Samurai Shodown Added to Evo 2019 Main Stage

Samurai Shodown has been added to the main stage of the Evolution Championship Series (Evo). The remake of the classic fighting game has an early-summer 2019 release date. Main stage games unveiled during the Evo 2019 reveal livestream include: Street Fighter V: Arcade Edition, Dragon Ball FighterZ, Tekken 7, BlazBlue: Cross Tag Battle, Under Night In-Birth Exe:Late[st], Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, SoulCalibur VI, Mortal Kombat 11, and Samurai Shodown.



While some games are heavily-expected returns (like Street Fighter V and Tekken 7), a notable few are welcome newcomers, such as the upcoming Samurai Shodown and the much-loved Under Night In-Birth Exe:Late[st]. Mr. Wizard and MarkMan have also pledged that side events will receive even more spotlight at Evo 2019, continuing the trend from last year in giving other communities more spotlight, even if their favorite game isn’t on the main stage. Evo 2019 will take place on August 2-4 at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Samurai Shodown Added to Evo 2019 Main Stage

Comparing the Galaxy S10+ and the Xperia 1 to the iPhone XS Max

Folding phones aren’t the only big displays you’ll see at this year’s Mobile World Congress. Plenty of traditional, non-bendy devices have graced the show floor this year, with screens far past six inches — we’re long past the days when handset…

Source: Engadget – Comparing the Galaxy S10+ and the Xperia 1 to the iPhone XS Max

The Cassette Returns On a Wave of Nostalgia

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Pause. Stop. Rewind! The cassette, long consigned to the bargain bin of musical history, is staging a humble comeback. Sales have soared in the last year — up 125% in 2018 on the year before — amounting to more than 50,000 cassette albums bought in the UK, the highest volume in 15 years. It’s quite a fall from the format’s peak in 1989 when 83 million cassettes were bought by British music fans, but when everyone from pop superstar Ariana Grande to punk duo Sleaford Mods are taking to tape, a mini revival seems afoot. But why?

“It’s the tangibility of having this collectible format and a way to play music that isn’t just a stream or download,” says techno DJ Phin, who has just released her first EP on cassette as label boss of Theory of Yesterday. “I find them much more attractive than CDs. Tapes have a lifespan, and unlike digital music, there is decay and death. It’s like a living thing and that appeals to me.” Phin left the bulk of her own 100-strong cassette collection in Turkey, carefully stored at her parents’ home, but bought “20 or 25 really special ones” when she moved to London. “I’m from that generation,” she says. “It’s a nostalgia thing — I like the hiss.” “Vinyl has got so expensive to manufacture these days, especially if it’s only a seven-inch you’re putting out. You’ll only lose money on a seven-inch release,” says Tallulah Webb, who runs cassette-only label Sad Club Records. “Cassettes are an exciting way to put music out, in the same way that seven-inch singles were exciting for punk. They have always been a crucial part of the DIY scene.” On the flip side, Peter Robinson, founder and editor of Popjustice, believes the trend for tapes is a gimmick gone too far. “Cassettes are the worst-ever music format, and I say that as someone who owns a Keane single on a USB stick,” he says. “I can understand the romance and the tactile appeal of the vinyl revival, but I’m actually quite amused by the audacity of anyone attempting to drum up some sense of nostalgia for a format that was barely tolerated in its supposed heyday. It’s like someone looked at the vinyl revival and said: what this needs is lower sound quality and even less convenience.”

“I think labels know full well that almost every cassette they sell is going straight on a shelf as some sort of dreadful plastic ornament,” he says. “I don’t think it’s much different to the recent trend for pop stars adding pairs of socks to their merchandise lines, the crucial difference being that, for better or worse, socks don’t count towards the album chart.”

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Source: Slashdot – The Cassette Returns On a Wave of Nostalgia

There's Enough Digital Storage For Everyone In This Gold Box Sale

Isn’t it weird how most of our life is just… data now? Well, right now you find a place to store all of those memories and work stuff with this Amazon Gold Box sale on memory and storage. There’s something from everybody here—microSD cards, rugged external drives, key chain flash drives, and awesome SSDs from…

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Source: Kotaku – There’s Enough Digital Storage For Everyone In This Gold Box Sale

Twenty minutes into the future with OpenAI’s Deep Fake Text AI

Twenty minutes into the future with OpenAI’s Deep Fake Text AI

Enlarge (credit: Max Headroom / Aurich)

In 1985, the TV film Max Headroom: 20 Minutes Into the Future presented a science fictional cyberpunk world where an evil media company tried to create an artificial intelligence based on a reporter’s brain to generate content to fill airtime. There were somewhat unintended results. Replace “reporter” with “redditors,” “evil media company” with “well meaning artificial intelligence researchers,” and “airtime” with “a very concerned blog post,” and you’ve got what Ars reported about last week: Generative Pre-trained Transformer-2 (GPT-2), a Franken-creation from researchers at the non-profit research organization OpenAI.

Unlike some earlier text-generation systems based on a statistical analysis of text (like those using Markov chains), GPT-2 is a text-generating bot based on a model with 1.5 billion parameters. (Editor’s note: We recognize the headline here, but please don’t call it an “AI”—it’s a machine learning algorithm, not an android). With or without guidance, GPT-2 can create blocks of text that look like they were written by humans. With written prompts for guidance and some fine tuning, the tool could be theoretically used to post fake reviews on Amazon, fake news articles on social media, fake outrage to generate real outrage, or even fake fiction, forever ruining online content for everyone. All of this comes from a model created by sucking in 40 gigabytes of text retrieved from sources linked by high-ranking Reddit posts. You can only imagine how bad it would have been if the researchers had used 40 gigabytes of text from 4chan posts.

After a little reflection, the research team has concerns about the policy implications of their creation. Ultimately, OpenAI’s researchers kept the full thing to themselves, only releasing a pared-down 117 million parameter version of the model (which we have dubbed “GPT-2 Junior”) as a safer demonstration of what the full GPT-2 model could do.

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Source: Ars Technica – Twenty minutes into the future with OpenAI’s Deep Fake Text AI

Faraday Future couldn't raise the cash to bring back its workers

Things seemed to be looking up for Faraday Future by the end of 2018, with the company reaching a restructuring deal with its main investor. Unfortunately, it reportedly wasn’t able to secure enough money to bring back the hundreds of employees it fu…

Source: Engadget – Faraday Future couldn’t raise the cash to bring back its workers

Physicists set world record in tabletop plasma acceleration with laser drill

Wakefield acceleration can use different drivers. In the laser-driven case (top), a strong laser pulse is fired into a preformed plasma. In the proton-driven scenario (bottom), a high-energy proton bunch is sent into a gas.

Enlarge / Wakefield acceleration can use different drivers. In the laser-driven case (top), a strong laser pulse is fired into a preformed plasma. In the proton-driven scenario (bottom), a high-energy proton bunch is sent into a gas. (credit: APS/Alan Stonebraker)

Particle accelerators can speed up subatomic particles almost to the speed of light. The tradeoff is that this requires miles-long tunnels, so such machines are typically enormous and very expensive to build. Physicists are keen to build a viable tabletop version capable of accelerating particles over mere centimeters. Researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have now achieved the highest energy yet recorded using these so-called “plasma wakefield accelerators,” and they describe their work in a new paper in Physical Review Letters.

Typical particle accelerators use modulated electric fields inside metal cavities to speed up electrons. The Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Switzerland is the largest ever built, with a 16-mile ring of superconducting magnets serving to boost electrons to near-light speeds. By contrast, plasma wakefield acceleration involves firing very intense, short bursts of laser light into a cloud of ionized gas (the plasma).

The resulting “wave” rippling through the plasma leaves a “wake” of charged particles behind it, just like a speed boat will churn up a wake of water as it zooms across a lake. Then a second laser pulses more electrons into the plasma. If this is done at just the right time, those electrons can “surf” along the wakefield. The electrons draw off the wakefield’s energy to pick up more speed, just like a surfer can pick up speed skimming down the face of a wave.

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Source: Ars Technica – Physicists set world record in tabletop plasma acceleration with laser drill

San Francisco used an algorithm to help it reverse pot convictions

San Francisco has used an algorithm to to help identify more than 8,000 pot conviction cases for expungement. The District Attorney’s office began working with non-profit Code For America on an automated system after California’s marijuana reforms in…

Source: Engadget – San Francisco used an algorithm to help it reverse pot convictions

How to Watch Michael Cohen Testify About President Trump and WikiLeaks Today

President Donald Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, will testify publicly today on Capitol Hill at 10 am ET, 7 am PT. And judging by his written statement, which was released last night, it’s going to be one for the history books.

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Source: Gizmodo – How to Watch Michael Cohen Testify About President Trump and WikiLeaks Today

The stylish Polestar 2 takes on the Model 3 with a 275-mile range

The Polestar 1 is arguably one of the best looking modern cars out there. It’s also the first and last hybrid from the electric-performance subsidiary of Volvo. Today at an event in Sweden the automaker unveiled its second car and first pure EV, the…

Source: Engadget – The stylish Polestar 2 takes on the Model 3 with a 275-mile range

The LG V50's Dual Screen is a half-step towards a foldable phone

Despite foldable phones being all the rage at MWC, one of the bigger companies at the show didn’t have one. LG has been clear that it won’t introduce a foldable phone anytime soon, choosing instead to focus on its 5G flagship, the V50 ThinQ. And it’s…

Source: Engadget – The LG V50’s Dual Screen is a half-step towards a foldable phone

British broadcasters are teaming up to launch a Netflix rival… again

The BBC and ITV, Britain’s two largest broadcasters, are hoping to launch a homegrown rival to Netflix in the UK. BritBox, which is already available in the US and Canada, would bring a huge amount of otherwise unavailable archive content to subscrib…

Source: Engadget – British broadcasters are teaming up to launch a Netflix rival… again