Abxylute 3D ONE handheld gaming PC hits Kickstarter for $1499 and up (3D display, Lunar Lake chip, and detachable controllers)

At a time when there are so many handheld gaming PCs available for purchase, it’s hard to make one that truly stands out from the crowd. But the Abyxlute 3D ONE manages to that by combining a bunch of rare features with one that makes it virtuall…

At a time when there are so many handheld gaming PCs available for purchase, it’s hard to make one that truly stands out from the crowd. But the Abyxlute 3D ONE manages to that by combining a bunch of rare features with one that makes it virtually unique. It’s got a bigger screen than most. Its […]

The post Abxylute 3D ONE handheld gaming PC hits Kickstarter for $1499 and up (3D display, Lunar Lake chip, and detachable controllers) appeared first on Liliputing.

Celebrated game developer Rebecca Heineman dies at age 62

The gaming community mourns a beloved mentor and LGBTQ+ advocate with a storied career.

On Monday, veteran game developer Rebecca Ann Heineman died in Rockwall, Texas, at age 62 after a battle with adenocarcinoma. Apogee founder Scott Miller first shared the news publicly on social media, and her son William confirmed her death with Ars Technica. Heineman’s GoFundMe page, which displayed a final message she had posted about entering palliative care, will now help her family with funeral costs.

Rebecca “Burger Becky” Heineman was born in October 1963 and grew up in Whittier, California. She first gained national recognition in 1980 when she won the national Atari 2600 Space Invaders championship in New York at age 16, becoming the first formally recognized US video game champion. That victory launched a career spanning more than four decades and 67 credited games, according to MobyGames.

Among many achievements in her life, Heineman was perhaps best known for co-founding Interplay Productions with Brian Fargo, Jay Patel, and Troy Worrell in 1983. The company created franchises like Wasteland, Fallout, and Baldur’s Gate. At Interplay, Heineman designed The Bard’s Tale III: Thief of Fate and Dragon Wars while also programming ports of classics like Wolfenstein 3D and Battle Chess.

Read full article

Comments

DeepMind’s latest: An AI for handling mathematical proofs

AlphaProof can handle math challenges but needs a bit of help right now.

Computers are extremely good with numbers, but they haven’t gotten many human mathematicians fired. Until recently, they could barely hold their own in high school-level math competitions.

But now Google’s DeepMind team has built AlphaProof, an AI system that matched silver medalists’ performance at the 2024 International Mathematical Olympiad, scoring just one point short of gold at the most prestigious undergrad math competition in the world. And that’s kind of a big deal.

True understanding

The reason computers fared poorly in math competitions is that, while they far surpass humanity’s ability to perform calculations, they are not really that good at the logic and reasoning that is needed for advanced math. Put differently, they are good at performing calculations really quickly, but they usually suck at understanding why they’re doing them. While something like addition seems simple, humans can do semi-formal proofs based on definitions of addition or go for fully formal Peano arithmetic that defines the properties of natural numbers and operations like addition through axioms.

Read full article

Comments