Psychonauts 2, Rock Band VR, more new games announced at The Game Awards

Other debuts include Telltale Batman series, Tron infinite runner.

Psychonauts 2! Yes! (credit: Double Fine)

Thursday evening's broadcast of The Game Awards included celebrities, trophies (real ones—not virtual ones on PlayStation), and music performances, but like in previous years, its most interesting content came in the form of world-premiere trailers for games expected to launch the following year. Perhaps the biggest brand-new announcement came from Double Fine, whose founder Tim Schafer took the stage to announce a crowdfunding campaign for Psychonauts 2.

The reveal teaser showed an admiral speaking vaguely about assaulting an island, then was warned that it was protected by "a comatose young girl who believes she’s herding a flock of sheep," at which point the admiral asked for the Psychonauts to do the job. After the trailer was shown, Schafer took the stage and told the crowd that it would immediately launch a crowdfunding campaign at fig.co, and that campaign is asking fans for $3.3 million to get a sequel off the ground for an adventure series that has enjoyed much more critical acclaim than it ever did commercial success.

Psychonauts 2 crowdfunding video

"I wanna say, 'fuck yeah, we can do this!'" Schafer said in a follow-up crowdfunding request video, which confirmed that the $3.3 million ask will only make up a third of the game's total budget; the other parts will be paid for by outside investors and by Double Fine itself. (Schafer has yet to confirm if Markus "Notch" Persson will be one of those investors.) Fans of the company's last making-of documentary series will be happy to know that filming crew 2 Player Productions are on board to chronicle Psychonauts 2's creation, as well.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Windows Server 2016 moving to per core, not per socket, licensing

This change aligns with the licensing scheme now used for SQL Server, among others.

Windows Server 2016, not likely to arrive until the second half of next year, is going to shake up the way Microsoft licenses its server operating system, moving away from per socket licensing to per core. The change was first spotted by Wes Miller who is, for his sins, an expert on Microsoft licensing policies.

Windows Server 2012 introduced a great rationalization in the way Microsoft licensed its server operating system. The two main editions, Standard and Datacenter, had identical features, and differed only in terms of the number of virtual operating system instances they supported. Standard supported two VMs (in addition to the host OS); Datacenter was unlimited. Beyond that, they were identical. The licenses for both editions were sold in two socket units; one license was needed for each pair of sockets a system contained.

Windows Server 2016 makes that simple system less simple. First, it reinstates the functional differences between Standard and Datacenter editions. Datacenter will include additional storage replication capabilities, a new network stack with richer virtualization options, and shielded virtual machines that protect the content of a virtual machine from the administrator of the host operating system. These features won't be found in the Standard edition.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Suspected San Bernardino killers took pains to erase digital footprints

Cell phones smashed with a hammer, hard drive and motherboard removed from computer.

The married couple police say carried out Wednesday's shooting rampage that left 14 people dead in San Bernardino, California, took pains to erase their digital footprints in the hours leading up to the deadly attack, according to a published report.

The husband-and-wife team, identified as Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, stormed a conference room inside the Inland Regional Center as a holiday party took place Wednesday and sprayed the area with bullets, authorities said. The couple, who wore military-style gear and were armed with high-powered rifles, pipe bombs, and 1,500 rounds of ammunition, were killed by police following a high-speed chase following a multi-hour manhunt. According to a report published Thursday by The Washington Times, they took actions to hide their electronic trail. The report stated:

Officials involved in the investigation say the couple appeared to have gone to great lengths to conceal their plans—a cell phone recovered from Ms. Malik’s body was newly purchased and had had been used only recently. Two other cell phones that were recovered had been smashed with a hammer and were expected to be sent to the FBI’s forensic lab in Washington for examination.

Authorities also noted that a hard drive and motherboard are missing from a computer found at the Redlands, California home the couple rented.

Not all of their digital footprints were wiped clean, according to other reports. This Daily Caller post said Farook's online dating profile claimed he enjoyed reading religious books and engaging in shooting practice. The New York Times, meanwhile, said that an online baby registry in Malik's name showed the couple was expecting daughter to be born in May and listed diapers, baby wash, a car seat, and safety swabs.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Turing’s Martin Shkreli regrets 5,000% price hike—says it wasn’t high enough

CEO of Turing says he was forced to raise price, appease shareholders.

Martin Shkreli being photographed for his role as CIO of MSMB Capital Management. (credit: Getty Images)

In a Healthcare summit hosted by Forbes on Thursday, Martin Shkreli, the founder and CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals, admitted he made a mistake by raising the price of a decades-old drug by more than 5,000 percent. But it’s not the mistake you might expect.

In response to an audience member who asked him if he would have done anything differently in regard to raising the price of the drug, Daraprim, Shkreli replied, “I probably would have raised the price higher.”

That price hike, which brought a pill of Daraprim from $13.50 to $750 earlier this year, has drawn fiery scorn from the public, media, and lawmakers. Daraprim is a 62-year old drug used to treat toxoplasmosis, a disease caused by a parasitic infection. Toxoplasmosis often strikes people with compromised immune systems, such as AIDS patients.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

TV binging, exercise skipping linked to poor cognitive function

Bad habits early in life may affect brain power later, researchers suggest.

Passing on the gym to snuggle on the couch and binge watch whole seasons of your favorite show this weekend may not bode well for your brain.

In a 25-year study that tracked more than 3,000 young adults into midlife, researchers found that those with the highest television watching and lowest physical activity scored worse on certain cognitive tests than their fit, less TV-addicted counterparts. In particular, couch potatoes had slightly lower brain processing speeds and worse executive function, but they scored just as well as other participants on verbal memory tests. The findings, reported in JAMA Psychiatry, may suggest that such bad TV and exercise habits early in life could set people up for faster cognitive decline in later life, the authors said.

However, the researchers can only speculate on cognitive decline for now, because they only tested cognitive skills at the end of the 25 years—not at the beginning. Therefore, it’s possible that participants with slightly lower cognitive function scores at the end of the study had those same low scores at the start and just enjoy spending lots of time lounging in front of glowing screens. Researchers can't tell from the data as is.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

China brings its cheapest tablet to China (land of the cheap tablets)

China brings its cheapest tablet to China (land of the cheap tablets)

The Amazon Fire may not be the best tablet money can buy, but it is probably one of the best tablets you can buy for $50 from a well-known company headquartered in the United States. It has a 7 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel IPS display, a quad-core processor, and Amazon’s custom version of Android 5.1 […]

China brings its cheapest tablet to China (land of the cheap tablets) is a post from: Liliputing

China brings its cheapest tablet to China (land of the cheap tablets)

The Amazon Fire may not be the best tablet money can buy, but it is probably one of the best tablets you can buy for $50 from a well-known company headquartered in the United States. It has a 7 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel IPS display, a quad-core processor, and Amazon’s custom version of Android 5.1 […]

China brings its cheapest tablet to China (land of the cheap tablets) is a post from: Liliputing

Dealmaster: We’ve got “Cyber Week” savings, like a Dell 5K monitor for $700 off

We’ve got tons of deals for the holiday season.

Greeting Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, the Dealmaster is back! If you missed out on Cyber Monday, it's apparently "Cyber Week" and the deals just keep on coming. The top item this week is a 5K Dell monitor for $1499.99, which is $700 off the MSRP.

Featured deals

Computers

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Programmiersprache: Swift ist als Open Source verfügbar

Die von Apple ursprünglich für iOS initiierte Sprache Swift ist nun Open Source. Das Unternehmen ist damit nun erstmals selbst auf Github vertreten und bietet eine Linux-Portierung an. Für die iOS-Appentwicklung gibt es schon jetzt Einschränkungen. (Programmiersprache, Apple)

Die von Apple ursprünglich für iOS initiierte Sprache Swift ist nun Open Source. Das Unternehmen ist damit nun erstmals selbst auf Github vertreten und bietet eine Linux-Portierung an. Für die iOS-Appentwicklung gibt es schon jetzt Einschränkungen. (Programmiersprache, Apple)

Störerhaftung im Bundestag: SPD wirft Union “Ängste vor offenen WLANs” vor

Der Gesetzentwurf zur Abschaffung der Störerhaftung hat den Bundestag erreicht. Freifunker, Opposition und Netzaktivisten fordern von der Koalition eine Abkehr von “kruder Sicherheitsesoterik”. (Internet, WLAN)

Der Gesetzentwurf zur Abschaffung der Störerhaftung hat den Bundestag erreicht. Freifunker, Opposition und Netzaktivisten fordern von der Koalition eine Abkehr von "kruder Sicherheitsesoterik". (Internet, WLAN)

Google’s Cardboard Camera lets you snap VR photos

Google’s Cardboard Camera lets you snap VR photos

Oculus, Sony, HTC, and other companies are planning to launch expensive, high-tech virtual reality headsets soon. But Google beat them all to the punch with a folded up piece of cardboard and a few lenses that turns just about any smartphone into a VR headset. There’s a growing amount of VR content that you can access […]

Google’s Cardboard Camera lets you snap VR photos is a post from: Liliputing

Google’s Cardboard Camera lets you snap VR photos

Oculus, Sony, HTC, and other companies are planning to launch expensive, high-tech virtual reality headsets soon. But Google beat them all to the punch with a folded up piece of cardboard and a few lenses that turns just about any smartphone into a VR headset. There’s a growing amount of VR content that you can access […]

Google’s Cardboard Camera lets you snap VR photos is a post from: Liliputing