Post-mortem: Ms. Pac-Man, Diablo dissected by their original devs

Annual GDC tradition includes Atari legal smack-talk, Battle.net’s humblest days.

SAN FRANCISCO—Development woes, legal battles, and little-known hacks: these are the cornerstones of the classic gaming post-mortem. Of the many traditions found at the annual Game Developers Conference, none compare to its video game post-mortem panels, which combine beloved games, legendary developers, and previously-unheard anecdotes in a delicious swirl of nostalgic catnip.

This year's installments lived up to expectations by giving up the goods on nearly opposite ends of the classic-gaming divide: action-RPG pioneer Diablo, which turns 20 this year, and the arcade phenomenon that is Ms. Pac-Man.

Born from speed-up kits

Many of Pac-Man's historical tidbits came to light five years ago when series creator Toru Iwatani spoke at the original game's 2011 post-mortem panel. (I had the honor of asking Iwatini about the game's name-change from the original Puck-Man, to which he laughed and said, "Don't you already have your answer?") But Ms. Pac-Man's genesis story is quite possibly more interesting—most notably because it wasn't created by Namco's Japanese staff.

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Forgotten audio formats: The Highway Hi-Fi

If only we could still play scratch our vinyl records while speeding down country lanes.

What’s the connection between the Beatles’ George Harrison, boxing legend Muhammad Ali, and Chrysler cars? The Highway Hi-Fi: a vinyl record player that just happened to be the world’s first in-car music system. It appeared 60 years ago this spring, in 1956, and should have been a smash hit. It was innovatory, a major talking point, arrived as the car market was booming as never before, and it came with much press hype. It also had the backing of a leading motor manufacturer. What could possibly go wrong?

Unlike car radios—which had already been around for more than a decade—the Highway Hi-Fi actually gave you a choice. The records you wanted to play were picked by you rather than by a DJ in a radio station miles away, and those discs could hold some 90 minutes of music. This playing time was twice what you could get from a normal vinyl record of the mid-1950s—a trick accomplished by dragging the Highway Hi-Fi’s playing speed down to a mere 16.66 RPM, half that of a normal vinyl album. In technological terms, this was seen as a minor miracle.

The Highway Hi-Fi, in action.

And yet, within a year of launch, sales were plummeting, and 12 months after that the Highway Hi-Fi was being withdrawn—also soon to be the fate of the companies that were to "copy" the format.

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Kim Dotcom Fights For “Mega Millions” in U.S. Appeals Court

Megaupload’s legal team was back in court this week in an effort to reclaim an estimated $67 million in assets previously seized by the U.S. Government. Megaupload’s appellate counsel refuted the claim that Kim Dotcom and his former colleagues are fugitives, noting that the District Court ruling violates due process.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

megaupload-logoFollowing the 2012 raid on Megaupload and Kim Dotcom, U.S. and New Zealand authorities seized millions of dollars in cash and other property.

Claiming the assets were obtained through copyright and money laundering crimes, the U.S. government launched a separate civil action in which it asked the court to forfeit the bank accounts, cars and other seized possessions of the Megaupload defendants.

The U.S. branded Dotcom and his colleagues as “fugitives” and won their case last summer. However, Megaupload’s legal team soon appealed the verdict and defended its position in the Fourth Circuit appeals court this week.

During the hearing Megaupload Appellate Counsel Michael Elkin pointed out that it was wrong to rely on the ‘fugitive disentitlement‘ doctrine, as Dotcom and his former colleagues were merely exercising their legal right to defend themselves.

Ira Rothken, Kim Dotcom’s Lead Global Counsel, informs TorrentFreak that the District Court’s decision denied defendants’ basic rights and violated due process.

“We asked the Fourth Circuit to rule in favor of fairness, natural justice, and due process by stopping US efforts to take Kim Dotcom’s global assets for doing nothing more than lawfully opposing extradition to the United States—a country he has never been to,” Rothken says.

Rothken believes that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) wrongfully labeled the Megaupload defendants as fugitives and hopes the appeals court will undo the verdict.

“The DOJ in our view is trying to abuse the Fugitive Disentitlement Doctrine by modifying it into an offensive weapon of asset forfeiture to punish those who fight extradition under lawful treaties, and a provocation for international discord.”

“Today we asked the Court of Appeals for justice,” Rothken adds.

Megaupload’s defense is not alone in this assessment having previously received support from a group of prominent legal experts.

The Cato Institute, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the Institute for Justice previously submitted an independent brief in support of Megaupload, describing the assets grab as a dangerous violation of due process rights

“Stripping the claimants of their due process rights isn’t just unconstitutional, it’s dangerous. There’s a growing literature on the abuse of civil forfeiture and those abuses are directly tied to the protections given to the claimants here, as well as the ability of government officials to directly benefit from forfeitures,” they wrote.

The crux of the appeal is whether or not the District Court’s order to forfeit an estimated $67 million in assets was right. According to the Government it was, as the defendants’ due process rights were not violated.

During this week’s hearing Assistant U.S. attorney Jay Prabhu denied any wrongdoing. According to the Government, Kim Dotcom and his colleagues were properly labeled as fugitives. The U.S. feared that Dotcom would get his money back if no action was taken and filed the civil case “as a last resort“.

The case now lies in the hands of the Fourth Circuit appeals court. Their decision will be crucial for the criminal trial, but the Hong Kong and New Zealand courts also have to weigh in on the verdict, as many of the contested assets are located there.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Linux-Treiber: AMD verrät Details zu den beiden Polaris-Grafikchips

Der erste Linux-Grafiktreiber für die Polaris-Generation zeigt, dass die Chips ein 128- und ein 256-Bit-Interface und GDDR5(X)-Videospeicher nutzen. Über die Shader-Anzahl verrät der AMDGPU aber nichts. (Polaris, AMD)

Der erste Linux-Grafiktreiber für die Polaris-Generation zeigt, dass die Chips ein 128- und ein 256-Bit-Interface und GDDR5(X)-Videospeicher nutzen. Über die Shader-Anzahl verrät der AMDGPU aber nichts. (Polaris, AMD)

Report: Nintendo To End Wii U Production in 2016

A report in the Japanese newspaper Nikkei suggests that the Wii U may become Nintendo’s shortest-lived home console ever when the Japanese game company ceases production of the troubled Wii U console this year.A follow-up report by Japanese w…



report in the Japanese newspaper Nikkei suggests that the Wii U may become Nintendo's shortest-lived home console ever when the Japanese game company ceases production of the troubled Wii U console this year.

A follow-up report by Japanese website IT Media included a response by Nintendo, but the company could only confirm that Wii U production will continue through at least until the end of 2016.

Wii U sales have been struggling against Sony's PS4 and Microsoft's Xbox One globally, and with roughly 12.6 million Wii U consoles sold so far (compared to 36 million for the PS4, which was actually released a year later than the Wii U). By comparison, Nintendo's previous console, the Wii, was a huge success and the fifth most successful console ever, with more than 100 million units sold since its debut in 2006 and its discontinuation in 2013.

Nintendo is set to release its new home console, the Nintendo NX, in 2017.

Tay, the neo-Nazi millennial chatbot, gets autopsied

Microsoft apologizes for her behavior and talks about what went wrong.

A user told Tay to tweet Trump propaganda; she did (though the tweet has now been deleted).

Microsoft has apologized for the conduct of its racist, abusive machine learning chatbot, Tay. The bot, which was supposed to mimic conversation with a 19-year-old woman over Twitter, Kik, and GroupMe, was turned off less than 24 hours after going online because she started promoting Nazi ideology and harassing other Twitter users.

The company appears to have been caught off-guard by her behavior. A similar bot, named XiaoIce, has been in operation in China since late 2014. XiaoIce has had more than 40 million conversations apparently without major incident. Microsoft wanted to see if it could achieve similar success in a different cultural environment, and so Tay was born.

Unfortunately, the Tay experience was rather different. Although many early interactions were harmless, the quirks of the bot's behavior were quickly capitalized on. One of its capabilities was that it could be directed to repeat things that you say to it. This was trivially exploited to put words into the bot's mouth, and it was used to promote Nazism and attack (mostly female) users on Twitter.

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More than $200,000 in vintage comics stolen from Macon, GA comic book shop

Owner says Justice League of America and X-Men issues were taken.

On Wednesday night there was a break in at Comics Plus, a comic book shop in Macon, GA. According to WMAZ, a local news outlet, the bandit or bandits used a crowbar to pry open the door and then disabled the alarm system by cutting out the wires and ripping it off the wall.

While the robbers made off with a safe containing $2,200 in cash, the more valuable pilfered items were the first eight issues of Justice League of America as well as the first 20 issues of X-Men. The owner of the store, Will Peavy, said that the early 1960’s issues were graded, meaning they had been authenticated and given a score based on their condition.

Peavy said the Justice League set was worth $100,000, and he told WMAZ that the X-Men set also had a “six-figure value.”

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Elect Hillary Clinton and we’ll all find out what’s hiding in Area 51

Bill Clinton didn’t see anything in those files, but his wife will look again.

John Glenn explains to then President Clinton where NASA keeps the aliens in 1998. (credit: NASA)

Some polls have suggested that as many as 50 percent of Americans believe UFOs of extraterrestrial origin have visited Earth, and the percentage appears to be higher among Democratic voters. So perhaps Hillary Clinton was playing to her voters Thursday night when she appeared on Jimmy Kimmel's late night talk show on ABC.

In comments first reported by the Daily Caller, Kimmel mentioned the first thing he would do as president would be to rifle through the Area 51 files with the aim of finding out what the government knows about aliens. He also mentioned he'd asked Bill Clinton about that, and the 42nd president said he had looked and didn't find anything.

"Well, I'm going to do it again," Hillary Clinton said. "I would like us to go into those files and hopefully make as much of that public as possible. If there's nothing there then let's let people know there's nothing there." What if there is something there? "If there is something there, unless it's a threat to national security, I think we ought to share it with the public."

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From daredevil to chicken: Scientists find off-switch for risky behavior

Firing up specific brain cells—linked to gambling in people—turns rats cautious.

(credit: Geffen Pictures/Warner Bros.)

Whether you prefer to play it safe or wade into risky business for larger payoffs, your decision process may largely depend on a tiny bundle of cells deep in your noggin.

By tagging and tweaking those cells in the brains of high-rolling rats, researchers were able to turn them from ballsy to cautious decision-makers. More specifically, the rodents switched their preference away from pulling a lever that released a jackpot of sugary treats 25 percent of the time to another lever that served up smaller-sized treats 100 percent of the time.

The finding, published in Nature, backs up previous studies in humans showing that drugs that interfere with those same brain cells can lead to gambling problems. The study also offers a neurological explanation for differences in risk-taking behavior as well as a target for new treatments for gambling addictions.

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Patent that cost Microsoft millions gets invalidated

For over a decade, Uniloc pursued royalties for various anti-piracy schemes.

One of the oldest and most profitable patent trolls, Uniloc, has been shot down. Its US Patent No. 5,490,216, which claims to own the concept of "product activation" in software, had all claims ruled invalid by the Patent Trademark and Appeals Board (PTAB).

The process through which PTAB eliminated the patent is called an "inter partes reexam," or IPR. The IPR process, created by the America Invents Act, is an increasingly popular and effective way for defendants to challenge patents outside federal courts.

The PTAB case against Uniloc's patent was filed by Sega of America, Ubisoft, Cambium Learning Group, and Perfect World Entertainment. The board found that every claim in Uniloc's patent was anticipated or rendered obvious by an earlier patent.

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