Zombie skirmish game The Walking Dead: All Out War puts real horror on your table

A terrific miniatures-based battle game featuring plenty of undead.

Enlarge / A complete cityscape filled with painted minis. It takes lots of work to get your game to look like this—but it certainly looks good when it's done. (credit: Mantic Games)

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games. Check out our complete board gaming coverage at cardboard.arstechnica.com—and let us know what you think.

I’ve always found something perversely appealing about the prospect of an undead apocalypse. From an early age, I stayed awake to catch Living Dead reruns on late-night TV and kept a mental map of escape routes around our neighborhood, just in case they were ever needed.

My other childhood obsession was the Warhammer line of miniature battle games. That’s why The Walking Dead: All Out War seems like it could have been custom-made for me. Set in the world of writer Robert Kirkman’s original horror comics, it’s a skirmish-scale miniatures game where rival bands of survivors clash in a world overrun by ravenous reanimated corpses.

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Apollo Lake mini PCs are coming soon

Apollo Lake mini PCs are coming soon

Intel plans to release a NUC mini desktop computer soon featuring an Intel Celeron J3455 Apollo Lake processor. But Intel isn’t the only company working on tiny desktops with low-power Apollo Lake chips.

A handful of device makers at the Consumer Electronics Show are also revealing plans for Apollo Lake-powered products. Mele has some on the way. And  I found a working prototype of a smartphone-sized PC called the Bben MN17A.

Bben is a Chinese PC maker that sells notebooks, PC sticks, and other mini PCs.

Continue reading Apollo Lake mini PCs are coming soon at Liliputing.

Apollo Lake mini PCs are coming soon

Intel plans to release a NUC mini desktop computer soon featuring an Intel Celeron J3455 Apollo Lake processor. But Intel isn’t the only company working on tiny desktops with low-power Apollo Lake chips.

A handful of device makers at the Consumer Electronics Show are also revealing plans for Apollo Lake-powered products. Mele has some on the way. And  I found a working prototype of a smartphone-sized PC called the Bben MN17A.

Bben is a Chinese PC maker that sells notebooks, PC sticks, and other mini PCs.

Continue reading Apollo Lake mini PCs are coming soon at Liliputing.

Taking a ride in Nvidia’s self-driving car

Riding in BB8 is an unnerving experience, but there’s no doubt this is the future of cars.

Enlarge

Sitting in the passenger seat of a car affectionately known at Nvidia as "BB8" is an oddly terrifying experience. Between me and the driver's seat is a centre panel covered in touchscreens detailing readings from the numerous cameras and sensors placed around the car, and a large red button helpfully labelled "stop."

As BB8 pulls away to take me on a short ride around a dedicated test track on the north side of the Las Vegas convention centre—with no-one in the driver's seat—it's hard to resist keeping a hand hovering over that big red button. After all, it's not every day that you consciously put your life in the hands of a computer.

The steering wheel jerks and turns as BB8 sweeps around a corner at a cool 10 miles per hour, neatly avoiding a set of traffic cones while remaining within the freshly painted white lines of the makeshift circuit. After three smooth laps, two Nvidia employees wheel out an obstacle—a large orange panel—into the middle of track, which BB8 deftly avoids.

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A Bunch of Weak Anti-Piracy Measures Are Still a Pest to Pirates

Ask any pirate if site-blocking works and the answer will probably be a resounding “no.” Ask them if ISP warnings or DMCA notices have much of an effect and it’s likely they’ll give the same answer. However, a range of weak measures has a cumulative effect and the ability to make piracy frustrating.

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

crypirateJust before Christmas, the Federal Court in Australia ordered The Pirate Bay and several other sites to be blocked by ISPs. Completely unsurprisingly, the first iteration of the block was defeated within minutes, much to the joy of anti-censorship advocates.

It’s often said that the Internet views censorship as damage, so it routes around it. But, branding site-blocking as an ineffective anti-piracy tool is probably missing the point.

Whatever reputation they may have built online, rightsholders and their anti-piracy partners are rarely naive, and few think that site-blocking alone will solve their problems. Indeed, most of them know that blocking is just one small weapon in their increasingly diverse anti-piracy arsenal.

While never is a long time, piracy is not going away anytime soon. However, making the practice frustrating is achievable, particularly when targeting inexperienced “new recruits” to the pastime. Even when armed with a VPN, merely visiting an established site is not as easy as it once was.

For example, thanks to seizures, sites are now more prone to jumping to new domains. If that happens abruptly, even long-standing users of those sites may not immediately know where the new site can be found. And then, even when word begins to spread, questions are raised over the authenticity of the site at the new domain. Is it real? Is it an imposter? Is it some kind of trap? While experienced users will tend to find out the truth, casual users can have their confidence undermined.

At the same time, not all domain changes are involuntary. Thanks to Google’s downranking of domains for which it receives lots of DMCA takedown notices, pirate sites often choose to migrate to a fresh domain name of their own accord, to one that is yet to feel the effects of Google’s efforts. Even when controlled, these domain switches have a destabilizing effect among users, especially those sensitive to change.

So, like domain blocking, DMCA notices are often seen as merely a drop in the ocean when it comes to tackling rapidly reappearing “whac-a-mole” content. But as the need to domain-hop illustrates, they are all part of the frustration effort.

Equally, simply visiting pirate sites used to be a relatively painless experience but lately, things have been going a little downhill. Sure, the quality of advertising has often left plenty of room for improvement, but these days the situation with junk ads is getting worse. On some sites it has become absolutely unbearable.

While some might blame site operators for this decline (and some are indeed guilty), the problem is largely down to rightsholders tightening the noose on companies prepared to advertise on pirate sites. Continuous pressure means that sites have fewer options, resulting in a decline in quality and an increase in the annoyance factor.

Of course, any visitor can use a decent adblocker to make their experience a bit better, but that deprives sites of revenue. Make no mistake, with their “follow the money” approach, that’s what rightsholders want. It’s just another way of chipping away at the ecosystem.

So, while site-blocking can be neutralized with VPNs and DNS tweaks, there’s no mechanism to stop sites having their brands undermined by domain-hopping, whether caused by seizures, unofficial clones, or efforts to get better search rankings. Equally, junk ads can be eliminated with something like uBlock Origin, but that deprives sites of revenue.

Clearly, none of these measures are good enough to hit piracy hard enough to kill it, but the barriers to entry are being raised. In addition to a fast broadband service, a decent VPN provider is now almost essential for many file-sharers, whether that’s for circumventing blockades or avoiding those pesky sharing warnings.

Equally, keeping on top of the latest news, changes, developments, and domain switches can be a time-consumer in itself. That certainly wasn’t the case ten years ago. And if that isn’t enough, running the junk ad gauntlet requires a skill set all of its own, one that can potentially affect all sites running in a browser, whether they’re guilty of bad behavior or not.

Somewhat inevitably, all this can lead to frustration if not sheer confusion. Is a site failing to load because it’s been raided? Because it’s been blocked? Because my VPN isn’t working? Because I’ve accidentally flicked the wrong ad-blocker? Or maybe a combination of them all – where do I start?

Experienced file-sharers probably won’t have a major problem overcoming these issues but for new-comers, the situation is less straightforward. In any event, for many people mainstream web-based piracy definitely isn’t as convenient as it once was. No wonder modded-Kodi setups and other IPTV solutions are gaining in popularity.

And so the cycle continues……..

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

2016 sees Internet Explorer usage collapse, Chrome surge

A couple of newcomers enter the scene, and Opera changes ownership.

At the start of 2016, Microsoft's Internet Explorer was still the most commonly used browser on the Web; it finished 2015 being used by about 46 percent of Web users, with 32 percent preferring Chrome, and 12 percent using Firefox. But Explorer's days have been numbered ever since Microsoft essentially ended its development. While the venerable browser is still supported and still gets security updates, its features and standard support have been frozen since 2015. Instead, Microsoft shifted active development to Edge, its new browser. While Edge is faster, more secure, and boasts much better support for Web standards, it's only available for Windows 10, which greatly limits its audience.

The landscape looked very different at the end of 2016. Chrome surged to command 56 percent of the market, while Internet Explorer plummeted to just under 21 percent. Edge isn't being completely ignored by Web users—it started the year on 2.8 percent and finished on 5.3 percent—but it seems to be underperforming its predecessor. At the start of 2016, Windows 10 was used by 10 percent of Web users. By the end of 2016, this figure reached 24 percent—a solid performance for a new Microsoft operating system that was no doubt buoyed by the free upgrade offer for Windows 7 and Windows 8 users. Among gamers, Edge is performing better: according to the Steam hardware survey, Windows 10 just passed 50 percent of Steam users at the end of the year. That growth came at the expense of older Windows versions; Windows 7 dropped from 56 to 48 percent, Windows XP from 11 to 9 percent, and Windows 8.1 from 10 to 7 percent.

These numbers mean that only 22 percent of Windows 10 users are opting for Edge. Assuming that Internet Explorer users are mostly on older versions of Windows (technically, Windows 10 users could use Internet Explorer too, though it's strongly discouraged and likely to be rare), 32 percent of pre-Windows 10 users are sticking with Internet Explorer. This suggests that either Windows 10 users don't regard Edge as a suitable replacement for Internet Explorer or that early adopters are less interested in the operating system's default browser.

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Closer look at Intel’s 2017 NUC mini computer lineup

Closer look at Intel’s 2017 NUC mini computer lineup

Intel’s first NUC computer with a Kaby Lake processor is set to ship this month. The company will offer a model with a Core i3-7100U processor within the next week or two. It’ll be followed by models with Core i5 and Core i7 Kaby Lake chips, with top-of-the line models featuring Iris Plus graphics, Thunderbolt 3 ports, and support for Intel Optane storage.

There’s also a lower-priced, lower-power model with an Intel Apollo Lake processor on the way.

Continue reading Closer look at Intel’s 2017 NUC mini computer lineup at Liliputing.

Closer look at Intel’s 2017 NUC mini computer lineup

Intel’s first NUC computer with a Kaby Lake processor is set to ship this month. The company will offer a model with a Core i3-7100U processor within the next week or two. It’ll be followed by models with Core i5 and Core i7 Kaby Lake chips, with top-of-the line models featuring Iris Plus graphics, Thunderbolt 3 ports, and support for Intel Optane storage.

There’s also a lower-priced, lower-power model with an Intel Apollo Lake processor on the way.

Continue reading Closer look at Intel’s 2017 NUC mini computer lineup at Liliputing.

Fahrgastverband: “WLAN im Zug funktioniert ordentlich”

Der Fahrgastverband Pro Bahn bescheinigt dem neuen WLAN-Internetzugang in den ICE-Zügen der Deutschen Bahn eine ordentliche Qualität. Der Verband sieht aber derzeit ein anderes Kommunikationsproblem. (Deutsche Bahn, Telekom)

Der Fahrgastverband Pro Bahn bescheinigt dem neuen WLAN-Internetzugang in den ICE-Zügen der Deutschen Bahn eine ordentliche Qualität. Der Verband sieht aber derzeit ein anderes Kommunikationsproblem. (Deutsche Bahn, Telekom)

Retrobit-Geräte im Hands On: Controller-Tisch statt Controller auf dem Tisch

Wäre es nicht praktisch, nicht immer nach dem Controller für seine Konsole suchen zu müssen? Innex hat das Problem gelöst und aus einem Tisch einen riesigen Controller gemacht. Ebenfalls neu: Ein Retro-Gameboy für Gameboy-, Gameboy-Color- und Gameboy-Advanced-Spiele. (CES 2017, Games)

Wäre es nicht praktisch, nicht immer nach dem Controller für seine Konsole suchen zu müssen? Innex hat das Problem gelöst und aus einem Tisch einen riesigen Controller gemacht. Ebenfalls neu: Ein Retro-Gameboy für Gameboy-, Gameboy-Color- und Gameboy-Advanced-Spiele. (CES 2017, Games)

Topless Shoes – Wearing Shoes Made Easy [Concept]

Wearing shoes has always been a difficult task for people with fat belly. They can’t properly bend down to reach their shoes and wear them on their feet. They’ve to waste quite a long minutes before they can start their running sessions to flatten their belly. Of course, it’s also difficult for the elders who’ve […]

Wearing shoes has always been a difficult task for people with fat belly. They can’t properly bend down to reach their shoes and wear them on their feet. They’ve to waste quite a long minutes before they can start their running sessions to flatten their belly. Of course, it’s also difficult for the elders who’ve […]

Pimax 8K VR ausprobiert: 200 Grad Sichtfeld mit 8K-Auflösung und zu hoher Latenz

Nomen est omen: Das Pimax 8K VR ist ein Headset mit 7.680 x 2.160 Pixeln. Aufgrund der Display-Technik fällt die Bildqualität zwiespältig aus und das Tracking bisher grottig. (Head-Mounted Display, OLED)

Nomen est omen: Das Pimax 8K VR ist ein Headset mit 7.680 x 2.160 Pixeln. Aufgrund der Display-Technik fällt die Bildqualität zwiespältig aus und das Tracking bisher grottig. (Head-Mounted Display, OLED)