Kojima Productions: Death Stranding erscheint auch für Windows-PC

Nahtoderfahrungen, unsichtbare Babys und Außerirdische: Bislang ist nicht ganz klar, um was es in Death Stranding von Hideo Kojima geht. Im Frühsommer 2020 will sein Studio eine Umsetzung für Windows-PC veröffentlichen. Die Version für Playstation 4 er…

Nahtoderfahrungen, unsichtbare Babys und Außerirdische: Bislang ist nicht ganz klar, um was es in Death Stranding von Hideo Kojima geht. Im Frühsommer 2020 will sein Studio eine Umsetzung für Windows-PC veröffentlichen. Die Version für Playstation 4 erscheint Anfang November 2019. (Death Stranding, Sony)

Luigi’s Mansion 3 review: The most “Nintendo” game from Nintendo in years

Nitpicks aside, there’s a reason we’re calling this Switch’s must-own game of 2019.

Boo! It's time for <em>Luigi's Mansion 3</em>.

Enlarge / Boo! It's time for Luigi's Mansion 3. (credit: Nintendo)

What is it about Luigi's Mansion that Nintendo keeps coming back to it? The game maker has no shortage of weird series in its history (especially Japan-only fare like Captain Rainbow), but Luigi's Mansion is that odd confluence of a popular mascot—an underdog, but still—getting center stage in a slow, puzzle-filled adventure series.

The results have always been solid—and even gorgeous—but never the stuff of a blockbuster. That may still be true with this year's sequel, Luigi's Mansion 3. Like previous entries, it revolves around a slow-and-scared Luigi picking through a haunted mansion. And once again, its slow, thoughtful, and silly gameplay, which revolves around Nintendo's wimpiest character ever, doesn't immediately shout "mainstream cultural phenomenon."

In a gaming world with more justice, this would be Nintendo's late-2019 blockbuster, a copy-for-every-kiddo delight that you can't help but tuck into every Christmas stocking (or, this week, every trick-or-treat bag). Luigi's Mansion 3 is by no means a perfect game, and it stumbles over its own clumsy, Luigi feet often enough to merit some nitpicking. But it's arguably the most "Nintendo" game I've seen from the company in years: one that oozes a sense of playfulness in every direction, from how you interact with its spooky environs to how those aesthetics rival the world's best kid-friendly CGI films. Close your eyes and imagine a handsomely drawn Nintendo game manual from the '80s or '90s coming to life in your imagination, all animated and living and breathing.

At its best, that's Luigi's Mansion 3.

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Kojima’s Death Stranding coming to PC next summer

Non-console release, now officially confirmed, has been hinted at since 2015.

You won't need a PlayStation console to play Kojima Productions' Death Stranding. While Sony is still publishing the only console version of the game, due next month, Kojima Productions and 505 Games announced today they are collaborating on a PC version of the title, due in the "early summer of 2020."

That may come as a surprise to some, given the way Sony has marketed the title for years now. Death Stranding was first revealed with great fanfare as a part of Sony's 2016 E3 press conference (then again, Shenmue III got similar treatment in 2015 but is also coming to PC this year). At that time, a Sony press release announcing the game noted that the company "will continue to expand the software portfolio with an attractive title lineup and deliver entertainment experiences that are only possible on PlayStation" (emphasis added).

Before that, Kojima described his first Konami-free game as a "collaboration with PlayStation" in a video with Sony CEO Andrew House, adding that he was "thrilled to embark on creating a new franchise with PlayStation." And the game's baffling 2018 E3 trailer led off with a large "Only on PlayStation" banner, which seems pretty hard to misinterpret.

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NVIDIA launches new Shield TV streamers with Tegra X1+ chips (a few days after people started buying them)

There’s no shortage of ways to stream Netflix, Hulu, and YouTube to a TV — Amazon, Google, and Roku all offer devices that let you do it for around $30 – $40. But NVIDIA’s Shield TV line of devices have long been some of the bes…

There’s no shortage of ways to stream Netflix, Hulu, and YouTube to a TV — Amazon, Google, and Roku all offer devices that let you do it for around $30 – $40. But NVIDIA’s Shield TV line of devices have long been some of the best options for power users, thanks to their high-performance processors, […]

The post NVIDIA launches new Shield TV streamers with Tegra X1+ chips (a few days after people started buying them) appeared first on Liliputing.

The Air Force’s secretive space plane returns after more than two years

The space plane spent 779 days, 17 hours in space.

Early on Sunday, the US Air Force announced that its X-37B space plane had returned to Earth, touching down at Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility in Florida. The uncrewed space plane had spent 779 days, 17 hours in space, breaking its own long-duration record.

During four previous missions dating back to 2010, the X-37B had previously flown for as long as 717 days, 20 hours—during a period from May, 2015 through May, 2017. The latest mission launched on September 7, 2017 aboard a Falcon 9 rocket.

As ever, the biggest question surrounding the Air Force's space plane concerned what it was up to during its long flight in low-Earth orbit. "The spaceplane conducted on-orbit experiments," an Air Force news release stated, blandly. "The distinctive ability to test new systems in space and return them to Earth is unique to the X-37B program and enables the US to more efficiently and effectively develop space capabilities necessary to maintain superiority in the space domain."

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Firmentochter gegründet: VW will in fünf Jahren autonom fahren

Der Volkswagen-Konzern bündelt die Entwicklung selbstfahrender Autos in einer neuen Firmentochter. Die Technik könnte ein “Standardmodul” für alle Konzernmarken werden. (Autonomes Fahren, Silicon Valley)

Der Volkswagen-Konzern bündelt die Entwicklung selbstfahrender Autos in einer neuen Firmentochter. Die Technik könnte ein "Standardmodul" für alle Konzernmarken werden. (Autonomes Fahren, Silicon Valley)

Sicherheitslücke: Forscherin kann Futterstationen von Xiaomi übernehmen

Mit der smarten Tierfutterstation Furrytail von Xiaomi lassen sich nicht nur die eigenen Haustiere füttern. Rund 11.000 Geräte konnte eine Sicherheitsforscherin weltweit einsehen – und fernsteuern. (Xiaomi, Sicherheitslücke)

Mit der smarten Tierfutterstation Furrytail von Xiaomi lassen sich nicht nur die eigenen Haustiere füttern. Rund 11.000 Geräte konnte eine Sicherheitsforscherin weltweit einsehen - und fernsteuern. (Xiaomi, Sicherheitslücke)

Backing Up Doomed Radio Station Online Archives Was “Furiously Illegal”

Following what began as a controversial political dispute in Denmark, publicly-funded talk radio station Radio24syv will shut down on October 31. Fearing that years of online archives could be lost forever, three IT experts created a project to download every show for posterity. As a result, they are now being accused of mass piracy.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

First launched in November 2011, Radio24syv (Radio 24 seven) is a talk radio station funded through mandatory license fees paid by the Danish public.

On October 31, however, the station will come to an end. Earlier this year Radio24syv said it wouldn’t be applying for a fresh broadcasting license after the government insisted that 70% of its employees must live in a certain geographic location of the country.

In May a lifeline appeared when the government said that the station might be able to switch to DAB rather than FM broadcasting. Ultimately, however, that fell through after another station won the slot. So with an October 31 shutdown looming, what will happen to eight years’ worth of online publicly-funded show archives and podcasts?

Station CEO Jørgen Ramskov announced last week that he was in negotiations to preserve the archive but for some, that was an assurance that could go either way. A website, created by three IT expects called ‘Archives24syv.dk’ appeared, urging members of the public to use its systems to grab every piece of content and upload it to their servers.

“So far, no one has been able to give a clear answer as to what will happen with the eight-year-long radio archive,” the website read.

“For safety’s sake, we will get it all. It is a big task, but we help each other out. Give us your connection and use the page here to copy the files from the archive to our server.”

In total, 2,000 people joined the call for action and between them downloaded and then help store the entire station’s archives in just three days.

This conservation project was unapproved by the radio station, to put it mildly. Station chief Jørgen Ramskov declared the effort “furiously illegal”, effectively branding the entire operation as mass piracy.

“It is totally and completely pirated,” Ramskov told Mediawatch. (paywall)

“If we had been asked, we would have said no – it is a complete infringement of copyright in relation to Radio24syv, Koda [collecting society for songwriters, composers and music publishers], Gramex [organization for recording rights of record companies] and others with rights in the material.”

But for those seeking to ensure that the publicly-funded content wasn’t consigned to history if a deal didn’t appear, that was an unfair characterization.

“We don’t want to compete with anything Radio24syv does,” Jens Christian Hillerup, one of the project’s founders, told DR.dk.

“If we were to redistribute in the extreme, then it would have to be cleared with Radio24syv and possibly other rights holders, so I am a little shocked at what Jørgen Ramskov says.”

The website created for backup purposes is now down, having fulfilled its initial goal. However, with a clear announcement on what will happen to the archive yet to be heard, its ‘booty’ may still prove important for preservation.

A copy of Radio24syv’s archives already exists in The Royal Library in Denmark, but access is restricted to computers that are on the library’s network, as well as those at the Danish Film Institute. But that’s not broad enough access, the backup project believes.

“Of course, it’s good to have it in the library if you research media. But that’s not the way podcast media is intended to be consumed,” Hillerup said. “It is, after all, a utility art that everyone should be able to access without stepping up to the library.”

In closing, Hillerup hopes that Radio24syv will be able to reach a deal to preserve the archives so everyone can move on.

“In that case, our archive will be irrelevant, and then we will probably just delete it,” he says.

This morning, Danish media is widely covering outrage at the termination of the channel and its archive, with words like “scandal”, “incomprehensible” and “murder” being used by politicians and observers to describe its pending demise.

Maybe an 11th-hour reprieve can save it. If not, the backup will prove more relevant than ever – if anyone is brave enough to do anything with it.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

KernelCI: Der Linux-Kernel bekommt einheitliche Test-Umgebung

Zum automatisierten Auffinden von Fehlern im Linux-Kernel und zum Testen des Codes nutzen einige Firmen bisher verschiedene, teils proprietäre Werkzeuge. Diese Anstrengungen sollen nun im KernelCI-Projekt gebündelt werden. (Linux-Kernel, Greg Kroah-Har…

Zum automatisierten Auffinden von Fehlern im Linux-Kernel und zum Testen des Codes nutzen einige Firmen bisher verschiedene, teils proprietäre Werkzeuge. Diese Anstrengungen sollen nun im KernelCI-Projekt gebündelt werden. (Linux-Kernel, Greg Kroah-Hartman)

IT-Jobs: Gibt es den Fachkräftemangel wirklich?

IT-Spezialisten seien Mangelware, heißt es. Doch die Zahlenangaben über offene Stellen unterscheiden sich stark. Gibt es den Fachkräftemangel überhaupt – und an welchen Kriterien machen Verbände, Forschungsinstitute und die Bundesagentur für Arbeit ihn…

IT-Spezialisten seien Mangelware, heißt es. Doch die Zahlenangaben über offene Stellen unterscheiden sich stark. Gibt es den Fachkräftemangel überhaupt - und an welchen Kriterien machen Verbände, Forschungsinstitute und die Bundesagentur für Arbeit ihn fest? Eine Analyse von Peter Ilg (Arbeit, Bitkom)