Battlefield 6: Beim Gunplay entscheiden Millisekunden

Vince Zampella und Byron Beede sprechen über das neue Battlefield, alte Fehler – und was für richtig gutes Gunplay wichtig ist. Ein Interview von Peter Steinlechner (Battlefield, Interview)

Vince Zampella und Byron Beede sprechen über das neue Battlefield, alte Fehler - und was für richtig gutes Gunplay wichtig ist. Ein Interview von Peter Steinlechner (Battlefield, Interview)

Krieg der Welten (2025): Der eigensinnigste und schrägste Sci-Fi-Film seit Jahren

Amazon hat eine innovative Adaption des Klassikers von H.G. Wells veröffentlicht – in der im Grunde Amazon die Welt rettet. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Film)

Amazon hat eine innovative Adaption des Klassikers von H.G. Wells veröffentlicht - in der im Grunde Amazon die Welt rettet. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Film)

(g+) NotebookLM Revisited: Was bringen die neuen Funktionen von Googles bestem KI-Tool?

Google hat seinem großartigen KI-Tool NotebookLM in den letzten Monaten zahlreiche neue Funktionen verpasst – es gibt aber auch noch Verbesserungsbedarf. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (KI, Google)

Google hat seinem großartigen KI-Tool NotebookLM in den letzten Monaten zahlreiche neue Funktionen verpasst - es gibt aber auch noch Verbesserungsbedarf. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (KI, Google)

Rocket Report: NASA finally working on depots, Air Force tests new ICBM

“I didn’t expect that we would get to orbit.”

Welcome to Edition 8.05 of the Rocket Report! One of the most eye-raising things I saw this week was an online update from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center touting its work on cryogenic propellant management in orbit. Why? Because until recently, this was a forbidden research topic at the space agency, as propellant depots would obviate the need for a large rocket like the Space Launch System. But now that Richard Shelby is retired...

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Australian launch goes sideways. Back-to-back engine failures doomed a privately developed Australian rocket moments after liftoff Tuesday, cutting short a long-shot attempt to reach orbit with the country's first homegrown launch vehicle, Ars reports. The 82-foot-tall (25-meter) Eris rocket ignited its four main engines and took off from its launch pad in northeastern Australia, but the rocket quickly lost power from two of its engines and stalled just above the launch pad before coming down in a nearby field. The crash sent a plume of smoke thousands of feet over the launch site, which sits on a remote stretch of coastline on Australia's northeastern frontier.

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