Forever Geek
Date PostedArticle
2 hours ago PlayStation is 15 Years Old

Did you own an original PlayStation? Did you buy it when it first came out? If so, be aware: you’re dating yourself.

The PlayStation 1 has turned fifteen years old. Can you believe it? Since 1995, Sony has sold more than 377 million PS1s, PS2s, and PS3s.

I mean, look at the big plastic buttons and ports on that old thing. By today’s sleek & sexy standards, this thing looks like a child’s toy. But on the plus side, it was the first game console to ever use discs instead of cartridges — a format that would soon be adopted by every console maker.

To celebrate 15 years of the PlayStation, Sony is offering free themes for PS3 and PSP on the PS Store, a PS Home commemorative PS1 “ornament” for your avatar to sit and stare at, and weekly discounts on PS1 titles from the PS Store.


5 hours ago Fanimation: Here’s Why Jabba The Hut Took Out A Bounty On Han Solo

Star Wars Cargo Drop Animation

I usually cringe at the thought of a fan made animated short for movies I love, typically they are poorly constructed, lack imagination and basically suck all around, however this telling of why Jabba took out a bounty on Han Solo is actually very well produced Star Wars flick.

The short animated flick tells the story of the cargo Han Solo ditched, which in turn caused Jabba The Hut to take out a bounty on his head.

Listen to the voice actor who portrayed Han Solo and you’ll swear you were listening to a young Harrison Ford, while the animation gives great homage to Ford and Chewbacca’s original characters from the trilogy, while lending itself well to the CG based Clone Wars series.

There is just one warning, the movie is in 3D, so while you can watch it normally, a pair of of high tech glasses will definitely hep your experience.

11 hours ago Ron Howard’s Ambitious Plan for Stephen King’s ‘Dark Tower’

This is history in the making.

Ron Howard, his producing partner Brian Grazer, and screenwriter Akiva Goldsman have unveiled a wildly ambitious plan for an unprecedented film and television co-production for Stephen King’s seminal fantasy series The Dark Tower, which tells the story of Roland Deschain, aka the Gunslinger.

King’s sprawling epic encompasses seven books of tremendous depth and complexity, and the notion of adapting it to the big screen has been a holy grail for Hollywood for years. Often believed impossible to film in ways that would capture the emotional power of the books, Howard, Grazer, and Goldsman have come up with a plan that they think will finally do justice to the series: a combination of three big-screen feature films, and two seasons of a companion television show. Both of which will be financed and produced by Universal Studios and NBC.


Yesterday Robots Send Your Message in Light

In a little over a week, Trafalgar Square will be home to a unique installation that will let Internet users send messages to friends and loved ones using nothing but light.

Using eight of the same kinds of industrial robots that automobile production lines employ, “Outrace” receives messages via the Internet or mobile device. The eight robots have bright lights at the tips of their arms, which then spell out the words in light. A nearby camera will take long-exposure photos of the lights, capturing the messages you send, which you can then share on Facebook or Twitter or whatever.

Outrace is a collaboration between car-maker Audi and European design firm Kram/Weisshaar, and is being displayed as part of the upcoming London Design Festival. To send a message of your own, login to outrace.org between September 17th and September 23rd.


Yesterday 2.5 Minutes of Awesome Scifi Action

In case you haven’t heard, there’s this little indie game coming out next week called Halo: Reach.

A full, extended version of the “Deliver Hope” live action short film that Microsoft commissioned for Halo: Reach has found its way online, and man is it a doozy. Full of killer battle scenes on a planet burning from invasion and war, there’s no other word to describe it but epic. It makes me yearn all the more for District 9 director Neil Blomkamp’s Halo movie-that-almost-was (even though Blomkamp had nothing to do with making this ad).

Kudos to Machinima.com for the exclusive on this. In related news, today it was announced that there are thousands of midnight events taking place all over the country to celebrate the release of the game, which you can read about here.


Yesterday Nintendo Wii Gets Sonic Screwdriver, Sculpted Remote Isn’t Cheap Knockoff

Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver WiiMote

Doctor Who is officially coming to the Nintendo Wii and what better way would there be to play the game than with a sonic screwdriver, the very same device carried by the Doctor in the BBC t.v. series.

I for one have a problem with many Wiicessories that are made of crappy plastics or in some cases styrofoam that my cat for some reason likes to eat.

This Wii-Mote accessory however is actually sculpted around it’s very own WiiMote, making it give off the appearance of a sleeker device, while at the same time providing a more realistic authenticity that’s sturdy to use and even features a top side light to give off the true sonic screwdriver effect.

This remote is definitely better than just some protruding add-on for a motion controller.

The sonic screwdriver is set to released in December over in the UK, two months after the Doctor Who Wii game arrives, unfortunately there are no plans to release the controller in the United States.

Can everyone say Amazon.co.uk, that’s where I buy all my hard to find gaming merchandise and most of it even manages to pass through customs.

Here’s a closer look at the gaming controller:

Yesterday What would you do?

With the shipment being a day late this week thanks to Labor Day, I thought I would focus on an intriguing series from the House Of Ideas. As much as I have criticised them in the past (not that it stops me reading every month, but could I call myself a true comics fan without the griping?), this seems to be something fresh. New. Certainly a departure from the standard fare, and hopefully one of those little gems that year after year, I will pick up and read again.

The premise is that one guy, as a result of standing up to a pair of thugs and being forced to swallow hospital waste, is unexpectedly diagnosed with cancer. Previously dormant, the biowaste has caused it to turn immediately agressive (hence the title), and this is stated from the lips of Mister Reed Richards himself, so there is very little doubting it.

However, this is comics, and there is another interesting side-effect that our central character Dennis has to deal with, while contemplating what to do with the rest of his life, short as it is. A life seemingly blighted by tragedy already, with the loss of his sister and her husband, but blessed (if you could call it that) with his stroppy, resentful and obviously grieving teenage neice. Hardly the easiest ride, but very very real. Even with appearances by the Thing, Mr Fantastic and Spider Man (in a lovely little homage there), this comic does not scream spandex.

The writer Rick Remender is not one whose name I normally remember (no pun intended) but looking at his biography and noticing that The End League (Dark Horse) is amidst his works, I feel satisfied in having high expectations here. The sense of tragedy is not forced, you can see it on the page itself laid out before you and I find I am already missing

Yesterday 20: God’s Number

How many moves does it take you to solve a Rubik’s Cube?  Whatever your answer is, I am sure it is better than mine – which is none.  As in no number of moves.  I just give up before I am even halfway there.

Rubik’s Cube enthusiasts will know, however, that there is such a thing as God’s Algorithm.  The whole idea is to discuss the ways one can solve the Rubik’s Cube, and to come up with the minimum number of moves needed.  The use of God is an allusion to the notion that the Supreme Deity will have the information necessary to come up with least number of moves.

This brings us to God’s Number, which has finally been determined.So, the magic number is 20.  God’s Number is 20.

On to the who and how…

The team behind the effort: Tomas Rokicki, a programmer from Palo Alto, California, Herbert Kociemba, a math teacher from Darmstadt, Germany, Morley Davidson, a mathematician from Kent State University, and John Dethridge, an engineer at Google in Mountain View.

With the help of idle computer time – 35 CPU years worth, no less – given by Google, the team was able to practically solve every possible position of the Rubik’s Cube.  Exactly how they did it? You can check out the whole process in the team’s web site.

After reading this post, I wouldn’t be surprised if more than a handful of you guys start scrambling around to find a Rubik’s Cube and try putting God’s Number into practical application.

Yesterday Transformers Sans 1800′s, Optimus Prime Steam Engine

Old School Optimus Prime

Optimus Prime may be a 21st century Transformer, but the team at Encline Designs wanted to see what he would have turned into during the 1800′s and the most obvious answer was formed, a steam engine!

The pictures shown below showcase Optimus Prime in all of his transformation stages as a steam engine.

Old School Optimus Prime Optimus Prime Steam Engine - Optimus Prime 1800's