Today's post is a smidge special.
as it is the 100th post to grace the digital pages of the Care and Feeding of
Nerds. Woot! Looking back over all the posts that have gone up in the past 19
months, it's fun and kind of surreal to see just how the blog has developed. And
there's more where this came from! Construction for the 2014 Convention Season
officially began yesterday so there will be progress posts in the very near
future. For now, though, let's get down to This Week in Geekdom.
Do a little dance. Have a drink with your bending unit. Get down tonight. |
Games
The vast majority of recent
gaming talk has been fussily orbiting the next generation of consoles that are
just beginning to hit the market, but fear not PC gamers, as this week gave
us a bit to indulge in. The fine folks
behind the indie-game propagating Humble Bundle launched the Humble Store.
While the terms governing the Store, like how long titles will be sold for,
remains a bit unclear, the offerings and corresponding discounts are very much
worth checking out. <site bookmarked>
If you live in a warzone, it
makes sense that you'd want to limit your time spent outside. In the case of
18-year-old Iraqi Yousif Mohammed, all those indoor hours went directly to
gaming. This is Yousif's incredible story of how the real-life battlefield
prompted him to become one of the top Battlefield
3 players in the world.
Science/Technology
Does the new generation of
consoles have you longing for the video hardware of your youth, but said
hardware has...ahm borne the brunt of your past frustrations and may be in
less-than-working order? Fear not. Australian entrepreneurs Cartesian Co. have
launched this (funded in less than 1 day) Kickstarter to allow them to produce 3D printed circuits.
The rest of this month is going
to be a visual smorgasbord for star-gazers. The next two-ish weeks will feature
not one, not two, but four comets in our skies. The science editors at
Time magazine have put together this interactive comet-tracker for those keen
on glimpsing 'Comet of the Century' title-holder ISON. Bonus: late tonight/early
tomorrow will give us the peak of this year's Leonid meteor showers!
Speaking of celestial bodies, scientists
feel that they may have solved one of the long-standing mysteries pertaining to
the good ol' planet Jupiter. Current theories of fluid dynamics indicate that
Jupiter's infamous Great Red Spot should have petered out centuries ago, yet it
seems to still be going strong. On November 25, two researchers will present their potential solution to this quandary.
We've had the ability to video
chat with another person for several years now but the experience has been
largely...let's call it two dimensional. Engineers from MIT mean to correct
that with this, an interactive 'pinboard' that allows for motion to be transmitted and re-created over distances.
Using data from the Hubble
telescope's scan of the relatively young M33 galaxy, two scientists have
created these images designed to approximate what our galaxy may have looked like some 11 billion years ago.
For those of you out there
unimpressed with Apple's Siri, IBM announced this week that they will be
releasing their fascinating/terrifying supercomputer Watson into computational
cloud form. Read here for details on our future Robot Overlord.
Fourier transformations are a
phenomenon so common, yet so world-changing, that they tend to go largely
unnoticed by the beings employing them. If you've ever wondered how an MP3 or
voice-activated software works, this brilliant primer has a beautifully succinct
run-down of the math and physics at play.
General Awesomeness
On Thursday, we got this first picture of pre-production for Star Wars: Episode VII.
Last Tuesday the United States
Library of Congress, with a little help from Seth MacFarlane, opened Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan Archive. Well done Seth!
If you missed out on last
weekend's Blizzcon, here is a gallery of the incredible cosplays that debuted
in the convention halls.
Finally, if you're a fan of Hyperbole & a Half creator Allie Brosh, NPR conducted this poignant interview with her earlier this week.
Best wishes for an awesome week
ahead!
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