Nintendo’s Famicom turns 30: a look back at the console that saved gaming

Nintendo's Famicom turns 30 a look back at the console that saved gaming

Without Nintendo’s Famicom there would be no NES. And without the NES, chances are, the video game industry as we know it would never have existed. It’s hard to appreciate history while you’re living it, but thirty years ago today on July 15, 1983, Nintendo’s Japan-only Family Computer debuted and set off a domino effect that would make video games a global, billion-dollar industry and rank Nintendo as synonymous with gaming itself. Rather than look back with the rosy tint we have for the NES’ early days, Ars Technica‘s gone the informed route to celebrate the system’s anniversary. From a condensed account of the console’s origins (i.e., failed Atari distribution deal, revised prototypes, soft US launch in 1985) to a walkthrough of the silicon circuitry and hardware add-ons (like the Famicom Disk System and Modem) that only saw the light of day in Japan, the retrospective covers all the bases of gaming’s golden era. There’s a whole lot more Nintendo trivia packed into the retrospective (did you know the original Famicom’s controllers had inbuilt mics?), so be sure to check it out and pour one out for that famous grey box.

Lead Image: iFixit

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Source: Ars Technica

Hydrogen Powered Cardboard Race Car

A hydrogen powered race car sounds as though it is extremely green, but did you know that things could be even more eco-friendly with this ride being made out of cardboard?

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Gawker George Zimmerman Juror B37 Hates Media, Called Trayvon ‘A Boy of Color’ | Kotaku Missed This

Gawker George Zimmerman Juror B37 Hates Media, Called Trayvon ‘A Boy of Color’ | Kotaku Missed This Year’s EVO? Watch All The Grand Finals Here. | Lifehacker Five Cheap Things You Didn’t Know Were Worth Buying from Monoprice | Jezebel George Zimmerman To Have Touching Reunion With His Gun

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Microwave Controlled By Raspberry Pi Hack

Fancy controlling your microwave remotely using a Raspberry Pi-powered device? That is now possible with a hack.

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Kremlin Turns To Typewriters To Prevent Leaks

In order to prevent or reduce the risk of security leaks, the Kremlin has allotted around $14,900 to purchase electric typewriters for documentation purposes.

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Vibrating pen checks your spelling as you write

(Credit: Lernstift)

Spell-check can be pretty frustrating, but it’s become an invaluable feature in word-processing programs. For jotting down notes with a pen, though, people just have to take their lumps. Or, rather, they did. The Lernstift smart pen, created by two German dads, hopes to improve spelling around the world by alerting scribes whenever they make an error.

While we’ve written about the Lernstift before, the project is now making a go on Kickstarter. Using a motion sensor that combines a gyroscope with an accelerometer (unlike the camera technology used in Livescribe pens), the Lernstift will be able to capture and monitor the user’s handwriting, vibrating whenever a word is spelled incorrectly. The pen was conceived by co-creator Falk Wolsky’s wife, who hit upon the idea after helping her son with his homework.

Also packed inside the pen’s barrel is a processor, memory chip, vibration module, and Wi-Fi antenna.

The pen has two modes: the first is checking spelling; the second is monitoring penmanship, with an aim to improve legibility.

The Lernstift pen contains an embedded Linux system.

[Read more]

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Another look at the green iPhone

If you’re aiming to see one of the supposed “budget” or “plastic” iPhones up close well before you see it in real life – and you like the color green – today is your lucky day. Straight from notorious leakster C Technology comes a set of photos that are neither blurry nor taken with a camera phone from ancient days. Here we’ve got what very much appear to be genuine articles, the iPhone Light (or whatever it’ll end up being called) in several pre-production images, all in electric green.

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These images show the iPhone to be working with the rather eye-searing green we’ve seen several times before, this time showing up without any IMEI information on its back. This time the device only appears with the brand “iPhone” posted on its back in a font that could just as easily have been placed there by a knock-off artist.

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What these images likely show is the rumored amalgamation of parts created by small-scale manufacturers in China to prepare case-makers for the eventual release of the genuine article. This iPhone likely sports the real color tone as well, preparing the case-makers for color matching as much as they do for case-fitting. Wouldn’t want to make a case that’s 2 Pantone numbers off, would we?

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You’ll also see a set of plastic buttons and a switch, each of these set to live under the shell of this smartphone while the device operates out in the wild. We saw similar keys just a few days ago in each of the several-times-leaked colors: green, yellow, blue, and a red that’s almost pink. You’ll find these colors to be lining up quite well with current iPad and iPhone cases offered by Apple as well.

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Have a peek at these newest images of the green iteration of the low-cost iPhone and let us know if you’re onboard with the idea that Apple isn’t aiming to cut costs, but to keep the screen size standard. And by all means, choose your color as well.


Another look at the green iPhone is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
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GameLogos Videogame Logo Archive: Title Shot

Do you miss playing one of your favorite games? Or have you played so many games that you can’t name them all? Perhaps you just want to kill time thinking about your favorite pastime? If you answered yes to any of those questions, head to GameLogos.

uncharted waters new horizons from gamelogos

Whoever runs GameLogos doesn’t discriminate. You’ll find logos from a variety of platforms and eras, from classics like Uncharted Waters: New Horizons to games that have yet to come out like Broken Age and mobile apps like Draw Something. And something called Call of Cookie. I must see what that’s about.

GameLogos is far from perfect: its only attempt at organization is through tags; it doesn’t even have a search box. Also for a site obsessed with logos its own logo is kinda plain. I’m sure some of you would rather look at cover art than logos alone. But like Please Press Start and other videogame archives, GameLogos is still a veritable time sink, especially if you’ve played through several generations of games. The fact that the blog scrolls endlessly helps too.

[via Boing Boing]

India closes state-run telegram service after 163 years

India closes staterun telegram service after 163 years

Sunday night marked closure of India’s telegram service after 163 years STOP
Service had lost money for several years, only 75 offices had remained open STOP
Email and smartphone use had replaced antiquated system STOP
End of an era STOP

[Image Credit: Indian Stamp Ghar]

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Source: Yahoo/AP

Behold a Once-Lost Plan for a Central Park That Might Have Been

Behold a Once-Lost Plan for a Central Park That Might Have Been

When the Board of Commissioners of Central Park decided it was time to build Central Park in 1857, they announced a design contest with a prize to the tune of $2,000 (around $50,000 today). Obviously, it was Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux’s design won. But there were 33 other failed entries, only five of which still exist.

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