Super Mario Bros. As an Augmented Reality Game

Forget Pokémon Go. I want to play Super Mario Bros. in augmented reality. Well, coder and designer Abhishek Singh has done it. He has recreated “World 1-1” from the game in Unity3D.

Super Mario Bros. has now been brought to life as a first-person augmented reality game. Abhishek tested the game out by using a Microsoft HoloLens, and of course, by dressing up as Mario, playing it in Central Park. You have to dress as Mario. That’s mandatory.

It’s pretty basic at this point, but it looks like it would be a lot of fun with some polish. I hope Nintendo makes an official version one day. I want to smash some Goombas with my feet.

[via Laughing Squid]

Gorilla Dances To 'Maniac' And Another 'Flashdance' Star Is Born

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Zola the gorilla has become a viral hit for his twirling moves in a tub at the Dallas Zoo.

But there was something missing ― “Flashdance,” the 1983 film featuring Jennifer Beals as a steel mill worker who tries to prove her worth as a dancer.

And CBS DFW obliged by adding the movie’s smash-hit song “Flashdance … What A Feeling” by Irene Cara as a soundtrack to the zoo video, above.

But the CBS affiliate wasn’t the only one. Below, our favorite, a Twitter user went with Michael Sembello’s “Maniac.”

And he’s dancing like he’s never danced before.

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iPad Pro 10.5 accessories: why you need these

The totally new 10.5-inch iPad Pro is the new darling in the tablet market, eclipsing even its larger contemporary. Sure, the iPad Pro 12.9 is an upgrade over its predecessor, but the 10.5 model is praised for hitting the Goldilocks size of being “just right” for creativity, productivity, and portability. But an iPad Pro alone does not productivity make. As … Continue reading

Amazon dreams of putting a giant drone beehive in your city

Patents don’t mean anything right up until the moment that they mean everything, so take it as read that none of this could happen. Amazon has, however, registered a patent for a concept that it’s calling a “Multi-Level Fulfillment Center for Unmanne…

Rayz Smart Mute feature now available for Rayz Plus Lightning headphones

rayz-plusWhen it comes to a pair of headphones, it is all very personal. Pioneer and Onkyo have come up with what they call a brand new “Smart Mute” feature for not only the Rayz, but also the Rayz Plus Lightning earphones, in addition to a slew of new Rayz Plus colors (Black and Rose Gold) that will be made available exclusively at Apple.com. If you prefer to shop at a brick and mortar store, then you can also pick those headphones up at Apple Retail stores worldwide.

First things first — the Rayz Plus happens to be the first and only Lightning earphones that sport an inline charging node, enabling you to juice up the iPhone as well as tune in to music or carry a conversation simultaneously. The Rayz Plus makes use of Apple’s latest Lightning audio technology, which is powered by Avnera Corporation’s LightX platform so that mobile consumers will be able to enjoy a simple yet smart solution.

What of the “Smart Mute” feature? This particular feature for the Rayz and Rayz Plus will automatically mute the microphone whenever a user is not speaking, while unmuting said microphone when the user starts to speak, making it the perfect tool when you are engaging with a phone call within a noisy environment. The Smart Mute feature is enabled after downloading the latest Rayz app for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch on the App Store while performing a Rayz software update.

Just to make sure that your pair of Rayz Plus is going to match your iPhone’s color, potential customers are able to check out this pair of headphones in either Black or Rose Gold shades that are available on an exclusive basis. This is one particular instance where waiting is better than being an early adopter, fashion-wise.

Press Release
[ Rayz Smart Mute feature now available for Rayz Plus Lightning headphones copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Friday's Morning Email: What The Senate Health Care Bill Could Mean For You

TOP STORIES

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WHAT THE SENATE HEALTH CARE BILL MEANS FOR YOU The Senate unveiled its version of the health care bill meant to repeal and replace Obamacare, and here’s where it takes aim at the safety netFour Republican senators have said they don’t yet back the bill. You can read the full text of the Senate’s bill here, as well as this simple graphical guide that breaks down the differences between Obamacare and the House and Senate plans. Take a look at how your deductible could change and the likelihood that the GOP defunds Planned Parenthood. And former President Barack Obama said about the new bill: “It’s a massive transfer of wealth from middle-class and poor families to the richest people in America.” [HuffPost] [Tweet | Share on Facebook]

LAYOFFS ARE COMING TO THE CARRIER AND BOEING PLANTS That President Donald Trump touted as places he had kept jobs. [HuffPost]

WHITE HOUSE ON TRUMP RAISING POSSIBILITY OF TAPES “I think it was more about raising the question of doubt in general.” [HuffPost]

OUTRAGE IS GROWING OVER DASHCAM FOOTAGE Of a Minnesota officer’s attempts to detain this driver. [HuffPost]

THE NEXT BIG RACE TO WATCH Is Virginia’s gubernatorial race this fall. [HuffPost]

HATE CRIMES HAVE SPIKED IN MANCHESTER Following the deadly concert attack in the U.K. city. [HuffPost]

WHAT’S BREWING

YOU’VE GOT A WEEK TO BINGE WATCH EVERYTHING THAT’S LEAVING NETFLIX But here’s what you have to look forward to. [HuffPost]

PRINCE HARRY: NONE OF US ROYALS WANT THE THRONE Well, Harry, we’ll take it. Speaking of, Prince Phillip is back home recovering from an infection. [HuffPost]

‘MILEY CYRUS IS TRYING TO CHANGE, BUT WILL WE LET HER?’ “The former ‘Hannah Montana’ star is going through a reinvention of her own right now, but instead of shedding the good-girl image she was known for at the beginning of her career for something more risqué ― she’s been there, done that ― she’s moving in the other direction.” [HuffPost]

PREPARE TO BE ALARMED By this chart breaking down who you are most likely to spend time with throughout your lifetime. [Quartz]

GOOP GOT BUSTED BY NASA Over “energy-balancing” body stickers. [HuffPost]

PUBLIC SAFETY ANNOUNCEMENT It’s not a good call to risk your physical safety to take a selfie with a celebrity, even if it is The Rock. [HuffPost]

BEFORE YOU GO

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Sonequa Martin-Green Of 'Star Trek: Discovery' Shuts Down Racist Trolls

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Beam her up to hero status.

Star Trek: Discovery” actor Sonequa Martin-Green ― the first black woman to be the lead in the franchise ― proved racist trolls wrong on Thursday, as she praised the universal appeal of “Star Trek” and pointed out its yearslong diversity.

The New Yorker last month reported on the ugly backlash to the new “Star Trek” show’s trailer, featuring Martin-Green as the lieutenant commander and Michelle Yeoh as the Starfleet captain. Some commenters decried the lack of an alpha male in charge, the magazine wrote, calling it a fear of “white genocide.”

But Martin-Green had the perfect advice for bigots.

“I would encourage them to key into the essence and spirit of ‘Star Trek’ that has made it the legacy it is — and that’s looking across the way to the person sitting in front of you and realizing you are the same, that they are not separate from you, and we are all one,” she told Entertainment Weekly on Thursday. “That’s something ‘Star Trek’ has always upheld and I completely believe that is why it’s been a mainstay in society in the hearts of so many people for so many decades.”

Noting the franchise’s casting diversity dating back to the original series in the 1960s, Martin-Green said she was proud of being on a “Star Trek” seen through the eyes of a black woman.

“I feel like we’re taking another step forward, which I think all stories should do,” she said to EW. “We should go boldly where nobody has gone before and stay true to that.”

“Star Trek: Discovery,” which takes place before Capt. James T. Kirk and crew, will be available on CBS All Access beginning Sept. 24, Variety reported. The premiere will also air on CBS that day.

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Mayors Could Shift Nearly 42 Percent Of U.S. Electricity To Renewables By 2025

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The country’s largest coalition of cities plans to vote this weekend on a pledge to make 100 percent renewable power a top policy priority over the next decade.

The resolution by the U.S. Conference of Mayors ― who represent a 148 million people and 41.8 percent of the country’s electricity use ― would be the broadest rejection of President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate agreement. If each of the federation’s 1,481 cities actually converted to zero-emissions electricity before 2025, U.S. emissions of planet-warming gases would fall by 619 million metric tons, according to a Sierra Club analysis shared exclusively with HuffPost.

That’s equal to the total combined carbon footprint of the five worst states emitting greenhouse gases: Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Florida and Ohio.

“The more cities that not only pledge to move to 100 percent renewable energy but pass that into a local law or ordinance and begin to work on that transition,” Jodie Van Horn, director of the Sierra Club’s “Ready for 100” campaign, told HuffPost by phone Wednesday from the mayors’ conference in Miami, “the closer we can get to meeting the Paris goals through city-level action.”

The Paris Agreement, a pact signed by every nation except Syria and Nicaragua, set broad, non-binding targets for countries to reduce emissions of the greenhouse gases that cause the planet to warm and alter the climate. The U.S., historically the world’s biggest emitter, agreed to scale back pollution by 26 percent to 28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025. Trump announced plans to pull out of the deal this month after shredding virtually every policy meant to meet those goals.

An alliance of more than 1,200 cities, counties, businesses and state leaders, led by billionaire and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, formed soon after, announcing plans to meet the Paris Agreement targets anyway. The group, called We Are Still In, includes some smaller municipalities than the U.S. Conference of Mayors, whose members have populations of at least 30,000.

The Sierra Club analysis, based on data from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and the U.S. Energy Information Administration, considered two additional scenarios. If the 34 cities who already have plans in place to transition to 100 percent clean energy achieve their goal, the U.S. emission from electricity would fall by 19.1 million metric tons. The number increases to 34.5 million metric tons, equal to 3.4 percent of U.S. electricity consumption, if an additional 84 cities whose mayors pledged to completely switch to renewables but have yet to pass a formal policy also meet their target. Of the 100 who committed to that promise, 16 already approved policies to convert their electricity supply to solar or wind.

Getting the entire U.S. Conference of Mayors to adopt solar and wind power remains the ideal, if lofty, goal, Van Horn said.

“This is the good, better, best scenario,” she said, referring to the three situations outlined in the report.

The analysis comes just days after new research sparked fresh debate over the feasibility of converting to 100 percent renewable energy. The study, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, warned that the costs of shifting the U.S. electricity grid to renewables by 2050, as Democratic senators proposed in April, could prompt a political backlash.

“If we push down the avenue of 100 percent renewables, it will become very obvious very quickly that it is neither cheap nor effective,” Christopher Clack, the study’s lead author, told InsideClimate News. “We worry that it could be used by our opponents to diminish the role of renewable energy on the grid.  We worry if we oversell them, it will lead to disappointment and backlash.”

Rather, Clack proposed policymakers should aim for a number closer to 80 percent renewable energy.

That public discussion of clean energy has progressed at all to the percentage of renewable energy, rather than its merits compared to fossil fuels, struck Van Horn has a victory in itself. 

“We think the academic debate is healthy,” she said. “A few years ago, we wouldn’t have been having a debate.”

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Samsung Galaxy Flip 2 flip phone has a keyless keypad

Smartphone trends have come and gone, form factors change from time to time. One thing that seems to refuse to die, however, is the flip phone clamshell design. Sure, it’s no longer the fashionable phone design almost a decade ago, but if you live in East Asia, they never really went away entirely. Every year without fail, Samsung puts out … Continue reading

Razer makes virtual currency push with $20M investment in Asian payment firm

 Razer has invested close to $20 million into Malaysia-based online payment firm MOL Global as part of a push to establish its virtual currency for gamers in Asia. The deal sees Razer subsidiary ZV-Midas buy equity from existing backers MOL Investment and Hotel Resort Enterprise in a deal that values the MOL Global business at around the $100 million mark. Gaming company Razer, which made… Read More