Lab-grown burger tasted at event in London, said to require ketchup

BBC journalists tastes labgrown burger, makes the following remarks

A couple of tasters, who claim they’re unpaid and impartial, are currently chomping their way through some very expensive artificial flesh at a publicity event in London. According to the BBC’s science correspondent Pallab Ghosh, who is also at the gathering, the main feedback so far is that the meat — which is presented as a burger — isn’t as juicy or tasty as the real thing, mainly because it’s totally lean. The substance was grown by a team at the University of Maastricht, with a spot of funding from none other than Google visionary Sergey Brin, who believes the technology is on the “cusp of viability” as a solution to animal welfare issues. Lead researcher Prof. Mark Post doesn’t seem too disheartened by the tasters’ comments, but says he’s working to improve flavor. At a current cost of $325,000 per patty, people are going to expect something special regardless of the ethical or ecological arguments — and some cajun spices probably won’t cut it.

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Source: @BBCPallab (Twitter)

Sony keeps the MMORPG flame alive with EverQuest Next and EverQuest Next Landmark

Sony keeps the MMORPG flame burning with EverQuest Next and EverQuest Next Landmark

If you thought Sony Online Entertainment (SOE) was done with the EverQuest brand, well, think again. The company has come up with a successor to the classic MMO with EverQuest Next (EQN), which aims to give MMO die-hards a world they can mold and disrupt to their heart’s content. According to Sony, “there are no levels” in EQN, but with around 40 different classes at launch, players can mix and match abilities and develop them as they go along. The game will also be smart enough to learn from your decisions, offering up related opportunities so you can do more of what you like, be it crafting weapons or beating up orcs. Further, NPCs are given “motivations” and “core values” so that they’ll attack you not just ’cause you’re within aggro range, but because they want your gold for example.

Perhaps the biggest departure from other MMOs is that EQN introduces the idea of fully destructible environments that would result in permanent change to the landscape. Blow a hole in the wall? Well, it’ll stay that way, at least until someone else comes along to patch it. Since you can now destroy things, SOE also launched something called EverQuest Next Landmark, a sandbox that lets gamers create objects and buildings in the EverQuest world with the same tools SOE designers used to make the game. Amateur game architects can share their creations with friends, or collaborate with them on larger projects. Landmark will launch as a “Free to Play” title later this year, and marks the first stage in EQN’s release. As for EverQuest Next itself, well, its pricing and availability has yet to be announced. Until then, treat yourself to some gameplay footage and read up on what’s new in the press release after the break.

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Source: EverQuest Next

Alt-week 8.3.13: giant robot ‘crabsters,’ walking planes and a year on Mars

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 8313 giant robot 'crabsters,' walking planes and a year on Mars

We didn’t intend for there to be a theme this week, but there is. It’s been all about unusual craft this last seven days. Whether it’s nature-inspired sea drones, interplanetary exploration, or walking planes, ground control isn’t calling Major Tom, it’s gone way weirder that. This is alt-week.

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Watch live: Japanese space launch sends Kirobo up to the ISS (video)

You love robots, and you love rocket launches… right? So, you’re going to want to watch the double whammy this afternoon we’re guessing. That cutesy little Kirobo fella is making his way up to the ISS, and you can see it unfold live, right here, with coverage starting at 3:00pm ET. So, grab a sandwich and get comfortable. Though, we can’t promise Kirobo will be making an actual appearance, stranger things have happened.

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Source: Space

#Leaving: Chris Messina exits Google for NeonMob’s digital art platform

DNP #leaving The creator of the hashtag exits Google for NeonMob's digital art collecting

If it weren’t for Chris Messina, #FirstWorldProblems wouldn’t exist. Since creating hashtags back in 2007 as way of grouping online conversations, he’s spent his time focusing on design and the open web at Google. Perhaps more accurately, redesign. Messina is responsible for the search giant’s revamped brand badges, profiles and +1 button, as well as helping create the Google Developers knowledge base. After over three years at Mountain View’s cavernous digs though, he’s leaving for something a little more intimate. Starting next week, he’ll call NeonMob — a sort of online art / trading card / sticker collecting-hybrid start-up — home. There, he’ll focus on the site’s growth and new media-activities like building a community. Oh, and as of right now, he’s two pieces shy of completing his first sticker set. Maybe if you help him out, he’ll return the favor — it kind of is his job, after all.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: Chris Messina

Engadget Giveaway: win a new Nexus 7, courtesy of CSR Racing!

Engadget Giveaway win a new Nexus 7, courtesy of CSR Racing!

You’ve seen the review, now enjoy the real thing for yourself. This week’s giveaway centers around the hottest tablet at the moment, the Nexus 7. Our friends at NaturalMotion want to get one into a lucky reader’s hands so they can enjoy the company’s signature game, CSR Racing. The app is free, so it’s definitely worth giving it a good look on whatever Android device you use. While you’re waiting for it to download and install, make sure you head to the widget below to enter to win. Good luck!

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Source: Play Store

Navy enlists UAVs to uncover atmospheric ducts, protect comms

DNP  Navy enlists UAVs to battle atmospheric ducts that wreak havoc on radar and radio

Turbulence. A minor bother for us, but a huge issue for enlisted seamen. So-called “ducts” in the lower atmosphere can wreak all sorts of maritime havoc; trapping radar and causing radio comms to travel further than expected and into the hands of the enemy. The Office of Naval Research‘s Ocean Battlespace Sensing Department (rad name, right?) isn’t satisfied with using balloons to keep track of the ducts anymore, and is deploying drones instead, including Insitu’s ScanEagle shown above. The result should be a greater understanding of how atmospheric conditions affect radar and communications, which could ultimately provide a tactical advantage — at least while we wait on those 100-kilowatt lasers.

[Image credit: Wikimedia Commons]

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Google taps film students with Glass Creative Collective

Google taps film students with Glass Creative Collective

Glass hasn’t exactly been revered for its brilliant image quality, but that’s not stopping Google from making a push among budding filmmakers. The Glass Creative Collective, a partnership with film and design schools, is intended to familiarize students at a handful of institutions with the video-capture wearable. Several colleges, including the Rhode Island School of Design, UCLA and the University of Southern California are on board — students will reportedly begin exploring the device as a filmmaking tool beginning this fall. Glass could be a fit for documentary filmmaking, and for capturing point-of-view footage, of course, but performance limitations would likely prevent it from taking on a starring role in any production. We’re a bit skeptical that the Creative Collective will be a booming success, but Google’s promised to circle back with results once the program gets off the ground.

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Via: CNET

Source: Google Glass (Google+)

FAA approves first drones for commercial operations in US airspace

FAA approves commercial surveillance UAVs, sows seeds of Judgment Day

Insitu’s Scan Eagle X200 and AeroVironment’s Puma (above) are the first UAVs to snag FAA approval for commercial operations, and they’re set to take to the skies later this summer. Prior to this, the only way the private sector could fly an unmanned vessel in US airspace was with an experimental airworthiness certification — and that cert prohibits business activities. It’s worth noting that these craft weigh less than 55 pounds and measure four and a half feet long; they aren’t Predator drones, by any means.

Come August, a “major energy company” will use the X200 to patrol the Alaskan coast, keeping an eye on ice floes and migrating whales where the firm is doing petroleum exploration. Plans for the Puma sound slightly more action-packed, as it’s expected to support oil spill emergency response-crews and watch over wildlife in the Beaufort Sea. See, this is how it all begins: First we start trusting them with our lives, then it all takes a turn for the worse.

[Image credit: Wikimedia Commons]

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Via: Gizmodo

Source: FAA

New Zealand man creating Aston Martin replica on desktop 3D printer

New Zealand man creating Aston Martin replica on desktop 3D printer

When we first got a desktop 3D printer at Engadget headquarters, we made a Weighted Companion Cube. And then a Mario figure. What can we say? We like to start small. Ivan Sentch, a programmer living in Auckland, is a bit more ambitious with his projects — he sat down and started printing a replica of a 1961 series II Aston Martin DB4 on his second-generation Solidoodle, piece by piece. Sentch has been working on the project off-and-on since Christmas of last year, and is now finished with around 72 percent of the body. Once finished, he’ll make a fiberglass mold of the print. Check Sentch’s blog in the source link below for some insight into the process.

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Via: Solidoodle

Source: Replica DB4 Project