Google has announced the latest in its Chrome Experiments, an in-browser game called Cube Slam that lets you slam a small cube into your friend’s face (or a bear’s face, if you’re so inclined). While this isn’t the first game of this nature we’ve seen, this is arguably one of the most enjoyable, bringing a
Google’s latest Chrome Experiment lets you slam a cube at a friend’s face (video)
Posted in: Today's ChiliGoogle has cobbled together yet another fun Chrome Experiment, and this time it’s Cube Slam, a Pong-inspired tennis-style game with video chat support built-in. It was developed with WebRTC, an open source project that lets you enable video conferencing in the browser without plug-ins. This way, you can initiate a game with a friend just by sharing a link. The idea here is to propel a cube at your friend three times in a row until the screen collapses. Various power-ups like fireballs, lasers and shields are available along the way and every level presents an increasingly difficult set of obstacles and challenges.
If you’re feeling anti-social, you can also play against a computer character called Bob the Bear (seen above). Indeed, as WebRTC is not available on mobile just yet, the Bear will be your only opponent if you want to play the game on your phone or tablet. We were able to play a single-player game on Safari and Firefox, but Chrome is required for multi-player. Offline play is also available by downloading the app from the Chrome Web Store. Head on past the break to watch a demo of the game in action, or just click on the appropriate source to start hurling cubes at Bob.
Source: Google Blog, Chromium Blog, Cube Slam (Chrome Store), Cube Slam
The next generation in Google mobile OS has been suggested to be coming this October with the ability to run on a much wider variety of devices than Android 4.2 Jelly Bean currently does. This information comes from a source that speaks on how the Project Butter updates in Android 4.1 Jelly Bean will expand
It’s not that T-Mobile will stop trying to compete with Verizon and AT&T when July comes, but here in the first few warm weeks of summer the pink carrier will make a move on one of the most popular out-the-gate Android smartphones of the year with a unique proposal. While earlier this year it was
Mad Catz Project M.O.J.O. hands-on
Posted in: Today's ChiliThough we’re still back in the prototype stages here with the Mad Catz Android-based gaming console called “Project M.O.J.O.“, we’ve still had the opportunity to take a look at the basic build here at E3 2013. This machine aims to do battle with the few similar products on the market today, namely OUYA, for starters,
This is the HTC One Mini
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe leaks are true: HTC’s rumored M4 is indeed the One Mini. We know because a trusted source in possession of the “petite” 4.3-inch handset has fed us a direct image, while also confirming some specs. From what we’ve seen, the few renders and blurrycam shots that bled out earlier this year appear to be dead-on. The One Mini’s a more approachable (and affordable) version of the One — both inside and out — with some notable differences. For starters, its screen size has been reduced to 4.3-inches, much like Samsung’s Galaxy S 4 Mini, making it much more palm-friendly and deserving of the Mini moniker. But we don’t yet have a clear handle on its resolution. Certainly, the Mini’s not going to ape the One’s dazzling 1080p Super LCD 3 display — what’s more likely is that this “smaller” screen is of the 720p variety.
The Mini still features the much-lauded metallic unibody HTC ushered in with the One and Beats Audio branding on the back, although now its front face is ringed with plastic. The consequence of that latter design change should aid in reducing its weight, but it also means you’re getting considerably more bezel than on the One. There’s also no IR blaster on the device, so you won’t be able to use it as a handy replacement for your tv remote. And cosmetically, that’s about as far as the Mini strays from the One.
Much could change by the time the One Mini is released later this year — should be sometime in Q3 — but for the moment, the handset’s running a Sensed-up version of Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean with BlinkFeed on board. Specific details on the UltraPixel cameras weren’t made available to us, but we do know the rear module’s capable of full HD video recording and Zoe share capture. As for the processor inside, our source provided us with a few benchmark results, pegging the CPU as a 1.4GHz dual-core setup — presumably, a Snapdragon 400 just like the HTC First. That’s about the extent of what we have on the One Mini. For anything further, you’ll just have to wait for more leaks or HTC’s official announcement later this fall.
Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless, Mobile, HTC, Google