RIP Neil Armstrong, First Man on the Moon [Space]

Neil Armstrong, commander of Apollo 11 and the first man to ever set foot on the moon, died to today at age 82 due to complications from his heart surgery three weeks prior. More »

OnLive reportedly shutting down, new company forming in its wake (update: OnLive says ‘of course not’)

Well, here’s a bit of a shocker. After a strong showing at E3 and partnerships with companies like OUYA, gaming service OnLive is reportedly closing down, with an entire staff layoff resulting. At a glance, this sure feels a lot like the similar rise and fall of InstantAction, which was attempting to pull off something similar with cloud-based gaming. Polygon is reporting the story as relayed to the site by game developer Brian Fargo. We’ve reached out to the company and received a non-comment comment, “We don’t respond to rumors and have no comment.” Our OnLive contact also used the opportunity to plug its Google TV tie-ins and few giveaways — so, for the moment at least, things seem to be moving along as usual.

Update: Joystiq has reached out for comment as well, getting a similar, yet decidedly more blunt response: “We don’t respond to rumors, but of course not.” Blunt response or no, we’re sure this isn’t the last we’ll be hearing about this one.

Update 2: We reached out to OnLive again for clarification on whether the denial pertained to both the shutdown and layoff rumors. The response reads thusly: “I have no comment on the news other than to say the OnLive service is not shutting down. I’m sorry I cannot be more specific.

Update 3: Martyn Williams from IDG has reported there are employees leaving the OnLive offices with moving boxes.

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OnLive reportedly shutting down, new company forming in its wake (update: OnLive says ‘of course not’) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Aug 2012 15:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIP Sally Ride, the First American Woman In Space [Space]

Pioneering American astronaut Sally Ride died today after a battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 61. In 1983, she became the first American woman to travel to space. But that’s not all. At 32 she was the youngest American to have travelled to space at all at that time. What an incredible life. Our condolences go out to her friends and family. More »

Minitel to be shut down tomorrow: France bids adieu to the internet’s precursor

minitel-to-be-shut-down-in-france-tomorow

Back in the mid-80s, the idea of transferring funds, checking your email, buying stocks and booking a trip online was all a faraway dream. But if you happened to be in France at the time, you might’ve already been wired up and doing these things for years — thanks to the state-subsidized Minitels that were in each and every household. The country was far more interconnected than any other and proud of the text-only terminals, even though government-owned France Telecom monopolized access and you had to be newspaper company to supply any content.

It took off anyway, and soon faux-newspaper companies sprung up everywhere for the not-so-secret purpose of delivering paid Minitel services. They supplied information, financial access, ticketing, online shopping, and even some naughty text-based services (sacré bleu!). At its apogee in 1998, the system generated over a billion dollars a year in revenue, and accounted for nearly 15% of the annual income for online retailers 3 Suisses and La Redoute, to name a couple.

But France can be an insular nation, and Minitel never really spread anywhere else. The internet gave the coup de grace to the system and displaced it, and though it’s still accessed by millions each year, France Telecom will pull the plug once and for all this Saturday. Some regret that the nation didn’t build on its technological lead, but most French folks will probably remember the boxes nostalgically, knowing that they beat the internet by almost 20 years.

[Image credit: Musée De l’Informatique]

Minitel to be shut down tomorrow: France bids adieu to the internet’s precursor originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Jun 2012 08:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBBC News  | Email this | Comments