UK charity opens gaming visitor center / gaming gadget incubator for the disabled

Disabled gamers currently form a small, but growing portion of the gaming community, and the folks from the UK’s SpecialEffect video games charity are seeking to get a lot more of them gaming. SpecialEffect — with an assist from UK Prime Minister David Cameron — just opened a Video Games Visitor Centre to give those with disabilities a place to experience cutting-edge gaming tech designed for the disabled, like eye-controllers, in its GamesRoom. The Centre also has a GamesLab where “games and hardware are tested for accessibility” so game devs can adjust their wares to get even more people dishing out pwnage than ever before — bring it on!

UK charity opens gaming visitor center / gaming gadget incubator for the disabled originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 05:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Register  |  sourceSpecialEffect, GameBase  | Email this | Comments

Katamari Hack rolls across your favorite websites, leaving swath of HTML5 destruction in its wake

Google Chrome may have come out of Pwn2Own unscathed, but you can rip through any website it (or another HTML5-compliant browser) displays — just pull out your handy Katamari Damacy ball and wreak havok on the page. Na NAaaa, na na na na na na na, na na na na na naaaa…

Alternatively, paste the following Javascript into a bookmark, and then click it when you’re tiring of a page.

javascript:var i,s,ss=[‘http://kathack.com/js/kh.js’,’http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.5.1/jquery.min.js’];
for(i=0;i!=ss.length;i++){s=document.createElement(‘script’);s.src=ss[i];document.body.appendChild(s);}void(0);

Katamari Hack rolls across your favorite websites, leaving swath of HTML5 destruction in its wake originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 Mar 2011 16:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Kotaku, GamePro  |  sourceKatamari Hack  | Email this | Comments

Gadget Lab Notes: Personal Vehicle Concept Makes Walking a Thing of the Past

The Peugeot XB1 is a concept electric trike

Gadget Lab Notes is an eclectic roundup of gadget news briefs and intriguing products that catch our eye.

In the Future, Why Walk When You Can Wheel Around on the Peugeot XB1?
The XB1 is a cross between those hovercrafts from Wall-E, a robot, and a silver Honda Civic. The fully electric tri-wheeled concept vehicle would include GPS and smart phone integration, and top out at 35 km/hr. If the slew of recent concept bikes, trikes, and scooters are any indication, it looks like future humans won’t have much use for their legs.

Peugeot XB1 [Yanko Design]

Now That The iPad 2 Is Available, Let’s Move On To Some iPhone 5 Rumors
What would iPad 2 launch day be without some fresh iPhone 5 rumors? This time in the form of mold engineering diagrams. The images, from iDealsChina, show a slightly larger display (edge to edge) and essentially the same form factor as the iPhone 4. The design appears to match a photo of the bezel that they also released. Although the renders could be phony, it’s worth noting that the site has a track record: they previously leaked accurate renderings of the 4th gen iPod Nano before its release.

China’s Latest iPhone 5 Rumors [iDealsChina via Macrumors]

GroupMe Texting Service Is Poised to Get Big at SXSW
Group texting service GroupMe, which lets you easily send texts to a group of people regardless of carrier or phone model, looks like it may be a breakout hit of SXSWi. Having used it at this year’s CES, I can attest to its awesomeness. It’s an efficient way to deliver a message to a group of friends or colleagues. Watch out if you have a limited texting plan though—add a couple of drinks to the mix, and you could wake up to dozens of ah, colorful, messages just waiting to be read (that is, unless you were the sender).

GroupMe [GroupMe via FastCompany]

Get Your Race On With an iPhone Steering Wheel Speaker
Similar to the Wii steering wheel wiimote, this circular speaker has a place in the center where you pop in your iPhone 4. Two external speakers add some audio oomph to your game play, while the circular shape makes steering in racing games a bit more fun and realistic.

iPhone 4G Steering Wheel With Speakers [Focal Price via Ubergizmo]


This Is Not The Droid You’re Looking For: R2-D2 Hacked With an Xbox 360 and Projector
On second thought, this fun mod, which includes luminous blue LEDs, a speaker, and an Xbox 360 as a brain, might be the droid you’re looking for after all. The built-in projector displays images 15-50 inches away, and R2’s hull includes touch-sensitive buttons and auxiliary hookups for other input devices (like a Wii or Playstation) if you just want to use the projector. R2 also has HDMI out and optical audio out.

Star Wars R2-D2 Xbox 360 [Instructables via Dvice]

Don’t Arm Wrestle Your Opponent If They Are Wearing the x-Ar Exoskeleton Arm
The x-Ar Exoskeleton Arm is designed to provide arm support, particularly for those who constantly have to lift or transport heavy objects. The x-Ar attaches to the arm at the wrist with a cuff and uses steadicam-inspired technology so that arm movement is not hindered, just made more powerful. I hope these are available to rent before the next time I have to move.

x-AR [Equipois via Crunchgear]


PlayStation 3 Ban in Europe Lifted

ps3slim120.jpg

Last week we noted that thanks to a dispute between Sony and LG, sales of Sony’s PlayStation 3 console were abruptly halted in the EU. The move was part of a court -ordered halt of PS3 sales while the court weighed arguments between the two companies over the console’s ability to play Blu-Ray discs. Yesterday, Sony successfully appealed the injunction, won court costs and damages from LG over lost sales, and perhaps most importantly, PS3 consoles are back on store shelves in the EU again. 
At the heart of the matter, LG claims that Sony has infringed on some of its patents (and owes LG royalties) with the Blu-Ray playback technology in the PS3. They’re confident enough in their claim that they’ve taken it to the ITC (International Trade Commission) and filed suit in civil court, asking for undisclosed damages. 
This particular case is over, but it’s likely that LG will continue their legal challenges in attempt to get royalties from Sony. The only thing for sure at this point is that we haven’t heard the last of this. 
[via InsiderGamer (Dutch)]

PlayStation Suite coming to Tegra 2 devices

NVIDIA’s Tegra Zone app, freshly launched this month, has become the source for a nifty little bit of Sony-related news: the PS Suite that is currently slated to deliver PlayStation One games to the Xperia Play is coming to Tegra 2 devices. Of course, if you’re keeping up with your Sony tablet exclusives, you’d already know that the company’s expected to unveil a Tegra 2 slate this year, so don’t go assuming that your Xoom will necessarily get the PlayStation Certified badge. On a separate note, we’re also hearing this expansion of supported hardware will be followed up with the eventual addition of PlayStation 2 games to the Suite. Those are clearly not on the immediate horizon and we suspect Sony might be waiting for quad-core mobile chips — such as the one within its upcoming NGP — to hit the market before rolling the last-gen console’s wares out to pockets and messenger bags across the world.

[Thanks, Onno]

Update: Upon further investigation, we’ve been unable to confirm the claim about PS2 games being on Sony’s PS Suite roadmap. Android and Me reports it to have come from NVIDIA, but the original Tegra Zone post makes no reference to PS2 games. We’ve updated the post to reflect this.

PlayStation Suite coming to Tegra 2 devices originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Mar 2011 07:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceTweakers.net, Android and Me  | Email this | Comments

Razer Black Widow Ultimate Mechanical Gaming Keyboard [Lightning Review]

Mechanical keyboards are the miniguns of gaming gear: Heavy, ostentatiously clacky, and downright murderous. They’re commensurately uncommon and expensive. Razer’s Black Widow is the latest, a surprisingly spare piece of kit from Razer, considering its typical aggro-gamer mode of existence. (What’s a mechanical keyboard, you ask? Read this.) More »

Pure Luxury takes DARWINmachine’s Hammerhead PC, adds primo parts and lifetime warranty

Does this badass gaming rig look familiar? It should — it’s basically a DARWINmachine Hammerhead HMR989 with some sweet, sweet cherries on top. In an attempt to live up to its name, Pure Luxury’s pimped it out with an Intel Core i7-990X processor, 12GB of pricey Kingston RAM, two NVIDIA GTX 580 graphics cards, two 128GB SSDs, 2TB of magnetic storage, and a Blu-ray drive for good measure. The company claims the killer combo can boot in four seconds, and run Call of Duty: Black Ops at 1920 x 1200 resolution with 8xMSAA at 285fps. All of those components plug into an ASUS Rampage III Gene motherboard and a 1.2 kilowatt modular power supply to juice the blood-red monster machine, and there’s a lifetime warranty with 24/7 phone support. Should any of those expensive parts fail, Pure Luxury says it’ll replace them with equal or better performing components and foot the shipping bill too. Of course, all this luxury doesn’t come cheap — you’ll drop $9,500 before you see one of these puppies shipped to your house. Makes the original $2,900 Hammerhead look downright affordable, no?

Continue reading Pure Luxury takes DARWINmachine’s Hammerhead PC, adds primo parts and lifetime warranty

Pure Luxury takes DARWINmachine’s Hammerhead PC, adds primo parts and lifetime warranty originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Mar 2011 14:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmag  |  sourcePure Luxury PC  | Email this | Comments

OpenFeint and The9 will stimulate devs to port their games to Android with cold hard cash

Are you a developer seeking the widest and most profitable distribution for your mobile software? The traditional platform for achieving such goals over the past couple of years has been Apple’s iOS, but Android’s rabid ascendancy has recently turned that into a legitimate question. A question that OpenFeint is looking to sway even further in Google’s favor by announcing it will fund the porting of games from “other app stores” to Android with the help of Chinese online game operator The9. The specially selected games will of course get saddled with OpenFeint integration and the whole effort does have the waft of a publicity grab to us, but hey, it’s another few pennies thrown into the bottomless well known as “Android gaming.” Surely something worthy will eventually come out of it, no?

[Thanks, Calvin]

Continue reading OpenFeint and The9 will stimulate devs to port their games to Android with cold hard cash

OpenFeint and The9 will stimulate devs to port their games to Android with cold hard cash originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Mar 2011 08:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Droid-Life  |   | Email this | Comments

Sony adds cloud storage for game saves to PSN Plus subscriptions

Alright, it’s official, Sony’s PlayStation Plus subscription just became a thing worth owning with the new addition of online storage for game saves. It’s coming with v3.60 of the PS3 firmware, which we’re promised to receive tomorrow, March 10th. You’ll be allowed to stash up to 150MB of PlayStation 3 game progress data in Sony’s make.believe cloud, which is not exactly a staggering amount, but then it’s not like those save files take up that much space. The major attraction that we see here is being able to just plug your account details into any PS3 around the globe and continue your questing in Dragon Age II as if you’re still at home. See Sony’s press release and instructions on how to use the new cloud saving option after the break.

Continue reading Sony adds cloud storage for game saves to PSN Plus subscriptions

Sony adds cloud storage for game saves to PSN Plus subscriptions originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Mar 2011 12:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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URL Hunter game takes place entirely in your browser’s address bar, courtesy of HTML5

That’s right, kids: the tyranny of the browser window is over! Thanks to Corey from ProbablyInteractive (as well as clever use of HTML5 and the Canvas tag), we now have URL Hunter. Using the left and right arrows keys, the player controls an ASCII “O” that has nothing better to do all day but kill the letter “a.” When you find yourself on top of the “a” key, hit the space bar to earn a point. Simple? In theory, yes. But trust us — It’s harder than it sounds! Hit the source link to try for yourself.

URL Hunter game takes place entirely in your browser’s address bar, courtesy of HTML5 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Mar 2011 16:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Geek.com  |  sourceProbablyInteractive  | Email this | Comments