Text Messaging Pioneer Dies

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The “father” of SMS (short message service) text messaging has died aged 63. Matti Makkonen came up with the idea in 1984, though it was eight years before the message was first sent.

Makkonen had downplayed his status in text messaging’s development, noting that while he came up with the idea — first discussing it over pizza at a telecommunications conference — it was other people who did the technical work to turn it into reality.

Speaking to the BBC to mark the 20th anniversary of the first message, Makkonen said he originally envisioned it as being for “quick business needs.” He also noted that it was Nokia’s 2010 phone, launched in 1994, which really made widespread SMS use viable.

The beauty of SMS is that it used spare capacity in GSM mobile voice call networks, helping keep the costs down. Making this work meant keeping single messages to 160 characters or less. That means the cheapness is only relative as, for people who pay per message, the cost per byte can be more expensive than any other form of digital communication.

The character limit still has an effect today as Twitter’s 140 character limit was originally designed so that a message and username could fit into a single SMS message and sent to a user’s phone if they preferred to receive it that way.

While texting is still popular worldwide, it appears to be on the decline as people switch to other forms of messaging, most notably those which send messages over an Internet connection.

Steve Jobs – Official Trailer [Video]

Set backstage at three iconic product launches and ending in 1998 with the unveiling of the iMac, Steve Jobs takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to paint an intimate portrait of the brilliant man at its epicenter.

Steve Jobs is directed by Academy Award® winner Danny Boyle and written by Academy Award® winner Aaron Sorkin, working from Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography of the Apple founder. The producers are Mark Gordon, Guymon Casady of Film 360, Scott Rudin and Academy Award® winner Christian Colson.

In Theaters October 9, 2015.

[Universal Pictures]


Fallout 4: 10 Things We DON’T Want

Fallout 4 may be all most people are talking about (and by most people, I mean me and the multiple voices in my head), but just because we are excited doesn’t mean we don’t have some fears about the game. Yes, it looks awesome and most fanboys like me will eat it up no matter what they put in front of us.

BUT, there are some things we DON’T want to see in this new entry, too. Just because it is Fallout doesn’t immediately mean it is perfect (though it is damn close). Here are ten things we DON’T want from Fallout 4.

(Via Gameranx))

Mad Max Gameplay: This Is How You Kill Cars In Mad Max

The Mad Max game looks almost as insane as this summer’s spectacular movie. And this video is a handy-dandy guide to how cars kill you in that beautifully deadly wasteland.

And how you can kill with cars, as well. This is Mad Max, after all. Safe to say you will spend a good deal of time playing this game with people being crushed under your virtual tires. Sounds like a beautiful day to me!

(Via OutsideXbox)

Ben Affleck’s Lego Batmobile Revealed

lego_batfleckmobile

So above is the new Ben Affleck Batmobile Lego minifig that supposedly is taken from the Dawn of Justice version of Batman coming to the silver screen next year. The actual Batmobile here is said to be a pretty accurate portrayal of what we will see on-screen, with the lego indents being missing from the movie version.

I’d say it looks pretty fresh and at a $29.99 price tag, it is actually possible to own, which is nice.

(Image, story Via Wall Street Journal, H/T to ToplessRobot)

USA Challenges Japan to a Giant Robot Duel [Video]

From MegaBots Inc:

SUIDOBASHI HEAVY INDUSTRIES! MegaBots, Inc. challenges you to a duel! You have a giant robot, we have a giant robot – we have a duty to the science fiction lovers of this world to fight them to the death.

Prepare yourselves, and name the battlefield. In one year, we fight.

Here is MegaBots’ Robot, the 12,000-pound MegaBot Mk. II:

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And here is the robot from Suidobashy Heavy Industies, the 9,000-pound Kuratas:

[MegaBots Inc]