HTTP Gets Major Overhaul

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The first major revision of the hypertext transfer protocol has been finalized. HTTP/2 could mean pages are much faster to load, particularly on mobile devices.

Despite, or perhaps precisely because it’s such a fundamental part of the web, HTTP hasn’t had a significant update since changes to the current 1.1 standard in 1999.

The proposed HTTP/2 is a major overhaul. The current HTTP has major restrictions of how browsers can request data from websites: in simplified terms, a browser can only make one request at a time, and only to one site. That can mean a lengthy series of exchanges when loading complex pages.

Again in simplified terms, HTTP/2 allows a page to serve multiple requests to the same browser simultaneously. It also allows a browser to query multiple sites at once.

In an excellent Q&A guide, the Guardian notes that one of the biggest effects will be on media-heavy sites that a user visits for the first time and thus doesn’t have cached.

It will also be a major boost for mobile browsing where the slower connection speeds mean that the time spent waiting for requests to go from the device to a website is more significant.

It’s up to individual sites and browser manufacturers to incorporate HTTP/2, but the change won’t have to involve any user intervention. It’s completely backwards compatible and, other than any faster loading times, users shouldn’t notice any operational difference depending on what version of HTTP is running.

The revised protocol is partly based on an experimental Google protocol, SPDY, already available in many browsers. Google says it will replace SPDY with HTTP/2 in Chrome by early next year.

(Image credit: “Internet1” by Rock1997 – Own work. Licensed under GFDL via Wikimedia Commons – http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Internet1.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Internet1.jpg)

A Message from 10191: A Gigantic 360° Projection Mapping Show From the Future

This jaw dropping gigantic 360° projection mapping show was recently presented at the “Carré des Arts” in Mons, Belgium, Europe’s new “Capital of Culture.”

Project : 360° video mapping in the courtyard of the “carré des arts” for the Opening Ceremony of Mons2015, the new European Capital of Culture.

Technical : 20 video projectors for a projection surface of 4400 m²

Theme : We proposed our vision of the theme of Mons 2015 : Where technology meets culture! A futurist vision of a robotic world illustrated by CLOE our central processing unit system. “Year : 10191. A technological war breaks out. Descent into the depths of a dead planet. Discover the queen of the new world, Cloe…”

[DirtyMonitor | Via Kuriositas]

Mons is the European Capital of Culture 2015 so to get the year underway the Belgian city unleashed CLOE on an unsuspecting audience. Created by Dirty Monitor this is a Video mapping performance at 360° featuring a vision of the future transmitted to the past. The courtyard of Mons’ Carré des Arts (the city’s Graduate School of Art Federation) was transformed as all four sides became the surface for 20 video projectors covering 4400 square meters. Amazing work.


The Cake That Made it to my Stomach in Less Than 1 Parsec [Pics]

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Check out this amazing Millennium Falcon cake made by the folks over at Cup a Dee Cakes. I love how beautiful and detailed this thing is! It would most certainly make it down to my stomach in less than 1 parsec, because if my esophagus would be anywhere the length of a parsec, I most certainly would not be alive right now.

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[Cup a Dee Cakes | Via Walyou]

Barbie Gets Internet Connection, Will Talk To Kids

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Mattel is to release an Internet-connected Barbie that can remember and repeat a child’s comments. And, yeah, I think we all know where this is going.

The $75 Hello Barbie toy will include both speech synthesis and speech recognition, powered by a battery that lasts an hour between charges. The batteries are in Barbie’s legs, so there’s not much room for capacity. The microphone and speaker are in her necklace. She’ll only be “listening” when the child is pressing a button, currently located in her belt buckle.

The speech recognition processing is carried out online via a company called ToyTalk, hence the need for the Wi-Fi connection. As well as playing word games and talking with the child, the doll will tell stories, selecting the topic based on previous discussions. Hopefully Barbie will share her thoughts on opportunities for women in computer science again.

The range of dialogue Barbie speaks will be expanded over time and writers will be able to access the comments kids speak in return to help them plan new conversational branches.

Logical enough as such a toy may be in 2015, it does seem an open invitation for hacker pranksters, whether they be online troublemakers or older siblings with a twisted sense of humor.

Indeed, a similar talking doll named Cayla, launched last year, was quickly hacked with somewhat disturbing results.

Warning: Video below contains bleeped out language.

[Image credit: BBC]

Transform Your Phone Into a Time Machine With this DeLorean Phone Case [Pic + Video]

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For those of you who are interested in transforming their iPhone 6 into something that looks like the DeLorean Time Machine from Back to the Future, Bandai has you covered with their upcoming DeLorean phone case, and even though it looks totally impractical, I don’t care, I still want one. You can pre-order the case from Bandai japan for about $50 USD. Expected delivery date: June 2015.

[Product Page (Pre-Order | Bandai]

TARDIS Dematerialisation: A Doctor Who VFX Shot [Video]

Watch the TARDIS as it dematerializes in a whole new way in this interesting short VFX video from John Smith.

Since the TARDIS’ dematerialisation effect has remained largely unchanged for the past fifty years, I thought it might be interesting to try out a new approach. So this is my attempt at capturing what travelling through time and space might look like from the point of view of the TARDIS – from take-off to landing, all in one shot.

[John Smith | Via IO9]

What It Would Be Like If Presidents Acted Like Frank Underwood from ‘House of Cards’

House of Cards on Netflix is a pretty intense show, headed by a pretty intense guy. Frank Underwood played by the brilliant Kevin Spacey is a political figure unlike we have ever seen represented. And he loves to monologue at the camera. So what if other presidents were more like him?

Well, as you can see below, it makes for some interesting historical moments revisited. (Slightly NSFW at times).

[Via LaughingSquid]