This epic 53-foot tall Optimus Prime snow sculpture is currently on display at this year’s Asahikawa Winter Festival, which started yesterday and will run till February 12th.
[Via NA]
[Via]
In the UK, homes and locations marked with these historical plaques indicate which historical figures may have lived or worked in these locales. I tripped over this one online and felt it was worth sharing.
If you don’t understand why this image is laced with deep irony, you need to read more books.
(Note: This is apparently photoshopped – but it’s clever anyway)
These awesome-looking Converse One Star Super Mario Bros. pumps are due to be released in March 2012. Unfortunately, it appears they’ll only be available in Japan. Sadness.
[Via Likecool]
This is awesome… and Skyrim in this video looks so much better than on my PS3… probably because they grabbed the footage from the PC version.
[Via Being a Geek]
Apple has asked European officials to make changes that could reduce the number of lawsuits in the mobile tech industry. But while the changes are arguably valid, it’s notable that they are largely beneficial to Apple itself.
The call comes in a letter to the European Telecommunications Standard Institute, sent last November but only just made public. It specifically covers patents that relate to telecommunications standards such as 3G. Firms that work together to develop such standards agree to the principle that any resulting patents should be made available for other firms to license on a “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory” (Frand) basis. The logic is that this gives greater incentive to work on standards, which in turn helps the market grow and benefits all concerned.
As we noted recently, the European Union is formally investigating whether Samsung has not only breached these principles but is unfairly attempting to enforce the patents as part of the ongoing barrage of lawsuits back and forth between Apple and Android manufacturers.
A similar lawsuit saw Motorola get an injunction this week that banned Apple from selling 3G-enabled devices in Germany, only for Apple to persuade a court to almost immediately put the ban on hold pending legal arguments about whether Motorola had breached FRAND principles. The two sides each claim the other failed to negotiate a licensing deal in good faith.
Apple’s letter to the ETSI says the Frand system needs more consistent and transparent rules. It’s suggesting three formal additions to the principles:
The big problem with the call is that although Apple has formally signed up to follow Frand principles, it has very little involvement in developing communications standards (or standards generally, as those attempting to develop a standard charger socket for cellphones in Europe discovered.) That means that however reasonable its suggestions may be, they all work in Apple’s favor while being a mixed bag for its rivals.
I just bought myself a copy of Gotham City Imposters on Steam and its worming its way into my hard drive as we speak.
You haven’t heard of Gotham City Imposters? Have you been hiding under a rock? You play a makeshift superhero or supervillain in a deathmatch style romp while Batman is out of town. Check out the trailer:
The game looks wildly fun, and I can’t wait to get my cartoony smash on. There is also a metric pantload of unlockable achievements that can be used to upgrade your toon, but for the slacker with too much money and no desire to earn it, all the unlockable gadgets, costumes, and gear are available via DLC.
The game now has over one hundred selections of downloadable costume pieces, ranging in price from $1 to $4 (80-320 MSP). A majority of the DLC is obtainable the old fashioned way – by playing the game and earning tokens.
Personally, I want to have that pride knowing that if my wannabe Batman is running around in a burlap bag and a tutu that I EARNED it. That and the $15USD price tag on this silly thing is half the appeal.
Paying for content that is unlockable in game just feels cheap and takes half the fun away.