Super Mario Beads in Stop Motion [Video]

There’s a lot of similar Super Mario-themed stop motion animations out there, but I think this is the best one I’ve seen so far.

[Via]



Awesome PC Game: Abobo Vs. the NES Universe [Trailer]

Yeah, the name of this game may sound a bit weird at first, but before making a judgement call, I invite you to take a look at the trailer below:

This is the official trailer for our upcoming free web game, Abobo’s Big Adventure! We hope it gets you as excited about the game as we are! This game is a labor of love, made by the fans for the fans, and will be absolutely free to play.

Abobo’s Big Adventure is the ultimate tribute to the NES and you will all get to experience it in the near future. Prepare for the power of Abobo!

Now is it just me, or does this game look totally awesome? And the best thing about it? It’s going to be totally free.

We’ll make sure to let you all know as soon as it comes out… in a few months… or a few years.

[Abobo Vs. the NES Universe | Via Topless Robot]

Cool Tee: Processors Zombot

Zombot doesn’t want your brains, he only wants your processors!

[Get it @ 604Republic.com | 15% off with promo code “geeksaresexy”]



Assassin’s Creed Revelations: Launch Trailer

First Skyrim tomorrow, and then this a few days later. So little time (especially when you have 3 young kids), so many great games…

*sigh.

[Assassin’s Creed Revelations]

Single Molecule “Nanocar” Completes Test Runs

Forget the Mini or even the Ka, there’s a new leader in the race to produce the world’s smallest car, and this one is going to be hard to beat.

A team of eight researchers have produced an “electric car” from a single molecule. It’s not an attempt to solve crowded roads, but rather an experiment into the manipulation of tiny materials.

The molecule is arranged in a way that has a central stem (the chassis) leading to two hubs (the axles) each with two branches (the wheels). The branches rotate when they receive a tiny current from a scanning tunnelling microscope: a metal device with a tip as narrow as a single atom.

The results probably won’t do much to answer critics of electric cars’ limited ranges: a series of 10 electrical “charges” moves the “car” six billionths of a meter. What’s really important here is that the researchers were able to overcome forces such as gravity that would normally overwhelm such powered motion systems.

Wired notes that a strict analogy of this as a car would mean the wheels lifted up the entire vehicle each time they turned, making the experience more like being driven by someone who’d just got new hydraulics in his lowrider and really liked showing them off.

The other big problem is that not every wheel will turn every time. Having four wheels means there’s always enough turning to create constant motion, but even over the course of six nanometers, the direction proved more random than a perfect straight line.

The car analogy is also limited in that the experiment took place in a vacuum at -266 degrees Celsius. Repeating the success at higher temperatures and outside a vacuum are among the next steps in the study.

(Picture credit: Nature magazine via BBC)

The Legend of Zelda: Main Theme 25th Anniversary Orchestral Medley [Video]

This video was initially only available for viewing on the Nintendo 3DS, but thanks to the magic of the Internet, everyone can now enjoy the beauty of the main Zelda theme as performed by an orchestra.

[Youtube]

Incredible Quilts from the Intergalactic Transport Blackmarket [Gallery]

Be still my geeky heart. These quilts by Jimmy McBride are awesome. And, um, expensive. But that’s because they’re awesome and hand-quilting takes a lot of time, patience and skill. If being a blogger who talks a little too often about space was a more lucrative career choice, I’d be a blogger who talks a little too often about space while owning a badass quilted rendition of Phobos (above, swoon). If any of you Geeks are feeling super-generous, we’ll gladly accept gifts from the stellarquilts Etsy shop, aka the Intergalactic Transport Blackmarket, where you can pick up one or all of these incredible quilted works.

If you’re interested in McBride’s creative process (and of course you are), check out his blog, where he posts progress shots, technique how-tos, and talks about pickles a lot.

[boingboing]