We have nothing to fear but fear itself. And gigantic, car-sized frogs.
[Source: Dorkly]
Amazon has confirmed the details of its Kindle “lending library” for Amazon Prime subscribers. It’s a neat feature, though not enough to be the sole reason to subscribe.
The library of books available to “borrow” is around 5,000 titles of which more than 100 are either currently on the New York Times Bestsellers list or have been in the past.
There’ll be a separate “library” to browse, but eligible titles will also be marked as having a borrowing option when they appear in standard search results.
The deal works a little like the basic package of most DVD and game rental services. You can borrow one book at a time and keep it as long as you like. Once you “return” it you get a new one, but you can only get one new title a month.
The feature is available on all Kindle devices, including the new Fire tablet. However, the borrowed books can’t be read on non-Amazon devices through the Kindle app in the same way as purchased titles.
A year’s subscription to Prime is $79, so if you used it just for the books you’d be talking about $6.50 per title. Given bestselling titles average about ten bucks, that’s a lot for borrowing a book, though a bit more tolerable if you rarely read books more than once anyway.
Throw in the unlimited TV and movie streaming, however, and you’ve got an attractive deal for those who’ve opted for the Fire tablet, giving more weight to the theory that Amazon isn’t planning to make its money on the hardware but rather the content.
Valve and Dark Horse have joined forces to bring us a hardcover edition of comics: over two hundred pages of story and awesome new art in three fan-favorite series. Included: Team Fortress, Portal and Left 4 Dead. These are new stories, including origins and history, for Valve’s greatest games. What’s not to love? Check out some of the sample pages below, then head over to Dark Horse and preorder your copy—Valve Presents: The Sacrifice and Other Steam-Powered Stories drops November 16.
[buzzfeed]
Nick Jensen has a lot of free time and a big love for Halo: Reach. Combine the two and you get an all-LEGO Halo sniper rifle, potentially the deadliest LEGO object ever built (with the exception of the Death Star… maybe). Formally known as the Sniper Rifle System 99 Anti-Matériel, this awesome build comprises an unknown number of bricks, but is measured at 63 inches long and weighs approximately ten and a half pounds. This is about on-scale with the gun in-game, which is cited as being 5.5 feet long. The SR99 features a removable magazine, sliding bolt and moving safety, and took roughly four months to assemble. Not bad.
Jensen has a few other LEGO Halo weapons, too, and there’s a nice post about his build process for the SR99 at The Brothers Brick.
Ohhhhhhhh, HALO:CE now looks better than ever with its new textures and upgraded polygon count. I can’t believe this game is already 10 years old!
Certainly not as awesome as Geeks are Sexy’s Geek Alphabet, but close!
[Source: Fabian Gonzalez | Via Laughing Squid]