Kinect + Garry’s Mod = Real-Time Object Manipulation

Check out this awesome project by Yelp engineer John Boiles, where he used the kinect to control various characters in Garry’s Mod, a sandbox physics game that allows a player to manipulate objects and experiment with physics using the source engine of a Valve game. Check it out!



Hilarious: Spock Browses Facebook – Part 1, 2, and 3 [Video]

Now, thanks to the power of Facebook, it is now easy to peak in the private life of the members of the Enterprise.

[Via]



Awesome Team Fortress 2/The Dark Knight Mashup [Video]

After releasing the awesome Law Abiding Engineer mashup early in 2010, Youtube user TrueOneMoreUser surprises us again with a new video which integrates our favorite TF2 characters inside footage from The Dark Knight. Check it out!

[Via]

Your Favorite Villains

Your Favorite Martian is back with a new geeky video about villains! Really well done band, really well done.

For even more YFM, check out My Balls. (Well, not really my balls… )

She Don’t Like Firefly [Music Video]

Hey sexy geeks, would you go to the point of dumping a girl (or guy!) just because he/she dislikes Firefly, or any other favorite movie/TV series of yours for that matter?

WebOS coming to every HP computer

HP paid more than a billion dollars for smartphone maker Palm. And by golly, it plans to get its money’s worth.

The buyout was something of a surprise given HP had no previous involvement in the phone market, but it soon became clear the real target of the acquisition was WebOS, a generally well-regarded mobile operating system that suddenly looked a lot more useful when the tablet market came alive in the post-iPad world.

Now though, HP is going a step further: it plans to install WebOS alongside Windows on all its PCs.

It doesn’t appear it will be the traditional dual-boot system used on devices such as some netbooks. Instead it looks as if the two systems will be more integrated. The idea is that users will be able to install and run WebOS apps through an app store model, but be easily able to revert to standard Windows operations where needed.

The main goal for HP in making such a move is to make WebOS more attractive to app developers by vastly extending the potential audience. If it can make WebOS a major player, it could in turn persuade more firms to make apps designed for other HP devices such as “smart” printers or tablets (such as the wireless printing feature illustrated above), in turn making those devices more attractive to buyers.

There’s certainly a whole bunch of ifs and maybes in there, but given HP controls WebOS it seems a fairly low-risk strategy. As long as its able to integrate the two systems in a way that doesn’t utterly confuse the average buyer expecting a “pure” Windows experience, there’s no real downside even if the benefits aren’t as strong as it hopes.