Old Articles: <Older 761-770 Newer> |
|
Wired June 25, 2007 Clive Thompson |
For Certain Tasks, the Cortex Still Beats the CPU Luis von Ahn's new computer games pair random players to solve a computing problem. |
InternetNews July 19, 2007 Roy Mark |
Craps! Neteller to Forfeit $136M Neteller agreed today to forfeit $136 million in profits and return $94 million in American online gamblers' funds it is holding as part of a plea deal for violating U.S. gambling laws. |
Popular Mechanics August 2007 Joel Johnson |
Videogame Motion Sickness: Tech Clinic Diagnosis The accepted term for this malady has been called "simulator sickness," and despite a few studies to determine its cause, nobody is quite sure why it happens. Here are some tips on how to avoid it. |
Macworld July 8, 2007 Peter Cohen |
Wacky Mini Golf Gorgeous graphics and varied gameplay mark DanLab's latest mini golf effort. |
InternetNews July 5, 2007 Stuart J. Johnston |
Microsoft Bites Billion Dollar Xbox Bullet Microsoft announced on Thursday that it will take a pre-tax charge of between $1.05 and $1.15 billion to extend the warranties on its popular Xbox 360 game consoles due to "unacceptable" levels of a specific hardware failure. |
Macworld June 21, 2007 Peter Cohen |
Tasty Planet Whimsical and fun, Tasty Planet offers an entertaining twist on the Katamari Damacy style of game. |
InternetNews June 8, 2007 Roy Mark |
New Deal For Online Gambling? From the courtroom to Congress, opponents of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 this week began playing their hands to undo the controversial legislation. |
PC Magazine May 30, 2007 Monty Phan |
The Allure of Homemade Games Simple Flash-based strategy games are free, fun, and oddly addictive. |
Science News June 2, 2007 |
Science Safari: NOAA's Virtual World Players of the virtual reality game Second Life can now soar through a virtual hurricane at NOAA's new site. |
Popular Mechanics June 2007 Erik Sofge |
PlayStation 3 Set to Save the World, One Disease at a Time Sony recently released software that lets gamers connect their PS3s to Stanford University's Folding@Home program, which borrows processing power from thousands of PCs to create protein-folding simulations. |
<Older 761-770 Newer> Return to current articles. |