They are using Unreal Engine 4 for shadow cascades, ambient occlusion, lighting, motion blur, and presumably the background scene. The SDFs are raytraced for first-hit surface intersections, soft shadows, and extra ambient occlusion. The visual giveaway is that there are no reflective surfaces.
By Peter Watts (author of Blindsight), due out this summer. There are excerpts on his blog going back a decade, some found here by character search: http://www.rifters.com/crawl/?...
> DeepMind learned to beat the best go players in the world by teaching itself through trial and error.
AlphaGo was trained on databases of historical games. It looks for moves that are similar to what a human pro would play, and then reads out sequences to score the strength of the resulting position. It did not learn by itself from scratch. Once proficient, it was played against itself to improve.
The page you linked loads and performs fine for me, but I had a similar issue recently. My Firefox install is relatively ancient, and it began taking ages to load and then incorrectly render one particular site. What ultimately fixed it was creating a new profile, switching to it to test, and then switching back to my original profile.
I always want to read freshly opened pages at score 5/4 for full/subject comment thresholds, but if I modify the slider to see more, future pages will open at the last slider setting, not the 5/4 originally set in my preferences. Please prevent the per-page slider form changing the D2 comment threshold option, or add a mode that does this.
Star Trek TNG is science fiction because it explores the social issues of living in a future with FTL space travel, alien life, teleportation, replicators, communicators, tricorders, holograms, AI, androids, insecure computers, and so on. The science in science fiction can be fictional. More notably, Trek content routinely features scientists and engineers as main characters, with exploration and scientific and social progress as core themes.
Brazil is my favorite movie, and I will take your reference one step further to point out another scary thing that people tend miss on their first few viewings: there are no terrorists in the film, only routinely failing infrastructure, and the oblivious bureaucracy that places the blame on terrorism.
For completeness, I should say that Harry Tuttle does engineer one small disaster out of spite, but in general his M.O. is to go around fixing things without filing paperwork, and Sam Lowry sabotages the pneumatic tubes in his new office, but it's not suggested that everyone is as fed up as they are and therefor actively revolting against the system. The SWAT-style police entry and arrest of Buttle is also very destructive, as they fail to repair the damage, and then neglect it.
The real world does have actual terrorists, but they are similarly less threatening than our government and police and infrastructure.
The plant opened in 1993 and is still running. The factory had 1 boss and 170 employees in 1999 when the article was written.
It predates Valve but tells the same basic story: doing a very hard thing in surprisingly smart ways with extraordinary people yields success. GE Durham also delivers on schedule, but they're engineering and manufacturing, not making creative entertainment on Valve time.
So Windows must suck because you can't play Bayoneta.
Your point about exclusives is valid, but FYI: https://store.steampowered.com...
Outcast, back in 1999
That summary is crap. Outcast was only raycasting a 2d heightfield. No raytracing, no voxels.
The game Claybook is entirely raytraced
No, it isn't. Here are their GDC 2018 slides: https://www.dropbox.com/s/s9tz...
They are using Unreal Engine 4 for shadow cascades, ambient occlusion, lighting, motion blur, and presumably the background scene. The SDFs are raytraced for first-hit surface intersections, soft shadows, and extra ambient occlusion. The visual giveaway is that there are no reflective surfaces.
By Peter Watts (author of Blindsight), due out this summer. There are excerpts on his blog going back a decade, some found here by character search: http://www.rifters.com/crawl/?...
Because all the big sites wanted to be OpenID providers but not to accept logins from elsewhere.
Read the rules: http://darwinawards.com/rules/...
"The existence of offspring, though potentially deleterious to the gene pool, does not disqualify a nominee."
Please don't repeat the insanity misquote. It's garbage.
> DeepMind learned to beat the best go players in the world by teaching itself through trial and error.
AlphaGo was trained on databases of historical games. It looks for moves that are similar to what a human pro would play, and then reads out sequences to score the strength of the resulting position. It did not learn by itself from scratch. Once proficient, it was played against itself to improve.
The page you linked loads and performs fine for me, but I had a similar issue recently. My Firefox install is relatively ancient, and it began taking ages to load and then incorrectly render one particular site. What ultimately fixed it was creating a new profile, switching to it to test, and then switching back to my original profile.
1) "Blindsight" by Peter Watts is the best Science Fiction book.
2) Popularity is not a measure of quality.
3) The actual best way is to build a true machine intelligence that reads every book after succeeding humanity.
I always want to read freshly opened pages at score 5/4 for full/subject comment thresholds, but if I modify the slider to see more, future pages will open at the last slider setting, not the 5/4 originally set in my preferences. Please prevent the per-page slider form changing the D2 comment threshold option, or add a mode that does this.
Star Trek TNG is science fiction because it explores the social issues of living in a future with FTL space travel, alien life, teleportation, replicators, communicators, tricorders, holograms, AI, androids, insecure computers, and so on. The science in science fiction can be fictional. More notably, Trek content routinely features scientists and engineers as main characters, with exploration and scientific and social progress as core themes.
Gamasutra did a great interview with Burger a few years ago: http://www.gamasutra.com/view/...
Time to re-watch WarGames.
I am reminded of this classic New Yorker cartoon caption contest winner:
http://personalshoplifter.com/...
China once did something similar, and it lead to ecological disaster and mass starvation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...
Windows 8.1 mouse lag reportedly renders some PC games "close-to unplayable"
http://www.pcgamesn.com/windows-81-mouse-lag-reportedly-renders-some-pc-games-close-unplayable
Brazil is my favorite movie, and I will take your reference one step further to point out another scary thing that people tend miss on their first few viewings: there are no terrorists in the film, only routinely failing infrastructure, and the oblivious bureaucracy that places the blame on terrorism.
For completeness, I should say that Harry Tuttle does engineer one small disaster out of spite, but in general his M.O. is to go around fixing things without filing paperwork, and Sam Lowry sabotages the pneumatic tubes in his new office, but it's not suggested that everyone is as fed up as they are and therefor actively revolting against the system. The SWAT-style police entry and arrest of Buttle is also very destructive, as they fail to repair the damage, and then neglect it.
The real world does have actual terrorists, but they are similarly less threatening than our government and police and infrastructure.
Fast Company published this article about GE's Durham, NC jet engine factory: http://www.fastcompany.com/37815/engines-democracy
The plant opened in 1993 and is still running. The factory had 1 boss and 170 employees in 1999 when the article was written.
It predates Valve but tells the same basic story: doing a very hard thing in surprisingly smart ways with extraordinary people yields success. GE Durham also delivers on schedule, but they're engineering and manufacturing, not making creative entertainment on Valve time.
EA: "We are making all our future games worse."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sketchpad
> You want to get up and switch out the cartridge every time you wish to play another game?
I'd love to be able to plug in 10 cartridges and leave them there instead of swapping media.
Sound may be a better analogy than you realize. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vibration_theory_of_olfaction
You can't go home again.
Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, by Steven Levy.
The Invisible Gorilla: And Other Ways Our Intuitions Deceive Us, by Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons.
Blindsight, by Peter Watts.