Holy Cow: Dubai Police Have a Freaking Hoverbike

Remember how Dubai’s police department uses a fleet of supercars as their cruisers? Now the flashy force has added another head-turning vehicle: A Scorpion 3 hoverbike built by Russian company Hoversurf . According to Autoblog , …The police force aims to deploy its latest toy as a first-responder vehicle in hard-to-reach places, such as the middle of a traffic jam. Conveyed to a staging point, the Scorpion’s 660-pound cargo capacity could carry an officer to a choke-point scene with aid before a Mercedes G-wagen or Bugatti Veyron could get through. The hoverbike also does standard drone duty with a range of up to six kilometers. I’d love to see these here in New York City. Alas, this is the NYPD’s latest vehicle.

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Holy Cow: Dubai Police Have a Freaking Hoverbike

The U.S. vs. Japan Giant Robot Duel Finally Happened, and These Guys Aren’t Messing Around

We’ve been waiting for this international giant robot fight since 2015 , and this month it finally happened. To refresh your memory, American robotics firm MegaBots challenged Japan’s Suidobashi Heavy Industries to a mecha-vs.-mecha fight, the challenge was accepted, and trash-talking ensued. To be honest, I was a little worried that this duel was going to suck. I figured there’s no way these guys would actually deploy giant chainsaw swords and fire projectiles that could do any kind of actual damage, and I also thought that a concern for safety would limit the fighting tactics they’d use. I was wrong. These guys aren’t messing around. And during the two duels, the fear of the pilots inside the cockpits is palpable. I don’t want to spoil anything, and I’ve cut the video into the two duels. Here’s the first, which is practically over before it begins: Here’s the second, which is filled with some surprises and OH SHIT moments: I eagerly await the rematch!

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The U.S. vs. Japan Giant Robot Duel Finally Happened, and These Guys Aren’t Messing Around

Air Force General: “We’d be dumb not to” fly on SpaceX’s reusable rockets

Enlarge / SpaceX launches the Air Force’s X-38B space plane in September, 2017. (credit: SpaceX) The increasingly warm relationship between the US Air Force and the rocket company SpaceX appears to be approaching full-on bromance levels. The latest words of lavish praise for SpaceX have come from Gen. John W. Raymond, commander of Air Force Space Command, which oversees launch operations for the US military and national security sectors. In an interview with Bloomberg, Raymond said the potential savings from reusable rockets like the Falcon 9 booster now being flown and reflown by SpaceX are irresistible. “The market’s going to go that way. We’d be dumb not to,” he said. “What we have to do is make sure we do it smartly.” It would be “absolutely foolish” to not begin using them, Raymond said. Before the military can fly its satellites and other payloads on a previously flown booster, the US military has to certify that SpaceX’s “flight proven” boosters are reliable enough. That process already appears to be underway. “I don’t know how far down the road we’ve gotten, but I am completely committed to launching on a reused rocket, a previously flown rocket, and making sure that we have the processes in place to be able to make sure that we can do that safely,” Raymond told Bloomberg. Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Air Force General: “We’d be dumb not to” fly on SpaceX’s reusable rockets

Researchers craft an LED just two atoms thick

Enlarge / Hexagonal boron nitride, one of the materials used here. (credit: Wikimedia Commons ) Modern computers are, in many ways, limited by their energy consumption and cooling requirements. Some of that comes from the process of performing calculations. But often, the majority of energy use comes from simply getting data to the point where calculations are ready to be performed. Memory, storage, data transfer systems, and more all create power draws that, collectively, typically end up using more power than the processor itself. Light-based communications offers the possibility of dropping power consumption while boosting the speed of connections. In most cases, designs have focused on situations where a single external laser supplies the light, which is divided and sent to the parts of the system that need it. But a new paper in Nature Nanotechnology suggests an alternate possibility: individual light sources on the chip itself. To demonstrate this possibility, the team put together an LED just two atoms thick  and integrated it with a silicon chip. Better still, the same material can act as a photodetector, providing a way of building all the needed hardware using a single process. Atomic The work relied on two different atomically thin materials. These materials consist of a planar sheet of atoms chemically linked to each other. While their study was pioneered using graphene, a sheet of carbon atoms, they developed a variety of other materials with similar structures. The materials being used here are molybdenum ditelluride (MoTe 2 ), a semiconductor, and hexagonal boron nitride. Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Researchers craft an LED just two atoms thick

21 years later, original developer works to fix 16-bit Sonic

The announcement video for Jon Burt’s Sonic 3D Blast: Director’s Cut At this point, retro-game lovers are well used to fan-made “hacks” of classic titles that can do anything from adding modern players to Tecmo Bowl to adding an egg-throwing Yoshi to Sonic the Hedgehog 2 . What we can’t recall seeing before, though, is the original developer of a decades-old console game returning to fix it via a downloadable, emulator-friendly patch. That’s exactly what Traveller’s Tales founder Jon Burton is planning for Sonic 3D Blast . Burton announced via video that he’s going to make a “Director’s Cut” that fixes gameplay problems and adds new features to the original Genesis and Saturn title. Burton’s roadmap includes fixing the game’s infamous slippery momentum (which often makes Sonic feel like he’s running around on ice), enabling a pre-existing hidden-level editor, adding Super Sonic, adding an in-game save system, and more. A follow-up video shows more specifically how Burton is removing many of the control and gameplay frustrations that helped lead to middling reviews for the 1996 release (and subsequent ports to more modern platforms). Burt notes explicitly that this is “something I’m doing on my own time, for fun, and not connected to Sega or anyone else,” so it’s hard to call this an “official” remastering of the original game. That said, Burton’s history with the title and his pedigree with Traveller’s Tales set this effort apart from other unofficial retro-game mods. And Sega’s wholesale embrace of 16-bit game modding via Steam is practically a stamp of support for this kind of modern rejiggering of classic titles. Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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21 years later, original developer works to fix 16-bit Sonic

In 3-1 vote, LA Police Commission approves drones for LAPD

Enlarge (credit: Peter Linehan / Flickr ) The Los Angeles Police Department, one of the nation’s largest municipal police forces, approved a one-year pilot program for drones—making it the largest city in the nation to undertake such an evaluation. According to the Los Angeles Times , the LA Police Commission approved a set of policies that limits “their use to a handful of tactical situations, searches or natural disasters.” Each drone flight must also be signed off by a “high-ranking office on a case-by-case basis.” The drones are also not to be weaponized. The decision, which was announced Tuesday, was made despite vociferous protest. Already the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department uses drones, as do other agencies in California , including the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department and the Alameda County Sheriff’s Organization. Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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In 3-1 vote, LA Police Commission approves drones for LAPD

‘Drive’ director debuts free streaming service for forgotten movies

Love him or hate him, you can’t deny that Drive and Neon Demon director Nicholas Winding Refn has an astute eye for style in his movies. He’s taking that and launching his own streaming service , dubbed “byNWR.” It’s different from Netflix in that its offerings will be tightly curated by Refn and others. Oh, and it’ll be free. The service describes itself as “an unadulterated expressway for the arts, ” and beta sign-ups are live right now. Per Indiewire , the website further states that “byNWR shares Nicholas WInding Refn’s passion for the rare, the forgotten and the unknown, breathing new life into the culturally intriguing and influential.” Each month will feature a different restored movie (thanks in part to Harvard Film Archive) that fits into a theme that’ll change every quarter. When it launches next February the theme will be “Regional Renegades: Exploitation Gems from the Southern USA, ” and the second will be “Restored and Rediscovered Classics of American Independent Cinema.” Vodzilla elaborates that the website will also offer essays, music and photos in addition to streaming video. Sounds a bit like what Apple wanted to do with Music at first . Want to watch the movies somewhere other than your computer? Apparently there will also be screenings for the restored films as well at select theaters across the globe. byNWR is one of the more niche streaming services we’ve come across, but if you’re a fan of obscure movies from Hollywood’s past, it might be your best place to watch them — all it’s missing is an app. Via: Vodzilla Source: byNWR

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‘Drive’ director debuts free streaming service for forgotten movies