You can play 2,400 classic DOS games in your web browser

If you’re a PC gamer of a certain age (cough), you’ve probably lamented that many of the titles you played as a kid are hard to use on modern systems without downloading emulators or waiting for special re-releases . Well, it just got a lot easier to relive your gaming glory days. The Internet Archive’s growing collection of web-based retro games now includes roughly 2, 400 MS-DOS classics — you can now play cult hits like Gods or Tongue of the Fatman in your browser. This won’t quite recreate the experience of sitting at the family computer, of course. The project’s Jason Scott warns that you can’t save your progress on the web, and that some games could still “fall over and die” despite attempts to include only those programs that are likely to work properly. But look at it this way: even half-functional web emulation could prevent a much-loved game from fading into obscurity. Filed under: Gaming , Internet , Software Comments Via: ASCII Source: Internet Archive

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You can play 2,400 classic DOS games in your web browser

Mercedes-Benz unveils its vision of a self-driving car

Mercedes-Benz is far from the first automaker to experiment with self-driving cars , but it’s making up for that in style at CES. Meet the F015 Luxury in Motion, a concept car designed from the ground up for robotic transportation. Passengers sit face to face so they can talk more, and anyone can control the car through a remote unit. The vehicle even has a color-coded LED lights on the front and back to let you know what the car is thinking. It can tell you whether or not it’s in autonomous mode or let pedestrians know when it’s safe to cross. Developing… Filed under: Transportation Comments

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Mercedes-Benz unveils its vision of a self-driving car

Sony’s head-mounting display will turn spectacles into smart glasses

It’s no secret that Sony’s been working on a sort of Google Glass analog, but the fact that the company’s also got a bolt-on display that can (ideally) turn any pair of glasses into a savvy wearable is nothing short of impressive. After Sony wrapped up this year’s CES press conference, we got the chance to yank a pair out of some poor spokesperson’s hands and strap them on for ourselves. Long story short: Sony just might have a winner on its hands. Here’s the thing you have to remember: This isn’t the first time Sony’s tried to dangle a teensy display in front of your eye. Unlike the company’s own SmartGlasses (which exist as a discrete set of frames), the Attach! lives on as a separate unit attaches to any pair of compatible glasses. At least during those early days post-launch, the selection of frames that’ll play nice will be pretty limited as the physical connector on these prototype units are… unique to say the least. It’s a wide, peculiarly shaped gap that the Attach! fits into, and it just seems awfully unlikely that a Luxottica would ever embrace such a peculiar style. A Sony spokesperson said, though, that the final model will support a whole host of mounting methods, including truly mundane solutions like adhesive. Anyway, let’s talk about wearing the thing! Just like Google Glass, a tiny prism sits in front of your right eye and it acts as what Sony calls an OLED microdisplay. Once you get used to it appearing and disappearing from view while your eyes focus on other things, the semi-persistent image is bright, vivd and crisp, even if it isn’t immediately obvious how you’re supposed to interact with what you see. Most of the demo scenarios Sony dreamed up involve sports in one way or another — one visualized a path that wound through a series of Japanese mountains while others highlighted the imaginary route of a golf ball as it hooked down toward the final green at Augusta. Sony’s clearly gunning to imbue the thing with some sports savvy, but surely it wouldn’t be that hard to broaden the Attach’s skillset to cater to we mostly immobile bespectacled types. Still, the prototype frames seemed almost too light and insubstantial — I wouldn’t be surprised if they were 3D printed. It’s a shame that we don’t know how much the SmartGlasses Attach! will cost, nor when it’ll make the leap from show floor trinket to honest-to-goodness product. Sony’s going to court mostly developers for at least a little while after launch though, so maybe we’re looking at more than a smart pair of sport goggles after all. Filed under: Wearables , Sony Comments

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Sony’s head-mounting display will turn spectacles into smart glasses

Volkswagen’s connected cars have three displays and park themselves

Volkswagen’s wading into the connected car space in a few different ways including more autonomous driving . First up is Golf R Touch hatchback. It’s sporting three displays on the dashboard, with two being touchscreens. A positively massive 12.8-inch main console rests above an 8-inch control center on the dash, while a 12.3-inch instrument cluster — likely trickle-down from subsidiary Audi — resides behind the steering wheel. The screens are all high-res ( Slashgear reports the main screen is running at 2, 560 x 1, 700) and were designed to eliminate distractions and maximize customization. How’s that? The stage demo included camera-based gesture control and drag-and-drop movement of key functions that looked pretty simple. There’s a touch-strip below the main screen that tracks tactile input (and offers haptic feedback) for things like adjusting the radio volume as well. Here’s to hoping the advancements help improve muscle memory and look-free adjustment seeing as all mechanical knobs’ve been killed. Furthering that is the 8-inch control screen’s system for touch feedback for media and climate control systems. Of course, the Golf R is just a concept at this point so it isn’t clear if or when we’ll see these systems make it into production. Next we have the automaker’s coming vision of its assisted parking system. Trained Parking works using cameras to, well, train itself to how you park and your common maneuvers, and the company claims that eventually the car could put itself on an inductive charging plate. The more immediate plan though, is to allow the driver to control parking maneuvers via smartphone, sort of like Tesla’s solution . And speaking of phones, Volkswagen’s new App Connect platform brings in both Android Auto and Apple’s CarPlay system’s for in-car control of your smartphone. Unlike the rest of today’s announcements, this lattermost one his a release window: before the end of the year. Edgar Alvarez contributed to this report Filed under: Cellphones , Transportation Comments Via: Slashgear (1) , (2) Source: Volkswagen

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Volkswagen’s connected cars have three displays and park themselves

Origin slims down its chunkiest gaming laptops

If you’d waved a tape measure at Origin’s brawny EOS-17X gaming laptop last year, your fingers would fall at the 2.15-inch mark. Sufficiently shamed by that statistic, the company has put the hardware on a diet, slimming down the hardware to a much more svelte 1.52 inches. Of course, that’s not the only change, since Origin has also upgraded the internals to include Intel’s Z97 chipset, and also offers the ability to overclock the hardware. Naturally, build-to-order options are the standard here, with both the 15.6-inch EON-15X and the 17.3-inch EON-17X capable of supporting an Intel Core i7-4790K, up to 32GB RAM and NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 980M with 8GB RAM. You’ll also be able to cram in 4TB of storage, split among M.2 SATA, SSD or traditional HDD options, not to mention the ability to hook up an external 4K display. At the same time, the company is also whipping out a refreshed EON15-S , a (comparatively) super-slim unit that’s just 1.13 inches thick and weighs in at 5.5 pounds, a drop of around 36 percent compared to the previous generation. In addition to the 15.6-inch HD display, the unit comes with a Core i7-4720HQ processor and a GeForce GTX 980M with 4GB RAM. You’ll be able to order all of the units from today, with prices entirely contingent on what specs you need for your next LAN party. Comments Source: Origin PC

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Origin slims down its chunkiest gaming laptops

This power pack can charge your iPhone 6 in 15 minutes

We lamented the iPhone 6’s battery in our review, but the folks at ibattz have a solution for when Apple’s handset loses juice when you need it most. The company says its ASAP Charger’s 20-volt, 2 amp power pack can fully charge an iPhone 6 within 15 minutes . Think about it this way: that’s less time than it’d take to watch an episode of 30 Rock on Netflix . Your typical 5-volt, 1 amp charger, on the other hand, needs an hour or more to do the same task. The ASAP comes in 5, 600mAh and 11, 200mAh sizes, but, s adly, there isn’t pricing or availability information just yet. Blerg, indeed. Filed under: Cellphones , Peripherals , Mobile Comments

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This power pack can charge your iPhone 6 in 15 minutes

The iRig 2 wants to replace your guitar pedal board with a phone

IK Multimedia has been cranking out new versions of its iRig guitar adapter for phones and tablets for nearly four years . And at CES 2015, there’s yet another update. The iRig 2 still allows you to connect that axe to an iOS, Mac or Android device, but this time around, there’s a 1/4-inch output jack, so you can use the company’s mobile apps (like AmpliTube) alongside an amp with ease. It also means that, if you so choose, you could make that mobile device part of an effects loop, or replace it entirely. Sure, the sound of individual pedals is hard to beat, but this setup aims for connivence. There’s also a headphone jack to keep from annoying bandmates, and while the on-board gain control returns, a new toggle switch will bypass the connected mobile device entirely. If you’re considering giving it a go, the accessory will be available during the first quarter of 2015 for $39.99/€29.99. Filed under: Misc , Peripherals Comments Source: IK Multimedia

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The iRig 2 wants to replace your guitar pedal board with a phone

Audi’s self-driving car is traveling 550 miles to Las Vegas

Audi is confident that its self-driving car technology is ready for prime time — so confident, in fact, that it’s about to give the platform a very public long-distance test. An A7 Sportback with the mostly autonomous hardware is traveling 550 miles from Stanford, California to CES in Las Vegas, with trained members of the press taking turns behind the wheel. Not that they’ll be doing much. The A7’s cameras, lasers and radar will let it control highway driving so long as it’s under 70MPH, and it’ll only hand over the reins in “city environments” and other situations where it reaches its limits. This is a marketing stunt, to be sure, but it could show that autopilot systems are capable of taking over during long, monotonous trips. Your pilot to #CES today is “Jack, ” an Audi A7 built with the latest automated driving technology. #DrivingNotDriving #Vegas A video posted by Audi (@audi) on Jan 1, 2015 at 9:46am PST Filed under: Transportation Comments Source: Audi USA

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Audi’s self-driving car is traveling 550 miles to Las Vegas

Samsung’s first portable SSD packs fast storage for relatively little cash

You don’t exactly have a ton of options when it comes to portable solid-state drives. You can get fast performance or high capacity at a halfway affordable price, but rarely both. Samsung thinks it can strike that tricky balance with its first-ever external option, the Portable SSD T1. The USB 3.0 storage is based on the same speedy-yet-cheap V-NAND chips as the 850 EVO drive you might buy for your gaming PC, letting it hold a large chunk of your files without devastating your wallet or slowing down — it reads and writes at 450 MB/s, or just about desktop-level speeds. The line starts off modestly with a 250GB drive that costs $180, but you can opt for 500GB ($300) or 1TB ($600) if you have a lot of games or movies to carry around. That’s still expensive compared to spinning hard disks, but it’s a relative steal for the performance. Look for the T1 to hit US stores around mid-January. Filed under: Storage , Samsung Comments Source: Samsung

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Samsung’s first portable SSD packs fast storage for relatively little cash

YouTube is almost ready to take your 360-degree videos

Did you recently grab a 360-degree camera like the Bublcam or Ricoh Theta ? You’ll have an easy way to show off your all-encompassing footage very shortly. A YouTube spokesperson has confirmed to both Engadget and Gizmodo that its service will be adding support for 360-degree videos in the “coming weeks.” It’s not clear what the technical limitations are, but the update will undoubtedly require a way to pan around those videos — this isn’t simply a matter of raising the ceiling on file sizes. However it works, you can expect to see a lot of immersive online cinema in the near future. Filed under: Home Entertainment , Internet , HD , Google Comments Source: Gizmodo

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YouTube is almost ready to take your 360-degree videos