Bungie’s first real shooter hit, Marathon, has been released on Steam for modern hardware as Classic Marathon, a fan-led port that has Bungie’s blessing to release. Classic Marathon is completely free, letting you have the rare experience of playing a classic game not only easily but with zero time spent hunting down an old copy and fighting with compatibility.
Marathon is a sci-fi FPS where your character is in charge of fighting alien forces that have boarded a human colony ship in the distant Tau Ceti system. Your job is to defend the ship and the crow of the Marathon, but discord among the artificial intelligences that run the ship and factionalism among the alien attackers become the key points of the plot.
Having a plot at all was a pretty big new thing for first-perso…
ดอร์ทมุนด์ โดน โบคุ่ม บุกนำก่อน 2-0 โดยประตูที่สองเป็นความผิดพลาดของ เกรกอร์ โคเบล ที่ออกบอลช้าจนโดนบีบเสียบอล และเสียประตู แต่ทัพ “เสือเหลือง” เร่งเครื่องรัวยิงคืนแซงชนะไปได้ 4-2 ในศึกบุนเดสลีกา เมื่อวันศุกร์ที่ผ่านมา
คำพูดจาก สล็อตเว็บตรง
โคเบล กล�…
ดั๊ก พีเดอร์สัน หัวหน้าโค้ช แจ็คสันวิลล์ จากัวร์ส ยอมรับว่าผิดหวังมากกับผลงานของลูกทีม หลังการปราชัยต่อ บัฟฟาโล่ บิลล์ส แบบยับเยิน 10-47 ในเกมมันเดย์ไนท์ พร้อมเน้นย้ำว่าทีมเสือดาวต้องแก้ไขปัญหาอย่างเร่งด่วน ตามรายงานจากเอ็นเอฟแอลเน็ตเวิร์ค
จากัวร์ส ปล่อยให้ บิลล์ส ทำคะแนนต�…
The Epic Games Store has kicked off its 2023 Holiday Sale, and once again the free games are back—17 of them in all, beginning today with Destiny 2: Legacy Collection, a bundle of the Witch Queen, Beyond Light, and Shadowkeep expansions for Destiny 2.
Destiny 2 is free as a normal thing, by the way, so it’s a whole lot of Destiny for a whole lot of nothing.
The freebies are always the big attraction in the Epic Store’s Holiday Sale, but Epic is also bringing back its reusable coupons, and as it did in the previous Black Friday sale, the discount amount is being bumped to 33% off eligible purchases—that means games, but not DLC, in-game items, or currency. Everyone gets the coupon automatically, and it automatically renews each time it’s used, effectively making i…
The House of Lords communications and digital committee met today with Rob Sherman, VP of policy and deputy chief privacy officer for Meta, and Owen Larter, the director of global responsible AI public policy at Microsoft, to discuss large language models and some of the wider implications of AI. In a far-ranging discussion in which many words were said and not a lot of actual information conveyed, one particular tidbit caught our attention.
When asked directly by the chair of the committee, Baroness Stowell of Beeston, as to whether either company was capable of recalling an AI model if it had been “identified as unsafe,” or stopping it being deployed any further and how that might work, Rob Sherman gave a somewhat rambling response:
“I think it depends on what the technolo…
One of the joys of playing a city builder is peering down at the little people on your screen and watching what they’re doing. Manor Lords is no exception—it’s fun to sit back and observe your little 14th century peasants working in the fields, constructing buildings, and lugging resources from here to there as they go about their daily lives.
With a million Manor Lords players now closely watching the comings and goings of their villagers, one peasant’s name keeps coming up because, well, it’s kinda funny:
Cuntz.
That’s right, a villager named Cuntz has already become a minor celebrity since Manor Lords launched into early access a few days ago. Check your own village and you’ll probably find one, and since names are distributed randomly among your peasants, you…
Tim Schafer, founder of Double Fine Productions and the mind behind games such as Psychonauts, Brutal Legend and Grim Fandango, spoke on AI during an interview with Twitch streamer Cressup earlier this week.
Cressup asked Schafer: “I’m interested as a writer, what are your thoughts on AI and the games industry. Are you worried? Is it a tool you can ever see yourself using?” to which he replied that while he was impressed by the tech, the result left a lot to be desired.
“I [honestly] can’t figure out how they do it, I’ve had it explained to me, I know about machine learning and [neural networks],” he said. “I still can’t believe they’re outputting this writing that looks like human writing. So it’s really impressive on that level.” However, Schafer goes on to say that …
The flagship graphics cards of recent generations have been trending upwards in maximum power consumption. The RTX 4090 can pull more than 450W, the RTX 3090 Ti could do the same, while AMD’s RX 7900 XTX is rated for 355W. Factory overclocked models are typically a bit higher than that. But those are rookie numbers. It’s been reported that Nvidia’s next generation GB200 AI accelerator can pull up to 1,000W.
The source of the 1,000W claim is a statement made by Dell COO Jeffrey Clarke during Dell’s Q4 2024 earnings call (via The Register). He’s as likely to be in the know as anyone, so this 1,000W claim is no mere rumor.
Clarke’s actual quote is “Our characterization in the thermal side, you really don’t need direct liquid cooling to get to the energy density of 1,000 w…
Not content with accelerating graphics performance with AI via its various DLSS technologies and in designing GPUs themselves, Nvidia is now using AI to improve graphics drivers and further boost performance by up to 30%. Well, that’s the latest rumour.
According to CapFrameX (via OC3D), maker of frame time analysis tools, Nvidia is working on AI-enhanced graphics drivers. Performance boosts of up to 30% are mooted, with the average performance benefit a more modest 10%.
CapFrameX reckons we could see the new AI-enhanced driver in the first quarter of this year. If accurate, there’s not long to wait.
Of course, the very notion of what even constitutes AI. An actual machine learning technique? A really good algorithm? A coffee machine that turns on automatically? There …
Sim Wong Hoo, who founded Sound Blaster producer Creative Technology in 1981 and remained at its head ever since, has died. A statement released by the company said Sim “passed away peacefully” on January 4.
Creative Technology—known as Creative Labs in North America—was a groundbreaking player in the early days of PC gaming thanks to its long-running series of audio cards. After initially launching as the Creative Music System in 1987, the famous Sound Blaster line debuted in 1989, and quickly took over the market: Ad Lib, which prior to the arrival of Sound Blaster cards was the effective standard for PC gaming audio, lost so much ground so quickly that it was forced to file for bankruptcy in 1992.
The Sound Blaster series evolved through multiple generations a…