Sunday, 21 July 2013

Civilization V: Brave New World Review

Civilization is like a cousin to me. It has been there as long as I can remember and, for every great memory I have of us spending hours together, there are just as many where we didn’t speak for lengthy periods. There was also that time I nearly failed my A levels during a particular Civ 4 addiction, something I won’t forgive Sid Meier for any time soon. Civilization 5 wasn’t the same though, shedding many of the series’ deeper mechanics in favour of simplifying the formula.
Regardless of your opinion on this, the Brave New World expansion restores much of the depth the series had lost in Civ 5, whilst simultaneously retaining a simplicity and elegance that can only come from the most masterful of gameplay designs.
civilization 5 3
Lets get the mediocre stuff out of the way first. As all expansion packs love to throw numbers around, much of the media surrounding Brave New World discusses its new civilizations. There are nine in total, with two coming from the series’ past (albeit with alternate leaders) and the seven never before seen civilizations to control.
The first big change comes in the way culture is handled. You still manage culture as before but, rather than merely unlocking all policies to gain a cultural victory, the culture win conditions now rely much more on responding to what your opponents are doing.
They’re decent enough but, by the game’s very focus on creating a level field between all players, none of the new civs are particularly revolutionary. There are also eight new wonders, but these too do much the same thing as all other wonders in Civ 5. That’s not what Brave New World is about though, with the many effective gameplay tweaks eclipsing the standard additions.
The first big change comes in the way culture is handled. You still manage culture as before but, rather than merely unlocking all policies to gain a cultural victory, the culture win conditions now rely much more on responding to what your opponents are doing. It’s all wrapped around the great people and works mechanic, with famous art, literature and music generated in your civilization gaining you tourism. These tourism points accrue over time, acting as your offensive score in the culture battle.
As your tourism spreads to other nations, they use their culture scores to defend against your influence. If your tourism score is higher than a nations culture, they fall under your influence and, if you can do this to all the nations, you win. It becomes a more satisfying game of cat and mouse than the previous method, but it never becomes complex to the point of overwhelming the other game mechanics or victory conditions.
civ 5 brave new world
All this culture hasn’t stunted the growth of the more pragmatic elements of the game. Particularly when large armies get involved or politics start getting complicated, money talks. With this in mind, the introduction of trade routes allows for reliable incomes that change the pace of the game. Building caravans or trade ships allows your nation to establish a trade route with another city or city state within range.
For those worried it may become a bit of a grind pursuing the culture or economy method, Firaxis have added some new gameplay elements to mix things up in the late game.
This route supplies both parties with a differing boost to gold and science. Balancing out helping yourself and inadvertently helping your opponents adds a tactical depth to these trade units, and the extra gold you can acquire allows for some interesting diplomatic strategies. It also helps a losing Civ to play catch up, even when it comes to city development. Whilst you can use your gold to auto-build, you can set trade routes between your own cities to speed up their growth or production. Trade routes are simple, versatile and improve the economic side of the game to no end.
For those worried it may become a bit of a grind pursuing the culture or economy method, Firaxis have added some new gameplay elements to mix things up in the late game. Once a player has discovered all other civilizations in the game or builds the World Congress, they become the hosts for the World Congress, holding regular meetings to decide on global policies.
These are effectively global game rules changes that all players must suggest and vote on. Some may be used to help you, like voting for arts fairs that increase the production of culture, great artists and, as a result, tourism. Others are strictly to irritate and hinder others. You can vote for (or against) the right to prevent all trade with another civilization for instance, or raise the price of unit maintenance to harm those players who just spam large armies.
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This makes for a decidedly tactical shift in the latter parts of each game, made all the more significant through how you earn delegates. You get more followers if you’re the leader of the World Congress but, if not, you need to grind for new delegates by keeping the neutral city states on good terms with your nation. You can, of course, do so through having spies infiltrate the city states to rig elections. In fact, all of the mechanics from the original expansion are back as well, making Brave New World an even more decisive upgrade if you didn’t get the previous expansion.
It’s a glorious thing, a deepening and enrichment of mechanics without the usual cost to simplicity.
With the cultural and political gameplay additions alongside tweaks to espionage, Brave New World completely revolutionises the vanilla Civ 5 experience. This does raise an issue though as, having made previous expansion almost entirely pointless for those who didn’t have it already, will the next expansion also include all the content found in Brave New World? Here’s hoping your £20 isn’t spent in vain. Though £20 may seem steep in our current climate of cheap DLC, Brave New World adds enough significant new content to justify its price immensely, even if a later expansion will render it obsolete.
Just like any family member, Civ and I had a falling out. In 2010 my fond relative changed its attitude in an attempt to fit in and, in doing so, lost a part of its personality I found so endearing. No fights last forever though and, now that Brave New World has come along, Civ has dropped the act, returning to my life as its old self. It’s a glorious thing, a deepening and enrichment of mechanics without the usual cost to simplicity.
Expansion packs used to be a big commitment for PC titles, often complicating mechanics to the point of obscurity unless you really knew the original game. Brave New World is not one of these expansions. Far from shutting out those drawn in by Civ 5′s accessibility, BNW’s added depth arguably makes for an even more refined Civilization experience. It is the definitive Civ release to date, and should be considered essential for all fans of the series.
This game was reviewed on PC.

THE GOOD

Includes all updates from the previous expansion, Retains the accessibility of Civ 5, Restores lost mechanics from previous Civ games, New culture balances are satisfying, Fantastic additions to the diplomatic and economic systems

THE BAD

May become obsolete in future expansions, New civilizations and technologies aren't ground-breaking

Intel Bay Trail CPU benchmarked again, sets new records while being clocked at 1.4 GHz

It’s the second benchmark score of the highly anticipated and much debated Intel Bay Trail platform. You know, the SoC that “squashed ARM-based processors like an insignificant bug” not long ago.
Intel_bay_Trail
Back then, the Bay Trail CPU that powered Intel’s FFRD (Form Factor Reference Design) was clocked at a modest 1.1 GHz. This time, the clocking speed reaches a faster 1.4 GHz, and, as such, the total score is even more impressive – close to 50,000 points.
Let’s see, was there ever a mobile device to have its performance measured higher? There was, the Xiaomi Mi3, which topped the charts at over 80,000 points back in May, but that turned out to be a fabricated benchmark.
Meanwhile, ARM-powered champions like the Galaxy S4 LTE-A or Sony Xperia Z Ultra, both packing Snapdragon 800 heat, have been seen choking around the 30,000 mark. As for the octa-core Galaxy Note 3, that does perform a little better, but the keyword there is “little”.
AnTuTu_Intel_BayTrail
And to think the quad-core Silvermont-based Intel Bay Trail platform is theoretically capable of running at speeds of up to 2.1 GHz. Can you imagine what kind of scores the CPU would reach at that velocity? Mind = blown, huh?
Before getting too ahead of yourselves though, I see myself obligated to remind you Bay Trail chips are unlikely to go inside smartphones and will instead power only tablets, hybrids and whatnot. Plus, one has to take into consideration the recent accusations of Intel’s AnTuTu cheating.
I personally don’t buy those, but they do cast a small shadow of doubt over this apparently incredible performance gap between Bay Trail and Snapdragon 800 or Nvidia Tegra 4 CPUs. What do you guys think, could Bay Trail end products actually be so powerful compared with their competition or is this all an incredibly complex hoax?

Paypal makes a man a quadrillionare, for a moment

A Paypal error made a Pennsylvania man the richest person on the planet, giving him more money than the entire world’s money supply.
paypal-balla
If only for a moment Pennsylvanian Chris Reynolds was the richest person alive.
When Reynolds opened his Paypal account statement one morning, to his shock he had been credited $92,233,720,368,547,800. That’s 92 quadrillion dollars.
In contrast the world’s richest man, Mexican telecom mogul Carlos Slim, has a net worth of $73 billion. Bill Gates comes in second place with a net worth of $67 billion. Reynolds would have been more than a million times richer than either of these men.
In fact, Reynolds would have more money to his name than the entire world’s money supply. The Federal Reserve estimates the world’s M3 money supply to be $10.3 trillion, and on paper Reynolds had more than that.
According to a local paper in Reynolds’ hometown, Reynolds uses Paypal to sell auto parts online. He was expecting a balance of $0 in the account.
Speaking to the Daily News Reynolds said that if the statement was true he’d pay down the debt and go on a shopping spree.
“I’m a very responsible guy,” he said. “I would pay the national debt down first. Then I would buy the Phillies, if I could get a great price.”
Reynolds said that after the amount on the account was fixed he got another notice from Paypal, asking him to verify the credit card number attached to the account.
“Even though I have 90 quadrillion dollars, they still don’t trust me,” he said.
Paypal admitted to the error, but won’t discuss the details of what happened citing client privacy.
Source: Daily News

ICANN approves new top level domains

ICANN rules to allow the first non-English top level domains, while rejecting Amazon’s request for .Amazon
icannlogo
Arabic, Chinese and Russian speakers now have a few top level domains in their own language thanks to a ruling coming out of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers’ (ICANN) meeting in Durban, South Africa this week.
ICANN says that this will  ”mark the first time that people will be able to access and type in a website address for generic Top-Level Domains in their native language.”
The approved domains are as follows:
  • .شبكة (Arabic for “Web”)
  • .游戏 (Chinese for “Game”)
  • .онлайн (Russian for “Online”)
  • .сайт (Russian for “Web site”)
At the meeting ICANN also rejected Amazon’s bid for its own .Amazon top level domain because of objections from Latin American countries on the Amazon river.
Amazon is also seeking rights to over 80 domains including ones such as “.kindle,” “.wow” and “.book.”. ICANN has yet to rule on whether Amazon can have rights to these domains.


Read more: http://vr-zone.com/articles/icann-approves-new-top-level-domains/45896.html#ixzz2ZgLcwktY

Intel Core i7-4960X Ivy Bridge-E preview: Enhanced power efficiency ahoy

Tomshardware managed to score a next-generation Intel Core i7-4960X Ivy Bridge-E processor, and obviously put it through their usual battery of tests. Sadly, the results aren’t that impressive.
Core i7-4960X specifications
Intel’s next-generation Core i7-4960X Ivy Bridge-E processor doesn’t exactly deliver next-generation performance. In fact, anyone looking for a massive performance boost will go be sobbing in their beds tonight out of disappointment. For them, wait for Intel’s Haswell-E which promises to bring 8 cores (16 threads) processors for desktops (finally, Intel will move past the number 6 for desktops).
Ivy Bride-E is simply an updated Sandy Bridge-E 2012 core. The memory controller gets a boost and now officially supports 1866 MHz DDR3 RAM. Also, IB-E is built using the 22nm 3D tri-gate manufacturing process, although that doesn’t lead to Intel enabling the two additional cores for consumer desktop SKUs of the processor. Overclocking should yield better results, with the multiplier max bumped up to 63x, from 57x in Sandy Bride-E. Apart from that, you get the same 6 core-12 thread configuration, 15 MB L3 cache, LGA 2011 socket and a 130W TDP. It is that last aspect which really shows an improvement over previous generation LGA 2011 processors.
Intel Core i7-4960X Ivy Bridge-E benchmarks (7)
The verdict? Ivy Bridge-E is a not-so-important upgrade for current Sandy Bridge-E owners. Those people who jumped ship with Haswell are probably cheering right  now. That being said, Intel’s improved Ivy Bridge-E does deliver a near 30% drop in power consumption even while performance goes about 5-8% higher. This one’s not for desktops, but boy is it going to be loved in the server space. Keep an eye out for Ivy Bridge-E based Xeon processors which should hit the server market within the next couple of months.
Credits: Tomshardware

the Linux-powered ink pen that can spell-check

German inventors combine spell-checking from modern word processors with old fountain-ink pens.
Lernstift learning pen spell check
In today’s world, most people do their writing with a keyboard, but for those of you who are forced to use pen & paper, or just prefer the feel of it, the Lernstift should come across as a very attractive gadget.
Created by a team of two Germans Falk Wolsky and Daniel Kaesmacher, the Lernstift – German for “learning pen” – uses motion sensors and intelligent software running on an embedded version of Linux to detect when you make a spelling mistake, and then vibrates to let you know about it.
lernstift writing ink pen spell check
They didn’t stop there, however, and ended up packing the Lernstift with some other amazing features to include:
  • Two writing modes. Orthography for recognizing spelling errors, and Calligraphy for “pointing out flaws of form and legibility”.
  • Uses machine learning algorithms to cater to your unique handwriting
  • Works with English and German. Support for more languages will be included later on.
  • Can wirelessly sync with third-party apps (that will work with their in-development open API) for digitization of hand-written documents, and collaborative work.
They have launched a campaign for Kickstarter, asking for a public funding of £120,000 in order to mass-produce and distribute the pen, after finishing work on the prototype shown above. For more details, see their original page from the link below.

Five Best Disk Image Tools

DAEMON Tools (Windows; Lite: Free, Pro: $100)

Five Best Disk Image Tools

Disk image emulator DAEMON Tools comes in several flavors, including Lite, Pro, and Pro Advanced, with each version building on the feature set of the last. The basic Lite version is quite a bargain with a free-as-in-beer price tag. You can back up disc images, mount up to 4 virtual drives simultaneously (additional drive mounting is one of the upgrade perks) get quick access to your virtual drives from the system tray, mount images directly from Windows Explorer, and interact with your disk image collection from the DAEMON tools desktop widget. DAEMON Tools supports both local and network mounting.

Alcohol 52% (Windows, $27)

Five Best Disk Image Tools

Alcohol 52% is the baby brother of Alcohol Soft's flagship product, Alcohol 120%. Theprinciple difference between the two: Alcohol 52% doesn't include any disc burning software. Alcohol 52% does, however, include Alcohol's excellent CD and DVD drive emulation tools. The app supports up to 31 simultaneous virtual drives, is optimized for speedy playback—making it a popular choice for playing games off virtual discs—and can emulate and read dozens of drive and image combinations. Alcohol 52% supports both local and network mounting.

Virtual CloneDrive (Windows, Free)

Five Best Disk Image Tools

Virtual CloneDrive (VCD) is a free offering from SlySoft, the company behind popular disc-related products such as AnyDVD and CloneDVD. VCD supports up to 8 simultaneous virtual drives and supports common image formats such as ISO, BIN, and CCD. Once installed VCD integrates with your Windows shell, so mounting an image file is as simple as double-clicking on the file. Virtual CloneDrive supports both local and network mounting.

PowerISO (Windows, $29.95)

Five Best Disk Image Tools

PowerISO goes beyond simply mounting and unmounting of your virtual drives. You can extract ISO files, make bootable ISO images (or examine and extract boot information from an existing bootable ISO), and even optimize your ISO file to save space while preserving its integrity. PowerISO includes Windows shell and context menu integration, ISO creation from physical discs, and conversion between image formats. It also supports both local and network mounting.

MagicISO (Windows, $29.95)

Five Best Disk Image Tools

MagicISO is a disk image tool with an emphasis on start-to-finish image manipulation. You can extract disk images from physical discs, convert between formats, and work within your disk image as though it were an active drive instead of a static image. MagicISO includes a disc burning tool with support for multi-boot images (you could, for example, put three Linux install images on one master DVD). MagicISO integrates with Windows Explorer for easy drag-and-drop file swapping between virtual discs and your physical drives. MagicISO supports both local and network mounting.

Google Play Books and All Access Music expand to 13 new countries

Google is finally taking the conquest of Europe more serious and has expanded the availability of its Play Books and All Access Music services to 13 new countries.
The latest ones to get access to to the Books and Music part of the Google Play Store are Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania and Sweden. Users in those countries now have access to millions of books and songs in the newly redesigned Play Store, which was launched a few days ago.
The newly added 13 countries now join Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Spain, Russia, United Kingdom and the United States to make a total of 27 countries that have access to the Google Play Store Books. Google Play Music is currently available in Australia, Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain, United States, and United Kingdom, in addition to the aforementioned list of countries.
Here’s hoping that Google continues to expand its presence in more and more countries.

DxO camera shootout puts Apple iPhone 5 against GoPro Hero3

The GoPro Hero3 action camera was launched about a year ago and has gained some serious traction among extreme sports enthusiasts. Combining a rugged build with some serious video capture credentials the Hero3 has got the attention of the folks from DxO Labs, who have done their set of scientific tests on it.
As a fun experiment they even decided to compare the action camera to that of the Apple’s iPhone 5 and see which one does better with stills and videos. The comparison looks appropriate considering the fact that the iPhone 5 is still one of the more capable smartphone shooters around.
In the above score chart you can see that when it comes to stills the iPhone 5 does better with exposure and contrast and produces more accurate colors than its rival. There are also less artifacts on the photos captured with the Apple smartphone, but also less detail and more noise,
When it comes to video, though, the GoPro Hero3 is the undisputed winner, dominating its rival in all but stabilization categories. It should be noted though that the Hero3 can capture high-speed videos, which appear less shaky visually even if they aren’t as stable.
You can find the complete review of the GoPro Hero3, including the full details of this shootout in the source link below.

Rumour: Lenovo will release a Quad-core, 1080P, 5 inch Windows Phone this year

WPDang claims to have sources which confirm Lenovo is set to release a very high end Windows Phone in H2 2013.
The handset, which may either have the code name Lenovo Aupres and Lenovo Snoopy (leaked by evLeaks) is said to have a Quad-core processor, 1080P screen which is either 4.7 inch or 5 inch, and will be priced at 3,000 yuan ($488) or less.
The handset will benefit from Lenovo’s distribution channels and will compete with the likes of the recently (intentionally) leaked Oppo Windows Phone.
Windows Phone 8 GDR3 is said to enable support for the higher screen resolution and more powerful processor, which will enable an extra row of live tiles on the home screen.
Lenovo is one of the biggest smartphone OEMs in China, and having the company on board will certainly be a great boost to Windows Phone.

Escapa for Windows Phone 8 and Windows 8

Classic EscapaChallenging levelLevel generator
Do you remember the classic browser game Escapa? Now this addictive minigame returns on the Windows Phone Store and Windows Store and is even more fun!The rules are extremely simple - place your finger on the screen and start escaping. The longer you can help the red rectangle avoid the blue enemies and borders of the level, the better! You will have to develop strategies, find safe paths and improve your speed to beat the high scores! Are you fast enough to win?
The game includes a level generator – enter any number and you will get a new level each time – imagine more than 4 billion different levels – every single one is original and challenging! You can also compete with others on-line – the game features real-time leaderboards, a level of the day feature and lists of top levels and now-played levels.
You can download the game here on the Windows Phone Store or here on the Windows Store. The game is free, advanced features can be purchased via an in-app purchase – currently with a time-limited offer for just $0.99 (Windows Phone) $1.49 (Windows 8).
Windows Phone 8Windows 8
Game features
  • Hundreds of hours of fun
  • Level generator
  • Play against other players
  • Your results are synchronized across all devices
  • Leaderboards of the best players, favorite levels and currently played levels
  • The Level of the Day function
  • Easy gameplay
  • Works on all displays and even in snapped mode (Windows 8)

iOS App Snap Fashion Lets Users Find Clothing By Snapping A Picture

fash3An iOS app just made finding that perfect outfit a little bit easier. An app from the UK called Snap Fashion allows users to snap a photo of a garment that they fancy, and then be told where to find the item. Some of Snap Fashion’s partners include Bloomingdales UK, Clarks, BANK, French Connection UK and the Gap.
Snap Fashion is available for free on the App Store, and scours 110 UK retailers to find a match for photographed items. Users begin by selecting which type of clothing they are snapping a picture of, and then taking the photo. The photo is then uploaded to Snap Fashion’s servers to match the item. Once a match is found, users will be shown where to find the item if it is in stock in a nearby store, as well as links to partners who carry the item. Users can also create wish lists and share purchases with friends.
If you’re tired of searching stores for hours trying to find that perfect piece of clothing, check out the Snap Fashion app for iOS.

Could this be the Ubuntu Edge smartphone

We expect to see the first Ubuntu OS-powered smartphone unveiled later in the year and in the meantime, Canonical is demoing its upcoming platform on a couple of Nexus devices, Nexus 4 and Nexus 10.
That could change soon as we think we may’ve caught the first “real” Ubuntu smartphone called Edge. Details are scarce at the moment but we tend to think this isn’t a device made by one of Ubuntu’s partners but rather a reference design handset compiled by Ubuntu’s engineers. Heck the image we’ve got looks like a mockup and I guess we’ll have to wait for few more weeks (hopefully not months) to get all the details.
One thing is clear – Ubuntu could change the industry big time, providing real convergence out of box with many apps running across multiple form factors, including phones, tablets and even computers. Can’t wait to try it out. ;)
[Via: Liliputing]

Rovio Account Lets Angry Birds Players Save And Sync Progress Across Devices, Coming To More Games Soon

I've been in this situation multiple times: a friend or family member gets their Android phone so bogged down with apps and extraneous files that I recommend a full device wipe. The first question they ask is not "Will I lose all my contact data?", nor is it "What about all the photos I've taken?" No, invariably it's some variation on this theme: "Will I lose all my three-star ratings in Angry Birds?"After years on the market, developer Rovio is finally presenting players with an easy solution in the form of an official Rovio Account.
rovio cross platform
The service works just as you'd expect it to: log in with a username and password, and your level progress is saved and accessible on any Android or iOS device. Happily, this will also allow multiple users to play on the same device without overwriting each other's scores. The prayers of many a nuclear family of tablet users have been answered with benevolent and annoying squawks.
At present, the Rovio Account feature is only active on the original Angry Birds and (for some reason) The Croods, but Rovio plans to expand it to the rest of their lineup soon. I wouldn't be surprised to see it baked into Angry Birds Star Wars II when it launches in September. By the way, if you're wondering why Rovio isn't using the Google Play Games service to do this, remember that they've got multiple platforms to consider.
Source: Rovio via The Next Week

Leisure Suit Larry: Reloaded Sleazes Into The Play Store At Long Last [Update: It's Gone]

Fans of the preeminent dating/hookup simulator, Leisure Suit Larry have had the opportunity to be disappointed twice in the last few months. Leisure Suit Larry: Reloaded was supposed to arrive in the Play Store wrapped in cheesy suede back in May. Then it was pushed to late June, but missed that deadline too. Now at long last the hunt is on – Leisure Suit Larry: Reloaded has been released on Android.
The Leisure Suit Larry is a classic "adult-themed" point-and-click adventure with the goal of getting Larry some affection from impressionable young ladies. This game is a remake of the original Leisure Suit Larry, but the graphics and dialog have been tweaked to be more modern. Not too modern, though.
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Leisure Suit Larry: Reloaded was launched on Kickstarter last year and raised over $650,000. The developers only asked for $500,000, so that should give you an idea of how into this game some people are. This is a big 476MB download, and it's free. It looks like the first level is free, but it's $10 to unlock the full game. That's in-line with expectations.
Update: Remember what I said about disappointments up above? Well, add another notch. Replay Games has just pulled Leisure Suit Larry from Google Play after finding an error. The statement didn't go into and more detail, and they don't know when it will be back. Here's the full statement: