video games, china, obama, shanghai, liu bolin, invisible, photography, fantasy
In blather, china, kids, video games on November 25, 2009 at 12:48 pm
1. Chinese media are abuzz over the “mysterious beauty in black” seen behind President Obama during his visit to Shanghai. It turns out her name is Wang Zifei and she is a graduate student at Shanghai’s Jiaotong University.
2. Another cool China link: artist Liu Bolin becomes invisible by painting himself exactly like the background.
3. Finalists in National Geographic’s International Photography Contest. My favorite is the one of the New Zealand farmer.
4. Crispy Gamer’s Ten No-Bullshit Rules for buying video games for kids. Crispy Gamer is increasingly becoming one of my favorite gaming sites. These guys can write.
5. Lev Grossman picks the six greatest fantasy novels of all time.
china, electronic arts, itanium, jon huntsman, pandemic, rosetta, space, the onion, video games
In blather, china, space, technology, video games on November 17, 2009 at 12:31 pm
1. Electronic Arts is rumored to be closing Pandemic Studios. Yes, this is the same Pandemic that, along with BioWare, EA paid more than $800 million for two years ago. Although Pandemic was behind Full Spectrum Warrior, one of my favorite games of all time, its recent efforts, like last year’s Mercenaries 2, were met with lukewarm critical reviews.
2. Stunning photograph of a crescent Earth shot by Rosetta, the European comet-chasing spacecraft. Oh yeah, and irregularities in Rosetta’s flight path may lead to a re-writing of the known laws of physics.
3. Fascinating profile of Jon Huntsman, Jr., Obama’s new (Republican) man in China. In an awesome historical twist, Huntsman as a child handed Henry Kissinger his briefcase as he departed with Nixon on the famous secret trip to China in 1971.
4. Intel’s Itanium chip finally turns a profit. After a decade. And billions of dollars of investment and promotion.
5. And from The Onion video files: Ultra-Realistic Modern Warfare Game Features Awaiting Orders, Repairing Trucks.
china, incident, navy, u.s.
In china on March 10, 2009 at 10:12 pm
So Chinese naval vessels surrounded and harassed a U.S. sub-hunting vessel operating near China but in international waters.
Funny how this sort of thing always happens shortly after a new president takes office.