Sony's new coloring book lets you take crayons to PlayStation mascots



It usually takes years toiling away with 3D modeling programs at development studios before you can redesign some of video gaming's biggest names, but thanks to Sony's new PlayStation coloring book, you can make a stab at it with some crayons and a bit of creativity. The Art for the Players book, available now from Amazon UK, has line drawings ofUncharted's Nathan Drake, God of War Kratos, and Sackboy from Little Big Planet, alongside other memorable PlayStation mascots and characters, each crying out for a splash of color.

For the £10 price tag you might feel a little short-changed with the 16 games’ drawings on offer here, but the book does let you give Kratos his bushy dad-beard, and allow you to turnBloodborne's dark and viscera-soaked world into a colorful wonderland. The alternative is learning how to program, joining a development studio at a junior level, and then working your way up with a decade of late nights and deadlines until you're in a position to slightly tweak the colors on Nathan Drake's T-shirt — a night of relaxing adult coloring is much easier.

This rotary cell phone makes calls, sends texts, and will never fit in your pocket



As far as I’m aware, rotary cell phones never existed. The two technologies didn’t overlap much in time, with rotary dials getting replaced by push-button alternatives a decade or so before portable cell phones became popular. But that doesn’t mean rotary cell phones can’t exist now, and YouTube tinkerer Mr. Volt has created his own. It’s beautiful, minimalist, and looks heavy enough to smash a window.

The cell phone itself has six basic functions: it can make calls, store a single phone number, text (very slowly), tune into the radio, display system settings, and go to sleep. There’s a 96 x 96 OLED display, its case is made from a mixture of aluminum, brass, and 3D-printed plastic, and the whole thing is powered by an Adafruit microcomputer. It would also make a hell of a statement piece.

After all, anti-phones of one sort or another have been in counter-cultural fashion for a while now. Some are purpose built like the credit card-sized Light Phone, which can only make and receive calls. And some, like Nokia feature phones, are just the best phone at a certain price range that might be adopted for reasons other than price. ("I don't want to deal with apps," "I hate being distracted by my phone," etc.) The rotary cell phone would be a different beast altogether: not just restricting functionality, but actively hobbling the user with its weight and unwieldy controls.

Still, if some people choose to ride penny-farthings instead of regular bikes, presumably someone would like to try out the rotary cell phone for a while. Wouldn't you, just for fun?

VR eye tracking could shape your relationships with virtual people



Well over a year ago, I tried a Kickstarter-funded virtual reality headset that could track not just your head, but your pupils. It was called Fove, and it’s now open for preorders, with a price of $599 and a shipping date of early 2017. (Kickstarter backers will get their versions toward the end of 2016, and people who preorder in the first week will get a discounted price of $549.) At the VR Developers Conference in San Francisco, I was able to test out the latest version, and it’s come a long way — even if its creators admit that it’s ready for everyday use just yet.

Outside VR, eye tracking in entertainment is usually an aid for aiming and navigating in video games, whether that’s shifting the camera in an action game playing Asteroids with your eyes. Inside VR, it’s most practical for foveated rendering, where a headset saves processing power by rendering the part of a screen you’re directly watching in fine detail and blurring everything else. This could let people make more complex and beautiful VR experiences, or drive down the cost of VR-ready PCs, and multiple companies are working on it.




Fove has demos that showcase both these options, including a turret shooter and a detailed still scene with foveated rendering. But it’s also working on a more experimental project that CEO Yuka Kojima describes as interactive cinema. In this case, that’s a short vignette where you play a soldier being interrogated by a terrorist group. During the scene, looking at various parts of the environment triggers specific events, shaping the course of the story.

Some of these moments are simple: if you look down at an ashtray while your interrogator asks questions, he’ll shout at you and sweep it off the table. Others would have been difficult to detect if Kojima hadn’t been there pointing them out. If you examine the flashbang grenades on a terrorist’s uniform, for example, you fade into a full-fledged flashback, and a fellow soldier later rescues you with a flashbang attack. I only got to that point, apparently, because I’d followed Kojima’s instructions to avoid looking at the soldier in a photo lineup earlier, throwing the terrorists off his trail.

This kind of interactive storytelling is nothing new for video games. But compared to hitting buttons on a controller or even moving your hands in a VR game, eye motion is almost involuntary. With simple headset tracking, you can point your face in one direction and furtively glance in another. When Fove is watching your pupils, there’s no such option. The computer always knows what you’re doing.

YOU CAN’T TRICK THE COMPUTER

All of this is mostly theoretically interesting, of course. Fove has a single experience that’s a few minutes long; since it was only in Japanese, I couldn’t even understand the dialog without Kojima’s explanations. For now, she says Fove is aiming at selling to developers and public installations like arcades; headsets are apparently being installed in 7,000 Korean and Japanese internet cafes next February in an attempt to kickstart development. The headset doesn’t have a motion controller like the Rift, Vive, or PlayStation VR, and its catalog isn’t as robust.

The hardware is commendably solid for an indie VR headset. Its 2560x1440 screen (the same resolution as the Gear VR) is crisp, and the head tracking, which uses the same camera as the OSVR HDK 2, is nicely precise. But it doesn’t rival the industrial design of the Rift or PSVR, nor does it have the room-scale tracking of the Vive. It’s a product for people who are excited about building for one specific, experimental VR technology, not a credible competitor to big-name consumer headsets. By the former metric, though, it’s made great strides since 2015 — and it’s pushing forward in areas that, so far, we haven’t seen companies like Oculus and Valve talk much about

Three members of Apple's PR team have left for car companies






Three members of Apple’s communications staff have left the tech giant for car companies in recent weeks, just as reports have emerged that Apple has scaled back its auto-making plans.Last month longtime Apple staffer Sarah O’Brien joined Tesla as senior director of communications. While at Apple, O’Brien had worked on the communications teams for music, iPhone, and most recently, Apple Watch.

More recently, Colin Smith, who had been communications director of Mac hardware, software, and professional apps for seven years, jumped ship to join Ford Silicon Valley, which includes Ford Smart Mobility LLC and the company’s growing research and innovation center. Smith’s role is being described as a kind of hybrid communications and business development role.And another Apple comms staffer, Michaela Johndrow, is joining Ford in Michigan, where she’ll manage communications around electrified vehicles for Ford North America.


This kind of turnover in tech communications certainly isn’t unprecedented, but points to a growing interest on the part of automakers to staff up with people with expertise and connections within the tech sector.

The 5K display Apple and LG built together just got cheaper

Apple is reducing the price of its new 5K LG UltraFine Display by more than 25 percent as part of an effort to ease the transition to its new line of MacBook Pros. The special promotion, which amounts to a $349 price cut for the $1,299.95 monitor, brings the product’s price under $1,000. The company is also reducing the price on the 4K version from $699.95 to $524. Both products, designed in partnership between Apple and LG, are available on Apple’s online store, with the 4K model available now and the 5K model going on sale next month.“We recognize that many users, especially pros, rely on legacy connectors to get work done today and they face a transition. We want to help them move to the latest technology and peripherals, as well as accelerate the growth of this new ecosystem,” Apple said. “Through the end of the year, we are reducing prices on all USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 peripherals we sell, as well as the prices on Apple's USB-C adapters and cables.”In addition to these display promotions, Apple is temporarily reducing the cost of its many USB-C adapters now that the new MacBook Pro only contains Thunderbolt 3 ports. In a statement, the company said it recognized that many professionals rely on legacy ports and older devices, and that the price cuts would stay in effect until the end of the year.

“We recognize that many users, especially pros, rely on legacy connectors to get work done today and they face a transition. We want to help them move to the latest technology and peripherals, as well as accelerate the growth of this new ecosystem,” Apple said. “Through the end of the year, we are reducing prices on all USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 peripherals we sell, as well as the prices on Apple's USB-C adapters and cables.”

Zotac's new VR Go mini PC comes with straps, so you don't have to buy a backpack



Zotac has introduced multiple mini PCs that are VR-ready and able to fit in backpacks, but now the company is planning to release a computer that comes with removable straps attached, according to Anandtech. I love an all-in-one purchase. The VR Go PC is packed with:

Intel Core i7 processor
GeForce GTX 1070 graphics card
Removable battery
2.5-inch HDD or SSD bay
One HDMI output
Two USB 3.0 ports
A power connector
A proprietary cooling system

Zotac put the HDMI, USB ports, and power connector on one side for easy cable management. The PC can also be taken off the straps and used as a regular desktop computer. Seriously, all-in-one purchases are a beautiful thing. Zotac didn’t provide info on a release date, price, or how long the battery will last. I know, I’m sorry. The company previously showed off a proof-of-concept VR backpack, so at least we're getting more details about that idea?


Zotac also debuted another new mini VR-ready PC this week called the Magnus ERX480. It runs Windows 10 and is approximately eight by seven by two inches. I’m not sure how much it weighs, but it can’t be much. I know it'll fit in a backpack. You’ll have to buy the backpack yourself, though. Sad.

US boosting cyber defenses, but not police presence, for election



Federal and state authorities are beefing up cyber defenses against potential electronic attacks on voting systems ahead of US elections on 8 Nov, but taking few new steps to guard against possible civil unrest or violence.The threat of computer hacking and the potential for violent clashes is darkening an already rancorous presidential race between Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump, amid fears that Russia or other actors could spread political misinformation online or perhaps tamper with voting.To counter the cyber threat, all but two US states have accepted help from the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to probe and scan voter registration and election systems for vulnerabilities, a department official told Reuters.

Ohio has asked a cyber protection unit of the National Guard, a reserve force within the US military, for assistance to protect the state’s systems.On Thursday, Arizona Secretary of State Michele Reagan and her cyber security team met with officials from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the DHS, in addition to state-level agencies, to discuss cyber threats, said Matt Roberts, a spokesman for Reagan.

Cyber security experts and US officials say chances that a hack could alter election outcomes are remote, in part because voting machines are typically not connected to the internet.But the FBI sent a flash alert in August to states after detecting breaches in voter registration databases in Arizona and Illinois.

ARMED GROUPS

Unidentified intelligence officials told NBC News on Thursday that there is no specific warning about an Election Day attack, but they remain concerned that hackers from Russia or elsewhere may try to disrupt the process, likely by spreading misinformation by manipulating social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter.

DHS cyber security experts plan to hold a media briefing on Friday to discuss the agency’s efforts with states to boost the security of their voting and election systems.The potential for violence around the election has loomed in the background of the campaign for months. Armed groups around the country have pledged in unprecedented numbers to monitor voting sites for signs of election fraud.

Voter intimidation reported at polling sites so far prompted Democrats to accuse Trump of a “campaign of vigilante voter intimidation” in four states on Monday.But local authorities surveyed by Reuters on Thursday in five states – Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Wisconsin and Florida – said they were not increasing election-related law enforcement personnel or resources above 2012 levels.

‘A LOT OF TALK, LITTLE ACTION’

The FBI, which designates one special agent from each of its 56 field offices for election crime matters, has not increased its numbers or given staff additional training this year, said an FBI spokeswoman.

There has been no “substantive change” in the number of personnel deployed by the rest of the Justice Department, which designates Assistant US Attorneys and federal prosecutors within the agency’s Public Integrity Section to handle election crimes, according to a spokesman.Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, which represents hundreds of thousands of US officers, said cops are taking the same security measures they would take for any large event. He said he expects the vows by militias to monitor the polls to be “a lot of talk, little action.”

Civil rights groups said deploying more police officers to the polls can actually intimidate voters.

“The presence of law enforcement can have a chilling effect on the electorate,” said Kristen Clarke, president of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a watchdog group. “That’s something we want to discourage.”