Thursday, May 01, 2014

MC2 Post 1849 Oculus Rift 'Facebook Deal' Runs into a Wall






Zenimax Media, the parent company of both Bethesda Softworks and Id Software, has sent legal letters to Oculus and its new parent Facebook alleging that storied Doom programmer John Carmack aided in the development and creation of Oculus Rift technology while he was still with Zenimax, giving the company claim to at least part of the headset's intellectual property.



As reported this morning by the Wall Street Journal, Zenimax alleges that technology Carmack developed while he was still at Zenimax was the genesis of what would eventually become the Oculus Rift development kit. Zenimax traces this technological relationship back to E3 2012, where Carmack showed a very early "ski goggle" Rift prototype at the Zenimax booth to great acclaim from industry and press.


 



From:   http://arstechnica.com



 







==========================================
==========================================






Google's driverless car can Navigate a City




From:   http://www.cnbc.com

 



The tech giant's self-driving cars already can navigate freeways comfortably, albeit with a driver ready to take control. But city driving — with its obstacle course of jaywalkers, bicyclists and blind corners — has been a far greater challenge for the cars' computers.

 


In a blog entry posted Monday, the project's leader said test cars now can handle thousands of urban situations that would have stumped them a year or two ago.


"We're growing more optimistic that we're heading toward an achievable goal — a vehicle that operates fully without human intervention," project director Chris Urmson wrote.






 
=========================================
=========================================




Google Now Remembers Where You 
Parked Your Car


 

Sometimes, You're Guess is as Good as Mine, Google.


 

Google is making it a bit easier to get back to your car when you’ve parked in an unfamiliar city, at the mall, a concert, or any other spot that poses a challenge for those with a poor sense of direction. The company’s Google Now assistant will now recognize when you’ve left a moving vehicle and automatically keep track of your car’s last location. There’s no magic happening here: Google does all of this using your smartphone’s bevy of sensors. It’s essentially guesswork, and the company readily admits that it may sometimes guess wrong.





From:   https://www.yahoo.com


 









=========================================
=========================================


=============
=============



MC2 LOGO


=============
=============




 

No comments: