Tag Archive for Fun

Everything in the Universe

Everything in the UniverseDominic Walliman is a youtuber, science writer and physicist. In this excellent video he attempts to illustrate and explain everything in the universe. 

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Pac-Man – 12 Things to Know

12 Things to Know About Pac-Man

Pac-Man turned 40 this Memorial Day weekend. Pac-Man is the best-selling arcade game ever. The video game was created by game designer Toru Iwatani, who was 24 at the time. The idea for Pac-Man came to him when he removed a slice from a pizza. Pac-Man was originally called Puck-Man – but was changed because of how easy it was to turn that into an obscenity.

Pac-Man arcade gameThe game was produced by the Japanese company Namco and distributed in the U.S. by Chicago-based Bally-Midway. Between its debut in a Tokyo theater on May 22, 1980, and 1990 Namco sold 400,000 Pac-Man gaming cabinets to arcades around the world and made $3.5 billion ($7.7 billion in 2020) in lifetime sales. The arcade game was played more than 10 billion times in the 20th century.

Pac-Man’s success

A large part of Pac-Man’s success, in an era where almost all games were space-themed shooters (Galaga, Missile Command, Space Invaders), was its non-violent, maze-chase gameplay. The game presented something fresh and new. The new ideas in Pac-Man did something few other games did at that time – it appealed to female gamers. This universal attraction helped bring an unprecedented number of players into arcades around the world, who shoveled billions of quarters into its slots.

Best-selling arcade games of all time - StatistaPac-Man was also a pioneer in character development. The game had a defined main character, which was unheard of at the time. Chris Melissinos, curator of the 2012 Smithsonian American Art Museum exhibition “The Art of Video Games.” told CNN

Here comes this game that’s brightly colored and centered around a character that really doesn’t have a gender … And all of a sudden, we found a mascot — the first character in video games that existed not just in the artwork, but in the game itself. 

The ghosts

Mr. Iwatani told Wired that Popeye was the inspiration for Pac-Man’s ability to attack his enemies by eating fruit. Pac-Man’s protagonists, the ghosts Blinky, Pinky, Inky, and Clyde each have their own personalities based on early artificial intelligence (AI) routines. Blinky  (red) constantly chases Pac-Man, Pinky (pink) attempts to ambush him, Inky (light blue) is randomized depending on Pac-Man’s position and Clyde (orange) will get close to the player then attempt to flee to the bottom left corner, potentially cutting off escape routes. Mr. Iwatani told CNN, “We introduced an AI-like algorithm that sent the ghosts to surround Pac-Man from all sides.

Pac-Man game

Pac-Man has conquered all media

The popularity of Pac-Man opened the door to the first generation of gaming merchandise. Pac-Man has conquered all media – Online, print, music, and merchandising. Here are 12 other things you should know about Pac-Man.

  1. When a playable version of Pac-Man appeared on the Google Doodle it cost the world almost 5 million man-hours and $120 million in lost productivity.
  2. Pac-Man has appeared in more than 90 games. The Pac-Man spin-off, Ms. Pac-Man, is a top 5 best-selling arcade game, according to U.S. Gamer.
  3. Pac-Man on the cover of Time MagazineHe has been on the cover of Time Magazine.
  4. Pac-Man is a rock star. The Pac-Man inspired song Pac-Man Fever reached number nine on Billboard’s Top 100 chart in March 1982. The song sold more than a million copies
  5. “Weird” Al Yankovic recorded “Pac-Man” in 1981 set to the music of the Beatles classic “Taxman.”  It was not officially released until 2017.
  6. The game’s distinctive sound was an inspiration to early hip-hop pioneers; including Jonzun Crew’s Pack Jam and Newcleus’s Jam on Revenge (The Wikki-Wikki Song).
  7. He is a TV star. In a 1982 episode Taxi, Louie (Danny DeVito) installs a Pac-Man cabinet in the garage and Jim (Christopher Lloyd) becomes addicted to the game. The scene is effectively a how-to guide and an ad for Pac-Man rolled into one.
  8. Pac-Man has appeared on The Simpsons5 times. In episode 343, Homer was researching previous Super Bowl halftime performances and looked back on a tape of Pac-Man marrying Ms. Pac-Man as the ghosts danced and celebrated to the song “Physical” by Olivia Newton-John.
  9. He has had two television cartoons. First was Pac-Man: The Animated Series from Hanna-Barbera which ran on ABC from 1982-83 and then there was Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures (2013-2016) that was launched to support the new 3-D Pac-Man on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Wii U.
  10. Pac-Man is a merchandising maniac. Sports-card manufacturer Fleer produced three Pac-Man trading card sets. One set is based on the original arcade game, one is centered on Ms. Pac-Man, and a third is based on the Super Pac-Man game.
  11. Chef BoyardeeChef Boyardee Pac-Man pasta released Pac-Man pasta in three varieties: cheese, meatballs, and chicken. Of course, the pasta’s were formed in the shape of Pac-Man and Ms. Pac-Man.
  12. Counter-intuitively, the video game even had a board game. Milton Bradley published the Pac-Man board game in 1982  – which is going for $75.00 on eBay these days.

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I recall playing Pac-Man on a console at Pizzuti’s Pizza while in HS. My arcade game really stepped up when I lived around the corner from Pinball Pete’s in Ann Arbor (which burned down in 2009) and was dodging work while on campus.

Stay safe out there!

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

What the Internet Should Be Like

Take some time away from you FB feed while locked down and expand your horizons. Check out something on the Internet that might make you think. Here are a few ways to expand your online horizons.

Neal Agarwal at neal.fun is trying to make the web more fun. The developer created The Deep Sea. With the interactive visualization of the ocean, you can scroll, scroll, and then scroll some more to see what sea life (and other things) reside at various depths of the Oceans.

The deep-sea

What the Internet Should Be Like
Thanks to the site, you can see how deep-sea critters can dive.

The size of space

Another site Mr. Agarwal developed is The Size of Space. This one is an interactive visualization of the scale of the universe.

What the Internet Should Be LikeAt this site, you can compare the size of a Saturn 5 rocket that took NASA astronauts to the moon to Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy, our home.

Detroit Industry

The Detroit Institute of Arts has an online presence. One magnificent artifact is “Detroit Industry.” The murals depict the development of industry history and Detroit. You can see the four-wall mural created by Diego Rivera in 1932-1933 online via Google’s Arts and Culture project.

"Detroit Industry" by Diego Rivera. 1932-1933

Toilet Paper Calculator

Of course, we can’t ignore current events. The Toilet Paper Calculator by Nathan Yau offers a tool to estimate how TP much you need to hoard buy to survive the COVID lock-down.

The Toilet Paper Calculator

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This is the internet I signed up for.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tesla Teams with Hot Wheels for RC Toy Cybertruck

Tesla Teams with Hot Wheels for RC Toy CybertruckTesla’s electric pickup – Cybertruck will cost you nearly $40,000 when it goes on sale. Thankfully, Hot Wheels has teamed with Tesla to make a radio-controlled Cybertruck for the rest of us. The Mattel (MAT) versions include a deluxe and a smaller HotWheels version.

Tesla CybertruckThe deluxe Cybertruck version is a limited-edition 1:10 scale model. This model features, functioning headlights and taillights, a tonneau cover, and a telescopic tailgate that fold out as a loading ramp. It has a pistol-style remote to control the all-wheel drive with “Chill” or “Sport” driving modes that can get up to 250 mph scale speed.

Deluxe Cybertruck

The 1:10 model even comes with a reusable “cracked window vinyl sticker” that mocks the fail at the launch event. It also includes a plastic body that can be removed to see the model’s interior, the battery, and the drivetrain. The large truck has a 9.9-v, 3300-mAh rechargeable battery, and the run-to-charge time is 1:1. The deluxe Mattel version is 1/100th of the cost of the full-sized Telsa version at $400.

Mattel logoThe traditional scale HotWheels version of the Tesla Cybertruck fits on the classic orange Hot track. The 1/64th scale RC car has a gaming-style remote control, two-wheel drive but has Chill or Sport driving modes. Hot Wheels says the 1:64 car can get up to 500 mph scale speed. This version will cost you $20.

How to order a Cybertruck

Hot Wheels already offers the Tesla Model S, Model 3, Model X, Model Y, and Roadster as traditional Hot Wheels, so it no surprise that they added the CyberTruck to the stable. Just like real Tesla’s, the time between order and actually taking delivery of the purchased product is extremely long. Mattel says not to expect deliveries until mid-December 2020. The 1/10 version can be pre-ordered here and the 1/64 version can be per-ordered here.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Doomba

DoombaA fitting way to close out 2018 is to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the classic first-person shooter game “Doom.” Doom tells the story of a base operated by the Union Aerospace Corporation on the Martian moon Phobos. The base is overrun by demons from Hell after its top-secret teleportation experiments go awry. A detachment of space marines are sent to investigate and all but one are slaughtered. It’s up to the player to fight through the horde of demons on Phobos and, eventually Hell itself, to prevent a massive invasion of Earth.

Roomba self-driving vacuumLike the last space marine, Doom is a survivor. As Motherboard explained, Doom is compatible with many devices because id Software wanted it to be. id Software released Doom‘s source code to the public in 1997 for reuse. Doom has been modified to run in ASCII and on a number of platforms including ATMs and printers.

The latest hack of Doom comes from developer Rich Whitehouse. He exploited the fact that Roomba self-driving vacuum robots create maps of your house as they sweep up. iRobot CEO Colin Angle swears he will totally never sell maps of your home to advertisers. Despite the CEO’s assurances, Mr. Whitehouse demonstrates that these maps can be exported. He uses the Roomba maps to create Doomba a tool that converts Roomba maps for use in Doom. Mr. Whitehouse told Digital Trends.

There’s a lot going on under the hood, though. The Roomba is broadcasting a position and angle across the network in roughly one second intervals, as well as a bunch of other data. I write the relevant data out to a .noeroomba file as it comes in. When you go to load that .noeroomba file [into my own tool] Noesis, that’s when the magic happens.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.