• WWW.FACEBOOK.COM
    Nov 29 - Dec 8
    Nov 29 - Dec 8 Mark your calendar for the most wonderful time of the year! 25% off new #MaxonOne, #ZBrush, and #Redshift licenses! Treat yourself to our festive cyber sale and elevate your creativity. https://maxonvfx.com/3V5UtdI
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações
  • WWW.FACEBOOK.COM
    Episode 1 Modeling Cinema 4D Fundamentals: Makin Waffles
    LIVE NOW on #CreateWithMaxon! Dive into the world of 3D, and get familiar with the #Cinema4D interface and navigation. Learn how to create and change geometric shapes with Deformers and explore the importance of clean topology. Discover how Generators can add more organic or complex details to your mesh. Watch now! DOWNLOAD FREE PROJECT FILES HERE! https://maxonvfx.com/files_c4d_fundamentals In this episode youll dive into the world of 3D, get familiar with th...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações
  • WWW.YOUTUBE.COM
    A Mouse With Two Dads and a New Frontier for Biology | Katsuhiko Hayashi | TED
    A Mouse With Two Dads and a New Frontier for Biology | Katsuhiko Hayashi | TED
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações
  • WWW.SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
    Researchers Uncover the Oldest Record of Humans Using Fire in Tasmania, Almost 2,000 Years Earlier Than Previously Known
    The researchers of the paper, Matthew Adeleye, University of Cambridge, and David Bowman, University of Tasmania, study a sediment core. Simon HaberleToday, the island of Tasmania lies across the Bass Strait from southern Australia, but once, the two were connected by a land bridge. When humans first reached Tasmanias rugged coastlines and mixed forests approximately 40,000 years ago, it was the southernmost place our species had ever settled. The Palawa/Pakana communitiesTasmanian Indigenous peoplescall this island Lutruwita.Now, new evidence from charcoal and pollen provides the earliest known record of humans using fire on Tasmania. The discovery predates the previous oldest evidence of fire use on the island by about 1,700 years and demonstrates how these early Aboriginal communities shaped their environment through fire.In a new study published this month in Science Advances, researchers show these early people used fire to shape and modify Tasmanias dense and wet forest. By analyzing sediment coreslong, cylindrical samples of dirt that capture environmental conditions across timescientists were able to analyze the pollen and charcoal that had built up.They both, surprisingly, went back quite a long waylonger than most other records in the region have been found to go, says study co-author Simon Haberle, a paleoecologist at the Australian National University, to Cosmos Ellen Phiddian. The records also gave a glimpse into how vegetation and fire changed over the past 50,000 years or more, he adds.Researchers analyzed ancient mud from islands that would have been part of the land bridge that linked Australia and Tasmania during the last ice age. The mud showed an increase in charcoal from fires 41,600 years ago, followed by different types of pollen 40,000 years ago, revealing a major change in vegetation. This suggests Aboriginal communities were clearing the forests to create open spaces, potentially for subsistence.Fire is an important tool, and it would have been used to promote the type of vegetation or landscape that was important to them, says lead author Matthew Adeleye, a paleoecologist at the University of Cambridge in England, in a statement. It would have helped the early communities manage forests as they migrated.Previously, the oldest known archaeological evidence of humans in Tasmania was from sediment in a cave,where researchers had found charcoal, animal bones and stone tools dating to roughly 39,900 years ago.But the new paper extends that record deeper into the past.The findings are part of a growing body of research showing how fire moved with early human societies wherever they went, says Regan Dunn, a paleobotanist at the Natural History Museum Los Angeles County who wasnt involved with the study, to Sciences Warren Cornwall. With this research, its becoming more clear that humans first leave their mark on the land through fire, followed by changes to the landscape, she tells the outlet.In this case, those landscape changes came through the expansion of fire-adapted plant species, such as eucalyptus trees, concentrated on the wetter, eastern side of the islands in the Bass Strait, Adeleye says in the statement. The burning likely served tocreate spaces that produce more food or attract animals that could be hunted.The studys findings fit into the wider context of bushfires occurring across Tasmania and Australia today. As wildfires have raged through the forests, Aboriginal communities and scientists are thinking about ways to manage those disasters. One of these potential strategies includes traditional burning culture.Cultural fire management practices are integral to our agricultural practices and are medicine for Country, Zena Cumpston, a Barkandji researcher at the University of Melbourne, wrote in the Conversation in 2020, during the peak of the extreme Australian bushfires from 2019 to 2020, which became one of the most catastrophic fire seasons in the nations recent history.Cultural burning could potentially enhance the ecosystems health by improving soil quality and promoting growth, per the U.S. National Park Service. It enhances the habitat for plants and animals and makes it more resilient.For Haberle, the information coming from Western science, including this new study, is less of a revelation and more of an affirmation that cultural burning has been essential to the landscape for many thousands of years, he tells Cosmos.He adds that the Palawa/Pakana people certainly know a lot of this story already.Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.Filed Under: Australia, Ecology, Fire, Indigenous Peoples, Migration, New Research, Plants, Wildfire
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações
  • WWW.SMITHSONIANMAG.COM
    Ancient Egyptians Drank Psychedelic Concoctions From This 2,000-Year-Old Mug, Study Finds
    As part of the study, researchers created a 3D replica of the ancient mug. Cassidy DelamarterAn intricately crafted mug depicting an ancient Egyptian deity was donated to the Tampa Museum of Arts collections in 1984. Now, four decades later, scientists have found evidence of psychedelic substances in the 2,000-year-old vessel, according to a study published this month in the journal Scientific Reports.The mug is designed to resemble the head ofBes, an Egyptian god associated with joy, fertility and household protection. It was likely used around the second century B.C.E. during Egypts Ptolemaic era.For a very long time now, Egyptologists have been speculating what mugs with the head of Bes could have been used for, and for what kind of beverage, like sacred water, milk, wine or beer, says co-author Branko van Oppen, the museums curator of Greek and Roman art, in the statement. Experts did not know if these mugs were used in daily life, for religious purposes or in magic rituals.In the recent study, scientists conducted an advanced chemical and DNA analysis of the mug. The psychedelic components they found included the plant Peganum harmala (also known as Syrian rue), whose seeds can induce dreamlike visions. They also discovered traces of Egyptian lotus, which is a mild sedative that causes feelings of euphoria.In addition to the psychedelic residue, scientists found that the cup contained traces of a variety of substances including alcohol, honey, sesame seeds, pine nuts, licorice and grapes. The analysis also revealed the presence of what may be human blood and other bodily fluids. While the mixture may not be something everyone would opt to drink, co-authorEnrico Greco, a chemist at the University of Trieste in Italy, tellsNewsweeksProteins from blood, vaginal mucus and possibly breast milk were identified. These fluids may have held symbolic or ritual significance, emphasizing themes of life, fertility and regeneration, says Greco. The inclusion of human fluids, such as blood and mucous secretions, was an unexpected and highly symbolic element.Lead authorDavide Tanasi, an archaeologist at the University of South Florida, tellsFox News DigitalsIn [the] Greek cult of Asklepios, god of medicine, sick worshipers had to spend the night in the sanctuary and wait to be visited by the god curing them during their dreams, Tanasi adds. Those dreams were triggered by drugs (pharmaka) dispensed by the priests. So, our research confirms an earlier practice that has later comparisons in several other cultures.Moving forward, the researchers plan to reexamine other known Bes mugs using similar analytical techniques to see if the concoction inside was a common recipe.This is the first comprehensive scientific analysis of a Bes mugs organic residues, Greco tells Newsweek. Previous studies speculated on the contents of these vessels, but they lacked direct evidence. This study is groundbreaking in uncovering the actual substances used and their ritual significance.Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.Filed Under: Ancient Egypt, Archaeology, Artifacts, Egypt, Food, Food History, New Research, Religion, Religious History, Rituals and Traditions
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações
  • 0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações
  • VENTUREBEAT.COM
    Thomson Reuters CoCounsel redefines legal AI with OpenAIs o1-mini model
    Thomson Reuters integrates OpenAI's o1-mini model into CoCounsel legal assistant, pioneering a multi-AI approach with Google and Anthropic models for enhanced legal workflows.Read More
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações
  • VENTUREBEAT.COM
    From Kickstarter to Netflix: The Exploding Kittens Journey | Elan Lee
    The collaboration of The Oatmeal cartoonistMatt Inmanand video game designer Elan Lee on Exploding Kittens has been a fruitful one.Read More
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações
  • WWW.GAMESINDUSTRY.BIZ
    Report: Ubisoft Barcelona unions file lawsuit against return to office mandate
    Report: Ubisoft Barcelona unions file lawsuit against return to office mandateUbisoft's decision was made "suddenly and without transparency," unions claimImage credit: Ubisoft Barcelona News by Sophie McEvoy Staff Writer Published on Nov. 25, 2024 Unions for Ubisoft's AAA and mobile studios in Barcelona have filed a lawsuit against the Assassin's Creed publisher over its remote work policy changes.In affiliation with Spanish trade body CGT (Confederacin General del Trabajo), the unions are demanding that Ubisoft revert the return to office mandate and ensure remote working is protected by a collective agreement.As detailed in an email sent to GamesIndustry.biz, the unions claimed that though both sides were up to negotiate, management had yet to put forward a proposal since the lawsuit was filed on October 14.The changes proposed by Ubisoft will allegedly see employees return to work for at least three days a week.This will replace current monthly remote working guidelines that provide 60% of the monthly days, as chosen by workers, as home-based. Those on a full-time work from home scheme will also have to follow the policy.The unions claim that Ubisoft's decision was made "suddenly and without transparency", highlighting that it would create logistical problems as offices aren't prepared to accommodate all remote workers at once.Ubisoft reportedly said the return to office mandate was for "team creativity" and "better communication", but the unions argue that "management has consistently failed to present any actual tangible benefits to back this measure."GamesIndustry.biz has reached out to Ubisoft for comment.In September, over 700 employees at Ubisoft France participated in a three-day strike in response to the same return to office mandate. Last month, employees at Ubisoft Milan called for a one-day strike in solidarity with Ubisoft France.
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações
  • WWW.GAMESINDUSTRY.BIZ
    My Games launches mobile publisher MGVC Publishing
    My Games launches mobile publisher MGVC PublishingLabel looking for soft launch projects and established games, and is interested in Asian devs looking to expand to the WestImage credit: MGVC Publishing News by Marie Dealessandri Deputy Editor Published on Nov. 25, 2024 My Games has announced the launch of a new mobile publisher called MGVC Publishing.The new label is headed by executive director Nikita Matsokin, who has been at My Games since 2020 following six years at Wargaming, most recently as developer relations head.MGVC Publishing has already signed a handful of titles, including Reef Games Studio's merge-three title Fable Town, Press Fire Games' shooter Battle Prime, and ReactGames Studio's survival game Days After.The label is currently looking for soft launch projects ready for monetisation testing, and established games that are looking for growth, across the mobile spectrum from casual to hardcore. It's also interested in Asian developers looking to expand to Western markets.Matsokin commented: "Today's mobile market realities and new challenges demand fresh approaches. Complex user acquisition strategies require deep expertise and nuanced publishing and operational improvements that, together, can elevate projects to new heights. At MGVC Publishing, we believe in creating win-win partnerships that drive mutual success."With over six years of experience building strong relationships with independent studios, the MGVC team is a unique partner in the industry, committed to helping studios achieve breakthrough results."It's the second publishing label that My Games launches this year, following the debut of Knights Peak in June. We talked to the team behidn the PC and console publisher, who told us about how it intends to support premium games.
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 3 Visualizações