• Thermal images made by @aschilling show NVIDIA 5090 GPU's power cable heating up to over 150C, more than 300F. "This has nothing to do with the gr...
    x.com
    Thermal images made by @aschilling show NVIDIA 5090 GPU's power cable heating up to over 150C, more than 300F."This has nothing to do with the graphics card and can happen with every RTX 5090 pushing the power delivery to the limit":https://80.lv/articles/thermal-images-show-nvidia-rtx-5090-s-power-cable-reaching-150-c/
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  • Have you tried Split Fiction yet? Are you planning to? Tell us what you think about Hazelight's new title!
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    Have you tried Split Fiction yet? Are you planning to? Tell us what you think about Hazelight's new title!
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  • Josef Fares Split Fiction Launches to 98% Positive Reviews & Over 250K Concurrent Players
    cgshares.com
    Split Fiction, a new co-op adventure announced last year with a rather cryptic tweet from the creators of the 2021 Game of the Year It Takes Two, Hazelight Studios, has finally hit the shelves, breaking several records in its first weekend in terms of player numbers and overall reception from the gaming community.HazelightShowing the best start out of all Hazelight titles, Split Fiction reached 259,000 concurrent players on Steam at its peak far surpassing It Takes Two with 71,000 and A Way Out with 8,500.While SteamDB player charts always serve purely as representatives and dont exactly indicate how many copies each game has sold altogether, this is especially true for Split Fiction, given that split-screen games tend to be more popular on consoles than on PCs. With that in mind, its reasonable to assume that the games player numbers on PlayStation 5 are even higher than the impressive 259,000 it hit on Steam. In a recent interview with The Washington Post, Game Director Josef Fares stated that It Takes Two has sold 23 million copies since its launch, making it interesting to see whether SF can replicate its predecessors success.In terms of the gaming communitys reception, Hazelights latest masterpiece hasnt fared any worse, reaching a whopping 98% positive score on Steam and a commendable 9.4/10 on PC and 8.6/10 on PS5 on Metacritic. As noted by Fares in Fall Damages reacting to comments video, hed love for Split Fiction to bring home a second Game of the Year trophy for the studio. However, with GTA 6 also slated to launch in 2025, he believes competing with it would be tough.With its impressive performance, Split Fiction has also joined the ranks of the most successful Unreal Engine 5-powered games released in recent times, joining titles like Black Myth: Wukong and Marvel Rivals.Shortly before the games release, the Game Director spoke with Epic Games about the teams approach to handling UE5, discussing the development of custom tools, the integration of a scripting language Unreal Engine Angelscript into the source code, customization of Sequencer to support split screen and seamless transitions from gameplay to cutscenes, and more. You can read the full interview here.And what are your thoughts on Split Fiction? Have you tried it? Do you like the game so far? Tell us in the comments!Dont forget tojoin our80 Level Talent platformand ournew Discord server, follow us onInstagram,Twitter,LinkedIn,Telegram,TikTok, andThreads,where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post Josef Fares Split Fiction Launches to 98% Positive Reviews & Over 250K Concurrent Players appeared first on CG SHARES.
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  • Best Cards For Flush Hands In Balatro
    gamerant.com
    Balatro is a game filled with variety and flavor in every run. From the challenging boss blinds to the near-endless combinations of cards and deck types. Certain playstyles will of course net more success than others, but the beauty of the game is that any and all approaches can work given enough time and the right offerings.
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  • Ada Lovelace Leader Guide for Civilization 7
    gamerant.com
    Civilization 7's "Crossroads of the World" DLC adds new leaders and civilizations to the game. In the first part of this DLC Ada Lovelace was added to the game, a Cultural/Scientific Leader who was known for her work on Babbage's Difference Engine and Analytic Engine. Called "Enchantress of Number" by Babbage, her ideas about the use of computers beyond mere calculation and number crunching were hugely influential in the field of computer science.
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  • Office politics, good metaphors, trade wars and UX, clear AI interactions
    uxdesign.cc
    Weekly curated resources for designersthinkers andmakers.Interdepartmental collaboration doesnt just magically improveit takes effort. The real work isnt just in the pixels; its in how we communicate, build trust, and create alignment. When designers take the lead in bridging gaps, office politics becomes less of a roadblock and more of an opportunity. At the core, its about bringing people together around a shared vision and making design a connector, not just another function working in isolation.Office politics: the skill they never taught us By PascalPotvinfigma.to.websiteDesign in Figma & hit PUBLISH [Sponsored] Design your website in Figma and hit PUBLISH to instantly get a live, fully responsive website. Free hosting and all the settings you need for SEO, custom code, embeds, analytics, forms andmore.Editor picksHow the trade war proves UX is everywhere Perspective from a Canadian UXer.By ElvisHsiaoEverything I know about UX I learned from my parents Craft and problem solving go much deeper.By PatrickNeemanA crisis of meaning in UX Design Youre not alone.By JamesHarrisonThe UX Collective is an independent design publication that elevates unheard design voices and helps designers think more critically about theirwork.Eventbrite rebrand, a case studyMake methinkVibe coding and the future of software engineering Theres a new kind of coding I call vibe coding, where you fully give in to the vibes, embrace exponentials, and forget that the code even exists. Its possible because the LLMs are getting too good. Also I just talk to Composer with SuperWhisper so I barely even touch the keyboard.The existential challenge of design system team morale Burnout has become a rite of passage. Its (sadly) become a problem to manage versus avoid. Every design system team Ive worked on had these challenges. And I know my experience is not the exception. Were all in good company. Or, maybe, bad company.Chat is a bad UI pattern for development tools For decades we tried to fix this by making programming more human-friendly. Higher-level languages. Visual interfaces. Each step helped, but we were still translating human thoughts into computer instructions.Little gems thisweekWhy most products today are meh By EdOrozcoThe secret of good metaphors By LouisCharronTheres no making without breaking By TripCarrollTools and resourcesFrom designing things to designing change Designers as facilitators, protectors, and collaborators.By IdaPerssonA content design approach for connecting with Gen Z Its not about the words as much as designing for their values.By Angelique LittleDesigning clear AI interactions Users need more than a sparkle icon.By AlliePaschalSupport the newsletterIf you find our content helpful, heres how you can supportus:Check out this weeks sponsor to support their worktooForward this email to a friend and invite them to subscribeSponsor aneditionOffice politics, good metaphors, trade wars and UX, clear AI interactions was originally published in UX Collective on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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  • Bacteria might eat the next chair you buy
    www.fastcompany.com
    When plastic entered the design world in the 20th century, it was hailed as a wonder materialsomething strong, durable, lightweight, affordable, and malleable enough to sculpt into expressive, futuristic-looking forms. But the material lost its halo as the environmental consequences became apparent, plastic waste being one of them.The design industry has been figuring out what to do about this for years. Its tried recycling, reducing the amount of material in a product, developing bio-based compostable alternatives, or switching to something else entirely. But not all companies are able to easily switch up their production lines or find alternatives. Now, a growing body of research around plastic-eating microorganisms is reshaping how the industry is thinking about the material and its waste problem.Hellera furniture brand that produces high-end plastic furniture and home goods like Frank Gehry tables, Mario Bellini chairs, and Massimo and Lella Vignelli tablewareis now making all of its furniture with an enzyme that will accelerate the rate of biodegradation. The hope is that if its products wind up in a landfill or at the bottom of the ocean, that they wont be there for long.Ten years ago, we were all drinking out of plastic water bottles and nobody really cared, says John Edelman, the president and CEO of Heller. But we learned that plastics are bad for the world. The company began to make some products from recycled material, but we wanted to get to the next level and become more sustainable, Edelman says. How can we be good for the planet and create incredible design? He adds that the bioplastics and compostable plastics on the market now dont work for Hellers furniture because of performance requirements. Since everything is indoor-outdoor, it needs to withstand rain, snow, and the suns UV rays.[Image: courtesy Heller]Heres how it works: The powder enzyme, developed by a company called Worry Free Plastics, makes plastic more enticing for microorganisms to eat, essentially turbocharging a process that already takes place naturally. When the plastic is in a zero-oxygen environment, like a landfill, the enzyme activates and attracts anaerobic bacteria that break down its polymers. As they eat the material, they generate biogas and soil. If the plastic is exposed to oxygen, as it would be in everyday use, the material remains stable. According to Edelman, it will take approximately five years for a Heller product made with the enzyme to biodegrade.Philip Myers, the cofounder of Worry Free Plastics, says its enzyme works in fresh and salt water, commercial composting facilities, and soil. A third-party testing company using ASTM methods (which involve placing an item in a controlled environment for 45 or 90 days, measuring the material loss rate, then calculating how long it would take for the entire thing to degrade) found that Worry Frees enzyme could help a plastic bottle degrade, on average, in seven-and-a-half years and a plastic bag in five; the total time it takes depends on the density and thickness of the plastic and conditions in a landfill.Real-world environments are not as controlled as a labs and the actual degradation rate could be different. One landfill might be more potent than another one, says Stephen Andero, the vice president of science and innovation at Worry Free Plastics. After doing thousands of tests, no two are the same. That said, the estimated degradation time is significantly less than conventional plastic. A water bottle, for example, takes an estimated 450 years to decompose. The enzyme can also be added to all polymer plastics, including bioplastics like PLA, which arent composting as fast as manufacturers claim.Worry Free isnt the only entity to explore enzymatic technology and the role microorganisms play in accelerating the degradation of plastic. In 2016, a team of Japanese scientists discovered a natural bacteria that eats PET plastic, which changed how the industry thought of managing plastic waste. Some researchers are now trying to engineer extra-hungry, plastic-eating bacteria. A materials science professor at UC Berkeley recently developed an enzyme that can make plastic self-destruct when exposed to heat and water. All of this research is leading to a boom in the bioremediation business.Now, manufacturers are bringing this science into the products we use every day. To date, most of Worry Frees customers have been manufacturers of single-use plasticsitems like coffee cup lids and pallet film. Myers is just as eager to find more applications for his enzyme as Edelman is to address circularity at Heller.Most of Hellers furniture is rotationally molded, a process that involves putting a powder compound into a mold then heating it up. As it heats up, it coats the mold, and when it cools, it solidifies into the shape of the product. In order to make its furniture biodegradable, Heller mixes the enzyme into the power compound. Nothing else about its production line changes.Its a drop in technology, Myers explains. It doesnt require them to change their equipment, their processanything. Its plug and play.Heller began adding the enzyme to its production line in November last year. Its going to be in all of its rotationally molded LDPE products. As old inventory moves off the shelf, the biodegradable items will enter circulation. Theres nothing different aesthetically about the pieces, and the retail price is the same. Everybody talks a big sustainability game, but research shows they wont pay more for it, Edelman says. My goal is to do something that is sustainable and at the same price . . . We actually achieved our goal of not just using recycled products, not just being recyclable, but going back to the earth.While its not likely that people are buying $1,000 dining chair sets with the intent to throw them away, Edelman thinks that Hellers adoption of enzymatic tech can spark more brands to do the same. Sustainability is being applied to every product because the design firms are pushing it, he says. Theyre the catalyst.
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  • This new paint changes color with the weatherand cuts down on energy bills
    www.fastcompany.com
    The color of your house matters beyond aesthetics. An extensive body of research shows that painting buildings white (which reflects heat) can make them cooler, and painting them black (which absorbs heat) can make them warmer. This is the reason why most houses in Greece are white, and many housesacross Scandinavia are black. But what about the rest of the world, where temperatures often shift with the seasons?Industrial designer Joe Doucet has developed what he calls a climate-adaptive paint that can change colors based on the temperature outside. The patent-pending formula, which is known as thermochromic paint, follows the same principle as 90s mood rings. Except instead of jewelry changing color, its the entire facade of a building. If the temperature outside is below 77F, the building will be black. If its above 77F, it will turn white.The formula can be mixed with other tints, so if you want a blue house, it would simply look light blue in the summer and dark blue in the winter. Its phenomenal to think about the built environment changing with the seasons as nature does, says Doucet, who estimates that painting a building with this climate-adaptive paint could save an average of 20 to 30% on energy costs.The power of paintMany cities have turned to paint to alleviate urban problems like the heat island effect. In 2019, teams across Senegal, Bangladesh, Mexico, and Indonesia painted a total of 250,000 small household rooftops with white reflective pain as part of the Million Cool Roofs Challenge. In 2022, the city of L.A. covered 1 million square feet of streets and sidewalks in Pacoima, a low-income neighborhood, with solar reflective paint. Surfaces cooled instantly by 10 to 12F, and a year in, studies showed that the ambient temperatures throughout the entire neighborhood had dropped by up to 3.5F.[Image: courtesy Joe Doucet and Partners]A climate-adaptive paint could make a difference for houses and apartment buildings, but also large industrial facilities like climate-controlled farms and warehouses that would otherwise turn to AC or heating to maintain a desired temperature. It costs to heat and cool a large structure so anything you can do mitigate that cost makes sense commercially as well, says Richard Hinzel, partner and managing director at Joe Doucet and Partners.Doucet first had the idea for a climate-adaptive paint while renovating his own home in Chappaqua, New York. I put off what color it should be because I wanted to have an understanding of what color did in terms of energy use, he recalls. The designer, who recently gave wind turbines a much-needed design makeover, built two scale models of his house, with the same kind of insulation material he used in the actual house. He painted the first model in black and the second one in white. For a year, he measured the surface outside and inside both models, and found that, in high seasons like summer and winter, temperatures between the two varied by as much as 13F. More specifically, in the summer, the white house was 12F cooler inside than the black house, while in the winter, the black house was 7F warmer inside. He says the opposite was also true. The black house was 13F warmer inside in the summer, while the white house was 8F colder in the winter. [Image: courtesy Joe Doucet and Partners]Doucet obtained these measurements from a scale model, not a full-sized house, but he notes the only difference between the two would be the time it takes for each space to heat or cool. A smaller pan heats up and cools down faster than a larger one, but it does not get hotter or colder, he says by way of example.At the end of the experiment, it occurred to him that the answer to his original questionwhat color to paint his housewas to paint it black in the winter and white in the summer. But that wasnt a practical solution.The more practical solutiona paint that can be both at oncetook two years to develop and about 100 more models to get the formula right. The team used commercially available latex house paint as a base, then mixed in their own proprietary formula. But crafting a formula that can sustain the transition from light to dark without degradingand therefore ending up greyproved difficult.If youve ever had transition glasses that got stuck on dark and never returned to clear, you understand the problem. If the paint degrades too fast and you have to repaint your house every month, then nobody will buy it.The first few formulas were degrading too fast, but the team eventually concocted a secret sauce that helps the paint last at least one year with zero degradation. This number reflects how long Doucet has been testing the paint in his studio. The final number could be even higheror it could not.The paint is yet to undergo rigorous lab tests, so many unknowns remain. Were not starting a paint company, says Doucet. Instead, his team wants to license the formula to paint manufacturers who would then take the climate-adaptive paint to the finishing line and launch it themselves.If the idea resonates and paint companies jump on the bandwagon, they will have to develop a competitive product that is both durable and pricedaccordingly. For now, Doucet estimates that the climate-adaptive paint will cost about 3 to 5 times more than a standard gallon of paintthough he says youd quickly make that back in energy savings. Im confident that if theres a positive response, this could do very well on the market, he says.In the meantime, Doucet finished renovating his house and opted for black. I couldnt wait, he says with a laugh.
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  • Rollable laptop concept expands sideways to reveal an ultra-wide screen
    www.yankodesign.com
    Although we have yet to see the first commercially available rollable screen phone, were already seeing the design used in other industries, particularly in the TV market as well as on laptops. Lenovos design award-winning ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 concept laptop, for example, slides its lid up to deliver a taller screen. It does offer more screen real estate to fit more content or more apps, but a tall screen is honestly unfamiliar to many computer users.In contrast, ultra-wide monitors are quite common these days, but their advantage only works if youre at a desk where theres enough space to place it on. Considering their portable designs, laptops are stuck with narrow and more standard screen aspect ratios. This laptop concept design, however, tries to offer the best of both worlds, and it uses one of two popular solutions when it comes to doubling screen size without doubling device size.Designer: CompalTruth be told, its not clear what mechanism this laptop concept uses to extend its screen, but given the absence of certain details, it can only be a rollable display. After all, Taiwanese ODM (Original Design Manufacturer) Compal already showed off a concept for a dual-screen laptop with a multi-axis hinge, so its more plausible that the Infinite laptop concept employs a rollable design this time around. The fact that there doesnt seem to be any hinge further supports that theory.Regardless of the actual mechanism, the purpose of Compals Infinite concept remains the same. It extends its display laterally, turning a 14-inch monitor into an 18-inch ultra-wide screen to deliver more space for more complex workflows. Only the sides of the laptop lid seem to slide out, and the rollable parts of the screen seem to remain hidden inside the lid when not expanded. The design easily keeps the laptop portable and usable in constrained spaces but still offers the possibility of more screen real estate when needed.Another unique feature of the concept is the grilles that stand behind the rollable sections of the laptop screen. It appears that these are actually grids of LEDs arranged in a dot-matrix fashion and can be used to show notifications or denote actions. Its not exactly a groundbreaking feature compared to a rollable laptop screen, but it does add a bit of flavor to the concept design.Interesting as it may be, the chances of us seeing the Infinite in action are close to nil, at least not from Compals brand. The companys business revolves around creating and licensing designs for device manufacturers, so it might show up someday under a different name. Presuming, of course, the rollable design catches on in the computing space, which has failed to do so despite numerous concepts and prototypes demonstrating its potential.The post Rollable laptop concept expands sideways to reveal an ultra-wide screen first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • Literally cheesy keyboard combines the two things that a mouse loves
    www.yankodesign.com
    Although it hardly resembles it today, the first ever computer mouse did have a crude similarity to its namesake rodent. It definitely doesnt make sense considering its function, but that name has stuck, much to the chagrin of people who have a profound disdain for the critters. Of course, this association has led to a few comical illustrations and anecdotes when the computer mouse is given a literal interpretation, but all pale in comparison to these 3D printed keycaps that are both mouth-watering and cringe-worthy at the same time.Cleverly designed as a tongue-in-cheek joke to mouse-adjacent hobbies, this Mechanical Cheese Keyboard pays tribute to the delectable dairy in more ways than one. Perhaps a little risky for owners with little tykes that cant yet differentiate whats real and whats fake, this work of food art is sure to raise your popularity or infamy among your social circles. Just be sure not to serve this Charcuter-Keyboard in jest at your next party.Designer: RobertLobLaw2We all know that eating on our desks isnt just a bad habit, it can be disastrous for electronics as well. Just search the Web not only about the horrors of spilling drinks on laptops but also the pain of cleaning keyboards that have all sorts of crumbs stuck inside the keycaps and switches. As if defying conventional wisdom, this 3D printed keyboard design is pretty much literally all about food, one that your computer mouse would love to nibble on if it were actually alive.Designed to be used on mechanical keyboard switches, these 3D printed cheese-like keycaps add a little flavor to your typing experience. Figuratively only, thankfully. Like Swiss cheese, some keycaps have holes on them, but those arent decorative only. Youll notice that there are no printed letters, which could make you feel like typing blind as one of those mice from nursery rhymes. Instead, the keycaps are printed with an equally unique cheese font design, which while creative is a pain to read when youre in a rush.The set also includes accent keycaps in the form of cheese graters, wine bottles, and jam jars, all shrunken down to size, of course. Some keys like Shift and Enter have cheese knives on them, though fortunately not sharp at all. Theres also an accent in the shape of a mouse as if you needed yet another one on your desk.The Mechanical Cheese Keyboard is definitely a fun way to dress up your everyday tool, but its a novelty that could quickly lose its appeal over more practical concerns. The accents make it impossible to some keys comfortably, and the lack of letter markings might trip all but the most seasoned touch typist. Still, its definitely worth trying out if you have access to a 3D printer, and maybe it will set you off on a hunt for a 3D printed computer mouse as well.The post Literally cheesy keyboard combines the two things that a mouse loves first appeared on Yanko Design.
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