Thursday, April 26, 2012

Diablo 3 beta throws open doors, this weekend only

Diablo 3, the much-anticipated fantasy game, is scheduled for launch in North America on May 15. In the meantime, you can get your hands on the?Diablo 3?beta version.

Diablo 3: One of the most eagerly-anticipated games in recent memory, and also one of the most frequently delayed. Horizons readers will remember that back in September of last year,?Blizzard announced that Diablo 3, originally slated to arrive in 2011, would be held until early 2012 ? enough time for the developer to polish up the gameplay.?

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"[T]his week we pulled together people from all of the teams involved with the game to decide whether we felt it would be ready before the end of December, and we grudgingly came to the conclusion that it would not," a Blizzard exec wrote at the time. "Ultimately, we feel that to deliver an awesome Diablo sequel that lives up to our expectations and yours as well, we should take a little more time and add further polish to a few different elements of the game."

Since then, Blizzard has finalized a May 15 North America launch date for Diablo 3.?

This week comes news that Blizzard will stage an open beta event for Diablo 3, a kind of "stress test" for the forthcoming fantasy title. VentureBeat?reports?that the beta test will extend from Friday afternoon to 1 p.m. EST on Monday. Anyone with a valid?Battle.net account is invited to play (excepting folks in the?Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau markets, who are getting a separate beta event, on April 23).

You can get started here.?

Diablo 3, like Diablo 2 and the original Diablo, will take place in the the murky, shadowy world of Sanctuary. Among the playable character classes are the newly-introduced "monks" ? "priest-warriors who follow the divine injunctions of their Patriarchs, the rulers of Ivgorod," according to Blizzard. Sounds like some good, geeky fun to us.?

For more tech news, follow us on?Twitter @venturenaut. And don?t forget to sign up for the weekly?BizTech newsletter.

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SpaceX redefines 'fashionably late' as Dragon trip to the ISS is delayed again

Image

Just a week after NASA signed off on its launch, SpaceX has had to postpone the flight of the Dragon. It's yet another delay to NASA's efforts to supply the International Space Station using private spacecraft and reduce the US's dependence on Soyuz rockets. Taking to Twitter, founder Elon Musk said that the company needed to do more testing on the docking code for the capsule, while spokesperson Kirstin Brost Grantham told Space.com that the company needed more time to test and review the hardware. Pending NASA's approval, it'll begin its journey heavenward on the head of a Falcon 9 between May 3rd and May 7th. Given that the original mission was scheduled for November last year, they'll probably need to check the use-by dates on those space rations.

Update: Elon Musk has confirmed, via Twitter, that Falcon 9 and Dragon will lift off on May 7th and rendezvous with the ISS. So long as "the company" doesn't detour them to some mysterious rock first.

SpaceX redefines 'fashionably late' as Dragon trip to the ISS is delayed again originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Apr 2012 11:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Thursday, April 19, 2012

Flesh-Eating Bacteria Case Highlights Need for Early Treatments

A 5-year-old boy in Wisconsin who fell off his bike, skinned his chin and bit his lip was likely one of thousands of kids with a minor injury that day in 2008.

But 36 hours later, this boy was in an intensive care unit fighting for his life, suffering from a very rare infection of "flesh-eating" bacteria, formally known as necrotizing fasciitis, which had developed in his right cheek, near his lip.

The boy underwent surgery five times over the next three days, and each time, surgeons removed more dead tissue. As the boy's body struggled to fight the infection, his blood pressure dropped dangerously low.

"We were having really, really difficult conversations with the family about what the outcome might be," said Dr. Robert Chun, one of the boy's surgeons. The mortality rate among children with necrotizing fasciitis is about 25 percent, he said.

A few days later, the boy's condition began to improve. Today, he is a healthy child and a champion in his age group for bike racing, Chun said. He has a small scar that runs from the corner of his lip across part of his right cheek. "You notice it, but it's not disfiguring," said Chun, an assistant professor of otolaryngology at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.

The case prompted Chun and his colleagues to look at whether the rate of kids developing necrotizing fasciitis and the mortality rate from the condition have changed over the past decade. The findings are published today (April 16) in the journal Archives of Otolaryngology ? Head & Neck Surgery.

Necrotizing fasciitis cases over the past decade

The researchers used data from the Kids' Inpatient Database, which includes data from children's hospital records from selected hospitals across the country. The number of hospitals that send information to the database increased over the study period, Chun noted.

The data showed that in 1997, there were 46 cases of necrotizing fasciitis reported among the 1.9 million records of children discharged from the 22 hospitals included in that year's data. In 2006, there were 105 cases among the 3.1 million discharge records from 38 hospitals, Chun said.

"That actually means the relative risk of you having the disease was just about the same," in 2006 as in 1997, Chun said.

Similarly, the researchers saw no improvement in the mortality rate over the study period. Chun said that the mortality rates seen in this study ? 3.9 percent in 1997, and 5.4 percent in 2006 ? were quite different from the 25 percent rate seen in most other studies, but the difference was likely due to the way deaths are coded on hospital records.

The main message of the study's findings is that "even with all the new antibiotics and treatments, this disease is still around," Chun said. "This is still prevalent in our age of increasing technology and medicine."

The bacteria that cause necrotizing fasciitis, called Group A strep, are common, and the infections seem to strike randomly. Therefore, it's important that doctors and parents be aware of the signs of the infection, Chun said. In adults, necrotizing fasciitis often occurs in people who have diabetes or a compromised immune system, but like most children who develop the infection, the boy in Chun's case was otherwise healthy.

What parents should know

It can be tough for parents to know when something is wrong. "How many kids get cuts and scrapes every day?" Chun said.

One of the key signs to recognizing necrotizing fasciitis is that the child feels a lot of pain at the site of the infection, out of proportion with what a parent might expect based on how in the injury looks, Chun said. Other signs include rapid swelling of the area, with the skin being very tense and firm, and a child who has gotten very sick ? feeling lethargic, often with a high fever ? in a short time.

Kids with more run-of-the-mill infections can be irritable or angry, whereas as kids with necrotizing fasciitis are much weaker and sicker, he said.

The odds for infected children improve when the condition is recognized early, Chun said. "The faster you act, and the more aggressive you are in surgery," in terms of removing tissue, the better chance that a child will live, he said. Tissue that has died due to the infection doesn't bleed when surgeons cut into it, Chun explained, so they have to operate until they reach tissue that bleeds.

"My advice to parents is that if your child is beyond normal ? the pain is intense, the swelling is rapid, the child is becoming very, very ill ? it's time to seek help," Chun said.

Pass it on: Flesh-eating bacteria in children can be fatal when not treated early.

This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @MyHealth_MHND. Find us on Facebook.

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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

One Direction's Harry Styles And Taylor Swift Are 'Friends'

In an interview with an Australian newspaper, Styles addresses romance rumors and Zayn Malik assures fans, 'We're not changing our name.'
By Jocelyn Vena


Harry Styles and Taylor Swift
Photo: Getty Images

Are they, or aren't they? One Direction's Harry Styles is addressing rumors that he and Taylor Swift are in a budding romance.

Last week, it was rumored that Swift had shared told pal Justin Bieber that she was crushing on the One Direction singer after meeting him at the Kids' Choice Awards last month. From there, fans began to wonder if the twosome could be music's next great power couple. Well, it might be a little longer before things heat up between them.

Styles confirmed in an interview with an Australian newspaper that while they exchanged numbers and have been texting, nothing else is happening. "We met in America, she's very nice, yes," he told the Herald Sun. "She is very talented... She's very nice... We're friends."

Swift is one of many girls that Styles has been linked to since coming Stateside to promote the band's chart-topping album, Up All Night. Other rumored girlfriends include American singer Lily Halpern, New York-based photographer Sarah-Louise Colivet and former "Bachelorette" Jillian Harris.

It's not just the band's romantic entanglements that are making news these days. In the same interview, Zayn Malik also addressed concerns regarding a lawsuit regarding One Direction's name. The band and their management, Simon Cowell's Syco Entertainment and Sony Music, was sued by a U.S. band with the same name.

"We're not changing our name," Malik assured fans, who certainly had many suggestions for the fivesome. "We don't know what's going to happen but we're not changing our name."

Do you think Taylor Swift and Harry Styles are more than friends? Leave your comment below!

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Saturday, April 7, 2012

lines and colors :: a blog about drawing, painting, illustration, comics ...

Kieran Yanner
Kieran Yanner is a concept artist and illustrator working for a variety of clients in publishing and the gaming industry.

Originally from Darwin, Australia, Yanner now lives and works in Seattle, Washington in the U.S.

His clients include Hasbro, NCSoft, THQ, DC Comics, Marvel, Upperdeck Entertainment, Decipher, Wizards of the Coast, Wizkids, White Wolf, Vivendi Universal Games, Disney and Sony Online Entertainment.

Yanner works digitally and has a nice flair for visual drama, from the sweeping motions of dragons or sea monsters to emotional characters to dazzling special effects. He also demonstrates a flair for humorous illustration, as in his character designs for Save Dr. Lucky (above, fourth down).

His portfolio is divided into sections by project and shows the range of visual approaches and rendering styles he brings to the different kinds of projects he undertakes.

There is an interview with Yanner on 3D Total.

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Social Media Camp McAllen ? Blog Archive ? Confessions of A ...

By Veronica Button + April 6th, 2012

I apologize to the Boomers I?m offending, and will say that I understand your need for
formality, because being polite and professional was pounded into your brains from
a young age. I also understand how proud you are of your family, and the legacy ?

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