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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
1 y

New StarCraft rival designing an approachable RTS with 10-minute games
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www.pcgamesn.com

New StarCraft rival designing an approachable RTS with 10-minute games

RTS games are one of the genres that can be hard to get into as a new player. Titans like StarCraft, Command and Conquer, and Homeworld rule the roost with their years of lore, long matches, and complex systems. This is where the upcoming Battle Aces comes in. As the debut release from Uncapped Games, the team is made up of RTS veterans who want to make the genre more approachable, so we ask them how they're doing just that at Summer Game Fest. Continue reading New StarCraft rival designing an approachable RTS with 10-minute games MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best RTS games, Best strategy games, Best grand strategy games
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

Who Is Soon-Yi Previn? The True Story Behind Her Controversial Marriage To Woody Allen
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allthatsinteresting.com

Who Is Soon-Yi Previn? The True Story Behind Her Controversial Marriage To Woody Allen

Soon-Yi Previn was 21 years old when she first shared a kiss with filmmaker Woody Allen, who was then 56 and the long-time boyfriend of Soon-Yi's adoptive mother, Mia Farrow. The post Who Is Soon-Yi Previn? The True Story Behind Her Controversial Marriage To Woody Allen appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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National Review
National Review
1 y

Father of Freed Israeli Hostage Dies One Day Before Son’s Rescue
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Father of Freed Israeli Hostage Dies One Day Before Son’s Rescue

Yossi Meir passed away hours before his son came home.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

Frog Capital Just Needs 1 Graph-Post to Destroy Biden's (Media's) Claim That Inflation Is Going Down
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twitchy.com

Frog Capital Just Needs 1 Graph-Post to Destroy Biden's (Media's) Claim That Inflation Is Going Down

Frog Capital Just Needs 1 Graph-Post to Destroy Biden's (Media's) Claim That Inflation Is Going Down
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

AWKWARD: Whatever Is Going on in This Video, Joe Biden Is CLEARLY Not At ALL Happy With Obama (Watch)
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twitchy.com

AWKWARD: Whatever Is Going on in This Video, Joe Biden Is CLEARLY Not At ALL Happy With Obama (Watch)

AWKWARD: Whatever Is Going on in This Video, Joe Biden Is CLEARLY Not At ALL Happy With Obama (Watch)
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

OOPS! Gretchen Whitmer ACCIDENTALLY Reminds Everyone Dems Actually Killed Roe With Fear-Mongering BC Post
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twitchy.com

OOPS! Gretchen Whitmer ACCIDENTALLY Reminds Everyone Dems Actually Killed Roe With Fear-Mongering BC Post

OOPS! Gretchen Whitmer ACCIDENTALLY Reminds Everyone Dems Actually Killed Roe With Fear-Mongering BC Post
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

New Narrative of Pompeii Survivors Revealed Through Records
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New Narrative of Pompeii Survivors Revealed Through Records

Steven L. Tuck/The Conversation  On Aug. 24, in AD 79, Mount Vesuvius erupted, shooting over 3 cubic miles of debris up to 20 miles (32.1 kilometers) in the air. As the ash and rock fell to Earth, it buried the ancient cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum.  According to most modern accounts, the story pretty much ends there: Both cities were wiped out, their people frozen in time.  It only picks up with the rediscovery of the cities and the excavations that started in earnest in the 1740s.  Read moreSection: ArtifactsAncient WritingsNewsHistory & ArchaeologyRead Later 
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

Trump, Biden Race Tightens Nationally: CBS Poll
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Trump, Biden Race Tightens Nationally: CBS Poll

Donald Trump and President Joe Biden are essentially tied both nationally and across the collective battleground states, a new CBS poll shows.In the survey, the former president's guilty verdict in a fraud case in New York City pales in comparison to issues like the...
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

1st Neuralink user describes highs and lows of living with Elon Musk's brain chip
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www.livescience.com

1st Neuralink user describes highs and lows of living with Elon Musk's brain chip

Thirty-year-old Noland Arbaugh says the Neuralink chip has let him "reconnect with the world"
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Carbon is Surprisingly Abundant in an Early Galaxy
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www.universetoday.com

Carbon is Surprisingly Abundant in an Early Galaxy

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has once again found evidence that the early universe was a far more complex place than we thought. This time, it has detected the signature of carbon atoms present in a galaxy that formed just 350 million years after the Big Bang – one of the earliest galaxies ever observed. “Earlier research suggested that carbon started to form in large quantities relatively late – about one billion years after the Big Bang,” said Kavli Institute Professor Roberto Maiolino. “But we’ve found that carbon formed much earlier – it might even be the oldest metal of all.” ‘Metal’ is the name astronomers give to any element heavier than hydrogen or helium, and seeing metals like carbon so early is a surprise. Carbon is, of course, one of the building blocks of life on Earth, but it also plays a role in galaxy and solar system formation. It is one of the materials that can accumulate in the protoplanetary disks around stars, snowballing to become planets, moons, and asteroids. But astronomers weren’t expecting to see that process happening so early. When the first stars (called population-III stars) were born, in an era of the universe known as Cosmic Dawn, the only plentiful elements around were hydrogen and helium. All heavier elements didn’t yet exist. They were only able to form later, inside the cores of stars, therefore wouldn’t be detectable until well after the deaths of the first stars. Dying population-III stars that explode as supernovas throw their heavier elements out into the universe, allowing future populations of stars to develop rocky planets with more interesting chemistry. The galaxy in question, named GS-z12, is thought to contain largely second generation stars, built from the remains of those first supernovas. Astronomers didn’t expect the building blocks of the galaxy to be carbon-rich: “We were surprised to see carbon so early in the universe, since it was thought that the earliest stars produced much more oxygen than carbon,” said Maiolino. “We had thought that carbon was enriched much later, through entirely different processes, but the fact that it appears so early tells us that the very first stars may have operated very differently.” JWST’s Near Infrared Spectrograph allowed astronomers to break down the light coming from the distant galaxy into its constituent parts, revealing all the different wavelengths present. Every element and chemical compound has its own signature when viewed via spectroscopy, and the signal for carbon was very strong. There was also a fainter signal for neon and oxygen, though those remain tentative detections for the moment. How carbon emerged before oxygen is an open question, but one hypothesis proposes that scientists now need to revisit their models of population-III star supernovas. If these supernovas occurred with less energy than previously thought, then they would scatter carbon from the stars’ outer shells, while most of the oxygen present would be captured within the event horizon as the stars collapsed into black holes. Regardless of how it happened, there is now a strong case for heavy elements early in the universe – far earlier than anyone guessed. JWST is revealing unexpected details about the first galaxies that will ultimately make scientists’ predictions about the evolution of the universe far more robust. And perhaps most significantly, it also tells us about the very first step towards creating life. “These observations tell us that carbon can be enriched quickly in the early universe,” said Francesco D’Eugenio of the Kavli Institute. “And because carbon is fundamental to life as we know it, it’s not necessarily true that life must have evolved much later in the universe. Perhaps life emerged much earlier – although if there’s life elsewhere in the universe, it might have evolved very differently than it did here on Earth.” Learn More: “Earliest detection of metal challenges what we know about the first galaxies.” University of Cambridge. D’Eugenio et al. “JADES: Carbon enrichment 350 Myr after the Big Bang in a gas-rich galaxy.” ArXiv preprint (accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysics). The post Carbon is Surprisingly Abundant in an Early Galaxy appeared first on Universe Today.
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