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December 16 2010

16:38

Pee-based Gaming Coming to a Urinal Near You (If You’re in Japan)


For you men, peeing has become complicated these days: You have to deal with everything from tests judging your ability to pick a urinal to pictures of women laughing at you. It’s about time someone put the fun back in pee time, and SEGA thinks they have just the thing: urinal gaming. As Pocket Lint describes:

This wacky video (filmed in Japan, where else?) shows off the pee-based game in which the speed and accuracy of your urine stream is judged and converted to a cartoon-like mini-game display on the LCD.

Games to play with you pee include a graffiti cleaning task, a Marilyn Monroe-esque trick that blows wind up a lady’s skirt, and a game that asks you to shoot milk from your character’s nose. You control the game by hitting the sensor in the urinal, which rates you on how long and hard you can pee. The aim of the game is to help dudes stay on target, Popular Science explains:

If you can’t go standing up, perhaps Toirettsu isn’t for you (sorry ladies, but your hands-free method allows you to play Angry Birds on the can anyhow). Toirettsu targets restaurant and retail environments, ostensibly in hopes that by giving users goal-oriented mini-games to focus on, their men’s room floors might stay a bit cleaner as gents have somewhere to aim. And, of course, it gives establishments (and Sega) somewhere to place an ad.

Related Content:
Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Gaming at work positively correlated with multitasking
Discoblog: The Good Old Days, When Psychologists Used to Hang Out in Toilet Stalls
Discoblog: Brazilians Urged to Pee in the Shower to Conserve Water
Discoblog: Step 1: Pee on Stick. Step 2: Ask Your Phone if You Have an STD
Bad Astronomy: In space, no one can hear you pee
DISCOVER: Video Games That Make the World Better

Video:Youtube/uye515


November 30 2010

16:02

Guilt-Free Procrastination: This Online Game Could Cure Genetic Diseases

phyloHave a brain for puzzles? What about ones that help advance science?

A new online game called Phylo is harnessing the power of idle brains on the Internet–asking any and all to help align genomic sequences. Human brain power is used instead of computer power because, as the researchers explain in the press release, humans are still better at some things than computers are:

“There are some calculations that the human brain does more efficiently than any computer can, such as recognizing a face,” explained lead researcher Dr. Jérôme Waldispuhl of the School of Computer Science. “Recognizing and sorting the patterns in the human genetic code falls in that category. Our new online game enables players to have fun while contributing to genetic research–players can even choose which genetic disease they want to help decode.”

When game players find the best arrangements of colorful little boxes, they’re really making the best matches they can between the genome sequences of different animals–like a human and a monkey, or a dog and a bat. The researchers, from the structural biology group at McGill University, loaded the sequences of genes related to diseases like breast cancer into the program, adding in the genetic data for many different species. You can then slide the colored boxes (stand-ins for the nucleotides in DNA) around to minimize the number of mismatches and gaps and maximize the number of matched nucleotides. The matches show which parts of the genes have been preserved across different species and are therefore important, according to the Phylo about page:

These similarities may be consequences of functional, structural, or evolutionary relationships between the sequences. From such an alignment, biologists may infer shared evolutionary origins, identify functionally important sites, and illustrate mutation events. More importantly, biologists can trace the source of certain genetic diseases.

What I noticed in playing the game is that the scoring doesn’t seem to fit the game’s objective–the highest points are sometimes awarded for just squishing all the code together, not necessarily for making the most nucleotide matches. I also think the penalty for opening a gap (a stand-in for a genetic mutation) is too weighty. But all in all it’s quite addictive, until you get stuck on a sequence–you can’t move on to the next level until you equal the computer’s score, which, at least in my experience, can be tricky at times, and you can run out of time if you get stuck. Play the tutorial for more information and detailed directions.

In the end, you compare the gene sequences for up to eight different species, trying to make the best matches and beat the computer. Everyone’s alignments are analyzed by the game, and will contribute to the global database as an “optimization” of the computer’s sequence alignments. The creators even plan to create a Facebook application to play the game (which they optimistically say could rival Farmville in popularity), but right now it’s hosted at the group’s website. Give it a try and let us know what you think in the comments.

Related Content:
Discoblog: The Computer Game That Could Cure HIV
Discoblog: Impact: Earth! Lets You Smash Your Home Planet to Bits
80beats: Crowdsourced Science: 5 Ways You Can Help the Hive-Mind
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Foldit – tapping the wisdom of computer gamers to solve tough scientific puzzles
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Tetris could prevent post-traumatic stress disorder flashbacks (but quiz games make them worse)
DISCOVER: This is Your Brain on Video Games

Image: Phylo


May 04 2010

21:06

Is a Rogue Corporation About to Set Off a Geoengineering Disaster?

Last week, an atmospheric scientist named Kyle Vandercamp stumbled across some surprising documents at his job, and decided to blow the whistle on his employer, Bluebird Lab. The privately funded lab wasn't just researching potential geoengineering solutions--the planet hacks that could serve as a "plan B" if we can't get globe-warming CO2 emissions under control--it was actually preparing a full-blown, unilateral tryout for one of these schemes, he said. Freaky, eh? Might be something to be alarmed about--if it wasn't just a game. Vandercamp's blown whistle actually marked the start of an alternate reality game from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which is now playing out on the Web. Players can work with Vandercamp and the other characters to unlock Bluebird Lab's secret files, and will probably be called upon to save the world before the game is through. The geoengineering scheme in question would shoot sulfate particles into the stratosphere to increase solar reflection, keeping some of the sun's heat from reaching Earth and therefore lowering temperatures. The game seems to be premised on the idea that all geoengineering is a terrible idea, which plenty of climate scientists would take issue with. But who knows what twists the game will take. And since ...


April 28 2010

15:15

Scout’s Honor: I’m Only Playing This Video Game to Earn My Merit Badge

At first glance, it seems like every young Boy Scout’s dream come true: a merit badge for video games. The Boy Scouts of America have finally recognized the vital importance of the pastime that occupies so much of modern children's attention with the creation of a "video games" belt loop and pin, writes Engadget. But before anyone goes scurrying off to embark on a marathon gaming session, here's the rub. The awards aren't earned by beating a high score or rescuing the princess. Instead Boy Scouts have to fulfill several dull requirements in order to get the belt loop, including: Explain why it is important to have a rating system for video games. Check your video games to be sure they are right for your age. With an adult, create a schedule for you to do things that includes your chores, homework, and video gaming. Do your best to follow this schedule. Learn to play a new video game that is approved by your parent, guardian, or teacher. To get the pin, the scout also needs to create a plan with his ...


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