Episode 293 — AR 4 K9

Photo by Zach Lucero on Unsplash

Michael and Michael are left to their own devices to explore several stories featuring AR and AI — with games, drones and literature all making an appearance in this week’s episode.  

Andy’s copy of Mario Kart Live was just delivered, and judging from the initial response to the game, it is completely understandable that this is where he wanted to spend his time!  What a tremendous augmented reality implementation to transform your own home into a racetrack, and experience it through the camera mounted on the race car and viewed on your Nintendo Switch.  In another AR game example, Patched Reality’s game Epic Marble Run makes use of the iPad Pro (and just announced iPhone 12 Pro Max) LiDAR sensor to blend the world around you with the game’s task of getting the marble from start to finish.

But wait, there’s more AR: the US Army is testing augmented reality goggles for canine units, which spark a discussion between the co-hosts on how the dog’s handler could use the goggles to paint certain targets which the dog could investigate more closely.  This story is followed by the SiteAware example of using drones to quickly and easily evaluate construction project progress in conjunction with building an digital twin powered by artificial intelligence.  

The cohosts then get a little more philosophical while discussing an article about StoryFile, an way to allow for natural conversations between people — the person who was recorded answering questions, and the viewer who is asking questions that are responded to by the person who was recorded.  This reminds Michael and Michael of some earlier conversations on how recordings could be used to create a semblance of immortality, or at least how an artificial intelligence agent might use the corpus to determine how someone would have responded to a question.  One conversation on this topic happened back in 2012 on episode 26 of the podcast.  Michael R brings up Neil Stephenson’s book The Diamond Age which has examples of how a reader can interact with recorded and live other people.  Amazing how aspects of what Neil imagined in 2000 has become commonplace with today’s tablets and e-readers.

Following on the fantastically cool discussion with Mark last week, Michael and Michael explore some new ways to think about the code that goes into games, and how some of the delivered code is never activated because the conditions to execute that code are never triggered.  Which then requires one to ask the question, if code to make a sound never executes, does it really make a sound?  OK, so maybe that’s not the question, but still, it’s intriguing to know that there are visuals, dialog and gameplay that never saw the light of day that could be uncovered, restored and shared.  

Wrapping up this week’s episode, Michael and Michael share some of their favorite games that they would like to see a similar source code treatment, and links to those are listed below.  “Elf needs food badly!”  What games would you want to see the source code for?

Selected Links

Cnet article: Mario Kart Live turned my son into a terrifying monster — https://www.cnet.com/news/mario-kart-live-turned-my-son-into-a-terrifying-monster/ 

Nintendo’s Mario Kart Live — https://mklive.nintendo.com 

Epic Marble Run — https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id1515851367 

Patched Reality — https://patchedreality.com 

The Verge article: The US Army is testing augmented reality goggles for dogs — https://www.theverge.com/2020/10/9/21509181/us-army-augmented-reality-ar-goggles-dogs-military 

VentureBeat article: SiteAware raises $10 million to track construction zone progress using drones and AI — https://venturebeat.com/2020/10/08/siteaware-raises-10-million-to-track-construction-zone-progress-using-drones-and-ai/ 

SiteAware — https://siteaware.com 

dot.LA article: Storyfile uses AI to Allow Users to Talk with History — https://dot.la/storyfile-2648110620.html 

StoryFile — https://storyfile.com 

Episode 26 — Business Process Management & Immortality — https://gamesatwork.biz/2012/11/04/episode26/ 

Neal Stephenson’s The Diamond Age or, A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer — https://www.nealstephenson.com/the-diamond-age.html 

iPad — https://www.apple.com/ipad/ 

Kindle — https://www.amazon.com/b/?node=6669702011&ref=ODS_v2_FS_KINDLE_category 

The Verge article: A New Way to Think About Your Favorite Game’s Code — https://www.theverge.com/2020/10/15/21516254/video-game-history-foundation-secret-of-monkey-island-code 

Video Game Source Project by the Video Game History Foundation — https://gamehistory.org/video-game-source-project/ 

The Secrets of Monkey Island, An Evening With Ron Gilbert — https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-secrets-of-monkey-island-30th-anniversary-livestream-tickets-124486302883 

Games

Secret of Monkey Island — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_of_Monkey_Island 

Joust — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joust_(video_game) 

Space Invaders — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Invaders 

Gauntlet — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauntlet_(1985_video_game) 

Indiana Jones — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Jones_and_the_Temple_of_Doom_(1985_video_game) 

Missle Command — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missile_Command 

Episode 292 — Elite British Gaming

acorn
Photo by Heather Gill on Unsplash

Michael and Michael welcome to this episode occasional host Andy Piper and special guest Mark Moxon for an amazing trip down memory lane replete with assembly language references for a conversation about Mark’s lockdown project documenting the source code for Elite on the BBC Micro.  A fascinating look at the amazing creativity and user experience innovation rendered into 32K code running on a BBC Micro with many lessons for current developers.   Don’t miss this episode!

Selected Links

BBC Micro Elite source code — https://www.bbcelite.com 

Acorn Computers — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acorn_Computers 

BBC Micro — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC_Micro 

Elite — http://bbcmicro.co.uk/game.php?id=2484 

Elite Dangerous — https://www.elitedangerous.com/seasons/elite-dangerous/ 

Mark Moxon — https://www.markmoxon.com 

Episode 291 — Coffee Code

Photo by Michael Martine, Durham NC 2017

Michael and Michael have something special brewing for this week’s episode, starting off with an IoT thought experiment to determine how vulnerable consumer devices could be, and whether a device could be hacked without owning the network or the router.  The appliance of choice in this case the humble (internet connected) coffee machine, which researcher Martin Hron set to deliver a ransomware message, grind beans, turn on the water and beep until you decide to unplug it.  Not quite what you would want to have happen in the morning when you need that first cup of coffee.

Turning next to the robotic world, the co-hosts discuss an intriguing robot dreamed up by the team at the Toyota Research Institute that hangs from the ceiling to navigate around the kitchen.  Then, a disinfecting drone from Lucid.  Remember this North Carolina company from last year, that created a drone to wash windows?  This new one is designed to sanitize stadium seats.

Software stories for this week include a cool SwiftUI piece of code created to share information on the COVID-19 statistics for the UK which developer An Trinh has made open source.  And, in our continuing set of Microsoft Flight Simulator stories, we have a new interesting bug, this time a hole you can fly into.

Segueing to the world of fashion, Moschino partners up with Jim Henson’s Creature Shop to put on a special COVID-19 socially distant runway show for the Milan Fashion Week – with puppets, complete with models and spectators alike, with the newest fashions scaled to marionette sizes.

Wrapping things up this week, we have the Rolling Stone article on their top 500 greatest albums of all time.  See how many of these that you have in your collection and whether you agree with the rock critics choices for or #500! 

The team would love to know what IoT devices you’re intrigued by or what your favorite album of all time is.  Drop a line over on Twitter at @gamesatwork_biz and your topic may be on the agenda for next week’s episode! 

Selected Links

Gizmodo article: This hacked coffee maker demands ransom and highlights a key IoT flaw — https://gizmodo.com/this-hacked-coffee-maker-demands-ransom-and-demonstrate-1845191662 

Decoded avast.io article: The Fresh Smell of ransomed coffee — https://decoded.avast.io/martinhron/the-fresh-smell-of-ransomed-coffee/ 

The Verge article: Toyota’s robot butler prototype hangs from the ceiling lie a bat — https://www.theverge.com/2020/10/1/21496692/toyota-robots-tri-research-institute-home-helping-gantry-ceiling-machine 

The Verge article: Disinfecting drones will clean Atlanta stadium between events — https://www.theverge.com/2020/10/2/21498362/atlanta-mercedes-benz-stadium-falcons-united-nfl-mls-coronavirus-covid-19-disinfection 

D1 Disinfecting Drone by Lucid Drone Technologies — https://www.luciddronetech.com/disinfecting-drone/ 

Games At Work E255 — It’s A Wrap: with Lucid Drone discussion — https://gamesatwork.biz/2019/12/30/episode-255-its-a-wrap/

Mercedes-Benz Stadium — https://mercedesbenzstadium.com 

UK COVID-19 Statistics — https://atrinh.com/covid/ 

CNN Style article: Moschino sends puppets down the runway for Milan Fashion Week — https://www.cnn.com/style/article/moschino-milan-fashion-week-puppets-spring-summer-2021/index.html 

TechCrunch article: Everything Google announced at its hardware event — https://techcrunch.com/2020/09/30/google-hardware-event-roundup/ 

Kotaku article: That’s Not Right… — https://kotaku.com/that-s-not-right-1845218622 

Rolling Stone article: The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time — https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/best-albums-of-all-time-1062063/ 

Extended remix links for this week

Ars Technica article: Sourcegraph: Devs are managing 100x more code now than they did in 2010 — https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/10/sourcegraph-devs-are-managing-100x-more-code-now-than-they-did-in-2010/ 

CNBC article: Tesla Autopilot gets ‘moderate’ grade from European vehicle safety authority while Audi, BMW and Mercedes get top marks — https://www.cnbc.com/2020/10/02/tesla-autopilot-moderate-driver-assistance-grade-from-euro-ncap.html 

9 to 5 Mac article: Monochrome iOS 14 icon set nets designer six figures in six days — https://9to5mac.com/2020/10/01/ios-14-icon-set/ 

Episode 290 — Flying Cam

flying camera
Photo by fotografierende on Unsplash

Michael and Michael are glad to have Andy Piper join in for this first fall episode of Games At Work, and start things off right with some AR and VR stories, an AR one from Fukushima Daiichi workers using smart glasses to conduct their work faster, and a VR one showcasing passthrough camera capabilities and Infinite Office integration.

Then, games.  The new No Man’s Sky video is really impressive given the infinite number of worlds, which sparked a conversation on Spore.  The celebratory Microsoft Flight Simulator video going back to the original original version, also provided a short trip down memory lane with a reminder about the Battlezone arcade game.  My how far gaming has come in these last few years.  Almost so far that someone might make a podcast focused on the technologies used for gaming, and how they are applicable to business.  Hmm…  

Turning to AI, the Toonify app gets the conversation going on how this AI model takes an ordinary headshot and makes it look like a cartoon character.  See the show notes for the details and a link to try it out for yourself!  

After a discussion about the new Ring indoor camera drone named Always Home Cam, which seems just such an apt description of everyone’s 2020, so not sure why one might need such drone, Michael R shares a very cool open source project called MeetingBar which allows you to easily launch the next virtual video meeting you are in directly from the top of your screen.  And you know, you’re in at least a couple of such meetings every day!  

Rounding off this episode with a futuristic bicycle helmet, replete with lights, and messaging capabilities, an awesome lightsaber design and the requisite LEGO builds (new wall mountable Batwing, and baby Yoda!), Andy, Michael and Michael wrap up this week’s conversation.  

The team would love to know what you’re finding intriguing around the house, or around the web.  Drop a line over on Twitter at @gamesatwork_biz and your topic may be on the agenda for next week’s episode! 

Selected Links

NHK World-Japan article: Fukushima Daiichi workers use ‘smart glasses’ — https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20200920_17/ 

Venture Beat article: Oculus Quest 2 getting Infinite Office with Logitech keyboard and adjustable passthrough — https://venturebeat.com/2020/09/20/oculus-quest-2-getting-infinite-office-with-logitech-keyboard-and-adjustable-passthrough/ 

Microsoft Bob — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Bob

Spore — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spore_(2008_video_game)

The Verge article: This Microsoft Flight Simulator video highlights 40 years of PC gaming changes — https://www.theverge.com/2020/9/22/21450859/microsoft-flight-simulator-history-40-years-microsoft-ignite-video 

Battlezone — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlezone_(1980_video_game) 

The Verge article: Microsoft is acquiring Bethesda Softworks parent company ZeniMax — https://www.theverge.com/2020/9/21/21448877/microsoft-bethesda-softworks-zenimax-acquisition-xbox-game-pass-series-x 

Gizmodo article: I Have Seen the Face of God — https://gizmodo.com/i-have-seen-the-face-of-god-1845133084 

Justin Pinkney’s Toonify Yourself blog post — https://www.justinpinkney.com/toonify-yourself/ 

Toonify Yourself webpage — https://toonify.justinpinkney.com 

This Person Does Not Exist — https://thispersondoesnotexist.com 

Gizmodo article: Ring’s New Always Home Cam Is Actually An Indoor Spy Drone — https://gizmodo.com/rings-new-always-home-cam-is-actually-an-indoor-spy-dro-1845170272 

MeetingBar — https://github.com/leits/MeetingBar 

Fantastical — https://flexibits.com/fantastical 


Calendar 366 — https://nspektor.com 

TechCrunch article: The Lumos Matrix is the ideal urban bike helmet for a smarter, safer day trip — https://techcrunch.com/2020/09/21/the-lumos-matrix-is-the-ideal-urban-bike-helmet-for-a-smarter-safer-day-trip/ 

Gizmodo article: Star Wars: The High Republic’s Answer to Excalibur Is Exquisite — https://io9.gizmodo.com/star-wars-the-high-republics-answer-to-excalibur-is-ex-1845168113 

Slashfilm article: Cool Stuff: New LEGO Batwing Set Lets You Build One of Batman’s Wonderful Toys — https://www.slashfilm.com/lego-batwing/ 

The Verge article: Lego is making a Baby Yoda set. and I love him already — https://www.theverge.com/tldr/2020/9/21/21449221/baby-yoda-lego-set-the-mandalorian