Tag Archives: central

Lady Gaga Arrives In Gaming World With ‘Dance Central’

‘Rock Band’ creator Harmonix is working on a new dance game that uses the Kinect camera on Xbox 360. By Russ Frushtick Lady Gaga Photo: Jeff Kravitz/ FilmMagic Harmonix was making rhythm games long before the days of “Rock Band,” but despite being fans of dance music, the developer has always had a difficult time implementing those kinds of tracks into their games. The solution was to launch an entirely new rhythm-game franchise: “Dance Central.” The key to “Dance Central” was Microsoft’s Kinect , a motion-sensing camera that’s able to track the precise body movements of anyone standing in front of it. No game pad or controller is required — simply walk up and you’re good to go. From there, the jump to making a dance game seemed like a perfect fit. It’s the easy-to-play nature of “Dance Central” that made Harmonix believe they could bring it to the masses. During Microsoft’s press conference at E3 2010 , Harmonix co-founder Alex Rigopulos admitted that it’s a challenge to get people to play a dance game. “At Harmonix we’re always thriving for new ways to get people experiencing music,” he said. “Dancing can be intimidating for some people, but ‘Dance Central’ was developed so that everyone can play.” As someone who has never been good at dancing (in games or out), I came upon “Dance Central” with a healthy amount of skepticism. Surprisingly, though, I found the game remarkably easy, even for someone as rhythmically challenged as me. Complex dance moves are broken down into individual steps, and the difficulty is slowly ramped up, so players can take one move at a time. If someone is having difficulty pulling off a step-clap-step in the middle of Lady Gaga’s “Poker Face,” for example, the game will pause and let the would-be dancer try the move again until they have it down. It took me no time at all to adapt to the dozen moves throughout Bell Biv DeVoe’s “Poison,” and I even managed to gain a decent-size crowd of onlookers. Warning: This game requires a healthy sampling of humility. Harmonix isn’t ditching its “Rock Band” roots anytime soon, though. The developer is hard at work on “Rock Band 3,” which will introduce keyboards and a new “Pro” mode, which helps players to learn real-world guitars, drums and keyboards just by playing through the game. Both “Dance Central” and “Rock Band 3” are planned for release in the fall. For more gaming news straight from E3, head on over to Multiplayer.MTV.com . Related Photos The Evolution Of: Lady Gaga Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Lady Gaga Arrives In Gaming World With ‘Dance Central’

Americans get most radiation from medical scans

We fret about airport scanners, power lines, cell phones and even microwaves. It's true that we get too much radiation. But it's not from those sources — it's from too many medical tests. Americans get the most medical radiation in the world, even more than folks in other rich countries. The U.S. accounts for half of the most advanced procedures that use radiation, and the average American's dose has grown sixfold over the last couple of decades. Too much radiation raises the risk of cancer. That risk is growing because people in everyday situations are getting imaging tests far too often. Like the New Hampshire teen who was about to get a CT scan to check for kidney stones until a radiologist, Dr. Steven Birnbaum, discovered he'd already had 14 of these powerful X-rays for previous episodes. Adding up the total dose, “I was horrified” at the cancer risk it posed, Birnbaum said. After his own daughter, Molly, was given too many scans following a car accident, Birnbaum took action: He asked the two hospitals where he works to watch for any patients who had had 10 or more CT scans, or patients under 40 who had had five — clearly dangerous amounts. They found 50 people over a three-year period, including a young woman with 31 abdominal scans. When other radiologists tell him they've never found such a case, Birnbaum replies: “That tells me you haven't looked.” Of the many ways Americans are overtested and overtreated, imaging is one of the most common and insidious. CT scans — “super X-rays” that give fast, extremely detailed images — have soared in use over the last decade, often replacing tests that don't require radiation, such as ultrasound and MRI, or magnetic resonance imaging. Radiation is a hidden danger — you don't feel it when you get it, and any damage usually doesn't show up for years. Taken individually, tests that use radiation pose little risk. Over time, though, the dose accumulates. Doctors don't keep track of radiation given their patients — they order a test, not a dose. Except for mammograms, there are no federal rules on radiation dose. Children and young women, who are most vulnerable to radiation harm, sometimes get too much at busy imaging centers that don't adjust doses for each patient's size. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100614/ap_on_he_me/us_med_overtreated_radiation added by: MotherForTruth

Third Day of Violence in Kyrgyzstan

Violence in the Central Asian nation has claimed at least 124 deaths in a conflict between Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbeks.

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Third Day of Violence in Kyrgyzstan

Chris Brown Gives Back, Tweets About It

Chris Brown may have been denied entry by the U.K . because of last year’s Rihanna incident, but he managed to put his extra time here in the U.S. to good use. The singer has been busy rebuilding his image. If he’s trying to prove he’s actually a good guy, this helps. Here’s him handing $25,000 checks to the American Red Cross and the Central Virginia Food Bank: Chris Brown made a pair of generous donations in the past week alone. Brown Tweeted these photos personally, and some might say that he only gave to charity so he could publicize it and repair his image, but that’s not entirely fair. We’ll use our own, frequent Angelina Jolie defense: No matter what his personal motivations for humanitarianism are, his money and time still goes a long way. So, let us be the first to say: Good job Chris! NOTE : Follow THG on Twitter !

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Chris Brown Gives Back, Tweets About It

China: 4-Ton Transformeresque Sculpture of General

In the U.S., we often complete the run-up to graduation by writing 25 pages of extremely dry thesis that is typically read and appraised by a single person before being relegated to the library stacks forever. Bi Heng, a student at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in China, decided that instead he would create a 4-ton, $43,000 Transformer-inspired sculpture honoring legendary Chinese general Guan Yu. The sculpture was assembled from components of an old Jiefang brand vehicle, a 25-year-old military service truck employed by the People’s Liberation Army. Robo Guan Yu stands about 32 feet tall and wields a dynastic-era weapon that makes for a nice juxtaposition with the post-Revolutionary scrap he’s assembled from. As for the real Guan Yu, he was a respected general at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty and a key player in the civil war that ended it. Though his military exploits and valor have been pumped up to mythical standards over the years, he was apparently legitimately revered for his prowess at kungfu. Though Robo Guan Yu is unfortunately static, check out the accompanying promo video below to see the general’s latest moves. added by: diode

Visiting the Great Trees of London One by One

Images from The Great Trees of London : Richmond Plane Tree As a city, London is considered to be green and leafy, with lovely squares and parks filled with large and graceful trees. But the shocking truth is that there are only 56 great trees left in the larger area of London and only 10 in the central part. A great tree is an old and statuesque one, exceptional for its height and size of trunk and age. And they are disappearing quickly. Time Out, along with Trees for Cities has put o… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Visiting the Great Trees of London One by One

Germany vs Bosnia friendly 2010 score 3:1

Bosnia#39;s defender Adnan Mravac (L) and German forward Lukas Podolski vie for the ball during the friendly football match Germany vs Bosnia in the central German city of Frankfurt am Main. Germany won 3-1. New captain Philipp Lahm hit the equaliser and his deputy Bastian Schweinsteiger scored two penalties as Germany came from behind to beat Bosnia-Herzegovina 3-1 here on Thursday in a friendly. This was Germany#39;s final World Cup warm-up game before South Africa and the Germans responde

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Germany vs Bosnia friendly 2010 score 3:1

Is Lionsgate Hiding Killers?

If you want to hear what Movieline thinks of the Ashton Kutcher/Katherine Heigl vehicle Killers , you’ll have to wait until opening day, as Lionsgate has declined to screen the film early for critics. “We want to capitalize on the revolution in social media by letting audiences and critics define this film concurrently,” said studio publicists in a statement, before most assuredly bursting into laughter. Gee, what could they be afraid of ? [ HuffPo ]

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Is Lionsgate Hiding Killers?

On VOD: Dark Dark Dark Dark Dark Dark Dark

Things are going to hell in the Gulf, in Central Asia, in Greece, in North Korea and on the “me plus the couch equals bliss” on-demand channels. As with the news, the best you can do is gaze upon the badness, send in your modest payment, and, as Bono once sang, thank God it’s them instead of you.

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On VOD: Dark Dark Dark Dark Dark Dark Dark

Al Gore speaks on BP oil disaster, environment at Panetta Lecture Series

Gore brought serious talk of global climate change to the Central Coast. Gore was the special guest for Monday night's Panetta lecture series called Saving the Planet That Sustains Us, but the passion peaked around one topic: the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. BP has not released specific figures on the amount of oil spilled since the April 20 explosion. The former vice president said the company's decision to bar the scientific community from investigating the spill is both unfair to the American people and inexcusable. Before moving on to the next topic, he drew an analogy between the gulf oil spill and global warming hoping his numbers would hit home. added by: JanforGore