This is way too reminiscent of the Really Bad Tamagotchi Knockoff I had as a kid
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This is way too reminiscent of the Really Bad Tamagotchi Knockoff I had as a kid

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Also, I came to the disturbing conclusion last night that Pokemon can die.
Because I was thinking about transferring Pokemon, and I remembered that way back when, I had a Mew on my copy of Pokemon Red, obtained from the official Nintendo event. It would be nice, I thought, to have that Mew in the first main series game Iāll be playing in two decades.
But you canāt trade all the way from Gen1 up to the current gens, and even if you could I donāt have my cartirdge - it was left behind in a move, like so many others. I believe now (as many of my older games do) it graces the retro gaming corner at Confuzzled in the UK, so if you should find yourself in attendance you may actually get to see this Mew for yourself, with the original trainer listed as āNintendoā.
But thinking about that also made me realise - that cartridge is twenty years old. A venerable lifespan for a small animal, and, too, for a backup battery. A quiet and natural death, when it runs out.
Only a certain number of those Mews were released. You can hack one into your game, of course; but the fact that they were limited, for me, makes them feel more tangible, more individual. These pieces of code were spawned into existence, represented creatures, and when the last backup battery dies on those twenty-year-old carts (assuming no one copied their Pokemon to another device), will be no more.
The wily geniuses at the Fraunhofer Institute in Germany have created the worldās first real-time emotion detection app for Google Glass. The app (glassware, as Google prefersĀ to call it) can also accurately detect someoneās age or gender. All of the analysis is carried out on-board ā the cloud isnāt used; the raw dataĀ (which might be sensitive in nature) never leaves the Glass device. Real-time emotion detection could be of great use for people with disorders such as autism, who often struggle to interpret facial expressions, or simply for people who struggle to divine their partnerās true emotional state when they say that theyāre āfine.ā Fraunhoferās Google Glass app is based on its tried-and-tested SHORE (Sophisticated High-speed Object Recognition Engine) system. SHORE started off as an object-detection computer vision system, but over the years it has developed into a face detectionĀ and fine facial analysis system. It can pick out a personās faceĀ with a 91.5% success rate, and tell you that personās gender 94.3% of the time. It can even take a stab at the personās age. Previously, SHORE ā which is essentially a highly optimized C++ library ā hasĀ been deployed on various computer systems, from PCs to tablets. Now, Fraunhofer IIS has squeezed all of that facial analysis goodness onto Google Glassās rather wimpy hardware (1GB of RAM, dual-core TI OMAP 4430 SoC). Watch the video; itās a little bit scary how accurate the system is at detecting gender, age, and emotional state.
Surgeon ā Radiance