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The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

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The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Gawker Media readers have purchased more than 10 million products through links on our sites. Here are the 15 most popular from this year.

Let us know what you treated yourself to in the comments.

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/the-10-most-po...

http://deals.kinja.com/the-14-most-po...

http://gizmodo.com/the-13-most-po...

Ranking based on purchases on Amazon through links on Gawker properties. “Purchased by readers” may not be accurate and reflects all-time purchases. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale.


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Amazon Prime

The best deal in tech got multiple unprecedented discounts this year, and we need a guide just to keep track of the ever-expanding benefits.

http://www.amazon.com/Amazon-Prime-O...

http://deals.kinja.com/amazon-prime-w...

Purchased by readers number not accurate.


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Kmashi External Batteries

While they lack the build quality and features of more expensive options, you won’t find better price-per-mAh USB battery pack deals than these Kmashis.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/KMASHI-15000mA...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-km...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Magnetic Smartphone Vent Mounts

Minimal, cheap, effective, and everything is better with magnets.

http://www.amazon.com/Mpow-Magnetic-...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-mp...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-io...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Velcro Cable Ties

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

3. Million. Cable Ties.

http://deals.kinja.com/bestsellers-ve...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Sub-$20 Bluetooth Headphones

The ecosystem of sub-$20 bluetooth headphones ranks in the top five of all-time popularity. These are this year’s most popular variants of the latest models.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-mp...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Amazon Fire

The best deal of Black Friday and the ultimate stocking stuffer.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-am...

http://gizmodo.com/amazons-50-fir...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Amazon Premium Headphones

http://www.amazon.com/Amazon-KA416Y-...

Like I said, everything is better with magnets.

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-am...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Antec Bias Lights

Bias lighting is a great, and in the case of the Antec Bias Light, very cheap way to reduce the eyestrain that can come with looking at a screen in a dark room, while also improving your perception of on-screen blacks and grey.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-an...

http://lifehacker.com/why-bias-light...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Aukey Lightning Cables

Clearly, one cannot have enough lightning cables.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-au...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Aukey 4.8A Dual USB Car Charger

You buy a lot of car chargers, but this Aukey model that sits flush in your cigarette lighter while still delivering 4.8A was this year’s most popular.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-au...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Anker PowerCore External Batteries

Anker makes the best external batteries money can buy, and their PowerCore series is keeping thousands of your phones, cameras, and even MacBooks topped off.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://deals.kinja.com/bestsellers-an...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Panasonic Vortex Nose Hair Trimmer

The Panasonic ER-GN30-K Vortex Nose and Ear Hair Trimmer is an effective and cost-effective way to get rid of nose hair and more.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-pa...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

iOttie Easy One Touch 2

The iOttie One Touch won its Kinja Co-Op, and many a spot on your dashboards.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-io...

http://co-op.kinja.com/the-best-smart...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Rubbermaid 42-Piece Set

Let’s see so that’s... ~375,000 pieces of Rubbermaid.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


The 15 Most Popular Products Of 2015, As Purchased By You

Brother HL-L2300D Resolution Monochrome Laser Printer

Wrapping up our list is a printer you won’t hate, and a whole bunch of you liked enough to buy.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

http://bestsellers.kinja.com/bestsellers-br...


Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.

Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker.


Vixen Is Joining the Live-Action DC TV Universe, Thanks to Arrow

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Vixen Is Joining the Live-Action DC TV Universe, Thanks to Arrow

You can’t keep a good woman imbued with the power of the entire animal kingdom down. Previously relegated to an animated series companion to the CW’s DC TV-verse, Vixen will be joining the live-action big league when Megalyn Echikunwoke brings the hero to life as a guest star on Arrow.

Echikunwoke is the actress who voices Vixen on the CW Seed Vixen animated series, and is so perfect for the role that I have to assume that the CW had a live-action appearance planned for her—or at least optimistically hoped for one—from the start.

Vixen will make her debut on the 15th episode of Arrow’s current fourth season, which will air on February 24. The question now is this: Is The CW thinking about adding a fourth DC TV show—this time starring a woman of color—to its line-up, or could Vixen be joining the Legends of Tomorrow in that show’s second season? I hope the former, but I can’t deny the idea of Vixen and John Constantine headlining LoT also makes me nerdily giddy, too.

[The Nerdy Bird via The Mary Sue]


Contact the author at rob@io9.com.

Gorgeous Concept Art of the Fiery Alien Planet From Syfy's Childhood's End

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Gorgeous Concept Art of the Fiery Alien Planet From Syfy's Childhood's End

Syfy’s adaptation of Arthur C. Clarke’s Childhood’s End wrapped up earlier this week, and ended with a stunning glimpse of an alien planet. We’re excited to premiere some concept art by Emmanuel Shiu illuminates that insane vista, exclusively at io9.

Some spoilers ahead...

At the end of Childhood’s End, one of its characters stows away to an alien planet, determined to see the home world of the Overlords who’ve dramatically altered life back on Earth.

Here, we see the “Supervisor of Earth” Karellen—or perhaps another of his race?—showing Milo Rodricks the fiery landscape of Jenjedda. Particularly visible in the artwork below are the Overlord creatures, apparently using those massive wings to fly above the flames. That’s something we didn’t see on the TV show, but it certainly makes sense in this environment.

Gorgeous Concept Art of the Fiery Alien Planet From Syfy's Childhood's End

How Did Into the Badlands Get To Be So Badass? Our Exclusive Interview!

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How Did Into the Badlands Get To Be So Badass? Our Exclusive Interview!

The first season of AMC’s Into the Badlands is already almost over—the (hopefully very bloody) season finale is Sunday. We talked to star Daniel Wu and showrunners Al Gough and Miles Millar about what we can expect.

Gough and Millar, a long collaborating team of writers and producers who worked on Lethal Weapon 4, Shanghai Noon and Shanghai Nights, dubbed Badlands their “passion project.” They wanted to bring martial arts back to American TV, and they wanted to create a unique world that’s an amalgam of their favorite things.

“AMC was the only place we pitched the show,” Gough says. “An hour later, they called and said, we want it.”

Originally, Wu was just supposed to be an executive producer. When it came time to pick a lead, they were all like—Oh yeah! There’s a guy sitting in this room who’s a legit martial arts machine! And then Wu (who has starred in scores of action flicks in China and Hong Kong) was cast as unstoppable assassin Sunny.

Wu is trained in Shaolin kung fu, wushu, muay thai, and points out that not all actors in martial arts flicks are all black belts or something. Despite being the only Badlands cast member with a significant amount of martial arts training, he says if you’re a hard worker and have decent athletic ability, that’s all you need. (You also need a stunt double—Wu points out that all the greats, including the Badlands cast, defers to stunt doubles for particularly gnarly moves that could break someone’s neck and put them out of commission for two seasons.)

The casting of Wu also marks something that’s so needed, but still frustratingly rare, on American TV: an Asian lead. Back in the ‘70s on Kung Fu—arguably the last show in the US to put martial arts at the forefront—the 100% white David Carradine was cast to play the half-white, half-Chinese Shaolin monk, Kwai Chang Caine.

“I’m really proud this show is breaking boundaries like that, but not intentionally,” Wu says. “Sunny could honestly have been anything: black, white, latino. It just happens to be that the lead is Asian-American. It’s actually much more interesting to me to say, ‘let’s just make a cool show with a cool character.’”

Badlands takes place post-apocalypse, though we’re still not exactly sure what happened. What we do know is that there was some cataclysm that really happened in the real world—the real world as we know it—as evidenced by relics and references: Tilda finds a snowglobe from Hawaii in a box full of artifacts, there are mentions of the Bible and The Cat in the Hat, and a plastic toy soldier grants Sunny an audience with the River King, like it’s treated as an icon.

Beyond that, we don’t get any more background. Not even the characters seem to know what the hell happened. That’s intentional.

“For us, it was important that whatever happened happened so long ago that people don’t really talk about it,” Gough says. It’s like how “we see the Pyramids, but we’re not quite sure what happened.”

Gough and Millar say that it might not have even been one thing, but an apocalyptic cocktail of threats like climate change, terrorism, and other modern-day death knells: “If they all ever coalesced, it’d lead to this mass extinction event,” Gough says.

And now we have the Badlands. The team also didn’t want to portray this post-doomsday Earth as a dusty, dingy wasteland, but not as Blade Runner cyber nightmare, either. Instead, we have this lush, Louisiana backdrop, peppered with residual Southern culture, like grand plantations, clashing with the bloody, blade-filled battles the show’s becoming known for. Also woven into the atmosphere is pre-Industrial Revolution technology and Asian-inspired villages full of craftspeople and travelers in streets that resemble old China or feudal Japan. The showrunners say that feudal Japan also influenced the social structure of the world, with Barons as shoguns, Clippers as samurai, and Nomads as ronin.

“We’re fans of Kurosawa and Japanese samurai movies,” Millar says. “We liked the idea of using that as a model of society, and placing [Badlands] there.”

Gough and Millar also confirmed that the show actually takes place in what used to be the United States. “We wanted you to know that it’s in [what used to be] America,” Gough explains. “It’s a martial arts show, but we didn’t want it to be this foreign concept, in some foreign land somewhere.”

Which is part of why the odd juxtaposition and mash-up of genres, cultures, settings and time periods make for such an interesting show. Wu agreed that the “weird fantasy world”—one that blended a traditional martial arts drama, a dystopian future, and an American setting—is part of what makes Badlands so special.

What can we expect for Sunday night? A huge cliffhanger, Wu says: “The next episode is definitely going to leave people like, ‘What the fuck is gonna happen now?”

Gough says “You’ll definitely get the first glimpse of what could be beyond the Badlands” in the season finale. “In season two, you will see a lot more of the Badlands, and the geography will start to be answered.”

And what of season two? (Please please please let there be season two.) No official word from AMC yet, buuuuuut... Says Gough: “The network is really happy with the show.” And Wu: “We’re expecting a green light.”

Photo: James Minchin III/AMC


Email the author at bryan@gizmodo.com, or follow him on Twitter.

We Think We Know Why Trader Joe's Bottles of Ginger Beer Are Exploding on the Shelf

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We Think We Know Why Trader Joe's Bottles of Ginger Beer Are Exploding on the Shelf

Trader Joe’s announced a voluntary recall of their Triple Ginger Brew this week due to an unlikely reason: Bottles were literally bursting open by themselves. But why was it happening? We think we know the reason.

The Problem of Fermentation

Neither the FDA nor Trader Joe’s has explained what’s going on to cause the bottles to burst. The problem of spontaneously-bursting bottles sounds awfully familiar, though, if you spend time around a winery or a brewery. Over the summer, bottles of Angry Orchard hard cider started to burst on shelves, as well. The problem in those cases was a fairly common one for bottled alcohol of all sorts: bottle re-fermentation.

Fermentation is necessary to brew our beers, wines, and ciders in the first place. But once the desired fermentation has taken place, you need to stop that process. This is usually done either just by chilling your alcohol, or putting in an additive before you bottle your liquor.

Sometimes, though, the chilling or the additive isn’t quite enough, and the liquid begins a second, unplanned fermentation after the bottle has been sealed, this is bottle re-fermentation. Fermentation releases carbon dioxide, which builds up a steady pressure inside the sealed bottle. With nowhere for that pressure to go, the bottle can eventually burst or explode.

The Strange Case of Ginger Beer

Okay, but this is ginger beer—it’s non-alcoholic, practically soda. So why would it be experiencing a problem usually reserved for wineries and breweries? The answer has to do with the process of making ginger beer itself, and how it differs from ginger ale.

While ginger ale is a soda made with carbonated water, the carbonation in ginger beer comes from someplace quite different. The ingredients are usually the same—water, ginger, flavorings—but ginger beer also adds yeast to the whole concoction and even (more importantly) a fermentation time. In fact there’s a number of home recipes so you can brew up a batch of ginger beer fairly simply in your own kitchen.

That’s right, ginger beer, though non-alcoholic, is still fermented. That means it could easily be subject to the same bottle re-fermentation process as a bottle of beer or wine.

Is bottle re-fermentation definitely the source of the exploding bottles? It’s possible that there is some other unnamed problem causing it. But bottle re-fermentation certainly fits all the signs and seems like the most likely candidate to cause the problem.

Everything You Need to Know About Cassini's Final Enceladus Flyby

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Everything You Need to Know About Cassini's Final Enceladus Flyby

An important chapter in our exploration of the solar system concludes tomorrow, when NASA’s Cassini probe makes its final close flyby of Enceladus, an icy moon orbiting Saturn with a global ocean beneath its surface. Cassini has already collected samples to determine if Enceladus’ seawater might be habitable—but we still have some unfinished business with this tiny Saturnian satellite.

On December 19th at 9:49 a.m. PST (12:49 p.m. EST), Cassini will zip within 3,106 miles (4,999 km) of Enceladus’ south polar terrain, where curtains of ocean spray surge into space at a rip-roaring 800 miles per hour, feeding Saturn’s E-ring. It’ll be the 22nd time Cassini has flown by Enceladus since entering Saturn’s orbit in 2004. While it isn’t our closest pass by a long-shot—we sailed within 16 miles of the moon’s surface in 2008, and took another deep dive thorough its south polar plume this past October—tomorrow’s flyby distance was carefully selected to answer a critical question: how much heat is emanating from Enceladus’ ocean?

“Measuring the heat from the south pole is a very important constraint on how much heat there is in the interior,” Linda Spilker, Cassini project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told Gizmodo in a phone interview. And determining how hot the moon’s core is will help astrobiologists figure out whether Enceladus really can support life.

A mere 301 miles (484 km) in diameter, Enceladus is a complex, geologically active moon with thick outer ice shell and a rocky core kept warm through the gravitational tug of Saturn and another moon, Dione. Sandwiched between icy crust and rocky interior is a globe-spanning ocean that’s become one of the most interesting places to hunt for life beyond Earth.

Best of all, cracks in the moon’s south pole ice sheet are shooting jets of frozen saltwater into space—free samples for any curious space probes who happen to be in the neighborhood. In October, Cassini took a deep plunge through that south pole plume, passing within 30 miles (48 km) of Enceladus’ surface to collect a droplet of alien ocean water.

Scientists are hard at work analyzing the October sample’s chemistry, and hope to announce their findings within the coming months. “We’re really looking forward to completing the mass spec analysis of molecular hydrogen,” Spilker said. Molecular hydrogen, or H2, is a simple energy source that feeds microbial communities living in deep sea vents on Earth today, and if we find it on Enceladus, that’d be a big deal.

Everything You Need to Know About Cassini's Final Enceladus Flyby

Conceptual model of Enceladus’ south pole. A hot, rocky core maintains a liquid ocean layer beneath the moon’s thick outer ice sheet. Cracks in that ice sheet release pressurized material from the interior. Image Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech

Tomorrow’s flyby will add another piece to the habitability puzzle. Life doesn’t just need a chemical energy source, it needs heat. “We now have evidence of nanosilica grains that could only be generated in very hot water, leading us to discuss hydrothermal vents,” Spilker said.

And of all the places to look for hydrothermal activity, the south pole is most promising. For one, it’s currently in the darkness of a years-long Saturnian winter. Without the Sun’s rays striking Enceladus’ surface, scientists will have an easier time detecting heat from the interior. What’s more, recent modeling work indicates that the crust over the south pole is particularly thin. “Maybe that thinner crust means we have a warmer region in the south,” Spilker said.

By angling its Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) instrument at the south pole during tomorrow’s flyby, Cassini should be able to construct a good picture of heat flow across the moon’s splintered surface. “The distance of this flyby is in the sweet spot for us to map the heat coming from within Enceladus—not too close, and not too far away,” said Mike Flasar, CIRS team lead at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in a statement. “It allows us to map a good portion of the intriguing south polar region at good resolution.”

With the data Cassini collects tomorrow, and all the other science it’s accomplished this past year, we can expect to have a much better picture of Enceladus’ habitability prospects in the near future. One way or another, our discoveries about this little ice moon have been an incredible, and unexpected, outcome of Cassini’s decade-long exploration of Saturn’s rings.

Everything You Need to Know About Cassini's Final Enceladus Flyby

Plume jets rise from Enceladus’ south pole in this Cassini image taken in 2014. In the foreground, you can see the textured, crater-free terrain that’s characteristic of the south polar region. Image Credit: Cassini Imaging Team/SSL/JPL/NASA/ESA

“What’s amazing is when we first planned our mission, we had three flybys of Enceladus,” Spilker said. “After the first, when we detected the plume, we essentially reshaped the mission around getting as many as we could.”

“I think over the course of the Cassini mission, we’ve really changed our paradigm of where we might look for life,” she continued. “It’s not just about finding that zone for liquid water on its surface—but finding the right conditions for a liquid ocean, a source of energy, contact with a rocky core.”

Who knows—maybe first contact won’t involve an rocky planet in the habitable zone of a sun-like star, but a weird, alien moon, nestled in the shadows of a monstrous gas giant in the frigid reaches of space.


Top image: Artist’s concept of Cassini zipping past Enceladus’ south pole, via NASA/JPL-Caltech

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

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The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Yes, it finally happened, somehow: the next Star Wars movie has arrived. We’ve spent the whole week celebrating the new movie and the entire saga, but last night, the Force was with millions of people as they headed to the theaters to see the movie. Here’s some of the coolest cosplay and moments from across the world!

Have you seen Luke Skywalker? This guy’s looking for him.

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Not everyone was at a premiere to see the movie. Some were there to get married AND see the movie! Australian fans Andrew Porters and Caroline Ritter tied the knot thanks to officiator Obi-Shawn Crosby at the forecourt of Hollywood’s TCL Chinese Theater. AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Fans decked out as members of the Rebel Alliance troop the carpet at the movie’s European premiere in London. Chris Jackson/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Fans at the European premiere were given lightsabers to wave at passers by, but many brought their own too. Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

A legion of Imperial troops patrol the crowds at the European premiere. Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images

Presumably, these German TIE pilots are big fans of this woman’s taste in t-shirts.

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

German Jedi and Sith alike converse by the light of their sabers at a midnight showing in Berlin. Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

These Rebels definitely picked the wrong place to stand at the European premiere. Chris Jackson/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

So it might not be strictly cosplay, but this BB-8 dress is amazing! Robin Marchant/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

An incredibly excited Ewok takes a selfie with a suit of Stormtrooper armor at TCL Chinese Theatre. David McNew/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Distracted by a youngling, Kylon Ren meets his end with a sinister poke outside the TCL Chinese theater. Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

An Imperial Guard stands watch in Aschaffenburg, Germany.

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Pro-tip: Never get into a lightsaber fight with kids (unless you’re Anakin Skywalker, probably). Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

“You don’t need to see my identification.” “I don’t need to see your identification.” “Of course I have a ticket for the premiere.” “Of course you have a ticket for the premiere...” Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Jedi vs. Jedi, live at the TCL Chinese Theater! Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

The Dark and the Light clash for the fans. Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Captain Phasma gets a weapon upgrade at TCL Chinese Theater. Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Rey, look out!

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Fans raise their sabers inside the TCL Chinese Theater on opening night. Wait, Ewok Jedi!? Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Who knew Kylo Ren had 3D glasses on under that helmet the whole time? Handy. Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

A lone Jedi and their Wookiee friend makes their way to the ArcLight Cinemas Cinerama Dome in Los Angeles on opening night. David McNew/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Fans embrace each other as they exit a midnight screening of the movie. David McNew/Getty Images

The Awesome Cosplay and Excitement of Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Opening Night

Another happy Ewok Jedi leaves a midnight screening. David McNew/Getty Images

Kylo Ren hangs with the fans!

If you’ll allow me to get a little bit sentimental, it’s amazing to see in these pictures the sheer power of Star Wars, and how it touches the lives of so many people—young, old, men, women, united by memories and loves of a galaxy far, far, away, both a refuge of nostalgia and a land of new hopes and imagination. It really is like the force: Star Wars binds us, unites us, and connects us on a level few things rarely can.

Did you dress up to see the movie? What were the crowds like at your theater? Post your pictures in the comments below!


Header Image Credit: Darth Vader dishes out the popcorn at Brenden Theatres inside Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada. Ethan Miller/Getty Images

My Favorite Martian Is a Seriously Weird TV Show, And You Can Own All of It

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My Favorite Martian Is a Seriously Weird TV Show, And You Can Own All of It

Long before Mork and Mindy, ALF or Third Rock from the Sun, one TV show helped to pioneer the idea of an alien sitcom: My Favorite Martian is a surprisingly odd show. It stars Ray Walston and Bill Bixby, two phenomenal actors. And it’s now available as a single DVD box set.

http://www.amazon.com/My-Favorite-Ma...

My Favorite Martian is the story of a Martian (played by Walston, whom Star Trek fans will remember as Boothby) who comes to Earth. And he makes friends with a newspaper reporter named Tim (played by Bixby, who later starred in The Incredible Hulk). Tim decides to pass the alien off as his uncle Martin, and the two men live together.

This show only ran for three seasons, but because television was insane back in the 1960s, there are 107 episodes. The typical episode revolves around one of a few things: Tim is trying to carry on with his normal life of being a reporter and trying to date skinny blonde women, but Uncle Martin screws everything up with his Martian hijinks. Or Tim accidentally screws around with one of Uncle Martin’s gizmos and gets into hot water. Or else, Uncle Martin helps Tim to solve some problem.

My Favorite Martian Is a Seriously Weird TV Show, And You Can Own All of It

Basically, My Favorite Martian is Bewitched, if Samantha was an older man and Darren was pretending to be Samantha’s nephew. There’s not a lot of the “trying to understand a different culture” stuff that later shows like Mork or 3rd Rock paid lip-service to. In fact, watching the Martian pilot, it’s amazing how quickly the show rushes through the set-up. Tim believes Martin is a Martian almost immediately, and then they’re caught up in some wacky hijinks.

What makes this show so interesting is the way that Ray Walston plays the title character. He’s doing a version of your typical 1950s and 1960s “quirky” alien, the sort of character that you see in movies and television from before Leonard Nimoy changed everything. But Walston puts too much mischievous weirdness into the character of Uncle Martin to be just a regular alien. He’s clearly taking a lot of pleasure in being a disruptive influence in Tim’s life, but he’s also a bit of a pedant and a cranky authority figure. Walston does this thing with his eyes, with one wider than the other, that makes him look a bit demented and constantly a little flirtatious.

In fact, it’s hard not to compare Walston’s Martian portrayal with William Hartnell’s run on Doctor Who, which was happening across the Atlantic at the same time. They both have a fussy “cranky professor” thing going on, but Walston is a bit more dry and ironic in his oddness.

My Favorite Martian Is a Seriously Weird TV Show, And You Can Own All of It

Bill Bixby, meanwhile, is almost unrecognizeable to fans of The Incredible Hulk. He’s much younger here, but he’s also doing a much goofier character. Bixby is always mugging and doing an exaggerated “aw shucks” put-upon voice as he deals with the latest gosh-darn thing that having an alien under his roof has caused to happen to him. I gotta say, Walston’s performance is kind of great, but Bixby is clearly aware that he’s in a ridiculous sitcom and is acting accordingly.

My Favorite Martian Is a Seriously Weird TV Show, And You Can Own All of It

I haven’t watched all 107 episodes, but based on the ones I did watch, the show’s first season is clearly the best. (As is the case with so many of these shows.) In season one, Tim’s job as a newspaper reporter matters, and there are a number of storylines where Tim is trying to get a scoop or prove himself, and Martin either helps or gets in the way. And the characters of Tim’s landlady and her young daughter are also played to good effect. After the first season, a new policeman character is added, and the show is suddenly doing a lot more stories about the police detective being suspicious of Tim and his weird uncle.

The best episodes are the ones where the show just goes completely nuts—like one where Martin accidentally turns a squirrel into a human, and Tim, Martin and the squirrel have to form a Beatles-inspired singing group (complete with Beatle wigs) to get out of a sticky situation. They become a huge sensation, but the squirrel has to return to squirrel form, leaving their screaming fans disappointed. In another episode, a rabbit eats a Martian pill and becomes six feet tall. There is also random time travel, telepathy, and a few other science fiction tropes.

Nobody is going to accuse My Favorite Martian of being one of the all-time greatest TV shows. We put it at #76 in the top 100 some years ago, which seems about right. But this is an important show in the history of the genre, just because it predates both Star Trek and Lost in Space, and helped to define communication with aliens for a generation of viewers. (It’s no accident that the first ever episode featuring Mork from Ork is called “My Favorite Orkan.”)

And sitting in bed binge-watching episodes of My Favorite Martian turned out to be unexpectedly fun, because they’re just so silly and good-humored, and it has that old-school TV thing where nobody ever really learns anything and the plots are just random, and everything is fixed at the end of 20-odd minutes. There’s something slightly subversive about the way that Ray Walston is cocking his eyebrow at everything all the time, and the way he trolls all the humans. Plus it’s hard not to look at Ray Walston and Bill Bixby, in this day and age, and not see a married couple. They have so much more chemistry than Bixby has with any of the women on the show.

The DVD box set features beautifully restored picture and sound quality—at least on my computer screen, it looked great and had no noticeable blur or hiss or anything. (The episodes are almost all on Hulu, too, by the look of things.) The DVD set’s extras are a wee bit disappointing: There are some vintage radio interviews and a few bits of behind-the-scenes effects work, but no real look into the making of the show. The best extras are all of the random advertisements that incorporate the show’s credits into ads for breakfast cereals and other stuff.

My Favorite Martian Is a Seriously Weird TV Show, And You Can Own All of It

Actually, the best extra on the DVD box set is the unaired pilots for two other TV shows from the same production company—The Man in the Square Suit is a TV show that never got a green light, about a “square” TV executive who has to go work on a “mod” show about youth culture, and it’s one of the funniest things I’ve seen lately. (Those kids with their loud music and crazy dances!)

Anyway, My Favorite Martian would be a pretty good present for that person in your life who’s seen all the more well-known science fiction shows a dozen times. This is a major piece of science fiction history, that I suspect most younger people have never seen, and it’s pretty funny, both intentionally and unintentionally. And you can’t really beat Ray Walston and Bill Bixby as the stars of the show.

http://www.amazon.com/My-Favorite-Ma...


Charlie Jane Anders is the author of All The Birds in the Sky, coming in January from Tor Books. Follow her on Twitter, and email her.


We've Never Seen Venus' Roiling Storms Like This Before

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We've Never Seen Venus' Roiling Storms Like This Before

The first images of Venus from its solitary, tardy orbiter are already revealing new secrets about its cloud dynamics. The fourth of the Akatsuki spacecraft’s cameras sent back new details on cloud structure for the planet’s roiling storms that we’ve never seen before.

Akatsuki is the plucky spacecraft that managed to use its manoeuvring thrusters to slip into Venus’ orbit five years late. It looks like its instruments survived its close brush with the sun, and now the spacecraft is sending back its first up-close pictures of the planet.

We've Never Seen Venus' Roiling Storms Like This Before

First light images for Akatsuki captured on December 7 (LIR, UV1, IR1) and December 11 (IR2), 2015. Image credit: JAXA

The first three cameras all booted up quickly and captured images on December 7th as soon as the spacecraft was in orbit. The fourth camera took longer to boot up as the detector needed to be chilled to below -328°F (-200°C). It didn’t capture its first in-orbit image until December 11th. Between the super-rotation of Venus’ clouds and the spacecraft’s orbit, all four images capture approximately the same regions, despite being days apart.

The images are in infrared and ultraviolet light, so are remapped to the visible spectrum for us to see them with our limited human eyes. The long infrared (LIR) is used to map out temperature distribution, while ultraviolet (UVI) maps the chemicals involved in cloud formation. The two other mid-infrared views capture cloud structure at the upper layers and deeper within the clouds.

We've Never Seen Venus' Roiling Storms Like This Before

IR2 image captured on December 11, 2015. Image credit: JAXA

The IR2 infrared camera is centered around a strong absorption band for carbon dioxide. This can be used as a proxy for measuring the undulations of the cloud tops, revealing highs and lows. We already knew about the broad band around the planet—cloud tops at the north and south poles are lower (darker in the IR2 image) than in the central latitudes. But this image is the first time we’re seeing the more delicate structures of striping within the low latitude regions, giving us our first hint at unravelling the complex cloud dynamics of Venus.

We have no idea what it means yet, but at least we’re finally getting fresh details for this painfully-understudied planet to start pointing us in the right direction to ask questions.

[JAXA]

Top image: First light image of Venus in infrared reveals new detailed structures in the upper cloud tops. Credit: JAXA


Contact the author at mika.mckinnon@io9.com or follow her at @MikaMcKinnon.

The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015

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The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015

Not every scientific advance is heralded as a revolutionary breakthrough, because science mostly progresses incrementally. Sure, certain high-profile stories caught the lion’s share of attention this year. But there’s still plenty of nifty research going on that deserves a nod of appreciation too. Here are ten of our favorite cool science stories that you may have missed in 2015.

Is This the First Image of Light as Both Particle and Wave?

Early in the year, the first ever photograph of light as a particle and a wave at the same time went viral — but we soon learned the truth was a bit more nuanced than that. Created by a research team led by Fabrizio Carbone at EPFL, the experiment added a twist to the classic photoelectric effect, which explains why, for, instance, UV light hitting a metal target emits electrons. To wit: light exhibits both particle- and wave-like behavior.

This seemed positively revolutionary, since a cornerstone of quantum mechanics is that you just can’t see both particle and wave aspects at the same time. As Ben Stein explained at Inside Science News, the image is actually lots of photons (the elementary particles of light) imaged together, with some acting like particles and others acting like waves. It’s not the same photons exhibiting their dual nature simultaneously. Maybe it wasn’t as earth-shattering a breakthrough as the Internet originally thought, but it’s still a pretty darn cool picture. [Paper]

The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015

Credit: Luc Arnal

The Science of Screaming

Everybody finds the sound of a human scream shrill and jarring. A study by neuroscientists at New York University suggested this might have something to do with how the acoustic quality of a human scream triggers the brain’s fear response. The key is a property of sound known as roughness that refers to how fast a sound changes in loudness. Per co-author Luc Arnal, normal speech has very slow differences in loudness (between 5 and 5 Hz) while screams show faster differences in loudness (between 30 and 150 Hz). He likens the effect to a strobe light, only for sound instead of sight.

Arnal and his then-advisor, NYU neuroscientist David Poeppel, used recordings from YouTube videos, films and screaming volunteers, with varying degrees of roughness, to study how subjects in an fMRI scanner responded. The rougher the sound, the more participants rated it scary or distressing — and the stronger the activation response in the amygdala (often dubbed the fear center of the brain), rather than the auditory cortex. This suggests that our response to roughness in the sounds we hear triggers fear responses, perhaps to help us better react to perceived danger. They also found similar responses to the shrill sounds of crying babies or car alarms. [Paper]

A Quantum “Weeping Angel” Effect

We all know that quantum mechanics is weird. Case in point: a mere act of observation determines the outcome of an experiment. But if we never look away, time effectively stands still. It’s known as the quantum Zeno effect, although a rough analogy can be drawn to the Weeping Angels in Doctor Who. A watched quantum pot never boils. And a watched Weeping Angel can’t move.

There have been a series of experiments confirming that the quantum Zeno effect really happens. (There’s also an “Anti-Zeno Effect,” whereby staring at the metaphorical quantum pot brings it to a boil more quickly — also experimentally confirmed.) Most recently, Cornell University physicists used lasers to trap a gas of rubidium chilled to super-cold temperatures in a lattice of light. Thanks to the peculiarities of quantum mechanics, every now and then, an atom manages to tunnel out of the trap.

But when they repeatedly zapped the atoms with laser pulses at shorter and shorter intervals —the equivalent of looking inside Schroedinger’s proverbial box again and again and again — they found this makes it more difficult for trapped atoms to tunnel out. When the intervals become short enough, the atoms make like a Weeping Angel and are effectively frozen in place. [Paper]

Dance of the Liquid Droplets

Water droplets spread out when they hit a glass surface, but Stanford University scientists were puzzled by the strange behavior of water droplets dyed with food coloring that also contained propylene glycol (PG). As Gizmodo’s Maddie Stone wrote, “When two droplets of the same PG concentration are placed near one another, they coalesce. However, when droplets of different concentrations are neighbors, they get close but never join. Sometimes they even chase one another.”

In a paper published in Nature, the Stanford scientists described the “beautiful” science that explains why liquid droplets dance with each other in such strikingly synchronized motion. It’s because the dancing drops are “binary,” i.e., contain two different types of fluid. Water evaporates more quickly than PG, and also has a higher surface tension, so it leaves more of the chemical behind as it evaporates away from the droplet’s edge. Then the surface tension kicks in, driving an inward flow. Co-author Manu Prakash likened the effect to a tornado inside the droplet. “Now the engine is running like a car, but the clutch is not engaged,” he told the Washington Post. “The drop doesn’t know where to go.”

When another drop is added, the evaporation from the first acts as a kind of signal, telling the second where to go. The result is that two droplets appear to dance together. The Stanford team even created a guide so you, too, can create dancing droplets at home: you just need food coloring, water, and a glass slide. [Paper]

Earthly Cities Grow Like Galaxies

One of the nifty things about a good mathematical model is that it can reveal hidden connections between two systems that, on the surface, appear to be very different from each other. Two cosmologists, Henry Lin and Abraham Loeb, uncovered just such a surprising correlation, demonstrating that the way galaxies evolve from variations in matter density in the early universe is mathematically equivalent to the way cities grow from changes in population density on Earth.

Their analysis centers on a well-known scaling pattern known as Zipf’s law, observed in everything from personal friendships to the population density of cities. As Gizmodo’s Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan wrote, “Basically, the city with the highest population in a country will be twice as large as the next most populous city, and three times as large as the third most populous city, and so on.” The same holds true for galaxies, it seems. Loeb and Lin took a mathematical formula describing how galaxies form and evolve and applied it to the evolution of cities on Earth. The two systems proved remarkably similar. The scientists think that similar mathematical tools could be used to better model the spread of epidemics, among other applications. [Paper]

A Grand Theory of Wrinkles

The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015

Credit: Denis Terwagne and Pedro Reis, MIT

Wrinkles are found all throughout nature, from the surfaces of planets, to the dimples on a golf ball, and even in the small intestine. But these systems are usually studied on a case-by-case basis, working backwards to create computer simulations to better understand how and why they form. This year a team of engineers and mathematicians at MIT came up with their own grand unified theory of wrinkles, especially applicable to wrinkles that form on curved surfaces.

MIT engineer Pedro Reis has spent years studying how objects wrinkle. While conducting experiments on silicone test spheres, he noted that when he sucked the air out, some of those spheres formed dimples under pressure, but others formed a more squiggly pattern. His MIT colleague, mathematician Jorn Dunkel, noted a similarity between the latter and the patterns that appear when one heats a thin layer of oil. The two departments combined their efforts, pouring over all of Reis’ experimental data.

They found that the kind of patterns that formed depended on just two factors: the curvature of the lower layer in relation to the thickness of the top wrinkling layer, and how much stress was applied to the wrinkling layer. “Our theory you could basically apply to the surface of the moon or Mars, or the surface of a grape,” co-author Norbert Stroop told Quanta magazine. [Paper]

Getting to the Bottom of the Lollipop Hypothesis

It’s a question that featured in a classic candy commercial: how many licks does it take to get to to center of a Tootsie-Pop? This year we learned the answer: about 2500, according to experiments by physicists at New York University. Call it the Lollipop Hypothesis. The NYU researchers used the candy to determine how fluids dissolve solids, a topic that also applies to the erosion of rivers and how pills dissolve in the body.

The NYU team made their own homemade lollipops out of boiled sugar, corn syrup, and water, which they then molded into various shapes. Then they immersed the lollipops in a “water tunnel” (the aquatic equivalent of a wind tunnel) and watched them dissolve, varying the flow speed of the water. They found that there seems to be a preferred shape that objects take on as they dissolve, per Physics Buzz: “a smooth rounded front, a beveled facet in the middle, and a flat back side.” They also found that the dissolve rate depends on flow speed: for example, change the speed from 1 MPH to 4 MPH and the lollipop would completely dissolve in half the time.

As for counting the number of licks, they calculated it would take an estimated 1000 swipes of the tongue per centimeter of candy to reach the center of a Tootsie-Pop. Since the candy measures about 1.063 in diameter, that translates into 2500 licks. [Paper]

Solving the Mystery of How Glass Forms

Glass is a class of materials that has been around for a very long time, yet its deeper secrets still elude physicists — particularly the stubborn mystery of how glass forms at the molecular level. A team of Canadian and French scientists devised a new model for how a liquid turns into a glass by combining, for the first time, two decades-old theories: crowding and cooperative movement.

Molecular crowding basically treats molecules within glasses as people moving about a crowded room. The key element is density. As more and more people squeeze into the room, there is less space, so people (or molecules) move more slowly — although those located near the door are still able to move more freely, just like the molecules on a glassy surface never stop flowing, even at lower temperatures.

That’s where cooperative movement kicks in. As the crowd thickens, people tend to move in conjunction with their nearest neighbors. The scientists found that molecules exhibit similar behavior, forming strings of weak molecular bonds with their nearest neighbors. The new model could prove useful for developing novel glassy nano materials with useful properties. [Paper]

The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015

Credit: Evangelidis, V. et al./Journal of Archaeological Science

Slime Mold Builds an Ancient Road Network

Take a moment to marvel at the humble slime mold, an ancient group of organisms that reproduce via spores and get their name from the dimly stuff they excrete. When times get tough, slime molds band together, and exhibit a strange kind of hive-mind, or cooperative intelligence. They can solve mazes, change their appearance, and find the most efficient path between two food sources. And this year they helped reconstruct an ancient road network.

Greek archaeologists used a bright yellow slime mold called Physarum polycephalum to, in essence, redraw the ancient Roman road networks running through the Balkans between the 1st and 4th centuries A.D. They grew the molds on a map of the area made up of agar gel, with oat flakes at strategic locations, representing major Roman cities. The slime molds reproduced the network accurately. Those roads were well known from historical documents; this experiment was proof of principle. The archaeologists hope that they can use slime molds to help reconstruct lesser-known pathways that have been lost. So the best archaeological assistants of the 21st may well be be slime molds. [Paper]

The Coolest Science Stories You May Have Missed in 2015

Prat-Camps, J. et al./Scientific Reports

A Magnetic Wormhole Illusion

A team of scientists at Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain took materials science into stealth mode, creating a “wormhole illusion” that causes magnetic field to move through space undetected. The operative word here is “illusion.” This is not a bona fide wormhole connecting two points in space-time — a staple of science fiction decades, although we’ve never observed any directly. Rather, it’s created using metamaterials to tunnel magnetic fields from one point to another

The device is made of two concentric spheres encasing a spiral of ferromagnetic metal. As Gizmodo’s Maddie Stone wrote,

The ferromagnet transmits magnetic field lines from one end of the device to the other. Meanwhile, a shell of yttrium barium copper oxide (a superconducting material, yellow) bends and distorts the magnetic field lines as they travel. An outer shell composed of “mu-metals” (used for shielding electronic devices, silver) perfectly cancels out the magnetic distortion of the superconductor, rendering the entire thing “magnetically invisible” from the outside. Dunk it all in a liquid nitrogen bath—superconductors only work at extremely low temperatures—and voila, you’ve got yourself a wormhole.

It’s a very cool experiment, with a purpose: it could one day help improve medical scanners. Per New Scientist: “Wormholes could let multiple magnetic imagers work together without interfering with each other, or could be used to put some distance between bulky sensors and patients – all without changing the background magnetic field MRIs rely on.” [Paper]

Top image: Fabrizio Carbone/EPFL.

Black Holes Only Go Truly Black if They're Really Big

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Black Holes Only Go Truly Black if They're Really Big

Black holes don’t emit light, but they still shine. They do so because of accretion disks, but those disks don’t appear around black holes of all sizes. There could be incredibly huge black holes out in the universe that we can’t see, because they’ve gone really dark.

Astronomers have seen some massive black holes. They’ve seen black holes billions of times more massive than our sun. What they haven’t seen is black holes much bigger than 50 billion solar masses. While no one’s complaining about that, a few are asking why, and one guy has a guess. At the University of Leicester, Professor Andrew King took a look at the disks of gas and dust that surround black holes. These orbit the black hole a bit like water circling a drain—in that there’s a decent chance that matter caught up in that orbit is going to fall into the black hole, feeding the thing. In the meantime, the disk heats and shines, letting us “see” the black hole it is circling.

As the black hole grows, the disk doesn’t get bigger. The opposite tends to happen. Matter breaks up and away, often forming new stars. The bigger the black hole, the less capable it is of keeping a disk around it. The upper limit for a black hole that can keep any sort of disk is about 50 billion solar masses. Since the disk is what feeds the black hole, this becomes a soft limit for black hole size in general.

Not a hard limit, though. If two black holes collided, they could make a black hole with a mass of up to 100 billion solar masses. (Also, that would be incredibly cool.) Because it had no disk of hot gas around it, we would have trouble seeing it. For those who are now looking over their shoulders, it wouldn’t be completely invisible. It would still shape the motion of nearby objects and distort the path of light, so we probably would notice one if it were perched just on the edge of the solar system. (Although if we saw it, what would we do about it?) Still, it would be much, much harder to spot than other, smaller black holes. The bigger they get, the more impossible it is to see them.

[Source: How Big Can a Black Hole Grow?]

·Image: NASA/CXC/Tokyo Institute of Technology/J.Kataoka et al.; /NRAO/VLA

Fabiola Gianotti Becomes First Woman Physicist to Take the Reins at CERN

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Fabiola Gianotti Becomes First Woman Physicist to Take the Reins at CERN

Particle physicist Fabiola Gianotti has become the first woman to head CERN, the organization based in Switzerland that is home to the Large Hadron Collider. She succeeds outgoing director-general Rolf Heuer, who oversaw the laboratory’s operations for the last seven years.

Previously, Gianotti headed the ATLAS collaboration, one of two teams responsible for the discovery of the elusive Higgs boson on July 4, 2012. She quickly became a favorite figure in the media coverage surrounding that achievement — partly because of her gender (only 20% of the ATLAS team were women), and for her elegantly understated style, but also for her good humor.

For instance: Her use of the much-derided Comic-Sans typeface on her Powerpoint slides during that historic announcement was the source of much Internet amusement. Gianotti took the ribbing in stride. She even made an April Fool’s Day decree to make Comic Sans the official document typeface for all of CERN. She was a runner-up for Time magazine’s Person of the Year in 2012.

Gianotti’s father is a retired geologist, while her mother had a passion for music and art. Their daughter, born in 1962, effortlessly straddles both cultural realms, excelling not just in physics, but also music, cooking, and even dance (she trained as a ballerina as a child). “Musical harmony is based on physical principles while in cooking, ingredients must be weighed out with precision,” she told the Guardian in 2014, when her selection as the next director-general of CERN was announced. “At the same time, you have to able to invent, because if one follows the same recipe all the time, you never create anything new.”

Image: Claudia Marcelloni De Oliveira/CERN

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

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Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

There are lots of Spider-people in the Marvel Universe right now. But only two of them call themselves Spider-Man. One, of course, is the newly-rich Peter Parker, originator of the wall-crawler identity. The other is an alternate-reality successor to the Spider-mantle named Miles Morales. This week, we see Miles play a pivotal role in the last superhero battle of the Ultimate Universe.

Peter Parker died in Miles Morales’ native reality, victim of injuries suffered at the hands of archenemy Norman Osborn/Green Goblin. But months before Parker’s death, Miles had gotten bitten by another genetically engineered spider like the one that gave his predecessor his powers. His adventures have been happening for years now and the character’s debut has proven to be the most lasting artifact of Marvel’s Ultimate Universe imprint. The Ultimate Universe, which debuted in 2000, was populated with modernized interpretations of the publisher’s superheroes, some of whom had slightly different origins and appearances.

Spoilers follow.

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

But, despite high-stakes storylines that made the alternate reality radically divergent from the mainline one, enthusiasm for the line flagged. The powers-that-be decided to shutter the Ultimate-verse via a big crossover event called Secret Wars. That series has thrown together characters from a slew of dying realities on a composite planet created by an omnipotent Doctor Doom. In the Ultimate End miniseries—by Brian Bendis, Mark Bagley and others—heroes from mainline reality Earth-616 and the Ultimate Universe’s Earth-1610 find themselves shoved up against their counterparts.

The different versions of Captain America, Hulk, Iron Man and others are superheroes dealing with an unknown set of circumstances so, of course, they fight each other. But Miles—who survived the end of everything and Doom’s ascendance to godhood in an extra-dimensional life raft—explains that they’re from different realities.

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

After that revelation, the assembled heroes act according to their nature and go and fight the bad guy.

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

The amount of fear and doubt in Ultimate End #5 makes the last moments of the Ultimate Universe unexpectedly poignant.

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe

We don’t see the final showdown with Doom and how the Marvel Universe gets revised into its current new form. But we do see that Miles survives, waking up in a new world. And the great tragedy of his young life—the death of his mother during his first set of superhero battles—has been undone.

Here’s How Miles Morales Comes to the New Marvel Universe


Right now, it’s an open question as to how Marvel’s going to treat Miles’ backstory and whether this Spider-Man will remember what happened in the alternate reality where he was born. Will he or Peter Parker remember his old life? Will he have a different origin story? These questions will get answered in the February-debuting Spider-Man series that serves as Miles’ solo book. But, he’s already been shown as a member of the newest core Avengers squad. Most of Marvel’s other Ultimate characters will be fading from view but Miles Morales likely has an important future ahead of him.


Contact the author at evan@kotaku.com.

Full Suit Of Titan Armor Looks Like It Fell Out Of Destiny

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Full Suit Of Titan Armor Looks Like It Fell Out Of Destiny

Frank Ippolito and his team were asked by Sony to build a contest winner a full set of Titan armour from Destiny. After five weeks of work, they delivered, and then some.

Full Suit Of Titan Armor Looks Like It Fell Out Of Destiny

Full Suit Of Titan Armor Looks Like It Fell Out Of Destiny

Full Suit Of Titan Armor Looks Like It Fell Out Of Destiny

Here’s a kinda-gross ad/video that you can skip through to get to the parts where they’re showing the build progress and the suit in all its glory.

Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

A cheap 4K monitor, smartphone camera lenses, and Bushnell binoculars highlight today’s best deals. Here are the best of today’s deals. Get every great deal every day on Kinja Deals, follow us on Facebook and Twitter to never miss a deal, join us on Kinja Gear to read about great products, and on Kinja Co-Op to help us find the best. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

Ready to step up to 4K? If you don’t mind a refurb, this 28” Samsung monitor is just $340 today on Woot. [Refurb Samsung 28” 4K Monitor, $340]

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

We’ve posted deals on these smartphone lens kits enough that you probably already own a set, but if you need an easy stocking stuffer idea, this checks all the boxes: It only costs $10, it has nearly universal appeal, and relatively few people already own something like it. [Mpow 3 in 1 Fisheye, $10 with code RF6YDGK5]

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

One can never own too many Lightning cables. [Mpow Apple MFI Certified 8-Pin Lightning Cable, $5 with code 9TA5NA3H]

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

Whether you’re watching some birds or tracking planets, Amazon has some nice deals available today on binoculars and telescopes.

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Celestron 31035 AstroMaster 76 EQ Reflector Telescope ($90) | Amazon

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Celestron 71340 Outland X 8x25 Binocular ($28) | Amazon

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

It’s not really sandal season, but hey, a deal’s a deal. [40% off Teva Sandals, today only]


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

This seemingly-basic remote might not look like much at first blush, but it can actually control eight of your favorite home theater devices, and even turn your smartphone into a universal remote as well.

You’re probably used to seeing Logitech Harmony remotes with screens built-in, but it turns out that you already carry a much better screen in your pocket. So in addition to controlling your TV, cable box, game console, stereo, and more from the remote itself, the Logitech Harmony Smart Control can now do the same from your iPhone or Android from anywhere in the house. That’s especially handy when your favorite show is about to start and you can’t find the remote anywhere. Today’s $70 deal is the best we’ve ever seen, but I’d expect it to sell out quickly. [Logitech Harmony Smart Control with Smartphone App and Simple Remote, $70]

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

You might not want to wear it all the time, but the Microsoft Band 2 is one of the best fitness trackers you can buy, and Amazon is already offering a $50 discount for the holidays. [Microsoft Band 2, $200]

http://gizmodo.com/microsoft-band...


Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

Got your eyes on Apple’s jaw-dropping new MacBook? Best Buy is both offering a whopping $300 discount on the base 256GB/8GB model right now, plus an extra $50 off if you have a .edu email address. [Apple MacBook, $1000]

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Saturday's Best Deals: Cheap 4K Monitor, Smartphone Camera Lenses, and More

This was $5 cheaper on Black Friday, but if you find yourself in need of a lot of extra file storage, it’s tough to beat 5TB for $115. [Seagate Backup Plus 5TB Desktop External Hard Drive, $115]

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Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker


French Consumer Group Sues Valve Over Ban On Steam Resales

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French Consumer Group Sues Valve Over Ban On Steam Resales

Valve has come under fire from a French consumer association called UFC Que Choisir (slightly different from that other UFC). The organization litigates on behalf of the public, and they feel that Steam is letting customers down. I like what they’re trying to do, but I don’t love their chances here.

UFC Que Choisir believes that 12 clauses in Steam’s much-scrutinized Subscriber Agreement constitute breaches of consumer law. Their main points of contention, translated by Silencement, break down as follows:

-Steam’s Subscriber Agreement explicitly forbids users to sell their games, despite the transfer of ownership of digital products/licenses being legal

-Valve declines any responsibility in case they get hacked and users’ personal info gets stolen

-Valve claims ownership on the rights of any user-created content uploaded on Steam

-It is impossible to get the money on your Steam Wallet back if your account is closed/deleted/banned

-Valve applies Luxembourg’s consumer law regardless of the user’s country

Sounds pretty damning, huh? If UFC Que Choisir got Valve to concede these points, odds are they wouldn’t be able to just flip a few switches for France, specifically. Steam would be looking at some systematic changes. Problem is, most of UFC Que Choisir’s points don’t really hold water. Let’s break this down.

The first point—that people can’t resell their games—is a complex issue that hasn’t been solved in other mediums, and Valve already won in court against a German consumer group that filed a similar complaint. Valve expressly forbids the reselling of Steam accounts or games associated with Steam accounts. As for why, well, there are a lot of reasons.

At its most basic level, the issue is that physical goods are finite and digital goods can be as numerous as the stars in the sky, as manifold as Donald Trump’s selection of weird neck/jowl configurations. On top of that, in the current system we buy licenses to specific games under a larger Steam subscription—as opposed to individual copies of games themselves. This allows us to, among other things, download and re-download games to our heart’s content. It also means, however, that we don’t technically own the games we buy on Steam. We subscribe to them. As a result, our games are part of a service—not products we own.

Introducing the ability to resell would likely turn the current system on its head. Even if Valve implemented a feature that would, say, scrub a game from your account/machine and turn it back into a code you could sell, we’d be looking at a more or less infinite secondhand market. Because digital games don’t expire with use—like, say, keys you can sell on the Steam market—a relatively large number of people could pass around a few keys quickly and easily. The convenience is the biggest factor here. It might not seem all that different from the way a few friends might pass around a copy of a physical game, but the ramifications could be much greater because it’s all so easy and the potential audience is so much larger. On top of that, what happens when big Steam Sales enter the picture? It wouldn’t be difficult for people to buy up games on the cheap from developers/publishers, wait for prices to go back up, and then sell for a high price. I imagine that, in time, that’d cause publishers to raise the initial price of games, and Valve would likely need to cease Steam sales altogether. It’d be a big hit to folks making games, is what I’m saying.

That said, it might not be so bad. Microtransactions already help a lot of publishers deal with dual monetary damages caused by the brick-and-mortar secondhand market and piracy. If Steam were forced to implement some kind of resale system, we might just see more microtransactions and similar online features—a direction the industry’s already trending toward anyway. But, as more games go free and rely almost entirely on microtransactions, digital resale of games themselves becomes less and less relevant. Valve, meanwhile, already allows for the sale of some digital goods on the Steam marketplace.

French Consumer Group Sues Valve Over Ban On Steam Resales

Still, laws in certain countries (like France) stipulate that the transfer of digital software licenses is legal, despite what any single company might (try to) say. An EU law to that effect has been in place since 2012. However, Valve won the aforementioned case against a German consumer group in 2014. Games, as it turns out, may not be mere “software,” given that they can contain all sorts of music and art that fall under various copyright laws. On top of that, Valve has recently implemented game sharing and refund features that mitigate some of the inconveniences that emerge when people can’t resell games.

The short version? UFC Que Choisir’s chances aren’t looking great here.

UFC Que Choisir might actually have something with their second point, though. Valve declines responsibility pertaining to hacks when users bungle their own way into compromising situations—that is to say, when they get scammed by other users or duped by third-party trading sites. If an account is hijacked, however, Valve will sometimes make exceptions:

“Inventory restorations are granted on a case by case basis. In order for Steam Support to restore items, technicians will need to verify, using Steam’s internal data, that the account was hijacked.”

But what about an external hack of personal information, specifically? Well, a major Steam hack actually did happen back in 2011, and Valve’s report card there is... mixed. They waited four days to initially report what happened, but they tried to investigate the ramifications of the hack and informed users that they’d seen no evidence of credit card compromise. Unfortunately, it took them months to follow-up after that, and they found that hackers probably had gotten ahold of a lot of personal info, some of it encrypted. Ultimately, they advised users to stay on guard and use tools like Valve’s own Steam Guard security functions. It’s not clear what sort of steps they took to try and secure said data in the aftermath of the hack. So, in short, Valve responded to a hack by trying to clean up the mess, but they were slower about it than they probably could’ve been, and they left users in a frightening limbo. Classic shitty Valve communication. The whole episode wasn’t great. Since then, Valve’s implemented tighter security measures, but UFC Que Choisir isn’t entirely off the mark on this one.

When it comes to user-created content, Valve actually claims a non-exclusive right to your stuff, so you can still post or reproduce it elsewhere. Given that user-created content is often made within games Valve or their publishing partners own, that actually doesn’t seem like a terrible deal—especially since Valve gives mod makers a cut of the profit if they end up selling said items. A handful of particularly successful creators are even able to make a living off it.

The fourth point—the inability to get money on your Steam Wallet back if your account is closed/deleted/banned—sucks, but it’s also kinda a “them’s the breaks” situation. You turned that money over to Steam, same as you do when you buy a game or what have you. It makes a kind of sense that it’d vanish with all your games as punishment for breaking Steam’s rules in a way significant enough to get you banned. Admittedly, there are cases where account hijackers get people banned, and Valve’s notoriously shitty customer service takes weeks or months to respond. Until Valve convincingly clears that up, they’re not spotless here. All in all, though, the policy in itself isn’t super damning.

French Consumer Group Sues Valve Over Ban On Steam Resales

The last point—the bit about Luxembourg law—is flat-out wrong. In Steam’s Subscriber Agreement, Valve writes: “However, where the laws of Luxembourg provide a lower degree of consumer protection than the laws of your country of residence, the consumer protection laws of your country shall prevail.”

I’m glad to see this organization trying to fight for the rights of Steam users, but I feel like they’re barking up the wrong series of trees—or “forest,” as the kids are calling them these days. They’ve got one solid point and a bunch of weak/misinformed ones. Meanwhile, Valve has legal precedent (albeit in another country) on their side. They’ve yet to comment on how they plan to respond to the impending lawsuit.

All that said, would you like the ability to resell your digital games? What would need to happen to make such a system functional?

You’re reading Steamed, Kotaku’s page dedicated to all things in and around Valve’s stupidly popular PC gaming service. Games, culture, community creations, criticism, guides, videos—everything. If you’ve found anything cool/awful on Steam, send us an email to let us know.

To contact the author of this post, write to nathan.grayson@kotaku.com or find him on Twitter @vahn16.

Mongolia Is Getting Its Stolen Tyrannosaurus Skull Back

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Mongolia Is Getting Its Stolen Tyrannosaurus Skull Back

It’s always a good day when you get your stolen, $230,000 dollar Tyrannosaurus skull back.

That was Mongolia’s lucky break this week, after US attorney Preet Bharara filed a civil forfeiture complaint regarding a certain Tyrannosaurus bataar skull that entered the United States unlawfully in 2006 and was sold for $230,000 (plus a buyer’s premium of $46,000) at a California auction house in 2007.

A rare cousin of T. rex, T. bataar flourished in the modern-day Mongolia’s Gobi Desert in the late Cretaceous some 70 million years ago. As a Mongolian native, the animals’ mortal remains are considered “cultural artifacts” and belong to the Mongolian government by law. But in 2006, some wise guy decided to pull a fast one and list a T. bataar skull on a customs form as “fossil stone pieces.” It worked, and the fossil stones were soon sold for an impressive price tag to an anonymous buyer.

Homeland Security Investigations examined the skull in September 2015, and confirmed that it “rightfully belongs to the government of Mongolia and had been illegally imported into the United States.” It’s but one of many, many ancient reptilians the US has had to relinquish to Mongolian authorities over the past few years, including, according to The Guardian, three full T. Bataar skeletons, six Oviraptors, a Protoceratops, and numerous prehistoric lizards and turtles.

Perhaps the lesson here is that we ought to start including paleontology 101 as a pre-requisite to working at US customs. Seriously—nobody should be looking at those beastly jaws and and thinking “oh yea, fossil rocks.”

[The Guardian]


Top: A Tyrannosaurus bataar skeleton on display in a museum in Prague. Image via Wikimedia

Stormtroopers And Droids Invade The White House

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Stormtroopers And Droids Invade The White House

The Empire is apparently alive and well. Today, a pair of Storm Troopers and R2D2 accompanied White House spokesman Josh Earnest on stage at the White House Press Briefing Room.

The White House is having a Star Wars: The Force Awakens screening along with Gold Star families, and in conjunction with the event, it looks like Disney sent some of its newest ambassadors.

http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/compared-star-...

Stormtroopers And Droids Invade The White House

President Obama, who did his last presser of the year today, also noted: “Clearly, this is not the most important event that’s taking place in the White House today. There is a screening of Star Wars for Gold Star families and children coming up. So I’ll try to be relatively succinct.”

The President ended the conference saying, “OK, everybody. I’ve gotta get to Star Wars.”


Contact the author at Tyler@jalopnik.com.

Photos via AP

Spaceballs: The Search For More Money Is Apparently Happening!

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Spaceballs: The Search For More Money Is Apparently Happening!

With the success of Star Wars: The Force Awakens is already demonstrating, Rumors have been swirling of a sequel to 1987’s Spaceballs. Recently, Mel Brooks spoke with Adam Carolla’s ‘Take A Knee’ Podcast and said that he wants to start filming in 2016.

Spaceballs: The Search For More Money Is Apparently Happening!

Brooks has said in the past that he’d like to direct Spaceballs: The Search For More Money, and as Blastr points out, “vintage properties are all the rage” at the moment. Given the enormous commercial appeal of Star Wars, this would be the perfect film to skewer the rebooted franchise.

The real question comes with the cast: John Candy and Joan Rivers have both passed away, and Rick Moranis has since retired from acting (and if he didn’t come back for Ghostbusters, he probably wouldn’t come back for this). Fortunately, The Force Awakens gives Brooks an out: he can bring in a whole new group of cast members.

[Blastr]

Man At Arms Constructs Thorin's Sword Orcrist From The Hobbit

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We’ve really liked watching Man At Arms construct some epic replica weapons in the past, and now they’ve gone and created Orcrist, from Peter Jackson’s Hobbit Trilogy.

What’s pretty amazing about this is how they take it from a slug of metal to a really elegant weapon by the end. The process here is incredible, especially the detail that they put into it from forging it to the detailing.

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