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Smiley’s Shooty Adventure: Robotron meets Geometry Wars

Smiley

Robotron meets Geometry Wars, Smiley’s Shooty Adventure is a frantic action shooter available for both Mac and Windows. Created by Caffeine Monster Software, you are in charge of a smiley face as you take on enemies coming from all directions, using your mouse to point the fire and keyboard to move the smiley, perfect for lunch breaks when the boss is not looking and small enough to hide away quick =]

via Smiley’s Shooty Adventure [Mac, Windows, Game]: Robotron meets Geometry Wars | CreativeApplications.Net.

Anything that implements some Geometry Wars action is good enough for me 🙂

Just downloaded the demo. I’ll let you know how it goes…

Woo Seok Park – Sort and Separate

high tech rubbish

Lets face it. We all should be recycling. What used to be simple; “metal goes here, paper goes there, and plastic goes in over there,” is now a bit more complicated. For example did you know not all plastics and metals can be recycled? If you look for the recycling symbol on most packaging, it’s often filled with a number value. They denote what can and can’t be recycled. That’s where the Barcode Trashcan comes in. It makes being “green” a lot easier.

via Woo Seok Park – Sort and Separate » Yanko Design.

Mission Impossible: The Code Even the CIA Can’t Crack

Kryptos

Almost 20 years after its dedication, the text has yet to be fully deciphered. A bleary-eyed global community of self-styled cryptanalysts—along with some of the agency’s own staffers—has seen three of its four sections solved, revealing evocative prose that only makes the puzzle more confusing. Still uncracked are the 97 characters of the fourth part (known as K4 in Kryptos-speak). And the longer the deadlock continues, the crazier people get.

[…]

The 97 characters of K4 remain impenetrable. They have become, as one would-be cracker calls it, the Everest of codes. Both Scheidt and Sanborn confirm that they intended the final segment to be the biggest challenge. There are endless theories about how to solve it. Is access to the sculpture required? Is the Morse code a clue? Every aspect of the project has come under electron-microscopic scrutiny, as thousands of people—hardcore cryptographers and amateur code breakers alike—have taken a whack at it. Some have gone off the deep end: A Michigan man abandoned his computer-software business to do construction so he’d have more time to work on it. Thirteen hundred members of a fanatical Yahoo group try to move the ball forward with everything from complex math to astrology. One typical Kryptos maniac is Randy Thompson, a 43-year-old physicist who has devoted three years to the problem. “I think I’m onto the solution,” he says. “It could happen tomorrow, or it could take the rest of my life.” Meanwhile, some of the seekers are getting tired. “I just want to see it solved,” says Elonka Dunin, a 50-year-old St. Louis game developer who runs a clearinghouse site for Kryptos information and gossip. “I want it off my plate.”

via Mission Impossible: The Code Even the CIA Can’t Crack.

Pfft. I bet the NSA could crack it in seconds. 😛