The Morning After: The Borderlands movie proves bad video game adaptations can still happen
Eli Roth’s Borderlands movie adaptation sounds like a recipe for a solid sci-fi romp: Oscar-winner Cate Blanchett as the wise-cracking gunslinger Lilith; Jack Black as the quippy Claptrap; and even Jamie Lee Curtis. Lionsgate But according to Engadget’s Devindra Hardawar, it squanders the story potential and all that on-screen talent. He breaks it down in full, right here. Maybe I'll go see the new Deadpool. — Mat Smith The biggest stories you might have missed Intel is bringing GPUs to cars Former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki has died X now lets you sort replies so blue checks don’t bury other users’ comments You can get these reports delivered daily direct to your inbox. Subscribe right here! New light-absorbing material can turn everyday objects into solar panels Put it on roofs, put it on cars, put it on baseball caps. Scientists from the University of Oxford have created an ultra-thin layer of material that can be applied to the exterior of objects with sunlight access in place of bulky silicon-based solar panels. It’s made by stacking layers of light-absorbing perovskite just over a micron thick. The new material is also 150 times thinner than a traditional silicon wafer and can produce energy with 5 percent more efficiency. This technology, however, is still in the research stage, and the university doesn’t mention the long-term stability of the newly designed perovskite panels, which has always been limited compared to traditional photovoltaic technology. Continue reading. ASUS ROG Ally X review It’s got more RAM, storage and battery life than the original model. Engadget Thanks to some design tweaks and major hardware upgrades, ASUS has turned the ROG Ally X into the flagship Windows gaming handheld it was meant to be. Dare we say it, this might be the best handheld gaming PC. Continue reading.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-the-borderlands-movie-proves-bad-videogame-adaptations-can-still-happen-111340460.html?src=rss
Eli Roth’s Borderlands movie adaptation sounds like a recipe for a solid sci-fi romp: Oscar-winner Cate Blanchett as the wise-cracking gunslinger Lilith; Jack Black as the quippy Claptrap; and even Jamie Lee Curtis.
But according to Engadget’s Devindra Hardawar, it squanders the story potential and all that on-screen talent. He breaks it down in full, right here.
Maybe I'll go see the new Deadpool.
— Mat Smith
The biggest stories you might have missed
Intel is bringing GPUs to cars
Former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki has died
X now lets you sort replies so blue checks don’t bury other users’ comments
You can get these reports delivered daily direct to your inbox. Subscribe right here!
New light-absorbing material can turn everyday objects into solar panels
Put it on roofs, put it on cars, put it on baseball caps.
Scientists from the University of Oxford have created an ultra-thin layer of material that can be applied to the exterior of objects with sunlight access in place of bulky silicon-based solar panels. It’s made by stacking layers of light-absorbing perovskite just over a micron thick. The new material is also 150 times thinner than a traditional silicon wafer and can produce energy with 5 percent more efficiency. This technology, however, is still in the research stage, and the university doesn’t mention the long-term stability of the newly designed perovskite panels, which has always been limited compared to traditional photovoltaic technology.
ASUS ROG Ally X review
It’s got more RAM, storage and battery life than the original model.
Thanks to some design tweaks and major hardware upgrades, ASUS has turned the ROG Ally X into the flagship Windows gaming handheld it was meant to be. Dare we say it, this might be the best handheld gaming PC.
Continue reading.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-the-borderlands-movie-proves-bad-videogame-adaptations-can-still-happen-111340460.html?src=rss
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