Tech Roundup

These are the notes for my chat about current affairs for Radio Humberside this morning. I thought I’d do a Tech Roundup and make the notes into a blog post…..

Drone home

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Amazon are launching a tiny home security drone that can fly round your house to check that you haven’t left the gas on. It comes in its own cute recharging stand and you can teach it the way round your house. I can think of a few problems.

  • You’ll have to leave all the doors open so that it can make its rounds.

  • You’ll have to be OK with a mega corporation being able to look around your home. Although Amazon say that they are not going to keep the recordings I can forsee a time when you get emails with titles like “Replace that ugly woodchip in your living room…..”

  • Who on earth is going to need it in a time when we aren’t really allowed to leave the house?


Console confusion

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This is a brave time to be launching new games consoles but both Microsoft and Sony are in the midst of doing just that at the moment. Perhaps the calculation is that if nobody can go anywhere they are going to put a premium on having the best home entertainment possible. But they seem to be going about it in the most confusing manner possible. Sony “stealth sold” their new machine by putting making it available a while before they said it would be and Microsoft have chosen a name for their machine that is so close to that of their previous console (Xbox Series X vs Xbox One X that quite a few people seem to have bought the old machine by mistake.

The good news is that the new consoles offer graphics and sound which are astonishingly realistic and also have so much power that they will make creating truly immersive experiences much easier and cheaper for developers. It is also interesting to see how they are moving into a subscription model, Microsoft will give you a shiny new console and access to all their games for around thirty pounds a month, which sounds like a pretty good deal to me. Although I’m still spending too much time with Animal Crossing on my Nintendo Switch to get the best out of these new devices.


Fly the world with Microsoft Flight Simulator

Microsoft has done something that I think only a company with its vision and resources could. It has made a program that is genuinely revolutionary. They’ve built a Flight Simulator which is as big as the world. They’ve taken map data and aerial photographs for the whole of the globe and put it on their servers. Then they’ve added Artificial Intelligence that infers the shape of buildings from the overhead photographs and built servers that can stream this data into your computer as you fly around the planet. You can stick a pin anywhere in the world map and take off from there. The program includes pretty much every airfield on earth to land on.

The realism is astonishing. You get fantastic fluffy clouds and even rainbows. It’s a social game too. You can meet up with friends and take a spin around London, or New York, or Mont Blanc, or Chernobyl. It’s all there. Some of it is quite as you might expect though because the AI doesn’t always create the right buildings. Buckingham Palace is an office block. And at the moment Hull is missing a proper Humber Bridge (see above). You’ll also need quite a pricey PC and a fast network connection to get the best out of it. But it is going to totally change the way we regard video games. If indeed it is a game at all. There is so much detail that you some folks reckon that you almost learn to fly from the program. And I’ve been surprised how much fun it is to go flying with a bunch of friends.

One piece of great news for Hull residents is the fact that we have some of the best networking in the world, which makes heavily connected games like this really sing. In the future more and more experiences are going to be supplied over fast network connections and the KC LightStream service works a treat for this.


Among Us is so popular that they’ve cancelled the sequel

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The game Among Us has been out for a while. But recently it has been riding high on the Twitch game servers. 1.5 million simultaneous players, Developers Innersloth have been working on a sequel but they’ve now stopped because the original game is so popular that they want to spend time developing that instead. I’ve had a go at playing it, and it is well worth a look for anyone into social mayhem.


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If you’ve ever fancied having a sewage pump as a ringtone you can now live that dream. The BBC has released that, and lots of other sounds, for anyone to use. I wrote about this earlier here.