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If you’re looking for some quality computer training time for your kids, don’t wait to register them for one of Apple’s free camps. The three-day workshops are being held at retail stores across the country, including the following Lower Mainland locations:

  • Coquitlam
  • Guildford Town Centre
  • Oakridge
  • Metrotown
  • Pacific Centre
  • Richmond Centre

The creative camps are designed for kids aged 8 to 12, and are excellent opportunities for kids to get hands-on with the kind of technology they’ll be using for the rest of their lives. They don’t need to have any computer experience, nor do they need any of their own equipment; Apple provides everything.

The practical, pragmatic nature of the courses means that they’ll be coming out of their three days with a completed project. There are two tracks being offered: books and movies.

In the former, kids will use iPads to draw illustrations to go with their text, and will then learn how to pull those elements together with audio and multi-touch gestures to create fully interactive, digital books using iBooks Author.

In the latter, kids start by creating storyboards for their movie. Then they shoot video and create a soundtrack using the iPad version of GarageBand before editing it all together in iMovie.

Apple also offers other youth programs that include field trips for students and teachers (when the provincial government actually decides to get kids back into classrooms, natch).

Cross-posted at the Georgia Straight

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Gamers have reason to be excited about the goings-on at this year’s Electronic Entertainment Expo. The annual gathering of video-game developers and publishers took place in Los Angeles from June 10 to 12, and there are soon going to be some amazing things to play on the slick new consoles that Microsoft and Sony dropped last fall.

Read more at the Georgia Straight

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In addition to its announcements about video games, Sony had other details to reveal at E3 2014.

PlayStation Now, which provides games for rent through its streaming servers, will be available in Canada when it launches July 31.

More than 100 PS3 games (including titles such as Dead Space 3 and God of War: Ascension) will be available through the service, although rental periods and prices have not been announced. And Sony is bringing PlayStation TV to Canada this fall.

For $99, owners can access the upcoming PlayStation Now service, and can pair it with a PS4 to play games on a second television without needing an additional console. A $139 bundle includes a game controller, an HDMI cable, an eight-gigabyte memory card, and a copy of the Lego Movie Videogame.

Finally, Sony has green-lit the first series produced for the PlayStation Network. Powers, based on the Brian Michael Bendis comic series, will air starting in December. Bendis is executive producer of the series.

It will be available for free, even in Canada, to all PlayStation Plus subscribers.

Cross-posted at the Georgia Straight

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The British Columbia government seems hellbent on staking the province’s future on natural resource development. Like liquefied natural gas (LNG) and fracking are the unequivocal answer to all our problems.

Meanwhile, on Thursday night (May 15), a gathering of B.C.’s vibrant technology industries, world leaders in their fields, filled Science World with ideas and projects that will generate more revenue than any gas field.

NextBC was further proof that B.C. is at the forefront of the knowledge economy despite the priorities of the provincial government. Twenty-five of the province’s most innovative companies displayed and demonstrated their technology innovations and solutions in the Eureka Gallery.

Howard Donaldson, president of DigiBC, which produced the event, said that the 25 were “companies who are working on breakthrough technology”. They included small and large organizations that were both new and established, and represented a number of different sectors.

Among them, Internet applications including Hootsuite’s social media management tools, the dating website Plenty of Fish, identity verification from Trulioo (get it? “truly you”), and Payfirma and PayWith e-commerce solutions.

Recon was on hand with its Jet heads-up display, which is like Google Glass but mounted to Oakley-type sunglasses, and designed for “high intensity environments” like cycling, skiing, and snowboarding.

Also in the showcase were power and energy technologies like Elix Wireless’s charging and medical solutions and the surgical nurse training simulation app from Conquer Mobile.

Electronic Arts Canada was on hand showing the technology that went into the development of it’s mixed martial arts video game, EA Sports UFC, arriving on the PS4 and Xbox One in June.

Other entertainment technologies included CineCoup and Gener8, a company founded by former EA and Radical Entertainment exec Rory Armes and featuring the talents of former Radical studio head Tim Bennison and executive Danielle Rockel. Rockel explained that Gener8 has developed proprietary technology to convert 2-D films into 3-D, and has worked on the likes of 300: Rise of an Empire and Iron Man 3. Gener8 will also be converting The Grandmaster, written and directed by Wong Kar-wai and released in 2013, about the life of the man who trained Bruce Lee.

And leading the category of “that happens in B.C.?” was Burnaby’s D-Wave, which is a foremost quantum computer researcher and manufacturer. While conventional computers store data in bits, which are represented by zeroes and ones, quantum computers use “qubits” which can “exist in a state of zero and one simultaneously”. D-Wave quantum computing systems are being used by the likes of NASA and Google.

Later in the evening was a presentation of awards to companies deemed to have the most outstanding innovation. In his opening remarks, Donaldson said that a “do it at all cost attitude is central to innovation”.

“I congratulate the companies for stepping outside the status quo,” he added.

The five finalists for most innovative tech company were Avigilon, Captherm, D-Wave, General Fusion, and Urthecast. Representatives from the five companies were subjected to a series of questions from a judging panel to determine the gold, silver, and bronze winners.

Avigilon develops high-definition security video provider. Captherm has a new cooling technology that is superior to other cooling solutions. General Fusion hopes to prove its technology in the next two years, and claims to be only eight years away from commercialization of fusion reactor power plants. Urthecast is able to provide Earth images at a low cost, and is only months away from delivering high-definition images of the planet from space to our televisions and computers.

Awards went to:

  • Audience choice award: Fusion Pipe Software Solutions (cybersecurity services)
  • Bronze award: Avigilon
  • Silver award: D-Wave Systems
  • Gold award: General Fusion

In addressing the crowd during the awards, Andrew Wilkinson, minister of technology, innovation, and citizen’s services, admitted that the tech industry’s GDP is bigger than all the province’s resource industries combined.

But then, in a keynote address, Andrew Harries, founder of Sierra Wireless and now a venture capitalist, talked about seeing a sign that read, “Yes to clean jobs, no to pipelines” and said that he was fully supportive of the idea, but that the tech sector would have to significantly “up its game” if it planned to replace the revenues generated by resource extraction.

It still seems short-sighted of Premier Christy Clark to be reticent in publicly acknowledging the importance of the tech sector to B.C. And to gamble all our futures on something as tenuous as LNG.

Cross-posted at the Georgia Straight

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I’m not reluctant to admit that I’m a fan of the Halo games. Not enough to write fan fiction featuring the franchise’s main hero, Master Chief, but enough that I’m excited about The Master Chief Collection, which will be coming to the Xbox One on November 11.

It makes up for the fact that there won’t be a new Halo game until next year; Halo 5: Guardians is dated for fall 2015.

The Master Chief Collection includes all four games featuring the protagonist, including a version of Halo 2 remastered for its 10th anniversary, all on one disc:

  • Halo: CE Annivesary
  • Halo 2 Anniversary
  • Halo 3
  • Halo 4

Halo 2 Anniversary is being built on the original game’s engine, so dual-wielding is still a part of the experience, and the original multiplayer mode is intact.

Each of the four games arrives unlocked, so players can step into any level of any game and play at any difficulty level. Also included are playlists, both curated and user-defined, which mix and match levels from any of the four games into one experience.

An example, mentioned by senior producer Dennis Reese during a briefing for journalists at E3 on Tuesday (June 10), was the final stage from each game, presented one after the other.

That’s not all that comes in the package, either. Frank O’Connor, the franchise director for 343 Industries, the division of Microsoft Game Studios that coordinates all things Halo, said that included in the collection will be the Halo 5 beta, which will run from December 27 for three weeks.

Also included is Halo: Nightfall, a live-action series of video shorts produced by Ridley Scott, and described by O’Connor as “the spiritual successor” to Halo: Forward Unto Dawn, which was secretly shot in the Lower Mainland in the spring of 2012.

Nightfall, which is soon moving production to Iceland, according to O’Connor, will bridge Halo 4 and Halo 5 by introducing and telling the story of new character, Agent Locke.

The Master Chief Collection will be priced at $69.99. For four games and a television series, that’s good value. Especially being able to play them seamlessly on the Xbox One. I wonder how long it would take to start at the beginning, and play all the way through to the end.

Cross-posted at the Georgia Straight

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