Remade

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  • Six futuristic phone designs

    by 
    Inhabitat
    Inhabitat
    09.03.2016

    By Cat DiStasio Cell phone technology continues moving forward year after year, but many of the developments are incremental—a better camera, more storage space, or a faster processor. Those are just the improvements that make it to the mass market, though. There's is a whole world of innovative developments in cellular phone design and technology that most people have never heard a word about, and some of them even come from leading cell phone manufacturers. Nokia, for instance, has developed a cell phone that can recharge in your pocket and other models made from largely recycled materials. Other companies are working hard to develop modular phones that are easier to repair and upgrade, thereby cutting down on electronic waste. It's impossible to know which of these futuristic technologies we'll actually be able to get our hands on, but it's fun to dream about what kind of features your cell phone might have in another five years.

  • Nokia's "Remade" concept is all waste -- no, seriously

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    02.13.2008

    Nokia's been putting quite a focus on contributing to a greener, healthier world as of late -- still running off the high of winning Greenpeace's praise, perhaps -- and its latest concept, unveiled at MWC, takes the commitment to an extreme. The "Remade" phone is exactly that: a handset made entirely of recycled stuff. The case and keypad are fashioned from tossed cans, for example, and apparently, even the electrical components (never mind that the Remade can't actually place a call in its current incarnation) are entirely reused. No plans have been revealed to produce the Remade or anything quite like it, but the way Nokia's going -- and the way we're throwing away tin cans -- we wouldn't be surprised if it happened down the road.

  • The value of old games (or lack thereof)

    by 
    Mike Schramm
    Mike Schramm
    11.27.2007

    With all the crazy MMO games we're playing nowadays, do old, traditional videogames matter any more? Anyway Games, suprisingly, says no-- just like black and white and silent movies, he envisions the game industry abandoning the old formats and standbys and moving on completely to these new heights. When the last Pac Man gamer has moved on to MMOs, AG claims that while the old games will be preserved, there will be no need to play them.I'm not so sure that's true-- online, multiplayer modes, and persistent worlds aren't necessarily something that's mutually exclusive with "classic" gameplay. Xbox Live is a prime example, even though it isn't traditionally thought of as an MMO-- with achievements and leaderboards, Microsoft has turned old games like Pac Man into games that players can actually play socially, and advance their avatars across games.In other words, just like movies, old games don't die-- they just get remade. This world of MMOs is a newer one, yes (even compared to the already relatively new world of videogames at large). But nostalgia isn't the only force fueling the drive to push old games into the new worlds-- good gameplay is a forced to be reckoned with as well.

  • First look at Final Fantasy IV 3D remake [Update 1]

    by 
    Eric Caoili
    Eric Caoili
    05.09.2007

    Japanese magazine Shonen Jump has unveiled the first screenshots of Square Enix's Final Fantasy IV 3D remake, confirming rumors about its development that've been circulating since yesterday. The preview shows a sampling of combat and Cecil wandering through a populated town. Run past the post break for the scanned page and a smug look from Shonen Jump's pirate guy.With FFIV released for the GBA around late 2005 and FFIII remade for the DS just last November, are you starting to tire from all of Square Enix's rehashes like we are? We won't deny that the 3D engine looks great, but do we have to revisit every single Final Fantasy adventure with it, especially when an updated version of this particular game already came out less than two years ago? And for the love of all that is good and holy, why haven't Secret of Mana or Chrono Trigger made it on the list of games to be remade yet?