Month: October 2019

Review: Apple Arcade – A Month Later

Up until now, virtually all of the articles that I've been reading about the service has been positive.  What about this article?  Read on.

I am an Apple junkie.  When Apple announced its Arcade service, I knew that I had to try it out.  And with the 1 month free trail period, I couldn't resist.

Instead of giving you all of the globby-gook about what the service is and how you can play thousands of games at a monthly price, I'll get right to the point.

I'm not impressed.

As a kid of the 1970s and 1980s, I can tell you that all of the games that I played reminded me of that era.  Sure, the games didn't have dots that you followed on the screen, but it did remind of the start of that era.  Even Super Mario Brothers looked more impressive than most of the games that I played on the service.  Yes, I did try them on all of my iOS devices, including the Apple TV 4K model.

What didn't I like about the service?  

  1. The games didn't download to all of my devices at once.  I had to re-download them onto each device separately.
  2. The service seems to not be using iCloud to save game data so one can pick up where they left off on another device (something that iOS games have been doing for years).
  3. Most games need to have a game controller to even get into the game.  If one doesn't have one (like me) then they are outta luck.
  4. The graphics seem - well, basic.  Almost like they have been exclusively written for the iPhone and/or iPad, and then "thrown" onto the Arcade.
  5. The included Apple Remote is not good for gaming - even from the iOS app game store.
  6. All games must be played in Landscape mode.

What DID I like?

  1. Easy setup.
  2. Navigation of the Arcade menus on all platforms.
  3. Selecting a game.
  4. Downloading a game.

Bottom Line:

Apple Arcade has potential.  But unless you or your family is gonna be using the service a lot, I'd recommend sticking to the iOS App Store games for now.  I also feel that Sony has nothing to worry about (yet) with its upcoming PS5 Game System.

What do yo think?  Please comment in our FaceBook group.

The Mars Rover takes a Selfie

NASA's Curiosity rover took this selfie on Oct. 11, 2019

A new selfie taken by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover is breathtaking, but it's especially meaningful for the mission's team: Stitched together from 57 individual images taken by a camera on the end of Curiosity's robotic arm, the panorama also commemorates only the second time the rover has performed a special chemistry experiment.

The selfie was taken on Oct. 11, 2019 (Sol 2,553) in a location named "Glen Etive" (pronounced "glen EH-tiv"), which is part of the "clay-bearing unit," a region the team has eagerly awaited reaching since before Curiosity launched. Visible in the left foreground are two holes Curiosity drilled named "Glen Etive 1" (right) and "Glen Etive 2" (left) by the science team. The rover can analyze the chemical composition of rock samples by powderizing them with the drill, then dropping the samples into a portable lab in its belly called Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM).

About 984 feet (300 meters) behind the rover is Vera Rubin Ridge, which Curiosity departed nearly a year ago. Beyond the ridge, you can see the floor of Gale Crater and the crater's northern rim. Curiosity has been ascending Mount Sharp, a 3-mile-tall (5-kilometer-tall) mountain inside the crater.

The special chemistry experiment occurred on Sept. 24, 2019, after the rover placed the powderized sample from Glen Etive 2 into SAM. The portable lab contains 74 small cups used for testing samples. Most of the cups function as miniature ovens that heat the samples; SAM then "sniffs" the gases that bake off, looking for chemicals that hold clues about the Martian environment billions of years ago, when the planet was friendlier to microbial life.

But nine of SAM's 74 cups are filled with solvents the rover can use for special "wet chemistry" experiments. These chemicals make it easier for SAM to detect certain carbon-based molecules important to the formation of life, called organic compounds.

Because there's a limited number of wet-chemistry cups, the science team has been saving them for just the right conditions. In fact, the experiment at Glen Etive is only the second time Curiosity has performed wet chemistry since touching down on Mars in August 2012.

"We've been eager to find an area that would be compelling enough to do wet chemistry," said SAM Principal Investigator Paul Mahaffy of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "Now that we're in the clay-bearing unit, we've finally got it."

Clay-based rocks are good at preserving chemical compounds, which break down over time and when bombarded by radiation from space and the Sun. The science team is intrigued to see which organic compounds, if any, have been preserved in the rocks at Glen Etive. Understanding how this area formed will give them a better idea of how the Martian climate was changing billions of years ago.

While this marks Curiosity's second wet-chemistry experiment, it is the rover's first on a drilled sample. In December 2016, when Curiosity's drill malfunctioned, the rover still had a bit of sand that had been scooped up in a place called "Ogunquit Beach." It wasn't a drilled sample, but the team wasn't sure whether they'd get the drill working and be able to perform wet chemistry in the future. So they delivered the Ogunquit Beach sand into one of SAM's wet chemistry cups since there was still science to be gained.

Scientists consider Glen Etive a strategic location that will reveal more about how the clay-bearing unit formed. They built upon the valuable dress rehearsal at Ogunquit Beach to make adjustments that improved the recent experiment.

The results will be known next year. "SAM's data is extremely complex and takes time to interpret," Mahaffy said. "But we're all eager to see what we can learn from this new location, Glen Etive."

The individual images in this selfie were taken by the Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI), a camera on the end of the rover's robotic arm. The images are stitched together into a panorama; the robotic arm isn't visible in the parts of the images used in the composite.

MAHLI was built by Malin Space Science Systems in San Diego. The SAM instrument suite was built at Goddard Space Flight Center with significant elements provided by industry, university, and national and international NASA partners. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California, manages the Mars Science Laboratory Project for the NASA Science Mission Directorate in Washington. JPL designed and built the project's Curiosity rover.

More information about Curiosity:

https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/

http://nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl

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