Rob LeFebvre is an Anchorage, Alaska-based writer and editor who has contributed to various tech, gaming and iOS sites, including 148Apps, Creative Screenwriting, Shelf-Awareness, VentureBeat, and Paste Magazine. Feel free to find Rob on Twitter @roblef, and send him a cookie once in a while; he'll really appreciate it.
The Angry Birds are, ahem, transforming yet again in this new trailer from Rovio and Hasbro, released to coincide with San Diego Comic Con this week.
Youâve got the red bird cosplaying as a voice-less Optimus Prime, running his way through an island-style world, smashing through crates, and then finally facing a giant, laughing pig-bot Deceptihog. It doesnât get much better than this. Check out the video below.
Last quarter was bright but the future's even brighter, according to Apple.
Even Apple execs sounded pleasantly surprised as they revealed last quarterâs mostly higher-than-expected numbers Tuesday. But in whatâs become something of a refrain in Cupertino, they couldnât stop themselves from vague and knowing references to the incredible products waiting in the magical Apple pipeline.
Trust us, they seemed to say: Last quarterâs net profit of $7.7 billion â fueled by robust sales of iPhones, MacBooks and a surprisingly strong showing in the iTunes Software and Services category â was totally great, but wait till you see what weâve got up our sleeves.
âWeâre expecting a very busy fall,â said Luca Maestri, Appleâs chief financial officer. âWeâre very excited about whatâs in the pipeline.â
What else did Apple executives have to say during Tuesdayâs Q3 earnings call? Hereâs our take on everything you need to know from the latest numbers talk.
Imagine a world in which you can watch, search, and share anything from every The Simpsons episode, ever. If you were Homer Simpson, the dim-witted but lovable (and alcoholic child-strangler) father on the 25-year-old animated sitcom created by Matt Groening, you might drool at the prospect.
For the rest of us, though, we might explode with glee with the upcoming Simpsons World, an app and service that will indeed contain every single episode of The Simpsons, ever, in a searchable and share-able format. Now you can finally use official clips to add meaning and cultural relevance to every one of your reddit comment threads with ease.
âYou have no idea what loss is,â says Joel, the protagonist in the best game of 2013, The Last Of Us.
On July 28, youâll be able to watch a live stream of the principal actors read select lines from Naughty Dogâs cinematic hit. Troy Baker, Ashley Johnson, Merle Dandridge, Hanna Hayes, and Annie Wersching â the main characters in the game â will take direction from none other than Neil Druckmann himself, the writer and director of The Last of Us. Academy Award-winning composer Gustavo Santaolalla will be on hand as well to play selections from his game score.
Check out the promo trailer below for more details.
Bill promises his bride that he'll survive the war. Photo: John P. Johnson/ HBO
This week, the residents of Bon Temps confront their grief head on. Sookie mourns Alcide, Lettie Mae mourns Tara, and Arlene mourns Terry. Andy makes the biggest decision of his life, while Eric and Pam continue their quest to find â and kill â Sarah Newland, the crazy Christian we all love to hate.
This fifth episode of the final season of HBOâs True Blood series focuses on love and loss, while we all start to come to terms with the death of some of our favorite characters as well as the end of the long-running television show. Itâs a more restrained â and less hilarious â episode than last week, but we can only hope that weâre being set up for more over the top fun in the weeks ahead.
Pear Sports' workout system pairs a heart rate monitor with comfortable earbuds and a mobile app. Photo: Rob LeFebvre/Cult of Mac
Iâve been a runner for a long time. I trained for (and ran) the 1994 Los Angeles Marathon. Iâve run 5K races, half marathons and relays for full marathons up here in Alaska, too. I find that running gives me the best bang for my buck: All I need is a pair of running shoes, some appropriate clothing (it gets cold up here), and some music to keep me getting out there.
Recently, though, Iâve been playing with a new bit of gear: the Pear Sports heart rate monitor, paired with a set of earbuds engineered to stay in your ears while working out, plus a pretty fantastic mobile app to make sense of the heart rate data.
The Brother P-Touch P750W label printer works like a charm. Photo: Rob LeFebvre/Cult of Mac
When I was a kid, we used to label everything: toys, boxes, file folders. My parents used one of those manual rotary label dispensers, the kind you had to squeeze hard enough to make each individual letter poke up through the hard plastic label tape. It was a good day when my brother and I got to use the label maker to title our shelves, toys and books (âRobâs Stuffâ was a common theme).
These days, printing labels is a lot easier thanks to computers and label printers like the ones from Dymo and Brother. Typically, youâve got to connect these to a Mac or PC, and then use special software to send labels to the label printer.
The Brother P-Touch P750W (printer makers really need to work on their model names) is a label printer that can connect to your computer via USB, sure, but also connect either to your existing Wi-Fi network or create its own Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n network to print labels from any device, including iPhones, iPads, Android devices, Windows PCs and Macs.
Yeah, Iâve already labeled some shelves around the house. Old habits, it appears, die hard.
Talkin' 'bout my g-g-generation. Photo: Jonas Bengtsson/Flickr CC
When I wanted to learn how to knit, I went to YouTube. Anytime I need to learn a guitar solo for a cover song my band is working on, I head to YouTube. Iâm not alone in my use of the video portal, either. According to Nielsen, YouTube reaches more U.S. adults in the 18-34 age range than any cable network.
These types of everyday queries have made YouTube the No. 2 search engine in the world, second only to Google (which just happens to be the video siteâs parent company). More than 1 billion unique users head to YouTube every month, and more than 6 billion hours of video â almost an hour of video for each person on the planet â get watched in the same time period.
If youâre a new site, trying to capture enough mind share and traffic to create a successful user-created video content business, how could you ever compete with such a giant?
The residents of Bon Temps are reeling from the latest deaths in the town, Sookie is mourning Alcide but keeping a stiff upper lip, and Arlene is finally chosen to be vampire food in âDeath Is Not the End,â the fourth episode in this final season of HBOâs long-running vampire romance drama based on the Charlaine Harris novels. The episode is full of callbacks to the first season, as the last few shows have been. The True Blood team really wants to bring everything full circle, and this week theyâve succeeded more than expected.
While death may not be the end for vampires, itâs certainly the end for a host of folks in this forsaken little southern town. The shockers continue this week, not the least of which is Eric Northman with â90s hair, some fantastic Pam lines, and a funny little scene as Sam and Jason go to inform Deputy Mayberryâs next of kin that heâs dead. âKevin was a good man,â says Jason. Pause. âWith a funny voice.â
Sure, Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a movie that became a TV show that ended up as a comic book, but itâs a fine example of the cross-media value of certain nerdy properties. Comic book movies and television shows are all the rage right now, with Marvel and DC superheroes packing the theaters and shows like Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Arrow filling the little screen.
But there are plenty of comic books that donât feature superheroes, and we think theyâd be a great match for the home television market, as they have less reliance on big-budget special effects and can sustain longer story arcs than a movie can. With that, then, here are our picks for the best non-superhero comics weâd really like to see come to a television screen near you. Or us.
If you want to delve into the deep end with a massively online battle arena game, you can head on over to Riot Gamesâ League of Legends or Valveâs own Dota 2 with your computer, download a free copy of each game, and then dive in.
Or, you can grab a copy of Fates Forever, a surprisingly well-tuned and deep version of the popular game genre and eSports phenomenon. Itâs been over a year in development by the team led by the founder of proto-Game Center Open Feint and one of the first hit game devs on the iOS platoform (Aurora Feint), Jason Citron.
When we spoke to Citron last summer, he was full of excitement about his promising game-in-development. The wait has been worth it, as Fates Forever puts on an impressive show, squeezing a fully-realized MOBA game complete with distinctive heroes and cunningly designed infrastructure that can encourage and include everyone, from those brand new to the genre to the more veteran MOBA players, all on the iPad.
This is a fantastic game, and youâll want to check it out right now.
If you think that the conceit behind Ubisoftâs hacker-themed video game Watch Dogs isnât real enough, be sure to take a look at this website.
Watch_Dogs We Are Data takes real world, publicly-accessible location-based data and parses it into a display ripped directly from the video game of the same name. You can visit Berlin, Paris, or London, and zoom on down into the various regions of each city to see where mobile phones are, read tweets originating from specific spots, and see icons that represent CCTV feeds, traffic lights, and more.
If this doesnât freak you out even just a little, then more power to you.
Terry Gilliam giving instructions. Photo courtesy The Zero Theorem
A brilliant computer programmer living in a future dystopian totalitarian state must prove the Zero Theorem, in which 100 percent equals 0, or all is nothing. Heâs got a touch of social anxiety (âWe do not like to be touched!â), a seriously bald head, and a variety of future-weird outfits that he wears in each scene. Sound like fun?
If youâve seen any of Terry Gilliamâs similar work, like 12 Monkeys or Brazil (or even if you just dig Appleâs similarly themed 1984-esque commercial by Ridley Scott) youâre going to want to check this one out. The gloriously wacky and edgy trailer is below.
The deep synth pad from M83âs âMy Tears Are Becoming A Seaâ fills the air with an ethereal sound in this new trailer (below) for an upcoming video game. We watch a strange winged creature land on the ground just in time for a lithe foot to strike nearby. Itâs a elf-like warrior archer, and sheâs running for her life.
Saved by a golden steampunk robot character, the archer gets up and re-takes her place in the battle against hordes of robotic enemies, alongside a bunch of other heroes, including a blood-red dual-sword-wielding elf-dude with long hair as well as a massive dude with a gigantic gatling gun, like something out of Team Fortress 2.
All of this takes place in cinematic-styled slow motion, with M83âs music as the perfect match to the trailerâs action. âThis is something to take seriously,â the trailer seems to say. âThis is a game youâll want to play.â
This is Battleborn, the upcoming âhero-shooterâ from 2K games and Gearbox Software, the publisher/developer team behind the highly-successful Borderlands series.
Arguably the most-anticipated game for the new generation of consoles, Destiny aims to be a sci-fi first-person shooter from the same folks who all but created the genre with Halo back in 2001.
Today, Bungie put out the call: pre-order the game now (which is set to launch to retail in September) and get early, exclusive access to the Destiny beta.
PlayStation 4 owners will get to play first, with a July 17th beta launch date, while Xbox One gamers will get to play just a week out on July 23rd. The beta itself will terminate on July 26, with a special event for all gamers who show up on the games servers before the end of the day.
Check out the trailer below for some gorgeous visuals along with a few details.
First-person shooter Borderlands 2 offers up a ton of guns and a huge, open-world map with more in-jokes and Easter eggs than you can shake a boom-stick at. With the help of our friends over at Aspyr (publisher of the Mac version of the game), weâre going to share with you four of the hardest-to-find secrets from within the post-apocalyptic sci-fi video game.
Plus, read till the end and youâll get a special deal exclusively for Cult of Mac readers who want their own copy of the Game of the Year edition of Borderlands 2 (the one with all the DLC packs along with the basic game) at a heavily discounted price.
Sookie is the bait in this trap. Photo: John P. Johnson/HBO
True Bloodâs seventh and final season continues tonight with the third episode of the season: âFire In The Hole.â
Death comes to us all, and thatâs no empty promise with this series. Reverend Daniels calls it out: âDeath is a dark and blinded motherf-cker, whether you see it coming or you donât,â he tells Sam Merlotte.
This weekâs episode is all about love. Sookieâs unequal love for Alcide, Pamâs love for Eric, Samâs love for his lost fiancee and unborn child, Reverend Danielâs love for Lettie May, and Andyâs love for his daughter Adilyn. All the characters act out of love and sometimes lust, but even the good guys are going to need more than blind faith in each other to survive.
Iâve been playing music for coming up on 30 years now, and Iâve tried a ton of music gear. These days, I run a fairly bare-bones setup, with a smaller amp for those close venues, a couple of dual-effect pedals (Visual Soundsâ Route 66 and H2O), and a Boss VE-20 vocal harmony box to thicken up the background vocals in my disco band.
Iâve always had a thing for multi-effect boxes, though, running through my share of a few complicated ones that never quite gave me what I needed in terms of both effects sounds and onstage ease-of-use.
When I heard about TC-Heliconâs new VoiceLive 3 mega-stomp box, with a huge range of guitar effects and amplifier modeling, an amazing vocal-harmony processing system and a stage-quality looping feature, well, I had to try it out.
Imagine if you were actually a hunter of massive, dangerous creatures. Youâd need to gear up, make sure you have all the weaponry and armor youâd need, enough ammo for your ranged weapons, and youâd have to be sure your giant swords are sharp enough to cut through touch monster hide.
Youâd need to practice, for sure, and youâd probably get better over time, able to aim your sights at even more deadly monsters, because the bigger the baddie, the better the payoff.
Monster Hunter Freedom Unite is exactly this. While hunting monsters is a ton of stressful fun, full of dodging and attacking and slaying, the rest of the activities in-game â choosing weapons, farming, hiring chefs and companions, crafting and buying better weaponry and armor â are equally as satisfying.
And now? Itâs on your iPhone (or iPad), with some really excellent touch controls and better visuals than ever.
The official BBC One Twitter account had a surprise for fans of its hit show Sherlock Wednesday with a tease that the oft-delayed series about a modern Sherlock Holmes and his faithful sidekick John Watson will be returning.
"Miss me?" #Sherlock, the hit @BBCOne drama, will return for a Special, followed by a series of three new episodes. #221back
David Finch draws, Meredith Finch writes the new Wonder Woman this November. Photo: David Finch
For a comic book character thatâs been around since 1941, itâs surprising how few women (five) have written DC Comicâs biggest female protagonist. The character is as least as popular and visible as DCâs other superstars, Batman and Superman, but itâs not until recently that weâve seen her potentially coming to the big screen, while the other two have dominated DCâs movie output in recent years.
Itâs exciting, then, to hear that the comic book itself is getting some new creative energy: Meredith and David Finch, a husband and wife writer/illustrator. While David has some serious comic book cred, from Ultimate X-Men (with Brian Michael Bendis) and Batman: The Dark Knight, Meredith Finch has some chops as well, as seen in her short stories for Zenescope Entertainment. This will be her first lead comic writing gig.
Meredith reminds us that having a female writer for one of the most iconic female superheroes is important. âIt makes sense if youâre going to try to attract that female market that you appeal to them on every level,â she told USA Today, ââ your writing demographic reflects the demographic of your readership.â
Iâm a digital pack rat. Iâve got an iPhone, an iPad mini, a Barnes & Noble nook eReader, a space pen, several USB flash drives, and various earbuds along with a few charging and adapter cables.
I usually just jam all these things into my backpack as I head out the door, hoping they donât get lost or tangled in the process. They get lost in my bag of choice, and I spend a fair bit of time searching around for stuff I need in any given moment when out and about.
Honestly, though, it hasnât been much of an issue. Iâve been ok with taking the extra effort to find my headphones, say, and unwrap them from the unholy tangle theyâve become in my bag, for the simple fact that Iâm not super organized.
This new leather folio case, however, has me re-thinking all that. What if I could keep track of all the little digital ephemera I carry with me in a more compact, organized way?
This is how my non-gamer girlfriend shows me which games are worth playing: She stays up until 3 a.m., wearing down the iPad mini battery to 22 percent while she tries to solve the next level.
This time, she bathed our dark bedroom in colorful reflected light while she moved Niko, Groggnar, Eek and Claude around on the screen in Monsters Ate My Birthday Cake. If itâs so important to solve environmental puzzles on the bright screen in the middle of the night, I know the gameâs addictive.
This morning, still playing on the couch after charging up the iPad while she (finally) got some sleep, she told me like it is.
âIt took me 15 minutes, but I finally got that level,â she bragged. âWith three stars, bitch.â
Back in the heady days of the early 2000s, early social networking services like Tribe.net, Friendster, MySpace and (yep) Facebook all offered similar features: connecting with other folks via the world wide web. Orkut, founded in 2008 and owned by Google, is named after the engineer who created the service as a 20 percent project.
Of course, once Facebook became the de-facto social network in the US, services like Orkut all but disappeared here. Even so, Orkut was huge in Brazil, and even migrated to servers based there in 2008. Heck, there was even an Android and iOS app.
Unfortunately for Brazilians and other hold-outs, Orkut is shutting down in September of 2014. As of July 30, new users wonât be able to create new accounts on the service, either.
The zombie-vamps are coming. Photo: Tony Rivetti/HBO
Lots going on in this weekâs episode of HBOâs vampire-romance television show, including answers on Ericâs whereabouts, more info on the infected, zombie-like Hep-V vampires, and a whole bunch of callbacks to the first season of the show.
If you missed last weekâs recap, head on over and read up on the first episode of the seventh and final season of this HBO cult-hit, or read our massive recap of the first six seasons to catch up on the whole story, loosely based on Charlaine Harrisâ bestselling novels, so far.
Be warned â there be spoilers ahead, so if you donât want to know whatâs going on in the world of Sookie Stackhouse, keep moving, folks.