Keep Driving features some of the best pixel art I’ve witnessed in quite some time, and the style perfectly fits with the ...
During the 80s and 90s, pixel art graphics dominated the gaming scene, mainly due to the technical limitations of the consoles of that time. This simple yet detailed visual style marked a ...
The Greek document details a court case in ancient Palestine involving tax fraud and provides insight into trial preparations in the Roman Empire Sonja Anderson Daily Correspondent The papyrus ...
Pixel art is a staple of the industry, going back to the NES era. For more than a decade, this visual style defined the gaming industry, with Nintendo and Sega's early consoles making great use of ...
What’s likely to be one of the more interesting auction lots of the year (yes, I am aware it’s only February), the car collection of the famed Academy of Art University in San Francisco is up ...
Google is already working on four Pixel 11 series devices with bear-themed codenames. There’s also a Pixel 10a in very early development, with Google currently considering the possibility of ...
Scholars from the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the University of Vienna, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem worked in tandem to showcase this papyrus, which had been in possession of the ...
Ahead of the stable launch in March, Google is rolling out Android 15 QPR2 Beta 3 for Pixel devices. Quarterly Platform Releases deliver more significant changes compared to monthly bug fixes.
An incredible 1,900-year-old papyrus sheds light on an ancient criminal case involving forgery, tax fraud and slaves from the Roman empire. This papyrus, which was discovered in the 1950s but ...
That started with the Pixel 9, and is expected to continue with the Pixel 10 and now Pixel 11. What’s of note in today’s report is that Google is apparently “considering whether to even ...
Burnt to a crisp by lava from Mount Vesuvius in A.D. 79, the reams of rolled-up papyrus were discovered in a mansion in Herculaneum — an ancient Roman town near Pompeii — in the mid-18th century.
A new papyrus dating back over 1,880 years is giving archaeologists new insight into the Roman world’s legal system. Academics from the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the University of Vienna and ...