Posted by from MMO Champion
Mists of Pandaria Classic Development Notes: Pre-Pull Buff Adjustments
Mists of Pandaria Classic Development Notes - June 30
Originally Posted by Blizzard
(
Blue Tracker /
Official Forums)
We’re continuing to iterate on changes to pre-pull behaviors.
See above for the initial list. We’ve made the following additional changes:
The Synapse Springs buffs are removed when the gloves are removed.
Soulshatter can no longer proc effects.
Circle of Flame doesn’t work past level 89.
Sulfuron Slammer cannot be used in raid and will be removed upon entering a raid.
Unconscious Dig Rats can’t be used in raids.
Turnip Punching Bags cannot be used in raids.
Soul Reaper added to the list of effects that are removed on pull.
Hunter Focus no longer goes to max on encounter start.
On-pull actions updated to remove resources from a player if they are the first player to hit the boss or they try to pre-cast a missile spell that has a cost.
For example, if you engage the boss using Chaos Bolt and you are the one engaging, your resources on pull will behave as if you spent resources on a Chaos Bolt. Instead of going to 1 Burning Ember on pull, you will go to 0.
All renews from Shadow Priests are removed on pull (preventing previously-set up spell casts to influence the fight).
Soulburn casts obey the same pre-pull rules and will pull from your encounter start pool if you engage early.
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Posted by msmash from Slashdot
From the router-roulette department: An anonymous reader shares a report: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) has a plan for spectrum auctions that could take frequencies away from Wi-Fi and reallocate them for the exclusive use of wireless carriers. The plan would benefit AT&T, which is based in Cruz's home state, along with Verizon and T-Mobile.
Cruz's proposal revives a years-old controversy over whether the entire 6 GHz band should be devoted to Wi-Fi, which can use the large spectrum band for faster speeds than networks that rely solely on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. Congress is on the verge of passing legislation that would require spectrum to be auctioned off for full-power, commercially licensed use, and the question is where that spectrum will come from.
When the House of Representatives passed its so-called "One Big Beautiful Bill," it excluded all of the frequencies between 5.925 and 7.125 gigahertz from the planned spectrum auctions. But Cruz's version of the budget reconciliation bill, which is moving quickly toward a final vote, removed the 6 GHz band's protection from spectrum auctions. The Cruz bill is also controversial because it would penalize states that regulate artificial intelligence.
Instead of excluding the 6 GHz band from auctions, Cruz's bill would instead exclude the 7.4-8.4 GHz band used by the military. Under conditions set by the bill, it could be hard for the Commerce Department and Federal Communications Commission to fulfill the Congressional mandate without taking some spectrum away from Wi-Fi.
Posted by Slashdot Staff from Slashdot
From the next-gen-vpn department: TorrentFreak spotlights VP.net, a brand-new service from Private Internet Access founder Andrew Lee (the guy who gifted Linux Journal to Slashdot) that eliminates the classic "just trust your VPN" problem by locking identity-mapping and traffic-handling inside Intel SGX enclaves.
The company promises 'cryptographically verifiable privacy' by using special hardware 'safes' (Intel SGX), so even the provider can't track what its users are up to.
The design goal is that no one, not even the VPN company, can link "User X" to "Website Y."
Lee frames it as enabling agency over one's privacy:
"Our zero trust solution does not require you to trust us - and that's how it should be. Your privacy should be up to your choice - not up to some random VPN provider in some random foreign country."
The team behind VP.net includes CEO Matt Kim as well as arguably the first Bitcoin veterans Roger Ver and Mark Karpeles.
Ask Slashdot: Now that there's a VPN where you don't have to "just trust the provider" - arguably the first real zero-trust VPN - are trust based VPNs obsolete?
Posted by from MMO Champion
Get Started with Pet Battles in Mists of Pandaria Classic
Originally Posted by Blizzard
(
Blue Tracker /
Official Forums)
In Mists of Pandaria Classic, players can engage in Pet Battles—strategic 3v3 turn-based encounters that feature hundreds of collectible battle pets from across Azeroth. This beginner-friendly guide introduces the fundamentals of Pet Battles, from taming wild companions to mastering type matchups and ability combos.
What are Pet Battles?
Pet Battles allow players to turn their companion pets into battle-hardened allies. Unlock the feature through Battle Pet Training and take your team of three pets into tactical, turn-based encounters against wild creatures, quest trainers, and other players.
Each pet has its own family type, abilities, and progression path.
How to Get Started
Audrey Burnhep in Stormwind
Varzok in Orgrimmar
Train the skill: Visit any major city and speak with a Battle Pet Trainer to learn Battle Pet Training. This unlocks Pet Battles and the ability to track nearby wild pets on your minimap.
Tame your first pet: Choose from your current companions or tame a level 1 wild pet in a starting zone like Elwynn Forest or Durotar.
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Posted by Black Convoy from TFW2005
Thanks to friend site
Cybertron.ca we can report that the Transformers Studio Series Wave 29 Voyager is out in Canada.
Constructicon Mixmaster and
War For Cybertron Thundercracker were found at Walmart stores in Ontario and Quebec. Happy hunting!
The post
Transformers Studio Series Wave 29 Voyager Out In Canada appeared first on
Transformer World 2005 - TFW2005.COM.
Posted by EditorDavid from Slashdot
From the catching-some-rays department: "Earth's ozone layer blocks the Sun's shortest wave radiation, called UV-C, which is so damaging to cells in high doses that it's a go-to sterilizer in hospitals," writes Slashdot reader sciencehabit. "UV-C is such a killer, in fact, that scientists have questioned whether life can survive on worlds that lack an ozone layer, such as Mars or distant exoplanets.
"But research published this month in Astrobiology suggests one hardy lichen, a hybrid organism made of algae and fungi, may have cracked the UV-C code with a built-in sunscreen, despite never experiencing these rays in its long evolutionary history."
Science magazine explains:
When scientists brought a sample of the species, the common desert dweller Clavascidium lacinulatum, back to the lab, graduate student Tejinder Singh put the lichen through the wringer. First, Singh dehydrated the lichen, to make sure it couldn't grow back in real time and mask any UV damage. Then he placed the lichen a few centimeters under a UV lamp and blasted it with radiation. The lichen seemed just fine.
So Singh purchased the most powerful UV-C lamp he could find online, capable of sending out 20 times more radiation than the amount expected on Mars. When he tested the lamp on the most radiation-resistant life form on Earth, the bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans, it died in less than a minute. After 3 months—likely the highest amount of UV-C radiation ever tested on an organism—Singh pulled the sample so he could finish his master's thesis in time. About half of the lichen's algal cells had survived. Then, when the team ground up and cultured part of the surviving lichen, about half of its algal cells sprouted new, green colonies after 2 weeks, showing it maintained the ability to reproduce.
The species may provide a blueprint for surviving on Mars or exoplanets, which don't have an ozone layer to protect them.