NRC maakt ieder weekend een selectie uit het media-aanbod. Meer kijk-, lees-, luister- en gametips zijn te vinden in de Slim Leven-gidsen op nrc.nl en in de cultuurnieuwsbrieven van NRC.


Jessica, ook jij hebt het lichaam van een topatleet

Marijn de Vries


VS voeren luchtaanvallen uit op IS-doelen in Syrië na dodelijke aanslag op Amerikaanse militairen

De aanvallen op Islamitische Staat in Syrië van vrijdag zijn een vergeldingsactie voor een aanslag bij Palmyra, waarbij afgelopen weekend twee Amerikaanse militairen en een tolk om het leven kwamen.

kottke.org

Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

Wallace & Gromit’s Cracking Christmas

In 2002, Aardman Animations produced a series of short episodes called Wallace & Gromit’s Cracking Contraptions. In each episode, Wallace unveils a new invention, which Gromit then has to deal with. For the holiday season, Aardman has packaged a few of these short shorts into this compilation, Wallace & Gromit’s Cracking Christmas, free to watch on YouTube.

You can watch a longer compilation of (I believe) all of the episodes here.

Aardman even produced a new episode this year, in the form of a clothing commercial:

I hadn’t seen most of these before; I legit laughed out loud several times while watching.

See also: Nick Park demonstrates how to draw Gromit.

Tags: Aardman Animations · advertising · animation · Christmas · holidays · stop motion · TV · video · Wallace and Gromit

💬 Join the discussion on kottke.org

“The embrace of the unitary executive theory by both the president and...

“The embrace of the unitary executive theory by both the president and the [Supreme Court] has given us the worst of all worlds: an ultrapowerful presidency without an actual president at the helm.”

Roof of a temple

lioil has added a photo to the pool:

Roof of a temple

Tofukuji, Kyoto, Japan
東福寺 京都

osanpo_1848

gnsk has added a photo to the pool:

osanpo_1848

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Riot Games Is Making an Anti-Cheat Change That Could Be Rough On Older PCs

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: At this point, most competitive online multiplayer games on the PC come with some kind of kernel-level anti-cheat software. As we've written before, this is software that runs with more elevated privileges than most other apps and games you run on your PC, allowing it to load in earlier and detect advanced methods of cheating. More recently, anti-cheat software has started to require more Windows security features like Secure Boot, a TPM 2.0 module, and virtualization-based memory integrity protection. Riot Games, best known for titles like Valorant and League of Legends and the Vanguard anti-cheat software, has often been one of the earliest to implement new anti-cheat requirements. There's already a long list of checks that systems need to clear before they'll be allowed to play Riot's games online, and now the studio is announcing a new one: a BIOS update requirement that will be imposed on "certain players" following Riot's discovery of a UEFI bug that could allow especially dedicated and motivated cheaters to circumvent certain memory protections.

In short, the bug affects the input-output memory management unit (IOMMU) "on some UEFI-based motherboards from multiple vendors." One feature of the IOMMU is to protect system memory from direct access during boot by external hardware devices, which otherwise might manipulate the contents of your PC's memory in ways that could enable cheating. The patch for these security vulnerabilities (CVE-2025-11901, CVE-202514302, CVE-2025-14303, and CVE-2025-14304) fixes a problem where this pre-boot direct memory access (DMA) protection could be disabled even if it was marked as enabled in the BIOS, creating a small window during the boot process where DMA devices could gain access to RAM.

The relative obscurity and complexity of this hardware exploit means that Vanguard isn't going to be enforcing these BIOS requirements on every single player of its games. For now, it will just apply to "restricted" players of Valorant whose systems, for one reason or another, are "too similar to cheaters who get around security features in order to become undetectable to Vanguard." But Riot says it's considering rolling the BIOS requirement out to all players in Valorant's highest competitive ranking tiers (Ascendant, Immortal, and Radiant), where there's more to be gained from working around the anti-cheat software. And Riot anti-cheat analyst Mohamed Al-Sharifi says the same restrictions could be turned on for League of Legends, though they aren't currently. If users are blocked from playing by Vanguard, they'll need to download and install the latest BIOS update for their motherboard before they'll be allowed to launch the game. Riot's new anti-cheat change could create problems for older PCs if the new anti-cheat change is expanded, notes Ars.

The update relies on a BIOS patch to fix a UEFI flaw, and many older motherboards, especially Intel 300-series and AMD AM4 boards, may never receive that update. If Riot flags a system and the manufacturer doesn't provide a patched BIOS, players could be locked out of games despite having otherwise capable hardware.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Alec Monopoly

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Alec Monopoly

Paradise Island

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Paradise Island