Hammer time! Chris Hemsworth to imminently return in new Marvel epic Thor: Ragnarok with three month shoot confirmed for Australia’s Gold Coast from July

Hammer time! Chris Hemsworth to imminently return in new Marvel epic Thor: Ragnarok with three month shoot confirmed for Australia’s Gold Coast from July

The movie is being directed by New Zealand’s Taika Waititi, who has confessed that he’s eyeing a cameo for himself in the blockbuster.

‘I can’t help myself,’ the 40-year-old told the Daily Telegraph after revealing that he will ‘probably’ pop up in the highly-anticipated product.

'I can't help myself:' Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Waititi admitted that he's hoping to make a cameo in the upcoming superhero film 

‘I can’t help myself:’ Thor: Ragnarok director Taika Waititi admitted that he’s hoping to make a cameo in the upcoming superhero film

If Waititi does end up in the film, it certainly won’t be his first time appearing in a superhero flick.

The handsome Kiwi previously had a supporting role in DC Entertainment’s 2011 movie, The Green Lantern.

Waititi previously opened up to the Daily Mail Australia about The Green Lantern’s famously poor box office performance, admitting that it didn’t come as much of a surprise to him.

Star studded: Thor stars Australia’s Chris Hemsworth

‘Being part of it and reading the script and seeing how it all came together, I wasn’t really surprised with how it was received,’ he told the Daily Mail Australia.

‘A classic example was when we were blocking a scene and I said ‘I have one line and it’s not really necessary to the story and it doesn’t further the scene, just a suggestion but maybe I shouldn’t be in this scene?’

‘They were like ‘Shut up Taika, just say your line and do the scene’ and I said okay, and just sat there literally doing nothing and wondering ‘What the f*** am I doing in this movie?’.’

Not the first time! The 40-year-old previous appeared in DC's 2011 flop, The Green Lantern 

Not the first time! The 40-year-old previous appeared in DC’s 2011 flop, The Green Lantern

'I wasn't really surprised with how it was received,' he previously admitted to Daily Mail Australia

‘I wasn’t really surprised with how it was received,’ he previously admitted to Daily Mail Australia

The Academy Award-nominated star has been producing critically and commercially successful films in New Zealand since 2003, and is even behind the highest-grossing New Zealand movie ever, Boy.

Unsurprisingly, he’s also known for casting himself in his own projects.

Waititi has appeared in every single film that he’s written and/or directed, Eagle Vs. Shark, What We Do in the Shadows, and Hunt for the Wilderpeople.

Thor: Ragnarok, which stars Australia’s Chris Hemsworth and Cate Blanchett, is due for release in 2017.

Coming soon! Thor: Ragnarok is set to his theaters in 2017

Coming soon! Thor: Ragnarok is set to his theaters in 2017

Hammer time! Chris Hemsworth to imminently return in new Marvel epic Thor: Ragnarok with three month shoot confirmed for Australia’s Gold Coast from July

See what Minecraft would look like in the real world

See what Minecraft would look like in the real world

If there’s a single game that has defined this decade, it has to be Minecraft. Not only has the game sold over 100 million copies since launch, but it also prompted Microsoft to buy developer Mojang for $2.5 billion in 2014.

It’s a phenomenon unlike any other in the medium, but despite the fact that players have spent countless hours exploring the game’s infinite worlds, they probably wouldn’t want to recreate Minecraft in real life

YouTube channel Nukazooka released a video this week showing off what it might look like if the popular indie game was suddenly transposed over the real world. At first it looks relatively peaceful… but then the zombies appear:

Who knew that Minecraft could be so terrifying?

The game itself is far more intense than a blocky screenshot might suggest, but zombies, creepers and endermen are truly the stuff of nightmares when they make their way to our world. Still, it would be pretty fun to punch a tree a few times and watch it topple to the ground.

If you liked what you saw, director Andrew McMurry has plenty of other clever videos with impressive visual effects on his channel.

See what Minecraft would look like in the real world

Minecraft tree ‘probably’ the tallest tree in the Tropics

Minecraft tree ‘probably’ the tallest tree in the Tropics

A tree the height of 20 London double-decker buses has been discovered in Malaysia by conservation scientists monitoring the impact of human activity on the biodiversity of a pristine rainforest. The tree, a Yellow Meranti, is one of the species that can be grown in the computer game Minecraft.

The Yellow Meranti stands 89.5m tall in an area of forest known as ‘Sabah’s Lost World’ — the Maliau Basin Conservation Area, one of Malaysia’s last few untouched wildernesses. Its height places it ahead of the previous record-holder, an 88.3m Yellow Meranti in the Tawau Hills National Park.

The giant tree was discovered during reconnaissance flights by conservation scientists from the University of Cambridge working with the Sabah Forestry Department to help protect the area’s biodiversity. It comes at a crucial time, as the Sabah government takes measures to protect and restore heavily logged areas in the region.

Measuring a tree’s exact height is tricky when the tree is quite possibly the tallest tree in the Tropics. The only way is to climb it, and to take a tape measure with you. This is precisely what Unding Jami, an expert tree-climber from Sabah, did recently. When he reached the top, he confirmed the tree’s height and texted “I don’t have time to take photos using a good camera because there’s an eagle around that keeps trying to attack me and also lots of bees flying around.”

The tree actually stands on a slope: downhill it’s 91m tall, and uphill it’s around 88m tall. “We’d put it at 89.5m on average,” explains lead researcher Dr David Coomes, from Cambridge’s Department of Plant Sciences. “It’s a smidgen taller than the record, which makes it quite probably the tallest tree recorded in the Tropics!”

At this height, the tree is roughly equivalent to the height of 65 people standing on each other’s shoulders, or 20 double-decker London buses. It’s just a few metres short of London’s Big Ben.

“Trees in temperate regions, like the giant redwoods, can grow up to 30m taller; yet around 90m seems to be the limit in the Tropics. No-one knows why this should be the case,” adds Coomes.

The tree was spotted using a LiDAR scanner — a machine that’s capable of producing exquisitely detailed three-dimensional images of rainforest canopies over hundreds of square kilometres. Its laser range finder hangs from the undercarriage of the research plane, peppering the forest with 200,000 laser pulses every second, and calculating distances in 3D from each reflected pulse. The researchers then ‘stitch’ the images together, enabling them to map the forest tree by tree.

Threatened by habitat loss, the Yellow Meranti (Shorea faguetiana) is classified as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature ‘Red list’, the world’s most comprehensive inventory of the global conservation status of biological species.

“Interestingly, there may be more of this tree in cyberspace than in the world. It’s one of the trees that players can grow in the computer game Minecraft,” adds Coomes.

“Conserving these giants is really important. Some, like the California redwoods, are among the largest and longest-living organisms on earth. Huge trees are crucial for maintaining the health of the forest and its ecology. But they are difficult to find, and monitor regularly, which is where planes carrying LiDAR can help.”

Globally, around one billion hectares of degraded forest might be restorable, enabling then to continue to contribute to the planet’s biodiversity and its carbon and water cycles. However, a major problem faced by conservation managers is how to survey extensive areas in which conditions can vary in just a few hundred square metres and are continually changing through natural regeneration. “LiDAR scanning together with digital photography and hyperspectral scanners now provide us with unprecedented information on the state of the forest,” explains Coomes.

With funding from the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), the Cambridge scientists worked with the Sabah Forestry Department, the South-East Asia Rainforest Research Partnership and the NERC Airborne Remote Sensing Facility.

“The Sabah government is extremely proud of this discovery, which lays credence to the fact that our biodiversity is of global importance,” says Sam Mannan, Director of the Sabah Forestry Department. “Our international collaboration, as in this case, has brought great scientific dividends to the state and we shall continue to pursue such endeavours.”

Adds Coomes: “The discovery of this particular tree comes at a critical moment because, set against a backdrop of decades of forest loss, the Sabah government has decided to protect and restore a huge tract of heavily logged forest just to the east of the Maliau Basin. It’s exciting to know that these iconic giants of the forest are alive and well so close to this major restoration project.”

Minecraft tree ‘probably’ the tallest tree in the Tropics

TURNS OUT MINECRAFT IRL IS THE STUFF OF NIGHTMARES

TURNS OUT MINECRAFT IRL IS THE STUFF OF NIGHTMARES

Who doesn’t love Minecraft? It’s the light-hearted game of a lone survivor making his way in a pixelated world. The monsters aren’t too scary, and because the game can be as easy or as challenging as the player wants it, Minecraft is one of those rare games that adults and kids can both love and spend hours playing. So it would stand to reason that a real-life version of the game would be just as happy-go-lucky and mellow, right? I mean, how can you not feel calm with those mellow C418 tones coming at you?

Well, friends, it turns out realistic Minecraft is actually pretty solid nightmare fuel, as YouTubersNukazooka prove. Things start out with some lighthearted, chuckle-worthy stuff like chopping a tree down with NOTHING BUT YOUR FISTS (Steve’s a badass, y’all), and somehow being able to craft a pickax with nothing more than a bit of rock and wood. But the situation gets kicked up a notch when Steve is out exploring and spots some diamond in a cave wall. Hidden from the sun, monsters come out in droves to chase after our poor explorer.

The zombies are definitely a lot more terrifying than what we see in Minecraft, sure, but with shows like The Walking Dead on the air, we’re pretty used to seeing the shambling hordes of the undead. The spooky factor really gets kicked up when we see the “realistic” version of a Creeper–which is apparently a horrifying bug-like creature that has basically ruined my weird love of those little exploding bastards forever. It’s a fun and simultaneously terrifying adventure, and really makes you look at the world of Minecraft differently. I won’t spoil the very end of the video for you, but lovers of Minecraft lore will be pretty excited–and simultaneously terrified–about how this realistic Minecraft journey ends.

What Minecraft monsters would you like to see morphed into a more “realistic” version? What was your favorite part of the Nukazooka video? Let me know in the comments!

GET A LOOK AT MINECRAFT STORY MODE?

TURNS OUT MINECRAFT IRL IS THE STUFF OF NIGHTMARES

Minecraft in real life looks a lot more scary

Minecraft in real life looks a lot more scary

If you’ve ever found yourself sadly logging out of Minecraft, wishing you could just live in it, the experience may not be quite as fun as you think. YouTube channel Nukazooka, by filmmaker Andrew McMurry (who does all the VFX) and his friends, has created a video of what Minecraft might be like in the real world.

At first, everything seems fine. Certainly making hammers and smashing up rocks is a lot easier than anything you might find in the real world. Being attacked by monsters? Maybe not so much…

Minecraft in real life looks a lot more scary

Minecraft hits milestone, Pebble’s Core likes Alexa, Google’s podcars hit the horn

Minecraft hits milestone, Pebble’s Core likes Alexa, Google’s podcars hit the horn

If you’re addicted to fighting off zombies while designing soaring architectural wonders, there’s a pretty good chance you’re a fan of Minecraft. Turns out you’re not the only one playing: Minecraft maker Mojang says the blocky game of blocks – and the occasional blocky sheep – has passed the 100 million mark in terms of copies purchased. For just this year, Mojang says the game is downloaded 53,000 times – each day.

First released in 2011, Minecraft has been a surprise hit, and Mojang was scooped up by Microsoft in 2014 for $2.5 billion. Mojang says Minecraft is played on every continent on the planet – including Antarctica – and that nearly half of the players are crafting away on mobile devices. It’s also one of the few video games parents feel good about letting their kids play – for hours on end. There are a lot of future architects out there.

_______________

Smartwatch pioneer Pebble has been busy rolling out new stuff lately, including the unusual Pebble Core, a little box of tech that allows users to leave the phone at home but still listen to Spotify, record that moment of inspiration, track fitness data – and chat up Amazon’s helpful A.I. assistant Alexa, apparently. Not bad for just $69. The Core connects using 3G and there’s also a version for hackers who’d like to develop more core… stuff.

_______________

We’re keeping a close eye on Google’s autonomous car efforts and it looks like they just gave their self-driving pod-mobiles a very human-like quality: knowing when to honk the horn. Up until now, Google says their cars only honked discreetly at the interior occupants as a warning about an exterior danger. They say they want their robot cars to be polite, considerate and only honk when it makes sense for safety.

And just what kind of horn does a law-abiding, courteous, self-directed people-mover have? Google didn’t say, but seeing how the roads seem to be filled with highly distracted human auto-pilots, we have some rather loud suggestions.

Minecraft hits milestone, Pebble’s Core likes Alexa, Google’s podcars hit the horn