Man At Arms Reforges Sauron’s Mace

If you’re not already following Man at Arms: Reforged, you should be. The show features a talented team of metal workers from Baltimore Knife & Sword, one of the finest swordmakers for stage combat and sparring in the world, and they create cool weapons based on sci-fi and fantasy. They’ve already given Batman Wolverine’s claws, bestowed Iron Man with a sword, and built a lightsaber Katana for Yoda, but now they’ve created a weapon of horrifying magnitude: Sauron’s mace.

sauron_macezoom in

Yeah, I’d wager they’d be a bit better at wielding it if they were nine-feet-tall, supernatural death machines, but if I ran into a totally normal human holding this thing in a dark alley, I’d hand over my wallet. That thing looks like it would hurt.

Check out what they and their predecessor Tony Swatton have done so far here, and then overload them with your own great ideas, thus prompting an epic build like this one.

[via You Tube]

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Google patent application could give Project Glass one true ring controller to rule them all

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Let's face it: right now, the head nods and other rudimentary controls of Google's Project Glass are mostly useful for looking good, sharing photos and not much else. A US patent application submitted last September and just now published, however, raises the possibility of more sophisticated control coming from your hands. A ring, a bracelet or a even a fake fingernail with an infrared-reflective layer would serve as a gesture control marker for a receiver on heads-up display glasses. Having this extra control would give the glasses-mounted computing room to grow by learning gestures, and it could even depend on multiple ornaments for more sophisticated commands -- at least, if you don't mind looking like a very nerdy Liberace. We can imagine the headaches a hand-based method might cause for very enthusiastic talkers, among other possible hiccups, so don't be surprised if Project Glass goes without any kind of ring input. That said, we suspect that Sauron would approve.

Google patent application could give Project Glass one true ring controller to rule them all originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 May 2012 12:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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