Tuesday, October 21, 2008
To Find Us Now
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Hilfe Medic! Nintendo Killed Me!
As I mentioned in this week’s podcast, Nintendo is releasing the DSi this holiday season in
I have openly said that I modify my consoles – the ones that are mod-able anyway – and my Nintendo DS is also one of them. I use a M3 device on mine to enable ROM playability, which essentially allows me to play homebrew and other region games. Currently, all the Nintendo DS games are region free. So if you visit
Nintendo has been very active during this console generation in trying to kill piracy on their multiple systems and with their latest attempt by epoxy gluing the ROM chips on the Nintendo Wii, it comes with no surprise that they will be region-locking their downloadable games for the new DSi and the DS Download store. This is also very accepted practice in home consoles and it was always a surprise to me why they were not implemented in handheld devices. Nintendo’s DS system is currently the best selling gaming platform worldwide, only to be followed closely by the Wii and with a distant 3rd held by Microsoft’s Xbox 360. As we all know, hardware sales are only a means to an end. Similarly to how cell phone providers will give you a greater discount for every extra year you extend you contract agreement, console hardware is sold on the basis of attracting platform loyalty and increasing their attach rates. This is why manufactures such as Sony and Microsoft would be willing to sell their consoles at a loss in order to increase market share. Because the chances are if you own a XBOX 360 or a PS3, you will likely be buying XBOX 360 and PS3 games.
Nintendo realizes that with the largest market share in their handheld console, the piracy market seriously hampers their attach rate and software sales. By limiting software compatibility in the form of region lock, they automatically create multiple markets that do not require worldwide competition. Asian markets can compete locally, while North American markets can retain their own strategy. By also moving distribution to the “cloud” and following suit with other digital distribution models, they effectively cut out the middleman and are able to retain a greater portion of the revenue from each sale.
What they haven’t announced, and I will bet is true, is that the new DSi will also kill off any Slot 1 modding device. Given the built in SD Card slot, there is still hope that hackers will find a way to enable its function to run ROMs directly off of the native SD Card but the hardware manufacturers of these Slot 1 devices will also be put out of business.
This is quite uncharacteristic for Nintendo as they have been relatively quiet on the piracy front and as a company on a whole. This could spell a pretty interesting next generation battle for pirates VS. hardware manufacturers. With Nintendo’s track record, no one will know what’s going on until it happens. However, being someone that is using a slot 1 device, I’m sure going to be hanging on to my current DS even if I decide to upgrade.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Social Ineptitude
Let me tell you guys a story about a little squirrel.
This little squirrel has grown up with his community of squirrels and was generally well liked and accepted. Over the years, he developed in to a contributing member of the group and was even given some responsibilities in leading the younger squirrels.
But something changed over time. Certain aspects of this little squirrel’s development were not normal. He would often believe that instead of saving his nuts for winter, it was a wiser move to grow his very own tree so that the nuts would solely be his. His friends would question his knowledge of horticulture and even some would suggest that it was a smarter thing to gather nuts than growing nuts.
His response to their advice was. “No pain, no gain, right?”
This would continue onto other aspects of his life which ultimately led to the failure in his attempt to fly, his belief that he would be able to learn to drive a car, or that if he only courted younger female squirrels, he would be successful. Eventually, his friends stopped offering up advice and the ones that truly cared for his well being moved on.
This little squirrel has now become one of the senior squirrels in his community but because all of his friends already moved on, he is not left with the responsibility of mentoring the young squirrels growing up.
It’s hard to believe that a whole new generation of squirrels will now follow in this retarded squirrel’s footsteps but it’s true. And what’s even harder to believe is that this could happen in real life with real people.
What did this story have to do with tech? Nothing.
I’m pissed off at someone and this is my way of expressing it.
/endrant
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Episode 7: Epoxy This!
Podcast Episode 7 Show Notes:
Soapbox:
- Stupid winter tires
- Global Economy and effect on the home front
- Construction industry taking a real hit
- Spending will be low this year
- It’s not confidence in market since it’s not about investments, it’s protecting your own hide, if analysts are wrong, they aren’t going to be paying your mortgage
- Changing Careers
- Stats say you change careers 3-4 times in your life now
- Contemplating a 4 day work week
- What I learned while I was off for 6 weeks
Around the Net:
- Warhammer release
- Beta experience
- Robber gets away on an inner tube
- Uses craigslist to enlist 14 people to serve as decoy
- Smart thieves and institutional drones (police)
- How to encourage innovation: a place like google VS. MS
- Spore/EA gets sued
- DRM again at the forefront
- Mass Effect had it, why I still played it
- Android gets released
- T-Mobile exclusive
- Engadget video – lagging screen
- Open source VS. Apple
- Nokia 5800 XpressMusic announced
- Will ship with one year free music from nokia store
- Looks to be the very first direct competitor to iphone
- Good to see manufactures are standing up to apple and not trying to just clone
- Grand opening of first Calgary Apple Store
- First 1000 people gets a free T-shirt
- Apple as a lifestyle
- Dec 8 release in Japan
- 2009 in North America
- Do we really need another?
- Old school protection against modders
- Ballsy move - impressed with Nintendo
Impressionistic:
- Force Unleashed
- Easy as pie
- Unlimited health - dynasty warriors with stormtroopers - less deep
- Good story though - better than Clone Wars
- Heroes Season Premier
- Too many stories lines
- Had to rewatch the last 2 seasons to even remember what the hell happened
- I hate that they don't use their powers properly
- Knight Rider 2008
- So bad it’s good?
- It takes itself too seriously, tries too hard
- So far, 2 episodes of fan service only
- Smallville
- Messing up the Superman mythos
- doomsday in title credits but doesn't show up
Thursday, October 2, 2008
OPINION: Hindsight is 20/20
The topic du jour seems to be DRM, both on my own blog and around industry news. With the recent development of Spore/EA’s stance on Securom and other DRM practices, it seems that we are headed towards the same road as what consumers are currently seeing in the music industry.
With Napster and MP3 gaining huge momentum in the mid 90’s, music industry noticed that their sales of physical media were declining. There were two possibilities for this:
a) People are now pirating songs and downloading them illegally because of MP3’s
b) People are realizing that songs in MP3 format produced a far better listening experience logistically and prefer a medium change
And we all know which option the music industry, mostly RIAA, choose to see as the reason for declining sales. So what we have then is the evolution from heavy DRM which really started with audio CD’s that could not be played in every CD Player as they were formatted in CD-Rom format. These were not readily introduced until 2002 while MP3 momentum continued. What we can see is that in the beginning, the majority of consumers (read: over 50% of consumers – exact numbers are irrelevant in this discussion) were still buying their music. There were a growing number of people that were interested in MP3 technology but that was relegated to mainly the tech savvy crowd and those that were able to afford $300 MP3 players that held 512MB of music. In fact, more often than not, music was being “dubbed” onto other CD’s but not for the reason of not paying for your music, but for a way to create your own “mixed-tape” CD.
I remember when there was talk of “burning stations” that would allow you to buy individual songs from a multitude of artists and labels and the machine would burn you a custom CD of those songs. I personally was very excited by that possibility and believed it could have been commercially successful. What the industry decided instead was to lock down CD copying (which was readily cracked anyway) which drove more legitimate users to seek alternative means. If you told Suzie Soccer Mom that her new Tom Jones CD may not be able to play in her car’s CD-player (the most common player unable to handle DRM CD’s in the early 2000’s), she would have a fit. She would ask the salesman at her local big boxed retailer what her alternatives were and there would be separate CD players with car adapters or this newer product called an MP3 player, which would allow her to fit hundreds of her favourite songs on one small device that won’t even skip! When she gets this home and realizes that there isn’t a place where she can buy these songs in a MP3 format, she inevitability asks her teenage song what to do and he in turn sets her up with limewire. This is only one scenario but most outcomes are the same. This would also coincide with the success of iTunes and the iPod as the only player capable of accessing these songs.
Now Apple does have their own DRM in the form of fairplay but it’s less intrusive and much more behind the scenes than Microsoft’s WMA’s or Sony’s DRM rootkits.
Fast forward to 2008 and what we have now is a music industry that is facing extinction in physical media sales and a giant elephant in the iTunes store. iTunes and Apple are making money on music hand over fist and they want a piece of it. And the only way to attack this problem is to offer the consumer a better alternative – that would be DRM free MP3 music. E-tailers such as Amazon have already been selling DRM free music at a fraction of the price Apple is selling them. This should have been the action in the very beginning but who’s to say that without iTunes, we would be without iPods today. Although I believe that there will always be someone to step up and fill the void if it wasn’t Apple, it would have been someone else.
We can take this same argument and apply it to the video games industry as it also sits on a precipice of similar elevation as the music industry did 10 years ago. The tech savvy will always find a way to hack your DRM. The major difference here is that there are a higher concentration of tech savvy users in the PC gaming sector than in the music scenario. But if the industry offers a unified way to organize, distribute, and produce clean, consistent, and stable software, I believe sales will increase and piracy will decline (not by much but at least sales will increase). If someone like me who can pirate my games quite easily would rather buy a game from Steam than pirate it, then I’m sure there are many others out there that would follow suit.
Which is why I’m very excited by websites such as www.gog.com . They are owned by Stardock, the Godfather of DRM free gaming, and are releasing working, supported, DRM free “Good Ol’ Games”. Games such as Fallout 1 and 2, Decent, MDK, etc. These are games that I’m very fond of and can remember clearly spending many hours playing. Most of these games I have either lost or damaged the CD’s to or are simply incompatible with the latest operating systems and video cards. But a site like GOG sells digital copies of these with working patches for XP and
As I have said before, I’m not qualified to dissect the ins and outs of the industry or their business models. I can only speak as a tech enthusiast and end user. But to that end, EA and Activision/Blizzard seriously needs to take notice of models such as these because one day, an iTunes for PC games will happen and they will be left in the dust because they were too busy writing new Securom code (in the case of EA). If I had my vote, I would like to see Activision/Blizzard merge with Valve and redesign Steam to follow a relaxed iTunes model.
My Mac Smells like...benzene?
Most people love the smell of napalm…I mean new tech in the morning/afternoon/evening. Even that new car smell has been bottled up and sold. But what happens when that smell ends up being toxic and your gonads could shrink from it (Ok, I don’t know if your gonads would shrink but it certainly would from all the chemo)?
French newspaper, LibĂ©ration had first published a story about how Mac Pros built prior to 2008 were emitting a strange odor. A quote from a scientist used in the article suggests that the smell had toxic properties and one of which is the chemical Benzene. According to the CDC, “Benzene is a widely used chemical formed from both natural processes and human activities. Breathing benzene can cause drowsiness, dizziness, and unconsciousness; long-term benzene exposure causes effects on the bone marrow and can cause anemia and leukemia.” (Source: ToxFAQs for Benzene August 2007)
Apple has since said in a statement to Macworld that there were no evidence in their tests to prove the claim but they are still investigating the claim.
With the recent discoveries of melamine to the milk used in the production of milk products from
I remember years ago, it was told to me that eggs were too high in cholesterol and were not good for you in any amount, but recent articles have stated that eggs indeed are necessary in a proper diet. I’m not counting out the ill effects of Benzene or Melamine in foods and products as those are clearly harmful industrial chemicals, but the point is that we shouldn’t be surprised. If any of you reader had the opportunity to travel to China, it would be very clear that in a country with 1.3 billion people, there are actually 3 major cities that could live up to first world standards in healthcare, public safety, and other factors that are taken for granted in North America. These three cities being
Just some food for thought – that won’t cause you cancer. No I’ve got to throw out all my M&M’s, Cadbury chocolates, and White Rabbit Candy.
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Happy Anniversary
It’s been just over one year since I started this blog and lots have happened since then. There’s been a controversial Halo opinion, a GTA4 head to head, and my most treasured addition – the podcast. I’ve tried to keep the updates regular and mostly they have been so, but lately it’s been slacking again. The podcast takes quite of planning since I don’t have a co-host (of which I’m still working on) but it’s still a lot of fun to do.
I wanted to celebrate with a special podcast this weekend. It’s going to have a brand new segment for the ladies that listen (read: my wife!) and it’s going to be “Fashionable Tech”. Even the manliest man still has to satisfy the women in their lives and this new segment will showcase some interesting tech that has to do with fashion/appearance/accessories. Admit it, the inner geek in you wants to know what new, hip, cool, fancy, accessory can be used with your latest toy!
Look for the podcast to be available on iTunes and here on Sunday night/Monday morning.
Keep the comments and suggestions coming, I’m quite enjoying the responses!
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Smooth as an Android's Bottom

Monday, September 22, 2008
[UPDATED] Spoke Too Soon
So after my glowing review of the genius that is Apple and their 2.1 firmware for the iPhone, I had a catastrophic error this morning. I fully charged my phone, like every other night, and this morning woke up to a full battery bar. Nothing was amiss, right? By the time I arrived at work, after using the phone’s iPod function for about 15 minutes, my battery was at 60%. This was shocking and I wrote it off to a faulty charge connector last night. As the day went on and my phone sat idle on my desk, the battery continued to drain and by the time noon rolled around, I’m at 20% battery life! My usage meter says that I had 4H25M of usage and 5H15M of standby since last full charge. What in the hell is 4H25M of usage from?? I didn’t even use the internet or RSS or email functions in all that time! From checking around the interwebs, it looks like there are numerous others experiencing a dramatic drop in battery life after 2.1. But so far not many that had great battery life and then just died like mine. There are a few fixes that I can do to try and aleavate this, one of which is a complete reinstall of the firmware again (this will be my 4th restore). I’m hoping that will be the last thing I do and that I can fix it by turning off push. The only thing I can think of that has changed since my battery started to act funny was that I loaded the app “Feeds” and “Galcon Full” (upgraded from Lite) and that perhaps Feeds uses the push functionality and that maybe where the data usage was coming from. I have since turned off push so we’ll have to see if my usage is nuts still. I’ll update this tonight and see if anything has changed.
Update Sept 23: I unfortunately had to clean install 2.1 on my iphone, wiping all my settings and stored information. Luckily my contacts, email, and calendar were synced to Outlook and I was able to recover that stuff. So far this morning it's been acting normal. It's been reporting the correct amount of active VS. standby time. I'll have to see if it holds out until the end of the day. I turned off Push and dialed back the sync times to 30m for mail and 1H for Feeds. I also stoped the syncing from my company email system (which is not exchange, just IMAP) so that may have helped. Price of being an early adopter I guess.
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Episode 6: The Birthday Episode
- Still innovative?
- Compared to RIM certainly but needs to step up
- Lots of tech that still needs reimagining
- Star Trek Apple Data Pad anyone??
- iTunes and Nike+ Patent
- Spore limits accounts to one per CD KEY
- EA and Red Alert 3 - I'm not buying
- Minor League Football coach caught communicating with player through BT headset
- Unfair Advantage?
- Beijing Olympics as an example - if you got the tech, use it
- Feel the Force: How to Train in the Jedi Way
- Do you want your doctor to have on his resume that he's a certified Jedi Knight?
- Pop Culture collision
- The full sci-fi story isn't even complete or agreed upon and you teach it??
- University of Calgary offering Virus writting class - same thing?
- Seinfeld ads made no sense but at least got the conversation going
- New "I'm A PC" ads are directly targeted, at least that's something
- Could learn a bit from beer commercials - public responds to humor - WOW! That's new!
- Confirmed closing after Halo Wars
- Age of Empires was one of my favorite RTS games, better than Starcraft in the Fun Factor
- Console RTS can't succeed unless keyboard and mouse support are implemented - if they do, I can almost guarantee that I will be a couch jockey for life!
- Endwar will be a testament for alternative control schemes and if they are viable

- WiFi and GPS
- Bigger but nicer to type on
- Suretype is back and better than 2G pearl
- Competition not against Apple but for the young teens who wants fast texting

- This really should have been the one that it shipped with
- 3G performance is MUCH better
- switches to EDGE if low signal without losing your call
- backups are fast, 15 minutes down to 3 minutes
- SMS Keyboard lag slightly improved - I didn't have that problem much to begin with
- Battery life is improved - 50% left after a day of normal 3G use compared to 20% before
- Genius feature is fun and easy - except on any Alicia Keys songs
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
OPINION: Of Mergers and Slap Shots
With the stock market crash on September 15, lots of investors and advisors were scrambling to make sense of what happened. This isn’t a financial blog so I won’t go into the details but I will say that the tech industry will be feeling the pinch right away. This is an industry that is still cautious from the dot com boom and bust of the 90’s. One of the ripples you see that already touched the tech sector is the EA and Take Two games merger that was just scrapped on Sunday September 14th.
There were lots of speculations on why Take Two was still holding out after EA continued to come back with counter offers. That’s a moot point now since EA decided to walk away which caused EA’s stock to close on Monday at $43.30, dropping from $44.90 on the previous Friday while Take Two’s stock fell to a $15.45 low even before the NASDAQ opened on Monday from their previous Friday closing of $21.89. That’s almost a 30% decrease in stock prices over a weekend.
What does all this mean for you and I where we are gamers and not investors? As a gamer, the news has been that this merger wouldn’t have been in our best interest. No one like EA for various reasons; they are currently the second largest publisher in the industry and certainly use that to their business advantage by consistently releasing buggy games and incomplete builds (Battlefield 2 is an example of this). Their games do traditionally go on to sell very well but in general, the majority of the problems are not fixed until a 1.2-1.3 patch. Blizzard, EA is not. But the primary concern for gamers with the possibility of the now dead merger, was that there would be no more major league sports games competition. Take Two, while being famous for Rockstar Studios, also owns the 2K Sports studio, the only other major league developer in gaming.
The question is this: Is it really that bad to have only one player in the sports gaming genre? I personally believe that competition is great for innovation and for the consumer since this gives us choice. But in the specific instance of EA VS. 2K Sports, I don’t think it is as important as so may believe. 2K has lost the license to NFL, their NBA games are still very playable but innovative they are not, and their NHL offerings the last 2 years (including this year) has not been innovative either. In the field of innovation, EA certainly has been busy with their NFL and especially NHL products. But with the introduction of this year’s “Be A Pro” EA is positioning the sports genre for a transition into the MMO format. Eventually, I could see sports games becoming subscription based, with real time statistical updates, roster changes, and online fantasy leagues.
Fantasy leagues are a huge hit with armchair quarterbacks and couch goalies, just look around your office especially if you are in Canada and the hockey season is about to start. If you offer them a way to play out these fantasies in both an active format (actually playing the games with a controller) and a way to play it simulated (stat driven only) then what you have is a cross genre product that bridges the gap between the different armchair jocks. Unfortunately, it seems that 2K and EA will continue their dance until EA decided to throw more money at the cash starved NHL and make that license exclusive as well (which would not be good).
The real issue then is would EA have been as motivated to do crazy things like Right Stick actions and Be A Pro if NHL 2K7 wasn’t as good as it was. That is something only EA would know but as it stands at the moment, innovation isn’t necessary every year. I would even argue that a new sports game isn’t necessary every year. Did FIFA 07 change much going to 08? Would players have been just as satisfied with patches to the engine and rosters? You are asked to pay full price for a game that’s guaranteed to be out of date in 8 months. Replayability is much higher on sports games by nature, so that could justify the higher price but instead of charging another $60 for the next year’s update, how about charging us half that price for an expansion – because lets be honest, most year to year updates are just glorified expansion packs.
I hope that EA will continue to give fans innovation and challenge themselves year over year to be the only name in sports games. If the Madden series is any indication, I think we are fairly safe since innovation and tweaks have continued even though they are the only name in NFL video games. In the meantime, keep your eye on 2K stocks, if it continues to slide, might be a good time to buy – because you know ActivisionBlizzard or even Ubisoft is keeping their eye on this.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Episode 5: Underachieving with Style!
- Men and women are instinctually different
- Main difference when it comes to tech is the man's need for "Upgrades"
- Women don't understand the need for upgraded toys since you can't really upgrade a purse, you just buy a new one
- Hilarious satire on the status of our working North American society today
- "Good Enough is Good Enough"
- Very funny and applicable read, check it out here on Amazon.ca
- New iPod Nano's announced with a redesign
- iPod Touch redesign and new specs
- New Apple in ear headphones complete with mic and remote MSRP $80, not compatible with iPhone according to Apple's site
- iTunes 8.0 and the new Genius feature - big brother anyone?
- iPhone 2.1 Firmware, maybe this will prevent my 3rd restore in the last month?
- Fun and "google-esq" but not going to replace my main browser anytime soon
- Large resource footprint
- Download and try here
- Interesting concept, a gaming PC capable of running Crysis at 30 FPS for under $700USD
- No word on what OS this ships with
- Specs are here
- Reviews are firebombed on Amazon and other online retailers
- DRM issue is installation limits, how does EA define a "computer"
- Hardware changes are taken into account for "new" computer installs
- You can see a more detailed article here on Tom's
- Fun times and really makes you feel like a powerful Jedi
- Has the potential of being a Dynasty Warrior clone if not done correctly
- Breaks download record with over 1 million downloads
- Hope that this isn't another Too Human where the demo was better than the game
- Fun but a bit light on deep content in terms of gameplay
- Lots of other games do the parts better but Spore does the god sim the best
- Very deep creature creation
- CSI meets Hardy Boys
- Great cast chemistry
- Takes a bit of getting used to and doesn't really pick up until half way through season 1
- Currently going into Season 4 and I'm only half way done season 2
" Hey, love the podcast and your blog is interesting. Just wondering what you specifically didn't like about Too Human since you spoke about it a bit last week. Keep up the good work. Thanks."Thanks for the Email KYJELLY, I won't judge your name! I did have enjoyable moments with Too Human but if I were to pin point a few things I didn't like, it would have to be:
- The story was very convoluted and lofty without having any substance. It had some very interesting potential but overall, as a standalone game (I know it's supposed to be a trilogy but so was Shemue) it just didn't cut it.
- The gameplay was too similar to titles such as Dynasty Warriors. There was no real consequence to death, your enemies kept scaling to you, and if you had a dedicated button to "equip best" this game would have been easier than Lego Starwars.
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Sad Truth
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Episode 4: The one where I wish I was still using a Mac
- Career is going back to the future - I'll be starting my old job again in a few weeks. Unemployment was fun but Money talks.
- Internet Journalism: IGN is slowly following the path of Gamespot and others that are more opinion sites than objective reviews. Check out Gametrailers for a more refreshing take on reviews.
- Mac Switch: Sold my Hackintosh and my Thinkpad and have ordered a new T400 Thinkpad. If Steve Jobs decided to grant my wish of an updated MacBook with dedicated graphics, I'm cancelling the Thinkpad and getting a mac instead. Not an Apple fanboy but I still want one if only it's comparable in specs and price to the Thinkpad. For a review of the T400 that's coming soon, check out notebookreview.
- $1000 iPhone app: Here's a douchbag pretending to have bought the app but gives you a good idea of what I'm complaining about:
- iPhone Mania: iPhone Girl as reported by USAToday. How sad is it that iPhone mania has made a forgotten erase procedure into worldwide headline news!
- BlackBerry Bold: Best multimedia blackberry ever made, but still not an iPhone. For the converted iPhone-nites (yours truly included) it's hard to consider going back but if the bold is an indication of things to come, RIM isn't going to go quietly. Check out a fairly indepth review from APC of the BB Bold.
- Apple Announcement: Rumored by Kevin Rose of Digg.com, before the end of September, shooting for September 9th to be the magic date, there is going to be some pretty big chages to the Apple product line. I'm personally hoping for a Macbook refresh but that may not happen. Check out Kevin's blog to see what he thinks will be announced.
- Stargate Closed: Stargate Atlantis was canceled by Sci-Fi this past week. Boo! I love that show and don't know what will be there to fill the void.
- Soul Calibur 4: Worth a rental or a purchase at a discounted price (read: 50% off). Fun for the SC lovers and man-parties. But nothing too new here to warrant a full price purchase except for the diehard fans.
- Too Human: Not Human Enough. It's fun for the first few hours and then the story drags on and loses focus. Clearly this is meant for a sequel but it still feels like a game that was either rushed (which can't be if it's been in development for 10 years!) or that the developers just were good enough. It's a worthy rental since it's about 8 hours long the first time through but there's nothing really there to keep you coming back.
- Burn Notice: This is the perfect reimagining of 80's detective shows. Think of it as a Macguyver, Remington Steele, Magnum P.I., and a bit of Quantum Leap all mixed into a 21st century bowl. YUM!
- Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: This is a brainless romp through a post 90210 neighbourhood. It's still an entertaining show, lets just hope season 2 picks up right where they left off and gets the juices flowing again.
- iPod Shuffle: Piece of gimped iPod poo! The only thing good about it is the integrated clip and form factor. Can't even sync properly, can only auto fill. Bah! Spend the money and get a good armband for your iPhone instead.
Friday, August 29, 2008
Holy Mother of Ikea!
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Tuesday Update
Monday, August 11, 2008
Monday Update
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Episode 3: Unemployment
Monday, July 28, 2008
Monday Update
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Touched by Steve
Monday, July 21, 2008
The Long Dark Good Knight
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
And Here We Go Again
Monday, July 7, 2008
Episode 2: Live from Apple!
- Intel Pentium Dual Core E2160 Dual Core Processor LGA775 1.8GHZ 800FSB 1MB Retail ($70)
- Gigabyte GA-945GCM-S2C mATX LGA775 954GC 1PCI-E16 3PCI SATA2 Video Sound LAN Motherboard ($55)
- Buffalo Select D2U800C-2G/BR 2GB 1X2GB PC2-6400 DDR2-800 CL5 240PIN DIMM Memory ($50)
- Pioneer DVR-215DBK DVD+RW 20X8X16 DVD-RW 20X6X16 DL 10X SATA Black OEM DVD Writer No S/W ($23)
- Antec NSK3480 New Solution mATX Mid Tower Case 2X5.25 1X3.5 380W Black Front USB Sound & Firewire ($90)
- Segate 7200.10 320GB SATA2 HDD ($55)
- Total Cost: $343 + Tax
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Hacked!
Friday, June 20, 2008
Pirates...ARRRRGGGGRRRRR!
PC Gaming is dying.
The latest NPD data according to Tom’s Games is saying otherwise because NPD has updated their results with the MMO sector’s monthly subscription sales. I believe that there are absolutely still games that are meant to be played on a PC. Shooters, and RTSes are some of them. Then there’s the elephant in the room, MMO gaming.
When you hear about MMO, and if you know what that stands for, you immediately think World of Warcraft. I remember in University X years ago, my group and I did a presentation on Information Technology and used Everquest 1 as an example of what social interactions were becoming. Who would have thought that there could ever be a network of over 10 million subscribers worldwide in a game!
Then if you read any of the interviews with the big wigs of publishers and developers of PC games, piracy is the reason you will get for declining sales. While this is true to some extent and I believe that the majority of PC Gamers are quite capable these days of using BT and cracks. But what if we took the model of a MMO and combined that with regular games? Sure there are MMO “private” servers but if you ask WoW players, there aren’t many that would like to play with people that can use hacks and dupes in a game like WoW, which is what private servers are like. Alternatively, look at the model that Microsoft has followed with their XBL service, and as I have previously touched on, their Gamerscore/tag system. In general, this is really just an e-penis enlarger for the masses of gamers that care about bragging rights (me temporarily included!) So here’s the bright idea, create a gaming model where you are required to stay connected to the publishers servers (and this isn’t like the dialling home crap that was tried in Mass Effect) just like an MMO would and you are then able to run assets off of the developer’s servers.
If this were to be implemented in a game like Starcraft 2 for example, you would install the client on your PC, log into battle.net every time you start the game. While you are still playing in single player mode (much like Age of Conan’s first 20 levels), you are given the options of seeing a world map that shows rankings, hot spots, progress, achievements, and perhaps even an online store front that could facilitate in downloads of upgrades and other micro-transactional items.
And here’s how to make it successful, it’s all in the marketing.
If you bill this as a security feature, such as what happened with Mass Effect, it will fail and cause huge rebellion and public outcry. While if you spin this as an added bonus, free of charge (hint Microsoft!), that enhances the player’s enjoyment of the game, then it will be hailed as ground breaking and revolutionary. While all of this is great and good, and there will still be those that create private servers and hacks, but if the service you provide on the front end is indeed value added, then I believe consumers will choose to actually use that service instead of circumventing it.
This is all in my head of course, but I think there’s some merit to this idea. Battle.net is used as a match making service, but what if Blizzard expands that to something like what Steam has. Costs of maintaining the servers and bandwidth shouldn’t be any more than the license for Securom or other “innovative” security services. Maybe the PC Gaming Alliance could even come together to form a standard platform where you can see a PC Gamer Score similar to what XBL has but spans across developers and publishers. Sure the PC is not a standardized platform, but it’s still a common platform, it’s just open source. I honestly believe that with some thought and analysis, this could work.
I for one will support it. Even though I am familiar with piracy, I still pay monthly for my WoW subscription when I can play for free on a private server, but I choose not to as the value of being connected to Blizzard’s servers is just that much better than playing for free. You are going to get the poor/young students/kids still trying to pirate your games, but they wouldn’t have bought your game to begin with anyway. It’s the people that CAN buy your games who you want the money from. That’s where the real purchasing power is at folks.