Archive for December, 2007

Buy Crysis

December 30, 2007

As simple as it seems, there’s good reason to actually BUY the game. For one, the first ~70% doesn’t suffer from the shoe-horn of “oh crap we need to put plot here” Secondly, yes your machine will run it. Actually, let me REiterate that for your benefit,

YOUR MACHINE CAN RUN IT.

Don’t believe me? My MacBook Pro with an x1600 ATI can run it on the lowest settings at playable frame rates. Throw the resolution down (i know, it burns, it’s wasted pixels and is tantamount to listening to Classical music at 64kbps) and play the game.

The very idea of being airdropped into a tropical island to run around (completing mission objectives and) causing all kinds of hell for the N. Korean soldiers with no strict, linear, areas to play around in – unlike even the “beloved” Halo 3. Hell, it’s cheaper than an xbox game, and you can use Keyboards and Mice (for those rare individual who play with 2 mice, you know who you are Jeff) instead of a game pad.

That’s right, I went there; game pads aren’t the best for shooters. Halo and other shooters on the consoles work for 2 very good reasons. They make the gunplay slow, and they design the interactions according to cold hard realities of controllers.

If you do actually purchase the game, feel free to use my Amazon Associates link to help a not-so-starving geek out.

An old but interesting question

December 29, 2007

I’m going to steal a really good question and topic from the Philosopher’s Zone for friday the 29th – “Molyneux’s problem.”

See, Molyneux was an Irishman from the 17th century. And when he wasn’t busy keeping up with all things dealing with optics he read up on contemporary philosophers and medical journals.

“If a blind man were suddenly given sight, would he be able to differentiate a cube from a sphere by sight alone?”

Regardless of any given answer, the question is a powerful one. The type of question, in fact, that makes me love philosophy. Questions like the above opens the mind to channels of thought heretofore unexplored.

Therefore, an evening spent thinking over Molyneux’s problem is an evening well spent.

Boredom Chaser

December 23, 2007

Because the night needed some cuteness to alleviate the boredom.

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A very good keynote

December 23, 2007

It’s not often I speak of Keynotes unless they’re done by Steve Jobs. When Leo Laporte of twit.tv and security now fame presented the 2nd day keynote for Blogworld Expo 2007, I was rather interested in hearing what he has to say. He fulfilled this interest splendidly. If you watch TV, listen to radio or surf the internet you must give this video a go.

How ratings are wrong: an itunes story

December 22, 2007

As it should occur to anyone who has more than 50 songs in their library, there has to be a certain methodology for giving your auditory amusements ratings.

In iTunes they have the 5 star rating system. We’re all familiar with stars, aren’t we? 5 star hotels are better than 4, and God help you if you get stuck in a 1 star. If a movie has 2 of 5 stars, skip that steamy piece of fecal matter. Nor should we consider low stared video games. Our libraries are a different matter entirely, even if we don’t think about it enough.

My 3000 (more accurately, 2954 – Ed.) songs have already passed a critical point in the ratings paradigm. I already like these songs. In order for the star system to have any purpose in my collection, it’ll need a major retooling. Rather, I need to think differently about how I rate songs.

In spite of better judgement, I’ve allowed the tendencies of iTunes to determine how to do this. The shuffle feature, for instance, allows higher rated songs to be played more often. It makes sense that songs I want to hear more often would be rated accordingly. But there are some songs, you know which ones, that while you really do love to hear all the time, you don’t like to hear randomly. Seasonal or highly situational songs; drumrun from Halo 1, or the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. I don’t want to hear these too often. Should I rate them high because I like them very much, or relegate them to low star status to prevent burn-out?

We end up having a rating system here that can’t be used to rate music!

Hulu: almost as good as iTunes

December 18, 2007

I finally got into the Hulu Beta.

For those of you lucky enough NOT to know what Hulu is, it’s NBCs attempt to show how they can do the TV thing better than Apple. Without a doubt it’s different, but not better. Nor is this the first time competition has tried to side step apple’s market. 99¢ a song is pretty tasty if you want a few songs. If you’re going to download album after album it gets expensive very quickly. Alternatives showed up shortly after; subscriptions. 15 dollars a month for an ∞ number of songs is good enough for some people. It’s worked for music, but what works for television?

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