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- What's the highest dollar price will Bitcoin reach in 2024? Posted on March 20th, 2024 | 68 comments
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Missing option (Score:5, Informative)
Or every single stupid proprietary format they've ever introduced that died unloved and alone 18 months later.
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Or every single stupid proprietary format they've ever introduced that died unloved and alone 18 months later.
Their mommy loved them. Just sayin...
Another Missing Option: Planetside (Score:5, Informative)
I really loved Planetside, stopped playing it for a couple years then came back to it - only to find myself with a suspended account for a month (immediately I tried to cancel the subscription and they charged me again - refused to cancel until the suspension was lifted) due to "cheating" because I had a graphics card that apparently counted as a cheat due to it's ability to process faster than cards did nearly a decade prior when the game had come out. When I filed a bug report they added another 2 weeks to the suspension for "spamming their forums" with a single post about the glitch they had apparently just left in to exploit customers that would otherwise choose to cancel their accounts - getting me charged for another unplayable month. Planetside is by far my worst Sony experience and those fuckers should be shut down for how they treat users.
Re:Another Missing Option: Planetside (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Missing option (Score:2)
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
I hadn't heard about the fake movie critic. I wonder if the choice to do that was cooked up by the same people that decided to use graffiti to promote the PSP?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4567236.stm [bbc.co.uk]
It is sad to see some of the bad choices made by what was long a much loved and highly regarded company. With the many bright engineers, I really wish they'd get their act together to ship great products and embrace the diversity of customers and the varied uses they find for those products. I think that with the extraordinary events that have affected Japan some people are looking for ways to be supportive. As tarnished as Sonys' image is with some, I think it is not as permanently damaged as MS for instance, and is more salvageable if they make some serious reforms.
It seemed like they could have embraced open source too, coming close with work adding touch enhancements to GNUstep, then apparently dropping it. Perhaps it's not too late to do something with that?
http://blog.deliciousrobots.com/2010/11/27/sonys-changes-to-gnustep-gui-library-adding-touch/ [deliciousrobots.com]
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
Re:Missing option (Score:2)
is that related to ced?
Missing option (Score:3)
Re:Missing option (Score:3)
I voted "PR guy retweeting PS3 Master key" here because it was my favorite, in terms of hilarity. My least favorite (but most important) ones are "Rootkit DRM" and their general PS3 feature-whittling (option 2 and maybe option 3), because they are why I agree with you.
Re:Missing option (Score:3, Insightful)
Flaming Batteries (Score:2)
The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:5, Informative)
Not on the list but here's why I'll never buy anything Sony ever again. Three years ago I purchased a Vaio notebook and within six months the letters had started to wear off of the keyboard, the battery had failed and the DVD writer could only read disks. Sony refused to honor the warranty because I had wiped the hard drive and installed a Linux distro, they regarded it as an 'unauthorized modification'.
Friends don't let friends buy Sony.
Ganty
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, the reason I consider them quality products is because, in my experience, they are. I had a Vaio SZ1HP which worked without problems for 4 years! In fact, the only reason I stopped using it was because performance was lacking already (for the latest releases in tv shows I could see some flickering).
For 4 years this laptop went back and forth with me every day, going inside my bag, being thrown to the ground and it did not fail on me. By the end the fans were noisy, the battery was totally dead (caused most likely by the shitty charger I bought after 3 years, because until then it still had 1 hour of battery or so), some small parts of the plastic shell were broken and I had two dead pixels (who showed up late in its life), but the computer itself worked flawlessly (running Ubuntu without problems and Windows 7 ok too). In fact, it's still here, occasionally used by the friend who wants to check his mail.
The only reason I did not buy another Vaio after was the price of the Z series... I took a look at the P series but it did not satisfy me (I'm into 13'' laptops).
PS - I know this is just anecdotal evidence, but just because you had a bad experience it doesn't mean everyone had. I had a very good one indeed!
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2, Insightful)
By the end the fans were noisy, the battery was totally dead (caused most likely by the shitty charger I bought after 3 years, because until then it still had 1 hour of battery or so), some small parts of the plastic shell were broken and I had two dead pixels (who showed up late in its life)
So the signs of a quality product is noisy fans, dead battery, dead charger (why else buy a new one?), broken shell and dead pixels?
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:3)
dargaud said:
"Yeah, I don't know why a lot of people have Sony in high regards and consider them 'quality' products. Probably like Apple products, they mentally associate higher price with better build quality."
Except that Apple's quality isn't a false perception, some folks have had runs of bad luck with Apple (or, insert quality hardware company). Our company, which I do I.T. for, has had very little problems (software or hardware, Xserves to iPods) with them.
I've been doing this for quite a while, it's an experience thing.
YMMV.
But, back to Sony ...
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1975504&cid=35073810 [slashdot.org]
We loved their Trinitron Monitors
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinitron [wikipedia.org]
and found them hard to replace, but we've stuck to our guns. Sony, as your experience well illustrates has gone dark in the brains department.
Supposed Apple Quality (Score:2, Informative)
Our company has had problems with many of the Apple computers we have purchased. From keyboards and trackpads sporadically not working on the original MacBook, video scrambling and freezing on MacBook Pros, which were given logic boards as a temporary fix, to blacking out video and video flicker on newer MacBook Pros (Late 2008 Model and newer). Some of these Late 2008 and newer MacBook Pro models, when under their first year warranty, were given new logic boards as a temporary "fix". And after enough failures under warranty some were even replaced by Apple. Others which failed or failed again outside of warranty, are now very expensive Apple-branded hunks of beautifully water-jetted aluminum. Apple's discussion forums are full of people having the same issues we have here with their laptops. I, for one, am no longer disillusioned by Apple products; I can't imagine laptops from other manufacturers could have much worse track records. At least their users probably didn't pay as much for their computers.
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
You realize you are actually praising Foxconn (and the likes) products manufactured for Apple, following Apple's design?
Would you think the same of them if they were branded "Foxconn" instead?
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
I used my walk,an for over a decade, and it still worked great they day I got rid of it. 1980 to 1993.
In fact, every Sony product I ahve every owned ahs worked like a champ...hardware wise. Obviously online use has been a different issue,
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Not on the list but here's why I'll never buy anything Sony ever again. Three years ago I purchased a Vaio notebook and within six months the letters had started to wear off of the keyboard
Not the keyboard letters!
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Not on the list but here's why I'll never buy anything Sony ever again. Three years ago I purchased a Vaio notebook and within six months the letters had started to wear off of the keyboard
Not the keyboard letters!
Think of it as a free upgrade to Das Keyboard! [wikipedia.org]
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:5, Informative)
Sony refused to honor the warranty because I had wiped the hard drive and installed a Linux distro, they regarded it as an 'unauthorized modification'.
That's horsecrap, you should have sent them a copy of the Magnuson-Mass warranty act. If you change something to a product that has nothing to do with it's failing, they must honor the warranty. For example, if I put a new radio in my car and a month later the transmission falls out, the car company can't claim that they won't honor the warranty because I modified the car.
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Unless it was a gigantically huge radio resting on the gearshift ;)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Yeah I've found the decals on VAIOs rub off just by looking at them. I think within 6 weeks my last VAIO had lost all the labels for the ports on the sides, and all I'd done with the laptop was pick it up from one place and put it down in another. Several of the keys had lost parts of the letters too. The wrist guards also tend to show rub marks and wear after about 12 months too.
VAIOs look lovely on display in the Sony Centre, but give it a few months and they start to look quite ratty. For the price premium I would expect something that is designed to withstand normal usage a bit more robustly. Although I'm sure people wouldn't buy replacements as often if their old laptop still looked pristine!
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
I'm sure people wouldn't buy replacements as often if their old laptop still looked pristine!
(+1, nailed it)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
That's why you buy a new HDD for your install.
I got an acer aspire one when they hit costco, first thing I did was swap the HDD out for my install. If anything goes wrong it's an easy swap back to the OEM Win7 disk.
-nB
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2, Informative)
In Sony's defense, we all know that Linux will cause the letters to wear off the keyboard. I'm still waiting for a patch so I can stop buying replacement keyboards every other week.
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
Don't forget, too, that the availability of mature user interfaces other than point-n-drool means that, unlike MacOS or Windows, Linux means the keyboard is actually useful. And that means that even if system useful lifetime were exactly comparable, the keyboards would be more likely to wear out.
Which is also the reason that Linux types actually know how to type. Especially on nigh-indestructible keyboards like Northgate Omnikeys (ca. 1991) or IBM Model Ms.
Re:The Build Quality Of Their Notebooks (Score:2)
I wouldn't honor the warranty either. That's a pretty big modification, and they probably didn't test the hardware. And yes, Different OS's use the hardware differently.
Why you didn't just restore and then make a claim I'll never know. How do tyhey know it's wasnt' a DVD driver issue?
PS3 Master Key (Score:5, Insightful)
Favorite Gaffe? (Score:2)
Gee, I won't know until Spiderman 4 comes out..
All of the above (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:All of the above (Score:2)
Agreed, or "All of the above, and more!".
I find it so difficult to choose just one; they are all faves to me. :D
Re:All of the above (Score:2)
Missing options (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
So what's wrong with Blu-Ray?
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
*I owned a MiniDisc player years ago - and I used it to make re-writable mixes from all that music I was getting from (the original) Napster.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
hmm? minidisk was a massive hit in Japan; pretty much everybody used it for a few years. Stereo equipment came with MD players built in, bags and clothing came with special MD-player pockets, etc, etc.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Re:Missing options (Score:4, Informative)
They remained quite popular in a certain niche - recording enthusiasts. Nowadays I'm sure you can get a flash-based digital recording device that's much better, but up until just a few years ago minidisc was the best reasonably priced option for recording things (like concerts/demo tapes, nature, or anything else you may wish to record the sound from without spending tons of money).
With Hi-MD you could record in lossless WAV format for however much the 1GB discs could manage (90 minutes or so), or in compressed format for quite a while longer (though in classic Sony fashion it was their proprietary ATRAC format). It's true the regular minidiscs had a laughably small capacity once mp3s were in common use, but the Hi-MD discs at 1 GB (for about $7-8 per disc) were pretty good for the time (soon to be made obsolete by iPods and similar devices with large capacities of course).
I bought one in around 2005 or 2006 because I wanted a music player, but I didn't want an iPod and I didn't like the other mp3 players that were available (basically I chose it to be different) and I was interested in making bootleg concert recordings (I only ended up doing that once, but it was cool and the recording is great quality). It played mp3s and everything, you didn't have to use ATRAC. It turned heads when I swapped out discs to play different stuff. Practically speaking, it was kind of ridiculous, and an iPod at that point would have been the smart choice for a mp3 player, but I liked it a lot (I still have it but don't use it).
I bought a Cowon X5L a couple years later, and kept using that until last year when I got a smartphone (Nexus One). Both the Cowon and the N1 are much better media players :) But, the minidisc still holds a special place in my heart, and I suspect it's the same story for most people who used them (especially in their heyday, which was a few years before I got mine). There are very few technologies that you can really say that about, I think.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
They remained quite popular in a certain niche - recording enthusiasts. Nowadays I'm sure you can get a flash-based digital recording device that's much better, but up until just a few years ago minidisc was the best reasonably priced option for recording things (like concerts/demo tapes, nature, or anything else you may wish to record the sound from without spending tons of money).
This is surprising - not that I disbelieve you - but my experience with MD was so negative that it perplexes me that people who take their music this seriously would latch on to this particular technology. The small size of the disc meant that it had to strip the original signal to make it fit. It was very lossy, in my experience - comparable to Laserdisc storing the RF signal digitally as opposed to DVD having a digital signal and outputting it analog. The player would then try to compensate for the loss, but it never really covered it up well.
Then there was getting the music onto the disc. The recorder had two inputs, a mic line and an optical line that would, theoretically, connect to a receiver I didn't have with a similar output. You'd play a song on one device and hit record on the MD, not unlike when I used to dub tapes or record songs off the radio. There was no digital interface to a PC, so I'd be playing mp3s (which are lossy to begin with) in Winamp or XMMS, outputting through the speaker line on my sound card, in through the mic line, and recording to disc in yet another lossy manner. All in all, the sound quality was like putting a speaker behind a fish tank, letting that sound pass through a sheet of aluminum, and adding bass boost.
Forget about recording live events, at least with the device I had; you would need to be patched into the sound board to make that work. (I actually tried and failed to record a live violin concert in an acoustic room with an external mic hooked up.)
I get that the later versions have probably improved, but I hated it so much that when the Rio Volt [ebay.com] came out, I switched as fast as I could. I guess I'm more surprised that there was enough of a market still left after the first iteration for it to be allowed to improve.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Re:Missing options (Score:5, Insightful)
the fact that new blu-rays come with a warning notice that in order for it to play, my player might need an update?
honestly, the day i am unable to play a blu-ray i bought, on my blu-ray player because it needs an update which isnt available, i'll throw all the blu-ray junk on ebay and just enjoy my network media streamer..
c'mon feel the rage! (Score:2)
honestly, the day i am unable to play a blu-ray i bought, on my blu-ray player because it needs an update which isnt available, i'll throw all the blu-ray junk on ebay and just enjoy my network media streamer..
actually, it would be even worse if you had to update your player to play a disc you rented.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Nobody's making games or movies which need 50GB of space.
Metal Gear Solid 4 is dual layer.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Yup!
I too treat DVDs as a way to get the content from store, where I pay for it, to my internal file server.
This is a revenue stream for the media industry... I could just as easily download the stuff. It would be quicker and simpler, but I don't because of some weird twisted sense of morality.
Yet it seems like the media industry is fighting me in every way possible. It's like they don't want my money or something! Relying on people to pay for something they can easily get for free (and in a more convenient form) is a stupid enough business plan to begin with... but then adding measures that do nothing to stop piracy but make life harder for the few people who are paying you money is just insane.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
Re:Missing options (Score:3)
Does your twisted sense of morality make you delete the soft copy of the movie if you sell the DVD in the after market? The entertainment industry only gets a piece of the first sale, not any of the subsequent sales of that same product. They have a vested interest in preventing copy-and-resell as well as preventing copy-and-share.
There is no moral obligation to a corporation or any other non-moral actor. Legal obligation, perhaps, depending on your jurisdiction. And no, you don't have a moral obligation to the shareholders, either. They own shares specifically to avoid direct responsibility for the corporation. Their only exposure is the potential loss of investment.
You are of course, free to obligate yourself. I can't stop you. And you're free to call those of us who feel differently, "twisted". But on the flip side, we're free to call you a chump.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
You are free to call me a chump, but it's unwarranted.
Re:Missing options (Score:2)
PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:5, Insightful)
Not sure if it counts as a gaffe, but I was rather pissed they removed PS3 backwards compatibility.
I still don't understand why. To cut costs? I was willing to pay extra for that feature.
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:3, Insightful)
i think the only reason ps2 backwards compatability was included in the ps3 was to help drive adoption rate for the ps3. as ps3 adoption went up, then ps2 backwards compatability was phased out, until it was gone and the ps3 stood on its own.
it's not like sony really wants you to have a single device to play all their games on - they just wanted the new item to have a better sales ratio until a critical mass of buyers had been achieved.
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
Two way win:
1) Cut costs
2) Makes you buy a PS2; they still sell slim-line models for $100, you know.
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
I was willing to pay extra for that feature, too.
Instead, I don't own a PS3. Sony got $0 from me. Yay, Sony!
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:3)
It was definitely to cut costs, they got to pull a whole bunch of hardware out of the PS3. First the PS2 CPU, then the PS2 GPU as well.
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
As an added bonus, they can keep selling PS2s now, too.
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
As an added bonus, they can keep selling PS2s now, too.
Not to me. I'd much rather have a single device hooked up for both PS2 and PS3 games. As is, I just emulate PS2 games on rare occasions when I really want to play one.
Re:PS3 backwards compatibility (Score:2)
Bummed to lose backward compatibility, but I have two PS1s, two PS2s, and the PS3, as well as virtually every other console ever released in the US, so it's just another button on the switchbox for me. ;)
The one in Berlin (Score:2)
Ohh, you said "Gaffe" not "Giraffe" - sorry.
Missing Option... Sort of (Score:2)
These should be check boxes, not radio selections! I want to vote on more than one thing! (it REALLY shits me when programs and pages don't stick to that paradigm, by the way... Check boxes implies tick any, radio selection implies select one).
Re:Missing Option... Sort of (Score:2)
I can't pick just one though! Only the Sith deal in absolutes! (by the way, probably the poorest thought line in ALL of the New Trilogy)
Re:Missing Option... Sort of (Score:2)
Favourite means that you score it highest. The rest of the list, and the scoring betwixt need not be absolute.
Exploding batteries (Score:2)
Re:Exploding batteries (Score:2)
Probably same problem, they just didn't organise a recall making the problem public in the process.
The Fundamental Gaffe! (Score:5, Insightful)
What many saw as a synergistic mix of businesses, was actually schizophrenia waiting to happen. As a minor shareholder, I hope Apple doesn't start doing content.
Re:The Fundamental Gaffe! (Score:3)
The Gaffe that underlies them all is putting an entertainment company and an engineering/design company together. Using engineering know-how to protect all that Copyright stuff instead of making good products was the ultimate cause of Sony's slow but sure decline. Sony used to look at customers as someone to delight with their know how and ingenuity. Sony products used to be works of art. Now they see the customer as some idiot trying to steal things from them. And guess what? They got what they were looking for.
What many saw as a synergistic mix of businesses, was actually schizophrenia waiting to happen. As a minor shareholder, I hope Apple doesn't start doing content.
This is the best comment about Sony I've read on /. in a long time. I wish I had mod points right now. Sony's acquisition of CBS Records and Columbia was the catalyst for their decent into madness.
Re:The Fundamental Gaffe! (Score:2)
I heard a rumor they might be buying iTunes.
Re:The Fundamental Gaffe! (Score:2)
Finally, a comment worthy of being tagged "Insightful"!
Sony Memory Stick. (Score:3)
Sony Memory Stick. The entire product line is a joke. Three times the cost and 1/3 the capacity of "Generic" memory like SD. I laughed so hard when i found out they got over their 128MB limit by including a switch and gave you 256MB in 2 isolated parts. And then MagicGate came along where they wanted you to pay even more for the privilege of having DRM on your memory stick
Sony Style stores (Score:2)
Beta? (Score:2)
Sony v. Universal (Score:2)
Obligatory bash quote (Score:4, Funny)
Definitely the retweeting (Score:2)
SWG (Score:5, Interesting)
To date that is still my favorite mmorpg, until the CU. Most equipment was player made and the stats depended on the raw materials that randomly generated around the galaxy with random stats. It could take years to accumulate the mats to make uber armor, but you could then make a killing while selling it. Slicing armor/weapons was risky, which made the combination of great armor/weapon and a beneficial slice even that much more rare. A player could spend all their time crafting, which opened up the game to more casual players.
SOE was scared of WoW and tried to make their game more WoW like... but they did a terrible job and that's why I ended up moving to WoW.
Re:SWG (Score:3)
the failure with SWG was it's lack of star wars feel.
No one want's to hunt rats and craft crap. They want to:
Shoot Storm troops
Fly a ship through asteroid
play a Wookie
Kick ass with a light saber
And be important.
And they tried to make it like EQ, not WoW.
Sony's problem: mission confused (Score:3)
I find it interesting that Asus seems the least confused about its role in life of all the electronics companies, hence its introduction of the netbook (and now the ARM netbook/tablet) where they seem quite uninterested in how the "content providers" will see things. I would rate HP as highly if they didn't seem so concerned to keep pushing ink-based printing, which is often not a good deal for end users. If they really do decide to push webOS and make rude gestures at Microsoft, I might revisit that ranking. If Sony and Apple ever merged, OTOH, they would collapse into a kind of proprietary black hole.
Sony Vaio laptop battery bullshit (Score:2)
Several months ago, my boss bought a Sony Vaio laptop with Windows 7 Home on it. I was tasked with installing various work software on it. As part of that, I did a clean install of Win 7 Enterprise. While installing drivers (and trying to get the various hotkeys to work), I installed some power management software from Sony. After installation, there was continually a dialog box coming up saying that the battery is not properly connected. The only option was 'Click OK to hibernate.' Nothing was wrong with the laptop or battery. It had been purchased two days before. Fixing the problem was just a matter of killing the process raising the dialog and removing it from startup.
I did a bit of research, and I found that the sole purpose of that program is to prevent people from installing third party batteries. That's all it does. It's there to allow Sony to charge whatever it wants for batteries.
Aside from a walkman, I haven't had much experience with Sony, but after seeing their business practice, I don't think I will ever buy anything from them.
Betamax,... (Score:2)
...you insensitive clod.
Not Much Evil (Score:2)
The Rootkit DRM was the only actual evil thing on the list. The others are all either misguided, dumb, sloppy, or misunderstood.
Proprietary formats (Score:2)
I think Sony's failure is due to insistence on proprietary formats, many of which had their strengths but being Sony-only made them useless.
Betamax (as mentioned before)
DAT
Minidisc
ATRAC
Memory Stick
UMD
http://www.fastcompany.com/blog/kit-eaton/technomix/memorystick-micro-die-sonys-older-proprietary-standards [fastcompany.com]
And, probably related to this, letting the iPod take over from the Walkman as portable media player of choice.
I remember when Sony portable electronics were the Apple of their day - beautiful, well-designed, must-own.
DRM was my Sony watershed moment (Score:2)
Why are there so many to choose from? (Score:3)
I wish Sony had decided to just make a few choice gaffes instead of so many varied ones.
Don't forget their marketing slogan (Score:2)
"IT ONLY DOES EVERYTHING.(TM)" [playstation.com]
Therefore the true missing option is "All of the above".
Let us not forget Mini Disk. (Score:2)
Had Sony not been the playground toddler that wouldn't share his toys the Mini Disk had the potential to replace the normal CD early on. Instead it's just a footnote in obscurity.
Other OS (Score:2)
...Except their eBooks (Score:2)
If I'm asked what word I think of when I hear "Sony" my answer is "Proprietary formats" and then I would trail of by saying something like "... Wait... that is two words?...".
I actually surprised myself when I bought a Sony PRS-350 eBook reader. For my purpose it is optimal; small (5"), well build (aluminum) good screen. No darn keyboard, supports almost all known eBook formats, and best of all - is fully supported by the open source http://calibre-ebook.com/ [calibre-ebook.com] eBook management software... I haven't installed Sony's own software... ... I guess their Department of F***ups must have overlooked this...
Re:No Cowboy Neal option? (Score:2)
FRNXT GHRT SONY GURM
Re:Sharp Shooter (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sharp Shooter (Score:3)
The Wii is ass backwards making your front hand the trigger hand. It totally clashes with a lifetime of shooting skill muscle memory. As parent poster says, "Totally lame."
If some deranged individual were to shoot a bunch of people and it turned out also owned a realistic video game gun, imagine the lawsuits. I bet their legal department urged it be designed as unlike a real firearm as possible. Either that or it was designed in Japan by Japanese engineers who have never fired a real rifle. The gun control laws there are pretty restrictive.