Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Oh really? (Score 1) 143

But the thing that Xbox Live has over Wii or PS3, or even the PC for that matter, is the built-in voice communication, separate and compatible with the games and apps, so you can join up in a Party, then fire up Netflix together or go into a game together and have the chat continue to work through the loading screens and not interfere with the application sound. Playing with people you know, even if you only know them from Xbox Live, is so much better. It works so much better that I know some people who wanted to play Killzone together on their PS3s, and they fired up their Xboxen just to provide the communication.

Comment Re:The best one... (Score 3, Informative) 573

I agree that it is an interesting coincidence that Portland City had declined to joint the Joint Terrorism Taskforce and so the mayor was just as surprised as anyone when the FBI announced the arrest. But I think your characterization of the 19 year old "boy" is a bit off. The article you linked to describes someone who had been interested in joining jihad since he was 15 and had tried to go to Yemen and join the cause the previous year. He was only mad at his family because they had notified law enforcement that he was trying to join jihad. Bombing the Christmas tree lighting ceremony was his idea, he wasn't steered towards it by some informant. He hadn't done anything yet, but not for lack of trying, and he seemed pretty determined. I don't think it is fair to pretend that the FBI manufactured this threat.

Comment Re:Odd... (Score 1) 573

Okay, so you can argue that guy wouldn't have done anything on his own. But what about the guy who thought he was blowing up the van full of explosives in the middle of the Christmas Tree lighting ceremony in Portland? He thought up the plot and sought out the informants. I've heard the tape where the agent asks the guy "Are you sure you want to do this, you know there will be women and children in the crowd." and he is adamant. That seems like a pretty valuable use of agency resources.

Comment Re:I don't understand. (Score 1) 286

You're confusing legal and ethical. Anyone who isn't Catholic may not have any say in the matter and there may be no legal authority to stop it, but it would still be wrong if some of the Vatican administrators are using their authority to award supplier contracts to their cousins and pay double. That still doesn't make it a slashdot story, but the parallels to the wikileaks affair, and punishing the whistleblowers does.

Comment Broken? (Score 1) 423

In what way is the current system "fundamentally broken" ? They sold 609 million units last year just in games for the Wii, PS3, Xbox360, DS and 3DS. That's a lot of money for the industry. At the same time, I have tremendous choice as a consumer. Even just on the 360 there are a lot more good games than I have time to play. Add to that everything available for phones, pads, and the PC both in retail and electronic distribution and it is a great time to be a gamer. If there are developers and publishers that are losing money because they spent a bunch of money on a crappy game, that isn't the fault of the used game market. People have been predicting for decades that the tremendous and rising cost of producing and promoting blockbuster movies was too high and that studios would fail and fewer movies would be made, but I see no evidence that there are fewer movies available. If console makers go through with their plan to kill the used market, it might make them more money, or it might convince consumers to spend that $15-30 they would have spent on a used console game on some other platform. Or they may not be as willing to pay the $60 for the new game if they know they can't sell it for $30 when they are done with it, so, again, they may choose to buy a $5 app. that keeps them entertained for a week. It is a huge decision for console makers, with big effects, but let us not pretend they are fixing anything.
Apple

Submission + - Indie Game Developer Takes on Rovio and Zynga (forbes.com)

An anonymous reader writes: The past few years have seen a rise in independently-produced games, such as Braid and Super Meat Boy. In another David-vs-Goliath story, indie dev Zach Gage is attracting quite a bit of attention, including that of Forbes Magazine, with his current attempt at dethroning the usual suspects from the top of the App Store charts, a word-hunting puzzle game called SpellTower.
Science

Submission + - 'Huge' water resource exists under Africa (bbc.co.uk) 2

gambit3 writes: Scientists say the notoriously dry continent of Africa is sitting on a vast reservoir of groundwater. They argue that the total volume of water in aquifers underground is 100 times the amount found on the surface.
Across Africa more than 300 million people are said not to have access to safe drinking water.
Freshwater rivers and lakes are subject to seasonal floods and droughts that can limit their availability for people and for agriculture. At present only 5% of arable land is irrigated.

Privacy

Submission + - Sony Corporation Files For Patent On Gamers Meeting In Public (kryptonradio.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In the "not right in the head" department, Sony Computer Corp's got a patent application in on an idea for tying in-game events with real world meet-ups, and rewarding people for divulging their real life identities.

The media's sort of glossed over this, but this article posts the application abstract in full, and it looks like they're trying to patent company sponsored gamer meetups. Prior art? I think Blizzcon qualifies.

Toys

Submission + - LEGO is in trouble with feminists (foxnews.com)

Bravoc writes: "The new “LEGO Friends” rolled out in December featuring LadyFigs, curvier takeoffs on the traditional boxy LEGO men. Construction sets include a hot tub, a splash pool, a beauty parlor, an outdoor bakery and a “cool convertible," as well as an inventor's workshop.
But the SPARK Movement objects to the "LadyFigs," the female version of the little figures who man the spaceships, trucks and forts children create. "Ladyfigs" are somewhat anatomically correct, which hypersexualizes girls, according to the group.
"They have little breasts and they have fancy hair," the organization's executive director, Dana Edell, told FoxNews.com. "And it just disturbs us that this is the image that they want girls to see."
(as opposed to mostly anatomically incorrect BIG breasts and fancy hair — ala Barbi. Maybe they are just upset at fancy hair?)"

Comment Re:what? (Score 1) 223

No kidding. I'm pretty sure we know nothing conclusive about what causes autism, so any uncited quote from an unnamed source that claims that too much tablet use could cause it is worthy of scorn. I'm kind of surprised that hypnosec got away with including that crap in the headline. Can we mod him down?

Slashdot Top Deals

6 Curses = 1 Hexahex

Working...