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PC Games (Games)

Submission + - The Political Machine 2008 Announced (neowin.net)

An anonymous reader writes: Do you have what it takes to be the president? Today Stardock Entertainment announced The Political Machine 2008, a new PC game that puts players in control of the 2008 presidential campaign. Play as the campaign manager for a host of candidates including Barack Obama, John McCain, Hillary Clinton, historical candidates or design one from scratch. Players then choose their campaign battlegrounds and are off on the campaign trail to face a host of challenges including fundraising, talk show appearances, hiring spin doctors and winning endorsements. The game is won on Election Day by the player who gets the necessary electoral votes to become President. The Political Machine is both a single and a multiplayer game — players can either compete against the computer or against others online on www.politicalmachine.com. The website also provides an ideologically neutral location for users to discuss the current election. The game will be released at retail in this upcoming June for $19.95.
Nintendo

Submission + - Help Make Wii Rock Band Better (petitiononline.com)

An anonymous reader writes: An online petition was started to try and help convince Harmonix and Nintendo to make some improvements to the upcoming video game release "Rock Band" for the Nintendo Wii. The petition is available to read here. From the petition: "First, we would like to thank you for developing the video game "Rock Band" for the Nintendo Wii platform. Through various press releases recently, it has come to many potential customers attention that, while the game does sound to be planned very well, there is some room to for improvement." It goes on to outline just a few key areas that they would like to see improved. Pretty interesting read, even if you don't sign it.
Role Playing (Games)

Submission + - Blizzard 2.4 Patch Smooth as Sandpaper

fragmentate writes: "There is no supporting article for this, just a forum filled with irate paying customers. One of the darkest times in EverQuest history was the infamous "1017 error" that plagued them for weeks. People would lose connection, and then be locked out for hours with a vague error called "1017." Well, Blizzard has implemented this feature in their latest 2.4 patch that was released Tuesday, March 25th, 2008. It was a huge patch that added new content, and incorporated massive class and balance changes. I personally have three characters that I can't play. Many, many others are having the same difficulty. Additionally there are issues with older graphics cards now — although, in my opinion, people should just upgrade already. How did QA miss all of these issues? Quite simply, how can you test everything among ten to twenty thousand people what five to ten million people will have to play? You can't. But I'd like to at least see these gaming companies just be honest and say, "we did the patch, it's probably something on our side."; instead of the condescent."
The Media

Submission + - After Game Theory

An anonymous reader writes: Gus Mastrapa, the new "Media Coverage" columnist at GameDaily.com, begins his tenure with an interview with veteran game journalist Peter Olafson. Their chat deal mainly with Olafson's work in 2000-01 as Game Theory columnist with the New York Times, but also touches upon "new games journalism," game guides and his future plans. It's at http://www.gamedaily.com/articles/features/media-coverage-the-new-york-times-then
Censorship

Submission + - Free Speech Advocate Talks AO Games

GoodbyeBlueSky1 writes: Will practical censorship of video games be the best path to more creative freedom in the future, or will this approach backfire? Adam Thierer, First Amendment champion and director at Washington D.C. think-tank The Progress & Freedom Foundation, believes the industry should show caution when introducing games rated AO by the Entertainment Software Ratings Board (ESRB) into the mainstream. He believes that "the fact that AO-rated games are currently kept off the major consoles and off the shelves at some major retailers (ex: Wal-Mart and Target) is probably the most important thing holding back a full-on legislative assault on video games."
Privacy

Submission + - Penn State Issues Laptop Scanning Edict

An anonymous reader writes: In response to a recent laptop theft potentially placing social security numbers at risk, Penn State University has initiated a policy requiring the mandatory registration of all personal and university owned laptops used for any university related business, making them subject to periodic scanning by the university. Not only does this procedure severely infringe on the privacy of students, faculty, and staff, it does little if anything to solve the problem and in all likelihood makes the security problem worse. An anonymized copy of a recent email concerning this topic follows.



As some of you may have already heard, a PSU laptop was recently stolen. The theft potentially placed sensitive data (such as social security numbers) at risk. Understandably, data security measures have since become a top priority within Old Main and the Office of Risk Assessment. A coordinated, University-wide response is being developed within the framework of existing University policies AD19 (Use of Penn State Identification Number and Social Security Number), AD20 (Computer and Network Security) and AD35 (University Archives and Records Management).

What is clear at this point in time is that the response will require centralized tracking and periodic scanning of all laptops that have been, or are being used for any University related business. This includes all laptops purchased with any sort of University funding, and personally purchased/owned laptops. Laptops you have purchased and assigned to your research assistants are included in this inventory collection.

The first step has commenced. The step requires registration of all laptops meeting the above description. The immediate goal is to assess the scope (and potential risk). There is an aggressive time line for laptop data collection, so an email reply to me with the following information would be greatly appreciated.
  1. User/owner's name, office address, telephone number and email address
  2. Primary use of the system
  3. Laptop manufacturer, serial number, and approximate date of purchase


Please understand that the urgency of this initiative is being driven by Old Main's justified desire to protect identity information from accidental or intentional misuse. A response with your laptop information is needed no later than 5:00PM Friday March 7th. If there is some reason that this is not possible, please let me know.
Music

Submission + - RIAA Not Sharing Settlement Money With Artists

Klatoo55 writes: "Various artists are considering lawsuits in order to press for their share of the estimated hundreds of millions of dollars the RIAA has obtained from settlements with services such as Bolt, KaZaA and Napster. According to TorrentFreak's report on the potential action, there may not even be much left to pay out after monstrous legal fees are taken care of. The comments from the labels all claim that the money is on its way, and is simply taking longer due to difficulties dividing it all up."
Sci-Fi

Submission + - Sci-Fi Tech We Could Have If... (plainblack.com) 1

PlainBlack writes: "Possibility isn't limited by technology. And it's certainly not limited by human imagination. What makes something impossible is the lack of cold, hard, cash. Wired blog takes a look at 10 science fiction technologies we could build, if they weren't so expensive. Or if we hadn't wasted our money on fighting wars, the dot-com bubble, and super bowl ads."
PC Games (Games)

Submission + - Shadowbane Data Purge, Restart On The Way (wired.com)

CyBlue writes: The development team behind Shadowbane has come to the decision that "it would be best for the longevity of the game to reset all server and character data and start from scratch." In case you aren't entirely clear on the details of this decision, the developers have decided that everything that has ever occurred in the game to date will be wiped out along with every character ever created, every item ever equipped and every monster ever slain.
Role Playing (Games)

Submission + - Fox's Mass Effect 'Expert' Apologises (nytimes.com) 1

ShedPlant writes: "On Thursday we discussed a Fox News feature that propagated lies about the role playing game Mass Effect. According to the New York Times, Fox's 'expert psychologist', who admitted to never playing the game, has apologised for her comments on the show.

In an interview on Friday, Ms. Lawrence said that since the controversy over her remarks erupted she had watched someone play the game for about two and a half hours. "I recognize that I misspoke," she said. "I really regret saying that, and now that I've seen the game and seen the sex scenes it's kind of a joke.

"Before the show I had asked somebody about what they had heard, and they had said it's like pornography," she added. "But it's not like pornography. I've seen episodes of 'Lost' that are more sexually explicit."
One Amazon reviewer says of her most recent book:

I know all about this book but have never fully read it. Why? Due to the overwhelming backlash, I have no choice but to agree with the 1 star ratings. The rumors are rampant that this book was poorly written and poorly researched. So without verifying the contents myself — I give it a 1 star. Good thing video games aren't judged in this manner — whew!!!
The real question is, why would Fox want the opinion of an 'expert' who was clearly clueless on the topic?"

Software

Submission + - Is There Any Decent Access Control Software?

An anonymous reader writes: I am a power user in a very, very small niche of the computing world: I'm a power user on XP x64 with a Firewall from 2005. The Story: A few years back, I was turned on to Tiny Firewall Pro. It gave me not only a damn good firewall, but also granted me very anal access control over what programs could run on my system, what priviledges they could use, and what they had access to (Think Vista's User Access Control, only with more options and a better UI). At this point, I was still using the 32bit Windows XP. My problems started when I moved to an x86_64 arch. If I ran the 32bit windows with the firewall, for some reason, any and all network cards in the system would cut out after a few minutes (The issue is beyond the scope of the question). After much frustration, I ended up moving to XP x64, and yes, I can hear you groan. Luckily there was a version of the firewall that ran on x64, so I picked that up. It ran fine, and I was happy. Happy until I tried to apply some Windows updates. As it turns out, I can't apply any Windows updates that affect the kernel or its patching protection, lest I become infatuated with with a BSoD. I blame everything on the fact that the software was released in 2005. "Maybe you should upgrade!" I hear you cry (Kindly ignoring the "Move to Linux" folks with an empty smile). Alas, Tiny Software was accquired by Computer Associates halfway through 2005, and, to my knowledge, their products have long been discontinued. From what little I've read about Computer Associates, and from personally experiencing their Anti-Virus software, I don't particularly trust them, so using their equivalent is out. Is there anything comparable to Tiny's Firewall suite that runs on XP x64 or Vista x64 and is still being maintained?
Data Storage

Current Recommendations For a Home File Server? 170

j.sanchez1 writes "The recent coverage of Shuttle's new KPC has gotten me thinking (again) about a small, low-cost headless file server for home. In the past, I have looked at the iPaq and considered using older computers I have lying around, but for various reasons I have never jumped in to do it. Do you guys have any suggestions on what to use for a home file server (hardware and software)? The server would be feeding files to Windows PCs and connected to the network through a Linksys WRT54GL running DD-WRT firmware." There are a host of good options these days; what has the best bang for the home-user's buck?
The Courts

Submission + - Police subpoena MySpace over Meier suicide

Stony Stevenson writes: A federal grand jury has subpoenaed MySpace in an investigation into the suicide of teenager Megan Meier. The girl killed herself after being harassed by someone on MySpace, whom she believed to be a boy but who was in fact the parent of a schoolmate. Police in California are now investigating to see whether they can prosecute the parent for defrauding the MySpace social networking website after she set up a false identity on the site. Los Angeles police feel that they have jurisdiction since MySpace is headquartered in Beverley Hills.

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