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Comment Re:Oh how terrible (Score 1) 56

Sweet, it's good that they have that patent. I hate when games move the pedestrians out of the way. Carmageddon and GTA were so much more fun than Driver was in that respect. I played Crazy Taxi at the arcades once, didn't really get why it's such a big deal.

If you only played it once, I'd bet you didn't get the full experience, once you learn the (undocumented in the arcade version) techniques to play the thing, the game's a blast.

Role Playing (Games)

Submission + - Final Fantasy XIV on damage control (finalfantasyxiv.com)

basscomm writes: "Just the other day, it was reported here on Slashdot that Final Fantasy XIV was released into the world as a buggy, incomplete mess. Now, it's been announced that due to "generous amounts of player feedback" that lots of changes are coming (honest!). And, as a result, anyone who registers their game before October 25th will have their 30 day trial upgraded to a 60 day trial, but will it be enough to keep the game from hemorrhaging players once the free-trials end?"

Comment Re:In Game Voiceovers (Score 4, Insightful) 235

Voiceovers for quest text is just something I'll be skipping because I've already skimmed through the obligatory, "Sand people attacked my land cruiser while I was en route with a shipment of unobtanium for the port in Mos Eisley, and the crates with my valuable cargo are littering the deserts. Without the money, I can't afford the medicine for my sick daughter, and I'm incapable of traveling and/or fighting; would you please find 50 crates and return them to me?" I'll be already heading in the vague direction the quest NPC has sent me on, trying to get my next level/item/skill and some in-game currency.

Heck, I have friends who refuse to play Borderlands with me because I won't read the quest text before charging off in the direction of my next waypoint.

To each their own, I suppose.

Believe it or not, some people (like me) like to play games and pay attention to the little details like the "backstory" and the "raison d'être" for the things you're asked to do instead of treating the game's goals and objectives like a series of meaningless checkpoints.

Comment Re:Problems summed up (Score 2, Informative) 401

Even better is the crafting interface. Crafting is such a huge part of this game, and yet it's so tough to use that it's borderline imbecilic. For instance, you get a recipe for something as a quest reward and it's displayed in your log. Once. Unless you wrote it down or have perfect recall, you're going to have to consult a fansite, on another computer, because alt-tabbing away from the game currently crashes the thing. And actually crafting a thing for a quest? You have to go to your main menu -> select your crafting option -> click 'requested items' which brings up a box with the items in it -> click the item you want to craft -> click 'OK' (I forget the verbiage since I'm not in front of it now) which fills in the materials on your crafting screen -> then click again to bring up the 'crafting minigame' where you have to pick from a few different actions that will impact the quality of the item you're attempting to make. And if you want to make multiples of the same thing? You have to go through all of those steps again. Every time! How fun!

Or the loading screens. When you're sitting there trying to log in or when you teleport somewhere, you're greeted with a black screen with "now loading" and throbber in the bottom-right corner. Wow, excitement!

Oh, and that teleporting thing? That lets you go to one of the locations around the world that you've already visited? Yeah, that uses another resource called 'anima' that regenerates at an abysmally slow rate (and I couldn't find a gauge for to see how much I had left).

I never did get the payment thing set up right. For whatever reason, Square-Enix outsourced their credit card processing to an outfit called Click and Buy that I've never heard of. Turns out that you have to create a separate account with them to handle billing, which means that I have to give some third-party my credit card information, and if I terminate my FFXIV account, I have to terminate my Click and Buy account separately, which would involve writing and sending a letter. To London. I couldn't actually get the process to complete, though (some problem with the Verified by Visa, and it was a Saturday evening, so everyone who could help was closed), so I looked at other options, I can pay with Crysta (which are like Microsoft Points or Wii Points), which are available in increments of $5 (or 500 Crysta), but to buy those, I have to register my account through Click and Buy, so it's the same stupid thing! Or I can get a Playspan 'Ultimate Game Card', which again is similar to the Crysta (with the exception that you can supposedly use the points for dozens of other online games, too), but, bafflingly, though I live in a city of almost 200,000 people, the nearest place for me to get the things is nearly 40 miles away. And, for those of you keeping score at home, the account fees (for one character) are $12.99/month (or 1299 Crysta or Ultimate Points), so if you get these ridiculous 'points', you're always going to have a surplus of them you can't use. I was able to eventually tell them that I wanted to pay for my first (free) month by using Crysta instead of my credit card, but I will not be jumping through these ridiculous flaming hoops any time soon just to continue playing this mediocre mishmash of a game.

Social Networks

Top Reason for Facebook Unfriending Is Too Many Useless Posts 300

alphadogg writes "The No. 1 reason why friends dump friends on Facebook is when they get fed up seeing too many useless posts, according to new research out of the University of Colorado Denver Business School. Posts about polarizing subjects such as politics and religion as well as inappropriate and racist comments also sever many Facebook relationships, according to Christopher Sibona, a PhD student in the Computer and Science and Information Systems program. 'Researchers spend a lot of time examining how people form friendships online but little is known on how those relationships end,' said Sibona, whose research will be published in January by the Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. 'Perhaps this will help us develop a theory of the entire cycle of friending and unfriending.' Sibona surveyed more than 1,500 Facebook users to get to the bottom of why people dump each other. Not surprisingly, people who flood others with posts are at great risk of being unfriended. 'The 100th post about your favorite band is no longer interesting,' he said." Samzenpus likes this.
Windows

Submission + - Windows XP Rides (dell.com)

basscomm writes: The Operating System that just won't die has been dealt another blow today as Dell reminds us that it is halting the sales of computers with Windows XP preinstalled, though they note that XP will still be available under "certain circumstances".

Per Microsoft guidelines regarding Windows XP, system vendors like Dell will no longer be able to ship systems with XP Professional and XP Home after October 22, 2010. This means that we will stop offering XP as an option for customers starting this month in preparation for next month's deadline.


Comment Re:Reinstall GRUB (Score 1) 429

Seriously. It's not that hard. Get a boot CD, drop to a command prompt, install GRUB. If that's inconvenient, consider virtualizing one OS or the other. Say, virtualize Linux in Windows using free VMware Server.

You and your grandmother likely have different definitions of "hard".

Comment Re:getting things done (Score 2, Informative) 112

Except for the fact that I've never had a Windows box that got compromised or infected with any kind of virus, trojan or malware. Most "vulnerabilities" in Windows are user initiated. Practice a little common sense (ie. don't run things that come from questionable or unknown sources) and you are unlikely to ever see a problem.

Baloney. Let me guess, you don't have any antivirus installed either, because you don't need it? Either you haven't been using Windows for very long or your only Windows box is turned off in the corner. Back in the 90s I got a disk from my school that was infected with Stoned, and a few years later bought a CD-ROM game that came with Michelangelo on the disc itself. Even more recently, hardware from (more or less) reputable sources come preloaded with malware. Heck, part of my job is removing malware from PCs on a near-daily basis, and even though I know better, my USB key got hit by the Autorun worm last Summer. So yeah, common sense and safe browsing habits are wonderful things, but they're not a panacea. There are so many attacks coming from so many vectors, that if you use a Windows box you will get some kind of infection eventually.

Comment Re:Most absolutely not. (Score 3, Insightful) 462

I played the first Pokemon game about a year ago (luckily the battery held out, since the game is pretty old). I'm an adult and I have some qualms about playing any more Pokemon after that. Not because Pokemon is kid stuff; the cartoon is kids' stuff but the games are more tolerable for all ages.

But because Pokemon so highly depends on looking up guidebooks, figuring out how to optimize your party with inadequate information, knowing things like that a particular Pokemon gets a particular attack at level 50, knowing intricacies about the level up system (did you know that your Pokemon gain stats differently depending on what they fight to level up?), etc. Later games get a lot worse, with things like rules for gaining attacks when breeding Pokemon, Pokemon that evolve under obscure circumstances you can't guess, or that only appear at certain times on the real time clock, etc.

In other words, it's complex. And complex, here, is bad. I can just imagine someone starting a newer game in this series and having to figure out "you get this Pokemon by fishing on one out of several hundred randomly chosen tiles, then find the right Pokemon, and feed it a particular stat increasing item many times while making sure it doesn't have the stat which makes the stat-increasing items useless, then let it evolve".

That's the thing about the Pokémon games. Yeah, you can look up and wade through stats until your eyes go crossed, research gameplay mechanics, delve into the mysterious 'effort values', try to figure out egg groups and chain breeding to transfer a rare/useful move to the offspring, and find the 'correct' nature to min-max your monsters, but all of that's totally optional. You can have a perfectly good time going through the game, collecting monsters to build a well-balanced team, being pleasantly surprised when your level 49 Staraptor learns Brave Bird (and reacting accordingly instead of planning for it), trading with friends, and generally enjoying the story (such as it is). That's one of the great things about the game: it caters both to the 'pick up and play' types and the people who obsess over every statistic and spend hours min-maxing.

Comment Re:What is "Printing?" (Score 1) 152

And the same is true for me(I threw out my last printer almost a decade ago).

However at work some people must have hard copies. I finally figured out why recently. While you can multitask with any OS now but the monitors generally can only display ONE app at a time. even with widescreen monitors the majority of which have resolutions which really only allow decent reading of one document at a time. Which means if your reading from one or more sources, and compiling them on a third document you are constantly task switching back and forth which slows you down, You can stretch multiple documents out on your desk and glance at them to gather information as you type. Something that is only really possible with 2-3 monitors on computers.

At home I have 3 monitors and a TV which my computers can output on. however most people at work only get one monitor, two if they are lucky. Try working with just one piece of paper in front of you and stack all other work objects behind it. doesn't work so well does it?

The solution is either high resolution monitors(tough to find and expensive or multiple 1280x 1024 displays.

We frequently use printers at work for printing work requests for computers that customers bring in. When they pick them up, we have them sign the timesheets/bills and then go from there. We tried having them sign our monitors, but those were really hard to file.

Comment Re:Are you really worried that much about Facebook (Score 1) 451

I'm actually too lazy to switch them on a regular basis (they were set up with bogus info originally), and half the time I'm using a CC anyway (which throws anonymity out the window).

I still like using my "phone number" sometimes just for the heck of it. I use 867-5309, and it's never been denied. Too many young cashiers these days to even recognize it now. :-)

Whenever I get asked for my phone number, I just politely decline to provide it, which works without a hassle most of the time. On the rare few times where that doesn't work (and if I've planned ahead) I'll give them the phone number of their own store. And if you pay in cash, you're as private as you can get.

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