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Comment Re:Settlers 7 (Score 1) 279

I tried REALLY hard to find a good way to contact ubi about silent hunter. I LOVE the silent hunter series, and I was ready and willing to buy it, but not with this DRM. I have every previous version of the game, all paid for. Silent Hunter 3 is the best, a brilliant, fun game that I've probably put several hundred hours into (a lot for me).

Anyway, I failed. The support email I found for them bounces. The people on the phone don't care. They are lost at sea.
My last attempt was emailing jaime.cottini@ubisoft.com, apparently someone who does PR. I figure this is a PR issue, or would be, if they cared what we thought. The full message follows. It was sent on March 23rd, 2010, and as yet I've received no response.

--

Hello Jaime, I hope this finds you well,
Yes, this is misdirected, although I'd paint it as a "public relations" issue. The further I go here, the more I come to the conclusion that ubisoft is terribly out of touch with their long standing customers and will only become more so with this path. I've been trying to get this message through... a message from someone who sees a good enjoyable game that is being stuck behind a wall, for over a month now. I've emailed (and had the mail rejected, from addresses I found on ubi's various sites) repeatedly. This morning, I tried again, with the same results. So I'm appealing to you, as one of the only addresses I can find and hoping this one doesn't bounce, to read this, and see what I have to say.

If you scroll down, you can see the initial email and my initial thoughts, as of this morning. This isn't terribly different from the message I've been trying to send for the last month (or more). But in trying to do so, I've come across what I see as a deeper issue... a complete lack of attention to what the paying customer actually wants.

No customer wants to require an internet connection to play a game. No customer wants to spend many hours trying to figure out how to relay their desires. It seems clear to me that ubi has lost sight of the customer, and no longer really cares about what they want. There are not many publishers left who I can feel comfortable buying from with DRM restrictions and attitudes like this. Maybe ubi can turn around, and maybe ubi can even turn the tide and set an example, to their own benefit , of what is possible.

I will wait and see. While I do not expect a response, I nevertheless would appreciate one.
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Comment Re:The first thing to come to my mind... (Score 1) 541

Not likely, yet.
Game publishers still think no one wants linux games, despite that fact that me and my wife spent the weekend looking for good linux games for her, mumbling the whole time about how we would be happy to pay for such a thing...
Fail. I think part of the issue is it's very hard to target "linux" with any sort of reliable, always working game. Granted, games on windows aren't always reliable and always working either, but publishers have more experience with it, and limiting to "XP, Vista, and Windows 7 (or these days, just the latter 2) is a realistic move they can make and still sell games for windows. I don't know if this would be true for linux.

Comment Re:As long as they don't use GVoice Tech. (Score 3, Funny) 102

I'll never forget the time I was playing with dragon (the speech recognition software), and it seemed to pick up an obsession for the word "orange"... Mall was orange. Bus was orange. Elephant was Eggplant, but that's a pointless tale for another time...
Meanwhile, speech recognition still fails, and google voice is just the worlds best demonstration of why :)

Comment Re:Why boingboing? (Score 1) 941

I neither work for nor have any association with boingboing. It was just the link that was introduced to me, and it also happens to be the one everyone else is using all day long... which is perhaps because they got it from this summary, but either way, no bias intended.

My interest in the story is primarily because I am only a few miles away from this school. Perhaps you are upset because you work for the AP? :)

Comment Re:Tape (Score 1) 941

That's the cost of allowing something like this to happen. I have to imagine that a fair number of people knew it was possible and "think of the children" kept it going. This place is only about 4 miles from where I sit right now, so I have a vested interest in this issue... I have friends in this district!

The administrators need to be punished, criminally. The district needs to be punished by whatever means are appropriate, and perhaps this will mean bankruptcy and a state takeover. Whatever is necessary.

Microsoft

Submission + - Rootkit Caused BSOD Issues, MSFT Says (threatpost.com)

Trailrunner7 writes: Microsoft on Thursday confirmed that the blue screen of death issues that affected a slew of users after the latest batch of Patch Tuesday updates is the result of an existing infection by the Alureon rootkit. There was widespread speculation after the patch release that simply installing the MS10-015 update was causing the BSOD condition on some Windows 32-bit machines. However, Microsoft said at the time this was not the case and started an investigation into the problem. In an advisory released Thursday, the company said that it now was confident that the restart problem is being caused by the Alureon rootkit.

Submission + - School spying on student webcams

jargon82 writes: A Pennsylvania high school is using laptops they issued to students to spy on them in homes and outside of school. According to a class action filling the webcams and microphones in these laptops could be remotely activated by school officials, and have been used in this role. One student was accused of "improper behavior in his home" and the school provided a photo taken via his laptop as proof.

Submission + - SparkFun FreeDay MEGA Slam DDoS

DeadlyFoez writes: If you have not heard, SparkFun was having a free give away of $100 credit towards an order for the first 1,000 orders for a total give away of $100,000. Well they did not see this coming. SparkFun has been completely inaccessible. They have halted servers numberous times to try to shut down certain features of their website. They just recently Upgraded their server and wanted to test them out using FreeDay. This was one of the most epic failures in internet history

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