Ask the kids that saw Episode 1 how they feel about it today (they're 17-20 years old today) and you will universally hear "OMG, I can't believe I ever liked that crap!"
As much as I wish that were true, that's the exact opposite of what I've heard from most younger people I've talked to. The ones who grew up with the new movies still like the new movies, because that's what they grew up with, and a sizable chunk of them actually prefer them to the originals. Some of them react how you said as they get older, but far from all of them. Maybe not even the majority of them, but I've never actually kept score or anything.
Have you tried Steam?
If I'm remembering correctly what I read when this game came up on a different site, Steam's actually the one that said it was a "dead genre" and rejected it. Which is kind of weird, because they accept so many absolutely terrible indie/casual games no one's heard of (for good reason: because they're terrible) in equally dead genres on a regular basis (fortunately also along with a lot of rather good indie games, so it usually evens out in the end, but still).
They are the largest private employer in the state of Massachusetts.
One of the largest for a while now (I think top ten, definitely top twenty), but I'm pretty sure there are at least a few larger, including MGH and Brigham and Women's Hospital. The Internet says:
Massachusetts' two largest private employers are Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, both part of the Aa2-rated Partners Healthcare System. Other top employers include Harvard University (Aaa), Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Aaa), and Boston University (A2).
You look at your 21" screen from a foot away?
I look at my 24" screen from about 18" away, or sometimes even a bit less, unless I'm watching a movie or something. Aside from being fairly nearsighted, I have fun, wacky corneas that even further screw up my distance vision, which starts a bit closer tham arm's length for me, while having very little effect on things closer than that. 12" is pushing it a bit (although that's about the distance I look at my laptop from), but at a comfortable viewing distance for me personally, I could probably stand to get up to 200ppi before not noticing any further improvements. I agree that 300 may be a bit overkill for most people on a monitor on their desktop the way they use them currently (and definitely for a TV on the other side of the room). Really it's all irrelevant until someone gets off their ass and gets resolution-independent UI scaling working properly, though.
Even when I did game, I'd put down $40 for half-life and get... 4-5 years out of it.
Which is almost long enough for the next one to come out. Any year now they'll finish Episode 3 Forever...
Walmart is why you don't see many AO games, because they refuse to stock them.
While it's true that they won't carry the games, I'm pretty sure that would only affect PCs, because last I heard none of the console manufacturers would license AO games in the first place/allow them to be released on their platforms.
If (the big if) the trigger is flashing lights, then there could be a good number of cases reported. The only thing I got from the doctors on the flashing light part was it is a trigger "sometimes".
And that really is a pretty big "if". The vast majority of people with seizure disorders are unaffected by flashing lights. I don't remember off the top of my head, but I think the number who are is in the low single digit percents. And then even among those who are, different people are more or less sensitive and respond differently to different frequencies of flashing/strobing. I'm one of those lucky winners who's epileptic and has photosensitive seizures, and while some things cause problems (Times Square was a nightmare before I was properly medicated), I've never in my life had any reaction to any TV/monitor/projector/fluorescent lights/etc., aside from the usual headache most people would get using an interlaced CRT at 45 Hz (had one at work back in the day, and I don't think even any normal people could look at it without getting irritated). Some other people do, though. Anyway, point being that people with seizure disorders are a small subset of the population, and people who have photosensitive seizures are a small subset of that group, and people who have them triggered by any given frequency is a subset of that group, so it's not terribly likely, even though it does happen and can kind of suck when it does.
Aside from adding that, though, it's nice to see posts from someone about that where they actually know what they're talking about for a change, instead of the usual confused stereotypes, and in a way that people can easily understand and will hopefully learn something from. Only thing I'd really consider changing is that grand/petit mal are kind of going out of favor as terms these days, because they're a bit out of date and not as useful for categorizing things these days now that more is known how they work. Now they're tonic-clonic and absence seizures, both of which are generalized (i.e. involve the entire brain), and neither of which is actually all that common. Partial seizures (which have a focal point in a much smaller part of the brain and can be either simple or complex, depending on whether consciousness/awareness/memory is affected) are more common. Of course, now they're working to change those terms to split things up and rearrange them some more, too, but that's the current state of things. On the off chance anyone even reads this and is curious, I guess. Heh.
Also, just thought you might like to know... Et al. is short for et alii and translates literally as, "with others." etc. is short for et cetera and translates roughly as, "with other objects". There is a people/things distinction. So if the other stuff is people, "et al." and if the other stuff is things, "etc.".
It's probably more accurate to say "and" instead of "with" (which is where the ampersand came from; if you look at it, you can sort of see how it came from smooshing an e and t together, and you'll occasionally see "&c" as an abbreviation for "et cetera", usually in older documents), but yeah, that's a good distinction to at least be aware of (and which I sadly forget about and am not in the habit of using "et al." consistently).
It may be trivial, but it's still enough of an inconvenience that over the past year or two I've moved heavily away from using my Wii much to using my gaming/media center PC instead. They're hooked up to the same screen and speakers, so it's not like one is more accessible than the other. It's just that when I want to goof off for a bit with a game or movie or TV show, it's much easier to be able to get to it with a couple clicks than to have to go to the other side of the room, find the disc I want, and wait for the Wii to boot up and get through half a dozen warning screens about how we're all going to die if I don't read the safety information and wear my wrist strap.
It's not a horrible inconvenience, and I still use the Wii when there's something specific I want to do with it, but the PC offers much less "resistance", so it gets a lot more use these days both when I could do the same thing on either it or the Wii or when I'm looking for something to entertain myself with but am not sure yet what I have in mind and want to look at my options. The Wii would probably see more use if I could install everything and run without swapping discs (without having to mod it first) and it didn't have to basically reboot every time I go back to the main menu to switch tasks.
That same sort of thing does happen in limited parts of the US (mostly the northeast, which is older and denser, since larger amounts of the cities predate cars). I live in Boston, which is relatively compact, and you're likely to run into all sorts of people on the subway. Even more so in New York, and to some extent a few other places like Chicago.
On the other hand, I also have family in Detroit and Cleveland, and since I don't drive, I basically end up unable to leave the house and do anything without waiting for someone else to get a ride with them. Everything is enormously spread out, public transportation is nearly nonexistent, and most people wouldn't be caught dead on it if they had the choice.
Kind of a weird contrast. Not surprisingly, given my lack of driving, I prefer European-style cities (whether actually in Europe or not) to the newer car-based US type.
UNIX is hot. It's more than hot. It's steaming. It's quicksilver lightning with a laserbeam kicker. -- Michael Jay Tucker