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Comment Re:Wonder how Elon Musk (Score 3, Insightful) 262

There is, apparently, a flapping bird game, that is, apparently, all the rage. Or was that last week? That's right, technology so amazing, you stop caring about it when it is replaced in a few weeks. Right.... :)

I'm only playing along with you. In truth, I love what technology has available for us now. Our lives are faster, easier, and possibly improved, by the tech sector. I say possibly because we may find that virtual-mindedness is detrimental to a superior lifestyle that involves less or no virtualism. Who knows. But within a realm of trying to appreciate something, technology is highly appreciable right now as compared to even 20 years ago. I think if technology development just froze as a whole, we would still grow at least a bit more, on accident, due to the momentum of what we have now. We're doing great. Imagine all of the plausible combinations of current technologies and compare that to the present; that's the spread of the most immediate technological next step that will happen in the immediate future. And so it continues.

I can tell you this.... Video Games, today, are as beautiful as I imagined they would be when I watched games develop early on, 20 years ago . They aren't more or less than I had thought -- they're right on the money. Back then it was river city ransom. Back then, F-Zero and Doom2 looked great.

Everything is having a snowball effect. Kurzweil is basically correct in his thesis of the future.

Comment Re:This is a shining example (Score 1) 327

No... it's a shining example of why the 'work form home tele-work' idea isn't always a good idea. Lets take on step back and look at what you said .... Do you really think that private enterprise is a better place for a role in which all ideas/invetions are vetted for novelty? This is a regulatory agency, so to speak. Private business could only make things worse by being private. It doesn't make sense to even have a patent office and its purposes (a government-driven protection to ideas) governed by private business. That would be like allowing a wolf to tend to sheep.

Comment Re:Don't fix the problem, treat the symptom (Score 1) 182

Wouldn't it be nice to let engineers run society by design, balanced by laws implemented by philosophers? We'd be moving forward much more slowly and carefully because money wouldn't be part of human existence, and we can fully say that how far we've come has given us enough fruits to improve us and support us while we make smartly calculated steps forward.

Comment Re:Radicalization (Score 1) 868

The people that existed there, before the extradited/oppressed Jews were placed there, had sovereign rights to their land. A number of other countries placed those Jews in that land and then tried to force ideas by way of the UN. From my understanding, this forced invasion, in your opinion, needs to be accepted willingly and peacefully. What reality is showing is that the expectations of the homeless Jews and the saviour-states that moved them there have never been met. The locals don't like it. It was a bad idea.

What's going on now is that the bad idea is backed by power and money and the locals have nothing but terror/militia-scale effects to combat the invasion with.

Comment Re:Radicalization (Score 5, Insightful) 868

What you mean is that Israel doesn't consider what is 'currently' Gaza to be its own terriitory -- but that its own territory expands inch by inch at the crest of a bulldozer, and that any 'living beings' within that expansion ought to move to Gaza or die. Is that what you mean?

Lets at least keep reality on the table here.

Comment Re:I disagree. (Score 1) 116

At the high level of competition, you'd be surprised at the skills being developed. We don't use IM, we use radio comms similar to when I was in the military. PTT. We also have programs that model the maps (3rd party software) and allow us to draw and place icons and such so as to communicate out a strategy for everyone to work out and understand. It's like a chalkboard, but far better.

At the end of the day, you guys naysaying eSports simply lack the experience to know what you're talking about. So far every comment that dislikes eSports has been incredibly naive and demostrates a lack of knowing anything at all about the difference between competitive and casual gaming. Did you know that some people cheat by using methampetamines? Did you know that meth is to eSports as steroids are to baseball? Did you know the pro-leagues, when competing in person, test for these substances to ensure integrity?

Comment Re:It's about time!!! (Score 2) 116

You just don't understand the competition. The competition in gaming is not at all the same as the regular 'public' play. Competitive gaming is about developing and resonating on new advantages that other teams do not have and then applying them in carefully orchestrated strategies. You're right that it's not fun for you because your expectation of the game is similar to how the game was advertised. The people having fun with competitive gaming are reaping the rewards of hard work and the feeling of success when some very intricate feat the team developed actually worked.

A great example of what it means to game competitively comes from the Kubra Dam map on 8v8 battlefield 2. On that map there is to most people only one way for vehicles to go at the beginning -- straight across the top of the dam. If you tried to get to the lower part of the dam from the MEC side, you'd have to drive a long snaking road in the wide open. But.. while screwing around, my friend and I accidentally drove the MEC Vodnic (van-like vehicle) off of the top of the dam at the spawn down a huge veritcal drop, and the vehicle didn't explode! We were very surprised and *knew* immediately that we had discovered an advantage nobody had but needed to figure out how it happened and how to use it.

This then became an event taking a full evening of testing to find out that if you drive the van off the cliff at the right speed, and the front wheels go off, you can hit reverse, which would stop the vehicle from flipping forward while braking, and keep the vodnic level as its rear wheels exited the cliff lip. The vodnic goes off the cliff perfectly flat (when trained correctly for a couple hours), and lands on all four wheels. This makes it bounce very high and lose half of its health, BUT IT SURVIVES! And so this gave us a strategy nobody had. We could use the vehicle from the breakout, load people up on the top of the dam at the full frontal attack, but run one guy off the cliff in the Vodnik across the bottom of the dam, unnoticed, and into the USA Main base in under 30 seconds. This was not even known to be possible, so arriving in that base is unexpected and unprotected. The guys ramming to the full frontal on the top of the dam are battling alongside tanks, but to be smart, they are in the squad of the guy in the vodnik arriving at the USA main. This means that if your push for the middle flag gets killed, they will take it and it will stack the invasion of their main base further against them as those guys respawn in on the USA main that is just now being invaded.

The end result is that no matter how you approached it, you would capture key flags, and if necessary, the enemy would be left without any main base, stranded in the middle of the top of the dam.
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And that is just a glimpse at one technique required to win in the top of competition. When my crew took the TGL 8v8 world championship, we had a shoutcast with 2200 viewers. It was pure glory. We even took a game from what is known as the best BF2 team ever, Team HOT, in the TWL 12v12 ladder because we had a large array of these awesome technical feats trained for Sharqi Peninsula, and I developed a strategy for about 60 hours of effort and trained all 15 members (backups included) on how each stage of the strategy should happen and what fallback procedures would occur if primary objectives fail. We sacked their main in under a minute.

Comment It's about time!!! (Score 4, Interesting) 116

eSports have been my long-time favorite way to spectate gaming (or demonstrate skill to an audience). I've never been much of a fan of watching real-life sports -- some have been pretty interesting, especially if they don't have downtime (like soccer, rugby, etc) -- but at the end of the day, the fact that I don't participate in these sports has left me with less interest.

Competitive Gaming on the other hand, has been a staple in my life since Doom II. I will never forget how Quake 1 had great multiplayer mods with capture the flag, etc, and that you could go into a spectator mode. At that point, I was very excited to see how other players would react and strategize in situations I myself would encounter.

Fast forward over a decade and we've got competitive counter strike, battlefield 2, etc, rolling along and the shoutcasts started. These were always very niche, but they were far more frequent than the extremely rare CPL video streams and the poor attempts by big media companies to create an eSport event on television. Back then (about 10 years ago), those big media events usually had too many shots of the crowds and of the gamers themselves, and not enough attention to the gameplay. For me, the best shoutcasts were direct video streams from observer mode and first person mode, with announcers discussing the game as it unfolds.

Anyway... In the last several years, there have been Twitch streams and much larger scaled video game streams or recordings on youtube that are really starting to please my tastes. It's good to see that gaming, a very popular medium for competition and pleasure, is gaining mainstream attention. This is also a great sign that our generation is finally starting to matter.

Comment Re:What haven't they lied about? (Score 1) 201

The intelligence oversight act of 1974 gave small groups in congress the ability to oversee intelligence activities that breach rights -- the basis being that warranting evidence would then lead to permissions of privacy violations, etc. I don't understand why this isn't still important. It was important in August 2001. It was important on September 10th 2001.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

Comment Our politicians hate us... (Score 1) 148

Our politicians (Obama included) continue to say we need more STEM education. They also continue to expand H1-B visas. What does this mean? It means a hypersaturation of the workforce. This merely reduces the value of the most passionate and educated people in the country. We don't need more STEM. We need more reasons for STEM educated people to exist.

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