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Comment Re:Fuck Geohot (Score 1) 220

Why the geek expects the gamer to join him at the barricades now is beyond me.

Well, to me this isn't about "Fuck Games, I want mah Linux!", this is about the legal right to do as you please with your own property, and this is something that I would think is in everybody's interest. But instead we've seen gamers ride to the defense of Sony, forfeiting their rights as consumers, in favor of getting their latest game-fix. Most arguments I've seen are along the lines of "Piracy is bad!" (Don't get me wrong, Piracy is bad, but the lengths some people go to decry it are astounding), or "Well, now PSN will be full of Hackers. And to me, those arguments pale in comparison to what Sony is trying to establish as some sort of "standard practice", and why that is bad. And I guess that on some level, I expected some overlap between the Gamer and the Geek, but I guess I was wrong.

Comment Re:Competition (Score 1) 142

True. But as a dev, you'd want to expose your product on as many markets as possible, and I fear that some devs may not be too careful about what license aggreements they accept, and bam, suddenly the entire gaming community is tied up in ridiculous licensing distputes. But I may just be a bit pessimistic, I dunno...

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 531

And in the real world, who cares about speed?

Now what I wonder, should we care about speed? As many others have pointed out, getting from point A to point B as quickly as possible seems to have become somewhat irrelevant. Nowadays when everybody and their dog is carrying a smartphone, capable of processing, sending and receiving large amounts of information, "on-the-go", the need to physically be in another location seems to decrease.

Comment Re:Now if only... (Score 1) 90

I can definitely see something like this happening in the future, hell, just recently we got the Google +1 button, the EVE Online forums recently added a "native" (i.e. not linked to Facebook) like button. Not to mention all the Facebook "like" buttons strewn all over the web. But to summarize, I think we will be seeing a lot more "native" like-functions appear over the web, especially on forums and other sites aimed primarily at discussion. If nothing else, it may help cut down spam and "me too" posts.

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