Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment No it isn't (Score 1) 297

12" is the perfect size for many people who want the smallest possible laptop that they can still be productive on (i.e. type on comfortably). 12" laptops are a product with a market and that market probably doesn't care whether the product is called a netbook or a notebook or whatever.
Games

Why Video Games Are Having a Harder Time With Humor 202

Kotaku is running an opinion piece discussing why video games are having a harder time being funny as they've shifted away from text-driven adventures and toward graphics-intensive environments. "As technology improved, things began to get more serious. With the rise of 3D technology a strong focus was put on making games look good, delivering a more realistic — and often darker — experience to the player. Cartoonish comedic games became more of a novelty than the norm. Few titles, such as Rare's Conker's Bad Fur Day for the Nintendo 64, fully embraced humor." The article also talks about how the trend could soon reverse itself. LucasArts' Dave Grossman said, "As the games get smarter and start paying attention to more things about what the player is actually doing, using that ability not just to create challenges but to create humorous moments will be pretty cool. Eventually I expect to be out of a job over that."

Comment none (Score 1) 739

my first experience with Linux was that it didn't work. my second, third, fourth and fifth experiences, each with about a year between them and the last one Ubunti 08.04, were all the same. every time you read that Linux has now become so easy it works out of the box, and yet every time on my hardware (which changes over time) there is some component that just doesn't work (unless you're already a Linux adept or are prepared to invest hours of your time) - usually the wireless network. that's what the Linux experiene is like for me, and for many other people I bet.

Comment Re:The difference between... (Score 1) 628

As a pescetarian, let me assure you on behalf of my people that we would love for the rest of the world to learn the word "pescetarian" so we can actually use that word. Also, would you be so kind as to only label pescetarians as hypochrites when they claim they don't cause animal suffering?

Comment Re:Unfortunately, activism isn't always good (Score 1) 303

Or, we could give up our colonial arrogance and stop supporting murderous dictatorships who eliminate all democratic opposition - circumstances in which only the kind of extremists you talk about can survive and become the only voice of opposition. Look how well suppressing democracy by supporting the Shah has worked in Iran. Look how well suppressing democracy by supporting Mobutu has worked in Congo. The West makes the same mistake again and again: it suppresses democracy and supports dictatorships who are more friendly to our interests, and then acts all surprised when the whole thing blows up. The arrogance to blaim it all on the local people and label them savages who are incapable of peaceful democracy is staggering.

Comment Re:Highlights one of the problems.. (Score 1) 195

You're assuming your experience with GMail is representative for everyone's. My own experience is that it *always* works 100% without any problems whatsoever and that it is much more user-friendly than the Outlook/Exchange email service provided by my employer (a big IT services company). I'll bet you that my impression of Gmail is more common than yours.
PlayStation (Games)

Submission + - PS3 losing ground in Japan

Krommenaas writes: "Last week's sales figures from Japan show the PS3 dramatically losing the console battle in Japan, the home market of both Sony and Nintendo. The PS3 loses out 6:1 to the Wii in hardware sales and a whopping 30:1 in software sales (325,619 for the Wii vs. 10,412 for the PS3). Not a single PS3 title is in the top 50 of best sold games, while Nintendo occupies the top 19 spots with DS and Wii titles."

Slashdot Top Deals

The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh

Working...