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Games

Review Scores the "Least Important Factor" When Buying Games 169

A recent report from a games industry analyst suggests that among a number of factors leading to the purchase of a video game — such as price, graphics and word of mouth — the game's aggregated review score is the least important measure. Analyst Doug Creutz said, "We believe that while Metacritic scores may be correlated to game quality and word of mouth, and thus somewhat predictive of title performance, they are unlikely in and of themselves to drive or undermine the success of a game. We note this, in part, because of persistent rumors that some game developers have been jawboning game reviewers into giving their games higher critical review scores. We believe the publishers are better served by spending their time on the development process than by 'grade-grubbing' after the fact."
Portables

The Truth Behind the Death of Linux On the Netbook 406

eldavojohn writes "Groklaw brings us news of Microsoft holding the smoking gun in regards to the death of Linux on netbooks. You see, the question of Linux on netbooks in Taiwan was put forth to the Taiwan Trade Authority director, who replied, 'In our association we operate as a consortium, like the open source consortium. They want to promote open source and Linux. But if you begin from the PC you are afraid of Microsoft. They try to go to the smart phone or PDA to start again.' It's simple; fear will keep them in line. PJ points out, 'So next time you hear Microsoft bragging that people prefer their software to Linux on netbooks, you'll know better. If they really believed that, they'd let the market speak, on a level playing field. If I say my horse is faster than yours, and you says yours is faster, and we let our horses race around the track, that establishes the point. But if you shoot my horse, that leaves questions in the air. Is your horse really faster? If so, why shoot my horse?'"
Patents

Submission + - The real problem with the US Patent system (washingtonpost.com)

Pachooka-san writes: Saw this article in the Washington Post. IANAPE (I am not a Patent Examiner), but from long discussions with one, it touches on the real patent problem — the quotas that Patent Examiners must meet. They have no effective quality standards, only production standards, so many applications get only cursory review, just so the PE can keep up the grueling pace. The USPTO is the only government agency that can and does lay you off if your productivity drops below 85% of the standard for your civil service grade. A Primary PE has to process 5 new and 5 old applications every 2 weeks (that's 8 hours each, folks). The best part — that 28-box application mentioned in the article? — it gets the PE the same credit as the smallest application — how many of those 28 boxes do you think even got opened?
Security

Submission + - The Trolls of Myspace

blast3r writes: "The Trolls of Myspace Part I
Trolls seem to have taken over part of Myspace over the last several weeks. Intentionally attacking groups of people who object to their disruptive behavior as well as just attacking for the sake of the attack.
So, the definition we have known pertaining to Trolls has been somewhat benign. They come into forums to stir things up. Sure, most people hate trolls because they tend to slow down functionality of forum talks and they are just plain irritating. However, on Myspace, they seem to be evolving into a new breed of Trolls. It was found that Myspace had some weaknesses that would allow them to attack those that griped about their activities."

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