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Comment Good and bad (Score 5, Insightful) 660

My company is in the architectural visualisation sector, so that means we are utterly dependant on Autodesk AND Adobe software. Lucky us! The subscription system has it's pros and cons. Pros are that you get the latest and greatest technologies as soon as they become available (and bugs ofc). Cons is you are totally at their mercy, and in certain cases we pay much more than we used to. To be honest, I'm not so bothered about Adobe, their software is still cheap, as far as I'm concerned, and Photoshop is one of the most refined and evolved tools I've ever used (been using it professionally since v2.0). As for Autodesk, they are total price-gouging bastards. The money we have to spend - and make no bones about it, we HAVE to spend - on 3DS Max is outrageous. If there was a realistic alternative, we'd move in a flash. Except that would probably be owned by Autodesk too.

Comment It's not 'broken' (Score 1) 258

I don't think the term 'broken' is correct when it comes to describing the App Store. Technically it works absolutely fine. If I want an app, and know roughly what it's called, I can always find it. The process of buying the app or freely downloading it works flawlessly. There's nothing 'broken' about that. However, I would call the design and layout of it 'completely shit' or 'goddamn terrible'. But not 'broken'.

Comment Re:The Guardian (Score 1) 361

Fully agreed. In fact I wish the Guardian would go behind a paywall to make more money, as they have famously been losing millions every year by giving away their entire paper on the web for nothing. I really don't want to see them go bust, their news coverage is amongst the most important in the world. There is no reason not to pay for journalism and writing of their quality.

Comment UK Sales of Goods act (Score 1) 156

If you're in the UK it's always worth remembering that the Sales of Goods Act cover electrical goods for up to 6 (or is it 7?) years depending upon the product's application. Recently I quoted it to Quantum to get them to replace our knackered DLT S4 drive that packed up after about 4 year's use. I argued that since it was an enterprise product it was reasonable to assume it should last the full 6 years. They agreed surprisingly quickly and replaced the unit with a new one. A friend of mine used the same tactic on Apple with a broken Time Capsule that was also out of warranty - same result, quote the Sales of Goods Act and they'll give you a replacement.

Comment They practically forced me to do this (Score 1) 261

Previous to this news I had no interest in the Driver series, and had no plans on buying this title - it just isn't my sort of game. However, in light of Ubisoft behaving like such massive dicks, I feel compelled to retalliate in kind, and download a cracked bittorrent of this game, and give copies of it to everyone I know.

Comment Absolute Garbage (Score 1) 342

The longer the game, the better, as far as I'm concerned. Just thinking about spending £40 on a game like MW2 that has a 10 hour campaign makes my blood boil. All of my favourite games are long, all the Zeldas, GTAs, Elder Scrolls etc. This is what games should be like, and I will always buy them and never pirate them. Any game that's what I consider to be too short I will grab a bittorrent of, as I refuse to line the pockets of lazy-ass developers.

Comment Isn't it strange... (Score 1) 169

...how Intel can make an all-new architecture socket-compatiable with the previous generation for an enterprise product that no-one's interested in, yet they can't manage this with their consumer products? e.g. Sandy Bridge. It's almost as if they're taking advantage of their market dominance by screwing us all over!

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