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China

Where China's Weibo Beats Facebook and Twitter 68

HansonMB writes with this excerpt: "Launched in 2009, the micro-blogging service is owned by Chinese interweb behemoth Sina Corp, which happens to be the same company that partnered with Google before their deals famously floundered (cf those anxieties) and Google hightailed out of China (before coming back of course). Weibo is often described as a Facebook-Twitter hybrid, but anyone who takes a closer look can easily see that it's a different beast entirely. Actually, I would argue Weibo is better than both. Here's a breakdown of its standout features—some of which Google Plus has already included, and others that I'd love to see incorporated soon."

Comment Re:Not to mention (Score 1) 190

I'm not sure it works that way. I don't think XBL points are like the gold standard. I mean, you pay $20USD for however many points-- say 500 (Totally made up numbers here, but $0.04 USD per point). The transaction is done at that point, and Microsoft banks the cash, even if you don't spend your points for six months. It's not like you buy your premium horse armor for 415 points, but Microsoft still has to keep $3.40 in escrow to cover the "value" of your unspent points.

In my opinion the number one reason to do this is to decouple the idea of physical value from points. You don't have $3.40 in your XBL wallet, you have 85 points, and when you spend those 85 points to buy some pretty pixels on your screen you're not thinking about the fact that it was once $3.40. The second reason is exactly so they DON'T have to do what you're saying-- have fractional portions of a customer's unspent money laying around. If you still have $3.40 in your account at some point and you stop playing XBL, you're going to try to finagle a refund. When you have 85 Points it's easier for you to let go, because you're already been separated from the idea of it having physical value. The third big reason is that it allows a microtransaction model without paying tons of credit car processing fees. They'd rather sell you 1000 points up front even if you only spend them 100 at a time, rather than pay 10 times the processing fees using credit cards up front for every purchase.

Comment Re:Bad. (Score 1) 932

Nothing to do with driving. It's a god given right not to pay taxes, and then complain about the deficit to GDP ratio. Too many Americans don't realize that taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society, and that the US has the lowest taxes of any industrialized country in the world.

Comment Re:"Music Genre" nonsense (Score 1) 101

Then the execs would claim it was "a new genre that didn't stand the test of time," rather than saying, "it was a fragile new idea that we raped over and over until it could only sit in a corner; clutching its knees in catatonic horror and soiling itself. Next please." The fans didn't abandon music games. Companies like Activision took the fans for fools and pumped out overpriced garbage.

Comment Too Little Too Late (Score 1) 135

I'm in the market for an ereader right now. I've considered everything from the Kobo (I'm in Canada) to the iPad; weighing the pros and cons of LED screens versus eInk, etc. I've decided to buy an eInk device for a few reasons (I'm a heavy reader so I benefit more from the specific pros of those devices), and I'll do so in the next month. I mention this in case Jeff Bezos is trolling Slashdot, because I won't be buying a Kindle, and the reason is almost 100% because of the lack of ePub support. I don't want Amazon telling me that they will deign to allow me to borrow Kindle books from libraries. I want to be borrowing the ePub books that my library is already lending anyway.

I've pretty much ruled out the Kobo because of the difficulty of entering text (which I don't see myself doing very often, but it's plausible), and so I've decided I'm most likely going to be getting a Nook. I'm in Canada. There are no Barnes & Noble stores here, but the device works fine if you don't need 3G support. This means I'm willing to make a 6 hour round trip to buy a device from Amazon's competitor (to skip dealing with high shipping fees and Customs crap) because of one feature that could have easily been added in software updates by now, and which they seem to be totally obstinate in not adding. You don't need a partner program with 11,000 US libraries when you can just add ePub support and, poof, suddenly your device can work with what thousands of libraries are already doing.

I think Amazon is suffering from Not Invented Here syndrome, and if they're not careful they're going to get thrashed in the market they invented. They'll end up like Diamond and Creative, who were early to the MP3 player market right at the time when the demand had bubbled up to that magical point where a device can really take off, but got destroyed because another company did it better.

Comment Re:Status bar? (Score 1) 181

Artificially inflate version number? What the heck does that even mean? It's still going to be "Firefox 4" when it hits release. No one stupid enough to care about "it's version 12!" is smart enough to be downloading a beta. It's not like they're pulling a Slackware or something and going with Firefox 7, or worse, Firefox XP, or Firefox 2011.

Comment Re:Its not the speed that is the problem. (Score 1) 1026

The major advantages of Amtrak are lack of security and the space. Sadly, for high speed trains, I'm sure the first will be removed, and who knows about the second.

Do you know how much kinetic energy a train has moving at 250mph? What, do you want terrorists hijacking trains and driving them into skyscrapers? Why don't you love America? :(

Comment Re:Its not the speed that is the problem. (Score 1) 1026

force a radical shakeup of the frieght companies operating priorities

Do you like drinking orange juice while it's still fresh? Do you like being able to buy a mango in Boston in December? Then don't fuck with the railroads. I'm in Canada in February and I can get fresh pineapple, and if you fuck with that I WILL CUT YOU.
First Person Shooters (Games)

Fox News Brings Video Game Violence Debate To a New Low 421

Fox News took another shot at the video game violence debate earlier this week when they asked whether Bulletstorm, an upcoming M-rated shooter from Epic Games, is the worst game in the world. The article links violent games with an increase in rapes, and suggests there should be greater penalties for selling to minors. Gaming website Rock, Paper, Shotgun breaks down the problems with the article's sensationalist claims and highlights the disingenuous cherry-picking of quotes. "Scott Steinberg, CEO of TechSavvy Global, and all-round industry guru, got in touch with me to show me the answers he submitted to Fox when they approached him for comment. The full answers are reproduced below, because what results is a fantastic interview on the subject of adult game content and regulation. Fox chose to use none of Steinberg’s comments in their final piece, opting instead for the more sensational claims of those with no expertise in the subject (neither of whom have found time to reply to our emails). But seeing these answers also provides further insight into how the mainstream media coverage of gaming stories works. Far from being a reporter ignorant of the subject and twisted by naive contributors, Fox correspondent John Brandon was equipped with a wealth of factual information and informed opinion before composing his frantic article."

Comment Re:Yes! (Score 2) 104

they've required stations here to censor Dire Straits "Money for Nothing", despite that the song is written as a monologue describing the actual views of a real person of rock stars from the 80s.

You don't think the lyric "that little faggot's got his own jet airplane. that little faggot he's a millionaire" might be worthy of censoring? I'm a big Dire Straits fan, but I can see why they don't want that playing at drive time. At least that makes sense. I want to know who turned the radio version of Eminem's "Love the Way You Lie" from-- "I'm gonna tie her to the bed and set this house on fire" to "I'm gonna ___ her to the ___ and ___ this ___ on _____".

Comment Re:Right on! (Score 1) 364

And then add in that on top of your line speed limit AND your monthly cap, they also use DPI to do heavy throttling. A lot of us up here would have simply dealt with either caps OR speed limits OR throttling, but we starting seeing red when we're expected to tolerate all three. While prices keep going UP.

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