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Bug

Are Complex Games Doomed To Have Buggy Releases? 362

An anonymous reader points out a recent article at Gamesradar discussing the frequency of major bugs and technical issues in freshly-released video games. While such issues are often fixed with updates, questions remain about the legality and ethics of rushing a game to launch. Quoting: "As angry as you may be about getting a buggy title, would you want the law to get involved? Meglena Kuneva, EU Consumer Affairs Commissioner, is putting forward legislation that would legally oblige digital game distributors to give refunds for games, putting games in the same category in consumer law as household appliances. ... This call to arms has been praised by tech expert Andy Tanenbaum, author of books like Operating Systems: Design and Implementation. 'I think the idea that commercial software be judged by the same standards as other commercial products is not so crazy,' he says. 'Cars, TVs, and telephones are all expected to work, and they are full of software. Why not standalone software? I think such legislation would put software makers under pressure to first make sure their software works, then worry about more bells and whistles.'"
Businesses

MySpace Buys and Then Takes Down Imeem 165

Conchobair was one of several users letting us know that Myspace has snapped up free music streaming site imeem. Visitors to the imeem site are being sent to a MySpace redirect page, which states that they are "working to migrate your imeem playlist to MySpace Music." Currently there is no way to access imeem music or playlists or to make use of imeem apps on Android or iPhone. The AP reports that the deal was done for less than $1M — not bad for 16M subscribers — noting that the music startup was running out of cash. PC Mag notes: "Last week it was announced that Apple had purchased Lala, and now MySpace snaps up imeem. Are Pandora and Rhapsody next?"
Security

Submission + - Schneier: We need better un-authentication (threatpost.com)

Trailrunner7 writes: "Bruce Schenier writes on Threatpost.com: In computer security, a lot of effort is spent on the authentication problem. Whether it is passwords, secure tokens, secret questions, image mnemonics, or something else, engineers are continually coming up with more complicated — and hopefully more secure — ways for you to prove you are who you say you are over the Internet. This is important stuff, as anyone with an online bank account or remote corporate network knows. But a lot less thought and work have gone into the other end of the problem: how do you tell the system on the other end of the line that you are no longer there? How do you unauthenticate yourself? My home computer requires me to log out or turn my computer off when I want to unauthenticate. This works for me because I know enough to do it, but lots of people just leave their computer on and running when they walk away. As a result, many office computers are left logged in when people go to lunch, or when they go home for the night. This, obviously, is a security vulnerability."
Idle

Submission + - Idiot PC sales staff exposed (pcpro.co.uk) 3

Barence writes: "An undercover investigation has revealed how Dell's online sales staff take liberties with the truth when trying to sell customers new PCs. One member of staff told an undercover reporter that he would need a PC with a good graphics card to download digital photos. Another, who was more incompetent than devious, was asked how many photos could be stored on a 250GB hard disk. "Its[sic] on average 2 MB then 1024 MB * 2," came the bewildering reply. Meanwhile, a sales assistant at supermarket Tesco told the reporter that netbooks got their name because "a Japanese man on a plane fell asleep with a laptop on his thighs and was horribly burned, so the industry has dropped the name laptop.""

Comment Re:Oh no!! (Score 1) 791

I've used Gentoo since 2004 as my main Operating System, and i really liked it. But it has some serious flaws that disqualify it from beeing this "One size fits all" Distribution.
Compile time of packages
Nobody want's to wait a couple of hours for firefox to be installed (I know of binary packages but portage defines Source based installation as standard)
Broken ebuilds
I've spent countless hours struggling those x11-apps/whatever version 4.51 is missing a dependency on Perl6::Junction or has to be built with dependency X which pulls 30 new packages i never wanted.
Usability
Or lack of it. Compiz on Gentoo? Ext4/Reiser4 with Gentoo? Tuxonice with Gentoo? - No Problem, just Google it and get a huge coffee pot.
Recent Builds
In 2004/05 Gentoo was full of Bleeding Edge Software Ebuilds, but now you have to go ~arch and add Overlays to get things running that Fedora/Suse adds since months.

Comment Re:Noone likes DRM (Score 1) 1276

5.1 surround system

Forget "5.1 surround system". It needs to be good enough to resolve the differences between an mp3 and a CD.

Actually most people are not able to differ CDDA and a MP3 File encoded with 128kbps through a reasonable modern encoder. OTOH Multichannel Audio definitely enhances Home Cinema Systems.

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The computer is to the information industry roughly what the central power station is to the electrical industry. -- Peter Drucker

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