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User: Kunedog

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  1. Lied about Openness on Crowdfunded Android Console Ouya Reportedly Seeking Buyout · · Score: 1

    It isn't worth $100. The controller is crap, the unit overheats, and you can get more powerful android sticks for less.

    And you shouldn't even buy one hoping to hack it either.

    Here's what the Kickstarter page said about openness and hackability:

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ouya/ouya-a-new-kind-of-video-game-console

    Hackers welcome. Have at it: It's easy to root (and rooting won't void your warranty). Everything opens with standard screws. Hardware hackers can create their own peripherals, and connect via USB or Bluetooth. You want our hardware design? Let us know. We might just give it to you. Surprise us!

    But close to release, I decided to never buy one after I learned that the company didn't support a genuine end user recovery mode, and witnessed an Ouya employee (Al Sutton) berating and insulting the customers who insisted on one.

    His attitude about custom firmware was shocking as well.

    From a long-dead ouyaforum.com thread:

    I'm keeping a track of how many requests we get relating custom firmware, and from what I'm seeing the user base is not as interested in custom firmware as you might think, which is echoed by this thread (we've shipped 60,000+ units, and less than 10 people have commented in the last month in this thread about getting access to recovery mode).That doesn't mean that we're shooting the idea down, you need to keep in mind that in terms of priorities this is way down the list as you'd expect from any feature where it's being requested by less than one tenth of one percent of the user-base.

    After people began calling Al Sutton out over this and citing the Kickstarter page to him, he made things even worse by implying that root access was a priviledge and that Ouya was doing modders a special favor by having it, and that Ouya hadn't promised much of anything (instead attempting to compare the console's openness to that of consoles you can buy at Gamestop).

    As for "Open"; Well, a year or so ago the idea of going into a gaming centric store like GameStop or Game, buying a console, taking it home, writing a game on it, and publishing it without spending big money on development kits, licensing, and the like was pretty much non-existant. That's where OUYA is open; It's open to anyone to write games and apps without having to pay dev kit and licensing fees, it's open in that once you have your console you can code for it.
    The reason you can still simply get root access is that I've seen people want to tinker beyond what most users would do. OUYA could stick to what was originally put on the Kickstarter page and take away root from non-devkits, but I, for one, would be against that, because I've seen that people do use it constructively and responsibly, and not everyone bricks their device then raises a support ticket to try and get OUYA to fix it.

    It really floored me to read this a week before Ouya's launch, given the kickstarter page's promises of hackability.

    Anyone with a reflashable phone (or any pretty much any other Android device whatsoever capable of using custom ROMS) knows that a real recovery mode is absolutely essential, in case the OS/kernel gets borked. And a functioning non-OS-dependant recovery mode isn't just important for hackers. It could also be the difference between a faulty official update merely inconveniencing you, or outright bricking your console. Ouya's supposed "recovery mode" relies on an already-bootable OS, so it's useless.

    Even worse was the principle of the thing, and the evil behaviour of promising a feature from the beginning, then trying to handwave it away at crunchtime and citing a vague low demand (which wouldn't matter even if true). It reeks of Elite:Dangerous, which announced that they disabled the offline mode right before release.

  2. I See it made it to GoG.com DRM-free on Kerbal Space Program 1.0 Released After 4 Years of Development · · Score: 0

    While this feels a bit like a slashvertisement, I'll let it slide for a game this good.

  3. Customer Revolts on Valve Pulls the Plug On Paid Mods For Skyrim · · Score: 1

    Customer revolts are wonderful things.

  4. Shady Misinformation About Real Name Policy Too on Google Insiders Talk About Why Google+ Failed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yep, if you want me to participate in an online community in a lasting and meaningful way, there's no way in hell I'm using my real name.

    Even worse, Google tried to confuse the issue (i.e. talk out of both sides of its mouth) by drawing a practically meaningless distinction between your "real" name and your common" name. See, your common name is "the name that you commonly go by in daily life," as opposed to your real name which is . . . fuck if I know. IMO, it was intentional double speak so they could claim "it's not actually a real name policy" whenever convenient.

    Add to that at least one false start of rescinding the policy (is this one for real? Who knows?), and it's no wonder most of the internet judged them no more trustworthy (and of course potentially far more dangerous) than Facebook.

  5. 2D Fusion Reactor Too on Tesla To Announce Battery-Based Energy Storage For Homes · · Score: 1
    Lockheed's fusion reactor was reported the same way:

    http://hardware.slashdot.org/s...

    The company says it has proved the feasibility of building a 100MW reactor measuring only 7 feet by 10 feet.

    Is there something about energy tech that makes people afraid to mention a third dimension (other than time, of course)?

  6. Different Set of Rules on Gen. Petraeus To Be Sentenced To Two Years Probation and Fine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think we will find there is one rulebook for punishing people like Snowden, and another for VIPs like Petraeus. And yet another (very thin) one for super ultra-VIPs like Clinton.

  7. Definitely Bigger Than Games on Twitter Rolls Out New Anti-Abuse Tools · · Score: 1

    Sorry this comes so late, but yes, there are reasons to care about Gamergate even if you don't care about video games. How about the censorship campaign that compromised vast swarths of the internet, including nearly the entire games press, Reddit and no less than 4chan itself for fuck's sake. The fact that there exists a faction willing and able to carry out such a campaign is IMO the most revealing (and shocking) part of efforts to stomp Gamergate out of existence. For anyone who witnessed it firsthand, “Nobody is going to take your games away” makes for a rather trite and feeble reassurance.

    Hopefully you can also be persuaded to care about journalists giving positive coverage to their friends without disclosing those relationships. And to care about journalists printing misinformation to push an agenda, instead of simply reporting the news. Read up on Rolling Stone's fake UVA rape story if you haven't already. The parallels to the Gamergate scandal are uncanny, and neither can be explained away by a mere lack of understanding on the journalists' part. And take notice of how many articles, even after the story was known to be horseshit, still try to push forward a ""silver lining" narrative that RS's reporting "raised awareness" about the "important issue" of "rape culture" on campus.

    And it's not just games they want to dictate the content of. This has happened in comics, sci-fi, atheism, music . . . pretty much any subculture they think they can get away with co-opting and controlling. If that still doesn't hit close enough to home, remember that Slashdot ownership/editors have proven to be on the pro-corruption and pro-censorship side of the Gamergate controversy (in a total 180 from /.'s anti-Jack-Thompson days), and therefore you haven't been allowed to read a single article here describing anything in my GP post (i.e. anything about the actual journalism scandal). And that kind of censorship probably isn't limited to game content either.

    Hope that helps.

  8. It Remains a Journalism Scandal. Deal With It. on Twitter Rolls Out New Anti-Abuse Tools · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nice try. "Thanks to gamergate", three women have been forced from their homes from threats that law enforcement officers found credible enough to suggest that. Trying to pretend that gamergate has done anything but abuse people defines you as - at best - an imbecile.

    It causes you physical pain that few here buy into the "mysogyny and harrassment" narrative, doesn't it?

    The cover-up didn't work.
    The week-long gaming press news blackout and ongoing user comment/forum censorship (in former free-speech strongholds such as 4chan and Reddit, no less) didn't work.
    The coordinated, ongoing smear campaign that began with the "Gamers are Over" articles hasn't worked.
    The endless train of embarrassingly desperate counter-hashtags hasn't worked.
    The Wikipedia and Nightline hit pieces only damage those outlets' credibility for short-term effect.
    The SVU episode . . . hahaahhahaha WOW, where do I even begin . . . it is progapanda that couldn't be more precisely crafted to the corrupt press's specifications (i.e. "narrative"), and broadcast to a national non-gamer audience, much of which likely accepted it as reality. It was a wake-up call to quite a few previously unaware or neutral parties, especially game devs*.

    Eurogamer is the latest games journalism site to update its ethics policy in the wake of Gamergate, joining PC Gamer, IGN, the Escapist, and of course Kotaku/Gawker (though in Gawker's case, they put up more of a fight and the Gamergate pressure to be ethical had to be routed through the FTC).

    Gamergate also got Brad Wardell (CEO of Stardock) some long-overdue apologies for hit pieces run against him:
    https://twitter.com/iamDavidWi...
    http://www.gamepolitics.com/20...
    http://www.zenofdesign.com/in-...

    Ask yourself how much of this you've seen reported in the corrupt media (which at this point, sadly, clearly includes Slashdot). Of course none of it ever had a chance of appearing in the Wikipedia article. Nothing enrages anti-Gamergaters more than someone covering both sides of the story, and that should tell you something.

    Their side thrives only in an environment of propaganda and censorship, and evaporates when faced with integrity and transparency. They prove the need for Gamergate every time they write an article based on the assumption that terrorism and child porn^W^W^W^W misogyny and harassment have become the root passwords to the Constitution^W^W journalistic ethics.


    * like Mark Kern and Ken Levine, who had nothing to do with Gamergate, but were so disgusted by the SVU episode that they publically called on the gaming press to stop slandering gamers. Both were instantly swarmed by anti-GG on twitter, and VG24/7 ran a hit piece on Kern without even getting his side of the story, and refused even after he specifically asked them. I think Eurogamer saw exactly what happened to Kern, and it's no accident that tha

  9. Sorry, Millions Have Caught onto the SJWs Game Now on Twitter Rolls Out New Anti-Abuse Tools · · Score: 0

    Yeah, it's utterly unacceptable that people complain about rape and death threats.

    It is unacceptable to pretend that only one side of a controversy is receiving those threats, and blaming the other side for them without evidence. Doubly unacceptable, if you're a supposed journalist doing that.

    BTW: at this point SJW doesn't actually mean anything. It's just used as a "shit I hate on the internet" invective. There is no consistency in its use and people use it as a means of either rabble rousing or ad-homenim by trying to shut down a debate by flinging poo rather than actually engaging in a rational discussion.

    Like your post for example.

    No, SJW has gone mainstream with its core meaning intact: someone makes a show of standing up against oppression, but through their actions proves to be little more than a self-serving narcissist, seeking out offense even where there is none and making a mountain out of petty bullshit.

    It's a play on "keyboard warrior" but the phrase itself is mostly irrelevant. I didn't always know why "mouthbreather" was considered an insult until I had a couple of them as coworkers for a while. No doubt for a lot of people, Gamergate has been similarly enlightening with regard to the term "Social Justice Warrior."

    If you're looking for a word that has lost a lot of meaning through misuse while gaining popularity, see "troll."

  10. HTML5 on Google To Offer Ad-Free YouTube - At a Price · · Score: 2

    Just download an ad-blocker.

    I wonder if they are planning some anti-adblocker measures, or if they are just unaware that their business plan is completely flawed.

    How fortunate that, as a browser maker (along with Microsoft and Apple), they've coincidentally pushed for DRM to become part of web standards.

    And that they obtained considerable financial influence over the browser maker thought most likely to resist (Mozilla).

    And that Mozilla gave in.

  11. If Only on Sony Buys, Shuts Down OnLive · · Score: 1

    Sony didn't come in heavy handed and Buy On Live then shut it down. The headline is overly flattering to Sony

    FTFY. Seriously, I would praise any company that ruthlessly did what you describe (as long as it didn't benefit the Onlive scamsters, as the typical buyout would).

  12. 100% DRM. Always Was. on Sony Buys, Shuts Down OnLive · · Score: 1

    This is how I always explain streaming games to people who can't immediately see the horrible problems with it:

    Imagine if the Ubisoft always-on DRM were an inherent, unremoveable aspect of the game system rather than just something tacked on to a few individual games after the fact, such that Ubisoft couldn't even begrudgingly neuter it in a patch. Well, a streamed game is even worse than that would be.

    All you get is streaming video/audio and all the lag you'd expect (including controller lag), which is a recipe for disaster in North America. And any interruption in the connection that lasts more than a few tenths of a second is going to be behave like the equivalent of a "freeze" or "hang" that you'd NEVER tolerate in a properly local-hosted game. Not even the most twitchy DRM existing today has that problem.

    Some people consider IPS monitors unsuitable for games requiring fast reflexes (i.e. FPSes) due to their double-digit response times. Internet latency is often worse and certainly more unpredictable than LCD monitor response time, and with Onlive, etc. it applies to audio and keyboard/controller/etc input too.

    Then there are the bandwidth requirements.

    Let's say you're lucky enough to have a 30mb/s connection. Why would you want to use it to transfer your game's video instead of, uh, a DVI cable, which is capable of 4 Gb/s? The people who developed DVI apparently understood that that 1920 x 1200 pixels w/ 24 bits/pixels @ 60Hz results in bandwidth well over 3 Gb/s. The people who developed streamed games seem very, very confused (at best).

    Those of us who know anything about bandwidth and compression and (especially) latency can see the enormous technical obstacles facing a service like this, and Onlive never did anything to explain how they intended to solve them. Instead, they did everything they could to lock out independent reviewers with NDAs and closed demonstrations. A friend of mine described it as the gaming equivalent of the perpetual motion scam, and IMO that's spot on (except that Onlive would still have the draconian DRM issues even if it worked perfectly).

    Streamed games appear designed from the ground up to benefit the game publishers and fuck the customers, exactly what you'd expect from any DRM system.

    P.S. If Microsoft intended 24-hour XBox One check-ins were DOA, how the fuck are mandatory check ins going to fly when measured in milliseconds?

  13. SpaceShipTwo on Why the Final Moments Inside a Cockpit Are Heard But Not Seen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    An interesting note is that we do have cockpit video of the SpaceShipTwo disaster because no such union was involved, and it did seem to result in useful information. Still not sure which side of the issue I land on. I know I wouldn't want to be videotaped 24/7 at work.

  14. Narrative, Not News on Win Or Lose, Discrimination Suit Is Having an Effect On Silicon Valley · · Score: 2

    All the bullshit about a patriarchy and rape culture is exactly bullshit. Most women get it and ignore the feminists, so why the fuck are our politicians and media outlets giving them so much air time hmm? I believe the answer is what I started with.. people in power want us pitted against each other and the argument is too simple to latch on to.... if you are a useful idiot that is

    Note that even after we knew the UVA frat rape accusation was horseshit, MSM news articles about it still pushed the talking point that it "raised awareness" and "started a conversation" about "rape culture" and the "epidemic of sexual assault" on campuses. "Win or lose" (i.e. facts be damned) the narrative matters above all else.

  15. Not Too Far Off on Online "Swatting" Becomes a Hazard For Gamers Who Play Live On the Internet · · Score: 1

    The sad thing is that--after seeing the ridiculous smear campaigns in the gaming press against their own audience--I can only be about 80% sure that you're fucking with us.

  16. The Facts Don't Matter Because "Narrative" on The Stolen Credit For What Makes Up the Sun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I know how it sounds to complain that your one submission (out of the many /. receives) didn't get accepted, but I've tried submitting this recent scientific discovery (published in Nature Chemistry) a few times. IMO it's perfect material for Slashdot: a interesting new hypothesis (about a supposedly "well-understood" reaction) put to the test via regularly evolving experiments and apparatuses. And it was even largely funded through Youtube viewers (who the lead scientist thanks in the paper) and documented with (at least one) well-done video.

    But /. never ran it. I can't help but think that part of the problem is that the scientist is Dr. Phil Mason, aka thunderf00t, who is known for his vids that expose Atheism+ and anti-Gamergate types as fools. Think about the lousy submissions that do often make it on the front page, especially those that push an agenda.

    This is why things like Gamergate (and Slashdot's atrocious coverage of it) matter, even if you yourself don't personally care about videogames; it is a fight against neo-puritans who want to filter ALL types of content (not just games, comics, music, movies, etc) you're allowed to see, and refuse to acknowledge the work of those who don't buy into the "narrative."

    P.S. Clearly I'm biased, so if any of you think that my article submission is unworthy for some other reason, let me know (seriously).

  17. Barney on Gabe Newell Understands Half-Life Fans, Not Promising Any Sequels · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just announce Half Life 2: Episode Three: Blue Shift 2. You once again play as Barney, this time explaining where he was and what he was doing in Episode Two. Everyone would love you for this.

  18. They Don't Have Evidence on Twitter Adds Tool To Report Tweets To the Police · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here's an interesting vid:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... That is direct video evidence of an anti-GG Sarkeesian supporter threatening physical violence against a pro-GG guy. Everyone knows that if the other side had evidence one tenth as damning, we would never hear the end of it, ever, across dozens (probably hundreds) of sites.

    So it's the same old song for Slashdot's abysmal Gamergate coverage:

    http://tech.slashdot.org/comme...

    Try this: link to the /. article that covers the Gamergate scandal without screaming about misogyny and harassment. You can't. And that's because overall, the Slashdot readership doesn't buy the "misogyny and harassment" narrative for one second. The editors quickly discovered that the discussion thread for any article that straightforwardly mentions Gamergate--even if it's one-sided [slashdot.org]--couldn't be trusted to go the way the editors demand.

    For a while, they found limited success by posting articles with the template "misogyny, harassment, threats, misogyny, harassment, threats . . . oh btw Gamergate" (i.e. a br But even that's not working anymore, and the editors' credibility on this issue is shot. Permanently.

    Slashdot wants desperately to cover Gamergate, but doesn't want to be honest and up front that it's doing so, and especially that it's taking the pro-corruption side. In the early weeks, they even tried to participate in the blackout, which led to almost every article about gaming at all becoming a Gamergate thread. The editors/ownership knew damn well what they were doing, and it's silly to blame anyone else for the consequences of refusing to cover Gamergate, except with propaganda.

    This is one of those articles that follows that tired template. Make no mistake, it's about Gamergate and the editors damn well know it; they're just too scared to say so.

  19. Solar Nuclear on SimCity's Empire Has Fallen and Skylines Is Picking Up the Pieces · · Score: 1

    Lack of a Day Night Cycle(days just go by too fast).

    The 24/7 sunshine also makes it possible for solar to best nuclear as the endgame power source (no, I'm not kidding).

  20. It Remains a Journalism Scandal. Deal With It. on Twitter Will Ban Revenge Porn and Non-consensual Nudes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The cover-up didn't work.
    The week-long gaming press news blackout and ongoing user comment/forum censorship (in former free-speech strongholds such as 4chan and Reddit, no less) didn't work.
    The coordinated, ongoing smear campaign that began with the "Gamers are Over" articles hasn't worked.
    The doxxing and harassment of pro-GG folks hasn't worked.
    The endless train of embarrassingly desperate counter-hashtags hasn't worked.
    The Wikipedia and Nightline hit pieces only damage those outlets' credibility for short-term effect.
    The SVU episode . . . hahaahhahaha WOW, where do I even begin . . . it is progapanda that couldn't be more precisely crafted to the corrupt press's specifications (i.e. "narrative"), and broadcast to a national non-gamer audience, much of which likely accepted it as reality. It was a wake-up call to quite a few previously unaware or neutral parties, especially game devs*.

    Eurogamer is the latest games journalism site to update its ethics policy in the wake of Gamergate, joining PC Gamer, IGN, the Escapist, and of course Kotaku/Gawker (though in Gawker's case, they put up more of a fight and the Gamergate pressure to be ethical had to be routed through the FTC). And there are probably more I'm forgetting.

    Gamergate also got Brad Wardell (CEO of Stardock) some long-overdue apologies for hit pieces run against him:
    https://twitter.com/iamDavidWi...
    http://www.gamepolitics.com/20...
    http://www.zenofdesign.com/in-...

    Ask yourself how much of this you've seen reported in the corrupt media (which at this point, sadly, clearly includes Slashdot). Of course none of it ever had a chance of appearing in the Wikipedia article. Nothing enrages anti-Gamergaters more than someone covering both sides of the story, and that should tell you something.

    Their side thrives only in an environment of propaganda and censorship, and evaporates when faced with integrity and transparency. They prove the need for Gamergate every time they write an article based on the assumption that terrorism and child porn^W^W^W^W misogyny and harassment have become the root passwords to the Constitution^W^W journalistic ethics.


    * like Mark Kern and Ken Levine, who had nothing to do with Gamergate, but were so disgusted by the SVU episode that they publically called on the gaming press to stop slandering gamers. Both were instantly swarmed by anti-GG on twitter, and VG24/7 ran a hit piece on Kern without even getting his side of the story, and refused even after he specifically asked them. I think Eurogamer saw exactly what happened to Kern, and it's no accident that that their policy explicitly includes a "right of reply" (perhaps a subtle message that they won't similarly treat game devs like shit).

  21. Let's Fix That on Endurance Experiment Kills Six SSDs Over 18 Months, 2.4 Petabytes · · Score: 1

    the results suggest the NAND in modern SSDs has more than enough endurance for consumers

    "Challenge accepted." - some guy trying to invent octo-level-cell flash

  22. Related Articles on Turkish Ministry Recommends Banning Minecraft -- Over Violence · · Score: 1

    So moral guardians want veto power over game content, with spurious justifications . . . the articles in the "You may like to read:" section are particulary relevant this time.

  23. It's Not About Saving on Why We Should Stop Hiding File-Name Extensions · · Score: 1

    The problem isn't not looking at file name extension. It's trusting them. File name extensions are just a convention, and are not prescriptive except on very immature operating systems. There is nothing that prevents a JPEG file from being saved with a .txt name extension.

    I don't care how a file is saved so much as how it's "opened" (e.g. when it's double-clicked), particularly if "opened" == executed. Program files forced to display an "exe" extension to declare their capabilities (no matter their actual contents) can be treated with caution, but extension hiding by the OS ruins this safeguard.

  24. Oh God the Lens Flare, the Blur on Marissa Mayer On Turning Around Yahoo · · Score: 2

    TFA was directed by J.J. Abrams.

  25. FEO on Google Wants To Rank Websites Based On Facts Not Links · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If this ever happens, expect Fact Engine Optimization to become a new industry, and do exactly what SEO did to the reliability and utility of search engines.