You are an American, better get used to it. Of course they should be allowed to do it, think of the terrorists/pedophiles/hackers. Be a patriot and give them all the fingerprints, DNA, retina scans and personal information they want. It is for your own good.
Ever since Bill Gates left, and possibly a while longer _causing_ him to leave, Microsoft has been a symbol of whats wrong with the economy. Company gets built around an innovative idea by a bunch of enthusiastic experts, grows big because it actually sells useful products that make peoples lives easier. Then it all goes awry, clueless MBA types (hi Ballmer) take over pushed forward by vulture capitalists, monetizing, marketing, market share hogging and patent litigations take over the core business of making useful stuff and the company turns into yet another corporate zombie.
Your Symbian phone has been around for 5+ years. Android and iPhone have been out for almost 2 and Flash still does not work there. This, aside from the obvious software freedom versus proprietary lock-in should be the main reason for switching. I want to play video on my G1 and it is Adobe's fault I can't.
Lol i could smell that 9/11 remark and stupidity insult from sentence one, you nuts have a distinguishingly patronizing trolling style everywhere you go.
Opengl is losing out to Directx because it suffers from the open mentality complex, where everyone gets to mess with everything and it results in much more difficult usage by the game studio guy who needs to sit down and write an engine in it.
Not.
I have been playing Entropia actively from early 2005 till mid 2008 and I have an intense love/hate relationship with them. Let me list my personal pros/cons:
Pros:
Videogame with real money.
CryEngine powered.
No shards, one world.
Mature playerbase, mostly US/EU.
Stable financials, the company is shareholder-friendly.
They are a registered Swedish banking company.
They have a deal with Chinese Cyber Recreation Development Bureau.
Cons:
Addictive as hell.
Quite random, i would say quite close to poker in variance terms.
You will never catch up with the oldskool players, you would have to deposit million $ to get the same items and skills as top people.
Slow innovation, no new core systems for a long time.
Long term tendency to overpromise and underdeliver.
Low new account growth.
They seem to be content with having low amount of heavily hooked players. This is a conservative strategy unusual for a revolutionary company. However, this may be just the right type of approach to make it work. They will probably end up being bought by Microsoft or someone like that if they play their cards right.
I was a member of his society ingame and I can attest he definitely deposited quite a bit over the time. Entropia started back in 2000 and he was one of the top crafters right off the bat. That cost him money MindArk really needed at the time when they were just starting out. Look at it as inflation and opportunity cost adjusted money, 30k back then could well be 300k now.
No, that guy was Jon NEVERDIE Jacobs. Some sorta extroverted DJ from Florida and former MindArk PR guy for the US. He set the previous record by buying an asteroid for 100k $ couple of years back.
They are currently recruiting only flash game developers but I can imagine this getting as big as advertising is right now. It could even keep newspapers alive. "Do you want to access my free content? Sure, but gimme 10% of your processing power." As long as there is demand for this computing power, we are quite able to harness it.
I just got an epiphany. A scantily clad moon godess came down to me on a bolt of lightning and said:
A) There are people who need their cpu cycle expensive tasks computed, they are willing to pay for it.
B) Then, there are people who publish content on the web and want to get money for it.
C) And then, there are millions of people who want to read the B's content without paying for it. Their PC's sit idle when they finish downloading and displaying the content while people read it.
Then she left. I still don't get it.
stackoverflow.com is a good place to start
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetic_bombardment
Why do I need to pay $1200 per ear for a hearing aid?
Because you need it.
You are an American, better get used to it. Of course they should be allowed to do it, think of the terrorists/pedophiles/hackers. Be a patriot and give them all the fingerprints, DNA, retina scans and personal information they want. It is for your own good.
1. Research 2. Simulate 3. ??? 4. Profit!
Ever since Bill Gates left, and possibly a while longer _causing_ him to leave, Microsoft has been a symbol of whats wrong with the economy. Company gets built around an innovative idea by a bunch of enthusiastic experts, grows big because it actually sells useful products that make peoples lives easier. Then it all goes awry, clueless MBA types (hi Ballmer) take over pushed forward by vulture capitalists, monetizing, marketing, market share hogging and patent litigations take over the core business of making useful stuff and the company turns into yet another corporate zombie.
Your Symbian phone has been around for 5+ years. Android and iPhone have been out for almost 2 and Flash still does not work there. This, aside from the obvious software freedom versus proprietary lock-in should be the main reason for switching. I want to play video on my G1 and it is Adobe's fault I can't.
Lol i could smell that 9/11 remark and stupidity insult from sentence one, you nuts have a distinguishingly patronizing trolling style everywhere you go.
I remember Raven for ruining Quake 4 and it is not a positive memory at all.
Opengl is losing out to Directx because it suffers from the open mentality complex, where everyone gets to mess with everything and it results in much more difficult usage by the game studio guy who needs to sit down and write an engine in it.
Not.
Seriously, we do not need corrupt bastards like him.
with a god complex
That is so last decade ;P
I have been playing Entropia actively from early 2005 till mid 2008 and I have an intense love/hate relationship with them. Let me list my personal pros/cons:
Pros:
Videogame with real money.
CryEngine powered.
No shards, one world.
Mature playerbase, mostly US/EU.
Stable financials, the company is shareholder-friendly.
They are a registered Swedish banking company.
They have a deal with Chinese Cyber Recreation Development Bureau.
Cons:
Addictive as hell.
Quite random, i would say quite close to poker in variance terms.
You will never catch up with the oldskool players, you would have to deposit million $ to get the same items and skills as top people.
Slow innovation, no new core systems for a long time.
Long term tendency to overpromise and underdeliver.
Low new account growth.
They seem to be content with having low amount of heavily hooked players. This is a conservative strategy unusual for a revolutionary company. However, this may be just the right type of approach to make it work. They will probably end up being bought by Microsoft or someone like that if they play their cards right.
I was a member of his society ingame and I can attest he definitely deposited quite a bit over the time. Entropia started back in 2000 and he was one of the top crafters right off the bat. That cost him money MindArk really needed at the time when they were just starting out. Look at it as inflation and opportunity cost adjusted money, 30k back then could well be 300k now.
No, that guy was Jon NEVERDIE Jacobs. Some sorta extroverted DJ from Florida and former MindArk PR guy for the US. He set the previous record by buying an asteroid for 100k $ couple of years back.
is chistmasy
They will reverse that policy as soon as they miss the next quarterly results or something.
http://www.sacredfools.org/crimescene/casefiles/s2/shipoffoolsstory.htm
As long as my robot has the same right!
In 2020, you will not be using a printer. You will be using a scanner. Possibly a brain scanner.
They are currently recruiting only flash game developers but I can imagine this getting as big as advertising is right now. It could even keep newspapers alive. "Do you want to access my free content? Sure, but gimme 10% of your processing power." As long as there is demand for this computing power, we are quite able to harness it.
we got a winner folks
Yeah, ditching your SUV is like the most masochistic thing possible. Not.
I just got an epiphany. A scantily clad moon godess came down to me on a bolt of lightning and said: A) There are people who need their cpu cycle expensive tasks computed, they are willing to pay for it. B) Then, there are people who publish content on the web and want to get money for it. C) And then, there are millions of people who want to read the B's content without paying for it. Their PC's sit idle when they finish downloading and displaying the content while people read it. Then she left. I still don't get it.