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User: randalx

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Comments · 103

  1. Re:Out of Business? on Disney Close To Unveiling New "DVD Killer" · · Score: 1

    Disney doesn't have to go out of business to shut down a service they provide.

  2. Re:So why not? on US Manned Space Flight Taking a Budget Hit · · Score: 1

    He might be right but which option is the most cost effective? Sending a robot to Mars for a whole year or a geologist to Mars (and back) for an hour.

  3. Not only support but use OSS on FOSS Development As Economic Stimulus · · Score: 1

    The government could further mandate that public institutions use Open Source Software. Not only would this spur the demand but it would also save the government millions of dollars in licensing fees. Instead of just supporting a random assortment of OSS projects they should target the money to development they can directly benefit from.

  4. Re:Why not a Table Top port? on Ask the Warhammer Online Team · · Score: 1

    True but when most people think about WH they think about the Battle Game and not the RPG. And the fact is there are already tons of RPG based games but few (any?) Table Top Battle Game based games.

  5. Re:Why not a Table Top port? on Ask the Warhammer Online Team · · Score: 1

    So the target market is slightly different, I agree. But I propose that there is still a relevant market of players that would be attracted to this game.

    I believe there is a segment that is simply less interested in the painting aspect then in the strategy aspects of the game. Alternately, some of that customization interest could be funneled into a creative model modding feature. More importantly, I believe there are lot's of people that have simply dropped the hobby due to time constraints. An online version would allow you to jump into a game at any time.

    As for your argument about the Board at GW, if they really thought that way they probably wouldn't bother doing any video games at all. I suspect they are simply too risk averse to do anything innovative.

  6. Re:I can answer the table-top port q on Ask the Warhammer Online Team · · Score: 1

    If it's like MTGO, you'd be paying for the virtual models and not the game itself. So you could easily spend $1000 if you so desire.

  7. Why not a Table Top port? on Ask the Warhammer Online Team · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When I first heard of Warhammer Online I had a slight hope that the designers were going to create an online version of the table top game, something akin to what Wizards of the Coast did with Magic The Gathering Online. Judging by the people I've talked to, this game would be of great interest to current and former battlegamers. Instead you've gone the route of many former Warhammer based games, i.e. simply selected the most popular genre and slapped on the Warhammer universe onto it (ex. Dawn of War).

    I'd like to know, besides the Warhammer universe, why should this game appeal to a Warhammer battlegamer. And more importantly, why hasn't a serious online Table Top port been attempted.

  8. Re:But this doesn't add up on Microsoft Testing Its Own 'Google Base' · · Score: 0

    Monopolies don't innovate no matter what their marketing departments say.

  9. Mod Parent Up on Vatican Rejects Intelligent Design? · · Score: 1

    That was a really clear explanation. Someone please mod parent up. So many IDers are still confused by the definition of a "Scientific Theory". The proponents of ID use that confusion in their favour.

  10. Re:Similar article in the WSJ on VoIP Backlash From Phone Companies · · Score: 1

    Instead they should be encouraging high bandwidth services so users are encouraged to shell out for bigger pipes.

  11. Best advice: Bring 'em back on Sony Doing An End Run Around Its Own DRM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Instead of circumventing the copy protections, I hope most are simply returning their cd. Obviously they only care about their bottom line and not the trouble they put their "consumers" through. It's the only way they might get the message.

  12. Re:Kurzweil is dead wrong on Ray Kurzweil's "The Singularity is Near" · · Score: 1

    One of the methods to achieve hard AI is to simulate a human brain. Eventually, you must agree that we'll have the technology to fully understand how a brain works and at that point a computer simulation could be achieved. Now imagine simulating not the processing power of 1 brain but 1 billion. See where this can lead.

  13. Required reading on the Singularity on Ray Kurzweil's "The Singularity is Near" · · Score: 1
    For those interested in reading more about the Singularity, check out this seminal work by Vernor Vinge: Vernor Vinge on the Singularity

    Here's the abstract:

    Within thirty years, we will have the technological means to create superhuman intelligence. Shortly after, the human era will be ended.

    Is such progress avoidable? If not to be avoided, can events be guided so that we may survive? These questions are investigated. Some possible answers (and some further dangers) are presented.
  14. Re:Yeah, but so what? on The Digital Dark Age · · Score: 1

    You're assuming people can accurately judge what information will be important to somebody in the future. Also, the producer/custodian of the information might not necessarily care about preserving it. But again this does not mean it won't be important at some future date. Lastly, utility != importance. It might not be useful to know how the pyramids were constructed, but it's most definitively an important piece of information.

  15. Re:Stealing versus Copying on Gamer Killed For Virtual Property · · Score: 1

    Scarcity is indeed a key point. The current record company's business model is based around the scarcity of the physical goods they produce (cds). Thus their business model cannot apply to a scarcity free digital product. DRM technology is just a method to try to create an artificial scarcity where there is none. Their business model should change NOT the technology.

  16. Choice Quotes on Are Video Game Patents Next? · · Score: 1
    "patents may be obtained on "anything under the sun that is made by man"
    "if your game does nothing more than add one novel concept to a mountain of old game concepts, that novel concept may be patentable"
    How can you build on existing concepts if all concepts require a license or lawsuit. Having "everything under the sun" patented will bring innovation to a screeching halt.
  17. Sigh. Slashdotting. on Aquarium Full of Oil For PC Cooling · · Score: 1

    He should have submerged his webserver in oil!

    Use mirrordot and give his server a break.

  18. Belkin Media reader on NYT on Photo Storage Devices · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Belkin Media Reader works fine with a non photo iPod. You can't view the pics, even in grey scale, but it does list the number of pictures stored. I can confirm this since I own one and use it all the time. :-)

  19. Re:DRM on The Sony/MP3 Saga Continues · · Score: 1
    Show me a product advertised as a music playback device, which is also explicitly advertised as a backup method.
    Ever hear of the ipod?
    http://www.apple.com/ipod/
    Use as a portable hard drive -- take your files with you
    And my previous "player", an Iomega HipZip
    http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/article/0,aid,32628 ,pg,2,00.asp
    Since the HipZip doubles as a PocketZip USB drive, you can transfer files--music or data, for that matter--directly from your PC to a PocketZip disk via Windows Explorer. That functionality makes the PocketZip an excellent tool for on-the-spot backup or file transport...

    http://mp3.about.com/library/weekly/aapr110201hz .htm
    Can be used as a Zip drive to store any type of file
  20. Re:They aren't trying to stop piracy. on AACS Specifications Released · · Score: 0, Troll

    I suppose they'll have to get a copy of the key being used by another player (like a Sony dvd player) instead of asking for their own? Of course I'm sure this opens them to lawsuits under the DMCA.

  21. Re:You People don't get it on The Sony/MP3 Saga Continues · · Score: 1
    DRM is the only answer to protecting Sony's own copyrights
    This device applies Sony's DRM scheme to all music being moved onto the device and not just to Sony's copyrighted content.
  22. Re:DRM on The Sony/MP3 Saga Continues · · Score: 1

    So how about if the music I'm moving around doesn't have these copyright restrictions you are mentioning (public domain songs for example)? How about if it's a song I wrote and recorded? How about if I delete the copy I have at home and move the copy to the office (thus only having one backup copy)? What if my country's law's allow for multiple personal copies? What if my countries's laws allow me to share a copy with a friend?

    Yes, the device IS most certainly "mandating" and "limiting" what I can do with it (it's functionality not what I can physically do with it which I guess you need spelled out for you).

  23. Re:DRM on The Sony/MP3 Saga Continues · · Score: 1

    How about just to move files around between computers (i.e. home and work). Why should they limit the options of what I can do with MY device.

  24. Re:For the average Korean... on South Korean Gov't. Advocates Linux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This might be the first step in forcing those websites to drop ActiveX controls and make their sites work well in standards compliant browsers.

  25. aboveGame.com on The Peculiar World of Web Photo Sharing · · Score: 1

    For the gamers among you, please check out my new site, aboveGame.

    My site is focused on gamers wishing to record and share their virtual adventures and lives. Instead of photos, members post screenshots and can blog about what their virtual selves are up to. So far we've got some pretty amazing photos, so please feel free to browse the site or better yet participate!