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User: Fross

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  1. Re:And queue the WoW-is-neither zealots... NOW on The Psychology of Achievement In Playing Games · · Score: 1

    I'd say the WoW experience is closer to the "mastering" than the "performing", but it's 80% "ocd completist".

  2. Re:Well enough? on Facebook Photos Lead To Cancellation of Quebec Woman's Insurance · · Score: 1

    Hmm, just because someone disagrees with you doesn't mean they're ignorant of the subject.

    Of course, whenever someone questions what you want to believe you can just say they don't understand, but I think there is more value in asking the question.

    Personally, if I was off work with a long term debilitating condition, I would be concentrating on getting better and getting back to work, rather than taking the time off as an opportunity to go on holiday.

  3. Re:Touch screens and the like on Apple vs. Microsoft Multi-Touch Mouse Comparison · · Score: 1

    The good news is that with that diet, the mouse's warranty will probably outlive you, so if it does die of grease, you can get another one.

  4. Well enough? on Facebook Photos Lead To Cancellation of Quebec Woman's Insurance · · Score: 1

    I agree with most o the comments here, that the insurance company was not right to make the call based on photos they found on the internet, it's the doctor's decision.

    However, if you're well enough to go on holiday (be it depression or anything), then surely you're well enough to go to work.

    I know if I took sick leave from work and bunked off on holiday during that time, I'd get fired on the spot.

  5. A machine with just one instruction... on Building a 32-Bit, One-Instruction Computer · · Score: 1

    Would anyone like any toast?

  6. Re:The hiss is where it hides on Can We Really Tell Lossless From MP3? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know the SR60s/SR80s win a lot of awards, but I've not been a fan of them. They don't have enough presence, and in any slightly noisy environment they got completely drowned out - either down to their not keeping ambient sound out, or not packing enough punch. In isolation, they are pretty good. They're also not as comfortable as a good sennheiser, for me, I find the foam a little scratchy. I'd like a comparison of the 80s with the 225s, though.

    The Sennheiser 500/600 series (by budget) are universally awesome, though a bit big for travelling with. If your budget stretches that far, AKG 701s or the Denon AH series are also great bets. I'd thoroughly recommend you try some of those, the Senny 600/650s, the AKG 701 or Denon AH-2000 or 5000.

    (I also have no fiscal interest in any headphone companies, just like good quality headphones!)

  7. Is this how it works? on Iraq Swears By Dowsing Rod Bomb Detector · · Score: 1

    When the dousing rod flies 300 feet into the air, you've found the bomb.

  8. Re:Intel change is great, but... on Intel Updates SSDs, Supports TRIM, Faster Writes · · Score: 2, Informative

    You should not defrag an SSD. It won't give a performance boost, and will just contribute to wearing the drive down. Fragmentation is only an issue where access is not truly random, as it is with an SSD.

    Example discussion: http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/forum/page-246283_14_0.html

    The controller should do a decent enough job of spreading out the data for you.

  9. This is in EVERYONE's interest on Student Loan Interest Rankles College Grads · · Score: 1

    I don't understand all the hate on this article. "You should have known what you were signing up for" "College degrees are worthless" "You're making six figures, you can afford it", a lot of rage, also some contradictory posts, but all of them lacking the basic tenet: Education is good.

    The more people who go to university, the more qualified the nation as a whole. This increases their wealth and power internationally, as well as improving quality of life on a basic scale. The more wealthy and powerful they are, the more revenue they bring the government, and it goes on from there. Government investing in people and training is a good thing, surely?

    The reason it's so expensive is self-fulfilling - people are prepared to have a lower quality of life (remortgage their home, work while they study) to fund it, so the universities jack up their prices to match. Just think, for the $84000 debt in the article, one could have hired a graduate for maybe a couple of years, and got 40 hours 1-1 training! Univesity does not cost tens of thousands of dollars per student per year to run. The money's being siphoned off to the private sector.

    By making university less attainable, you end up with a lower quality workforce. This is why immigrants are flocking to the US, because they come from countries where education is more affordable, so they are more qualified. They're taking jobs (dey tk ur jerb!) because the american people is not educated enough as a whole to fill the market. The thing that I really don't understand, is you have a world leader country in terms of money, lifestyle, technology, science and research, why is it that poorer country immigrants are working for you, rather than you being paid large amounts of money to go over to their countries and bring them up to speed?

    I think american corporations are rich; they have the money, the resources, they need the skills. The american people are increasingly education-poor, because the system doesn't help them. And increasingly, the corporations will take workers from other countries, who have the qualifications and skills necessary. The government of these countries (India, some European countries etc) are enabling their people, educating them, and it's working - they're getting well paid jobs in America! The American government needs to support their people to at least the same degree, make education available as a first step, rather than a challenge, and get their population being world leaders.

  10. Do it right. on Student Loan Interest Rankles College Grads · · Score: 1

    The total amount of money involved, for all students in the country, is not huge. A couple of billion perhaps?

    Why doesn't the government just stick that money in a pot, and issue the loans themselves? They can charge a notional low rate of interest, and set favourable rates of return. This is, after all, investing in education, and in the country as a whole, why try to gouge the rates up and punish people for trying to better themselves.

    The UK government has a good system (or did 15 years ago, when I graduated). I could:

    - choose how much to borrow (up to a limit, but I could borrow less)
    - got a good rate of interest (1.2% or 1.3% I think)
    - payments started a year after graduating
    - didn't have to repay if I was earning around minimum wage (£12000 a year I think)
    - could pay it off early if I wanted to

    At the end of it, the government gets their money back (plus interest), from almost everyone, and they end up with a more educated workforce. Why exactly would you want to cripple that?

  11. Re:Seems a trifle disingenuous to me on Game Development On Android · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I can't agree with this entirely, you're forgetting that there was life (or rather, there were smartphones) before the iPhone. It's not like there was nothing before, but iPhone wiped the floor and really set the standard.

    3 years ago, everyone was clamouring over the new motorola, nokia, treo or what have you. The market was segmented, lots of different standards (anyone remember nGage?), OSes, and phone brands. Then all of a sudden comes the iPhone - one phone, one supplier, one app store, one development environment, and bam, completely flattens everything else. The only remaining phones from beforehand are others with strong brands and purpose/identities - namely the Blackberry.

    I don't see how a varied approach can beat the iPhone, in the mainstream arena. It's just too complicated for most people to go back down the multiple options route. To usurp the iPhone, something needs a killer device, and a killer app. You're not going to get something as impactful without a joined-up approach.

    Having said that, I'm an iPhone user, really looking forward to Android, and may even develop for it (I hated Objective C and in particular XCode), but I'm a techie, not mainstream. I had a treo, lots of palm apps. Most people want a phone that looks cool, plays good games, has good music playing capability and is fun to use. The iPhone does these incredibly well and simply.

    Android will hopefully take off and become a really great niche player for those of us into it, but the iPhone has practically defined the market and expectations single-handedly for mainstream smartphones, and it'll take one hell of an effort to beat that.

  12. Re:PC vs Console on Game Development On Android · · Score: 1

    Anything from Bloom/HDR to Anisotropic filtering back all the way to 3d textured FPSes. The jump from, say, Doom to Quake was entirely driven by uptake of hardware 3d acceleration.

    If you decide to "not see" those as innovation, well, that's your choice. They're certainly innovations in the style of games that can be portrayed. When/if the next change comes to realtime raytracing, that will completely change the way games can be designed (no need to count maximum visible polys, for a start), and that will be hardware-lead, too.

  13. Re:Why bother? on What To Do With a Free Xbox 360 Pro? · · Score: 1

    Try Plex, a XBMC derivative, on Mac. IMHO a better experience than XBMC (and FrontRow for that matter)

  14. Re:"Collector's edition" on Dragon Age: Origins To Get Paid DLC Expansion — On Launch Day · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So far collectors editions generally include vanity items, mild bonuses for the start of play - items that just show off that the user bought the CE, but don't have much impact on the game. Making DLC including an *area* and *new abilities* immediately splits the game into haves and have-nots.

    This is less like a CE, and more like WoW when Burning crusade came out - you want to be a blood elf? Well, you can't unless you have the expansion. Want to give your character jewelcrafting? Want to go to new areas (let alone progress pass 60), you can't.

    These expansions are fine, though even in WoW's case it really made second class citizens of those who didn't have the expansion. However, to do this on LAUNCH day is nothing short of a money grab.

  15. Re:Information wants to be free on Court Rules For Software Ownership Over Licensing · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The version on TPB works just fine.

  16. Re:Context is important on The Nickel & Dime Generation · · Score: 1

    Just as likely as playing WoW, and nothing else, for 5 years?

    The commenter below you thinks TF2 has more replayability than WoW, they are both certainly possibilities.

  17. Context is important on The Nickel & Dime Generation · · Score: 1

    I think it's important to realise the context of the amounts being talked about. Lets say you play WoW for 5 years, at $14.95 a month. You earn $50K, you pay $2000 a month in rent/bills. You have a Starbucks $4 coffee every working day.

    Total income: $250,000
    Rent/Bills: $120,000
    Starbucks: $5,200
    WoW cost: ~$1,000 (subscription plus expansion packs)

    In that context, it doesn't look that much, does it?

    On the other hand, for about as much fun:

    Team Fortress 2 total cost: $20

  18. Re:Geez on Wolfenstein Being Recalled In Germany · · Score: 1

    Well, last time they did, some pertty terrible things happened. Still, not sure correllation = causation... ;)

  19. A smart move on Microsoft Awarded Patent For Peer-To-Peer DRM · · Score: 1

    This is a very shrewd way of Microsoft positioning themselves to benefit from an emerging market.

    P2P is growing both in terms of public awareness (thepiratebay, napster) and legal usage (e.g., Aion open beta being available through torrent the last few weeks - I saw over 164000 peers at one point...). However, governments are starting to clamp down on P2P specifically. The UK Government has a paper open to comment until the 29th September and due to be implemented next year, trying to track P2P users and potentially removing their broadband access.

    This is likely to culminate in lots of restrictions on P2P technologies, which will end one of two ways:

    1) Technology war, where the network is changed in subtle ways to avoid detection (torrents via SSL, mass VPN uptake). I can only see the more technically minded people doing this, though.
    2) P2P networks are effectively blocked by mass ISP cooperation brought on by legislation, the only allowable exception added to the legislation is P2P with added DRM, and, lo and behold, if you want to make one of those, you have to pay a licence to Microsoft. Cha-ching.

    Microsoft will be of course betting on the latter outcome, whether it works out that way this was a small outlay for them to give a potentially massive return. It's down to the market penetration of a suitable solution, really. Napster made P2P common, but after it shut down, your average mainstream user who wanted to download music didn't go to torrents or anything like that. To properly succeed, the appropriate solution will need to be easy to use and in the wide mainstream consciousness.

  20. An inefficient solution to a non-existant problem? on Google Wants To Ease News Browsing With Fast Flip · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I really get what the purpose of this is, if someone can elucidate that would be great.

    So people aren't reading enough online, fine, you want to highlight interesting content quickly for them to get to.

    I don't see how this view actually helps users identify what is worth reading and what isn't - certainly in the small view, the pages are too small to read, you just get a view on page layout and graphics, nothing about the content or the article. Even the full-size views, are screenshots of the page and as such very inefficient (the one of the BBC article on Eddie Izzard is 80k).

    Why not just syndicate/scrape the content and post it as RSS to get through more content, or alternatively, if you're after a view of what it is without the actual text, just grab graphics from sites and display those instead. I don't see how taking screenshots of it helps the provider or the reader.

  21. Re:Really fun browser on Meet Uzbl — a Web Browser With the Unix Philosophy · · Score: 1

    Some people may consider viewing images as adjunct to browsing. Want to browse the web? Sure! Want to view images embedded in webpages? Well, that's an extra, you'll have to write a script to do that.

    I think managing the persistent user experience, such as cookies session to session, is very much a part of browsing as a whole.

  22. Re:Cool for home pr0n collection, but business? on Build Your Own $2.8M Petabyte Disk Array For $117k · · Score: 1

    Why are these unsuited for business?

    Get 2 pods, 100 TB of storage, $16K.
    Hosting it in a raq somewhere... I don't know, $10K per year, for somewhere really good?
    $10K per year for someone to perform maintenance on it, based on your figure above.

    You're still coming in way under $50K, all in, for more storage.

    I find it hard to believe that the additional $x00,000 really gives worthwhile "added value" on top of that.

  23. Re:Deadline is not the problem on Dirty Coding Tricks To Make a Deadline · · Score: 1

    Hahahahahaha! You've obviously never worked in the real world. Are you an academic?

    The boss comes in, 5 hours before an unmovable deadline, and says "The client has insisted you change feature X to do Y". Unfortunately, that's a fundamental change in the architecture.

    Or a nasty little hack. Which is the point here.

    Scope creep/changing requirements is not the developer's fault. It's the managers, but sometimes these things just can't be managed, and the client will get their way or the cheques don't get written.

  24. Re:TL:DR on Blizzard Answers Your Questions and More · · Score: 1

    It's not about the difference between an RTS and an MMO. It's about copy verification (I think DRM is the wrong term here)

    Seeing as we don't know the implementation details, seems silly to say it's good or bad yet. It could be something like Steam (connect just once), verify each time it's run, or constant connection to a server, who knows.

    Having a unified copy verification scheme for all their games seems sensible. The availability of an internet connection is a computer issue, not a game type issue.

    If you're setting up a LAN, does it have internet access? If it doesn't, how easy is it to add internet access? Not very, I'm guessing, especially with internet sharing. So you do that, and there is no problem. Is this really such a damn big deal?

  25. Re:WoW:C sounds pretty cool on Blizzard Answers Your Questions and More · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'm planning on restarting and levelling up a few characters through the changed azeroth, I think that will be fun. I wasn't really bothered with the grind to 80 and the pressure on stats/gear/builds for high end characters.

    Having said that, if someone wants to buy my old account, with 5 level 70s, drop me a line ;)