Archive for December, 2009

Golden Wii

New James Bond flick? No. A 22 carat casual gaming console for those who have £299,995.00 and no financial sense.


golden wii

Who says the “days of conspicuous consumption are over”?

 

3d Gaming Around the Corner?

From engadget

In case plans by AMD and a slew of other tech vendors planning to showcase 3D Blu-ray compatible products at CES wasn’t a tip-off, the updated specifications are done. The key details? First, that the Blu-ray Disc Association has chosen the Multiview Video Coding (MVC) codec to store 3D, so that even though it is now providing a full 1080p frame for each eye, it will only require about 50% more storage space compared to the 2D version, and all discs will be fully backwards compatible, in 2D, on existing players. Better than backwards compatibility, the PlayStation 3 will be forwards compatible with the new discs

How many times have you missed a jump because you weren’t able to judge depth correctly? Being able to see the 3d in games would be huge! A game changer, pardon the pun. Let’s just hope we don’t need barf bags for the trip.

3d bluray player

 

All Is Not Fair in Xbox Live and Modern Warfare 2

Arstechnica reports that Microsoft is temporarily banning players that exploit what they’re calling a glitch but to me looks like a tactic. Basically if you hold a grenade then equip the javelin when you are killed the grenade goes off turning you in to a suicide bomber.

“While IW works on getting the MW2 glitch fixed, people we catch using it will recieve suspensions from LIVE. Play fair everyone,” Toulouse said via Twitter. He also noted that this policy isn’t anything new, and that it’s in place for more games than just Modern Warfare 2. If you get caught taking advantage of the exploit, you’ll be banned for 24 hours. If you’re a particularly bad case, the banning could last up to two weeks.

The ban isn’t for Modern Warfare 2, it’s for the entirety of Xbox Live. If you’re banned, no new content for you. No playing online… in anything. Major Nelson posted the details on his blog: “Keep in mind, this isn’t just a ban on a particular game. This is a ban on the Xbox Live service as a whole, so you won’t be able to go online at all during your ban. Initially, you may be banned for a day, a week, or depending on severity, permanently! Kiss that $50 goodbye,” he wrote.

Check out their article for more details.

Not so fun if you’re bombed but banning seems harsh and unnecessary to me. The game’s incredibly popular and I doubt this is having a big impact on its playability. Isn’t this kind of creativity the heart of emergent gamplay? It’s entirely within the rights of the developers to patch the game to prevent it, but I say until then if you can do it in the game world without code/hardware modification then it’s fair play.

 

Vrooom did you get that?

Tesla Motor’s blog has a customer post on how he helped sound engineers at Microsoft Games Studios sample squealing roadster.

…engineers from Microsoft Game Studios (some working on Forza, some on Project Gotham Racing) asked if I was willing to take my Roadster to a track so they could record a variety of sounds. Some time ago they had the opportunity to record Tesla motor noises when a prototype was being run on a dyno at Tesla. But the teams were excited about the prospect of recording other sounds, particularly tire skid and squeal noises, without the interference of loud engine and exhaust noise. Of course I said “yes.”

The teams arranged to use a local motorsports park that was formerly a small airport. We met early (7:30 AM!) so they could mic-up the car. Two hours later, they had three large boom mics “suction-cupped” to the side and rear of the car, plus a mic in the trunk, and two up front over the swaybars and near the front tires, plus one in the cabin interior, the latter mostly to record verbal “clapboards” to identify each segment. A sound engineer with the recording deck rode shotgun and I did the driving.

Who knew exotic $100k electric sports cars elicited such exotic requests to borrow the keys.

 

Full Disclosure

Watchout bloggers, the Federal Trade Commission’s blogging guidelines have taken effect…

The FTC will require that writers on the Web clearly disclose any freebies or payments they get from companies for reviewing their products. The commission also said advertisers featuring testimonials that claim dramatic results cannot hide behind disclaimers that the results aren’t typical.

The FTC said its commissioners voted 4-0 to approve the final guidelines, which had been expected. The guides are not binding law, but rather interpretations of law that hope to help advertisers comply with regulations. Violating the rules, which take effect Dec. 1, could result in various sanctions including a lawsuit.

I’d like to wholeheartedly embrace this guideline so come on somebody send me some free stuff!