Thursday, 29 April 2010

This blog has moved


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Tuesday, 27 April 2010

The Pidgeon Post moves on

As of May 1st, FTP support on blogger will end. This means no more hosted Pidegon Post.
As sad as it may be, I've discovered a wonderful little thing called tumblr, and have decided to continue the blog there. the addresss is: http://nuclearpidgeon.tumblr.com/. hopefully with this new re-birth, more content will appear on the blog. hopefully

until next post,
nuclearpidgeon

Wednesday, 6 January 2010

XFX 5770 Unboxing

So I finally got my new video-card. FINALLY. And the packaging was awesome enough to warrant an unboxing blog post. enjoy.










And finally, an arty colour removal shot


merry new year and whatnot

Monday, 19 October 2009

Is Online Distribution killing the Collectors Edition?

I don't know about you, but I seriously love collectors editions (heck, I like just having a physical box to prove the fact that I have the game without having to start it up). There's just... that warm fuzzy feeling you get opening up a fancy, decorated box that has all these awesome physical extras in it. From the SPORE Galactic Edition, which features one of the most awesome-looking boxes, and contains a making-of DVD and art booklet, to the UT3 collectors edition, which comes in a simple metal box, with a little art booklet, and a making-of DVD and tutorial videos for the game editor, I think that Collectors/Special Editions are something really awesome. Take, for example, the collector's edition of the upcoming Dragon Age: Origins. Whilst I am currently sick of this game, after having it shoved down my throat by 2 friends of mine, it is not possible to ignore the special edition, which comes with a cloth map of the game.

Yet the thing that worries me is Digital Distribution. Services like Steam and Direct2Drive offer games at really good prices, but force you to download the game off the internet. This has started to bug me as of late: call me stupid if you want, but I get annoyed by the fact that I bought The Orange Box, and DON'T HAVE THE BOX TO PROVE IT! Maybe it's just a social thing - being able to 'show off' you impressive collection of games to others. Maybe it's just a sign of OCD, and that I'm going mad. But the fact is, boxed games are becoming either rarer, or at least less essential to the gaming experience. Take Left 4 Dead for example. I actually got a cousin from England to bring it over to Australia when he visited last year. However, the box provides very little of an 'user experience'. You put in the disc, it copies the files, activates it on steam, and then that's it. You may as well put that disc away, you're never gonna need it again. There's not even a proper manual! (at least, not on the disc). All you get is a 'quick-start' card, which just has basic install instructions, and a key command reference. Even the installation itself is a dull experience, with little game art/media and a simple copying bar.

I haven't been playing games for that long, but another of my cousins has been in the PC games market since the days of Diablo, Warcraft II (yes, 2) and Half-Life. He still has some of the box stuff/manuals. The first thing that strikes you is how much bigger the boxes were back then. They were at least twice the size of today's standard DVD cases. And they came with a proper manual: the type that gives you not only troubleshooting and game instructions, but also backstory stuff. The Diablo 2 manuals are a classic example - they come with all this extra text explaining stuff that happens between Diablo I and II. So does the original StarCraft: that has complete history profiles on each of the 3 races, and detailed unit info.

The 'smaller box and manual' principle is not limited to just games as well. A more recent example is the iPod Touch. The first generation came in this nice black box, that was a a fair bit bigger than the actual ipod. But I have a 2nd gen, and the case for that is simply the ipod, with the headphones, USB cable and 'quick-start guide' sandwiched in the back. Maybe this is because of shipping and printing costs in this day and age, with corporations wanting to spend less to make more, by cutting down on 'unnecessary extras'. I think it's a shame, but I think I know why they do this. It's pretty simple – back in the days of HL and Diablo, the Internet was a lot less mainstream, and therefore, patches for games were seen less. This meant that the troubleshooting, system specs and feature sets in the manuals would always be relevant and up-to-date. However, in this day and age, patches are release regularly, and they can sometimes change the feature of a game and/or its system specs. Case in point: the UT3 2.0 Titan patch was released recently, adding 3 new gameplay modes to the game, simplifying the interface, and adding a lot more control over the graphic effects, which may or may not have affected the base system requirements. In Left 4 Dead, survival mode was released, and more recently, the crash course campaign, which would make any printed manual significantly out-of-date.

But back to my main point. Are services like steam killing the collector's edition? I'm pretty confident we'll be seeing Collector's Editions long into the future, especially for single-player games. But some companies seem to have already decided to abandon the boxed experience of getting a Video Game, which is a shame. Valve is the main focus here: it may be that in the future, one of their games will be released as a steam purchase exclusive. But I hope that they will keep releasing boxed copies, and that they realise that the box experience is something that many gamers hold dear.

Oh yeah, and when StarCraft II comes out, there better be a special edition that costs at least twice the retail price.

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Thursday, 28 May 2009

Unreal Tournament 3 2.1 update announced, another free weekend

Epic Games have annoucned another free weekend for Unreal Tournament 3 for the PC. This comes with the release of the 2.1 patch, which adds bug fixes and minor improvements to the new UI that was released with the version 2 patch. It is also to celebrate the start of the third phase of the 'Make something Unreal' mod contest.

To pre-load Unreal Tournament 3 Black for free, visit http://store.steampowered.com/app/13210.

Original Link

Thursday, 2 April 2009

April Fool's Day

The internet has been going nuts for April fools day - here are a few funny pranks I came across.

From Slashdot - practically EVERY item posted on the 1st of April :

Blizzard Shows Off Diablo III Archivist Class, WoW Dance-Off
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/2215205

It's been a busy day for the folks at Blizzard, who have released major announcements for several different games. The next Diablo III class has arrived: the Archivist. Despite their frail appearance and hunched, labored movement, they are quite deft at launching Quest Bolts at nearby foes, or conjuring a whirling Lore-nado of spinning books. Loud monsters can be silenced with a devastating Shush attack. Blizzard also put Starcraft II'slatest unit on display, the Terra-Tron, which is a giant, robot uber-weapon assembled from the buildings in your base. Finally, for World of Warcraft they announced two features that have been requested by players for years: a battle of dances, where you can show off your avatar's hippest moves, and the ability to 'p1mp' your mounts. (Not sure exactly what that means, since I don't speak elvish, but there's a Nightsaber with a cannon — holy crap!)

Warner Bros. Acquires The Pirate Bay
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/173236

mlingojones writes"TorrentFreak breaks the news of The Pirate Bay's acquisition by Warner Bros: 'After years of hostility, lawsuits, police raids and heated invective between the two groups, the Pirate Bay has today announced they have settled their differences with US media conglomerate Warner Bros. The largest BitTorrent tracker has sold out to Hollywood and the two have agreed a deal.'"

TiVo Announces DVR-SuperAdvance
http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/2131236

mark0 writes"TiVo has announced the TiVo DVR-SuperAdvance. The PC World review says, 'Familiar TiVo interface; DVR can record not-yet-broadcast programming; potentially useful as a wagering aid,' though, '[it is] expensive; access to programming is limited; footage is displayed in standard definition only.'"Hopefully, TiVo will supply a review unit

Alpine Legend Revolutionizes Music Game Genre
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/1612209

Microsoft has announced the upcoming release of Alpine Legend for the Xbox 360. Building upon the established titles of the music game genre, Alpine Legend takes you to the Swiss mountaintops, where you and your friends play up to three Alpenhorns at a time while a fourth yodels along. When you're done playing, you can disassemble the 8-foot horns for easy storage. "Jam with alpine legends like Franz 'The Manz' Lang and Johann Hornbostel. Shake the mountain tops with 100 classic Alphorn tracks including, 'Whose spit is in my horn?' and 'More goat bell (It needs).'"

Interview With the Author of "Mastering Cat"
http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/1211240

Shlomi Fish writes"O'Reilly is publishing a new book titled 'Mastering cat,' about the UNIX 'cat' command. Here is an interview O'Reilly-Net conducted with the author about it. Read it to see if this book should be part of your bookshelf of technical books."

Yeast-Powered Fuel Cell Feeds On Human Blood
http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/1710253


holy_calamity writes"Canadian researchers have taken a sensible, if slightly creepy, step towards solving the problem of medical implant batteries running down. They've built a fuel cell powered by yeast that feed on the glucose in human blood. If this makes it into people, keeping your implants going will be as simple as eating a donut."

Microsoft Asks Fed For Bailout
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/2222227

snydeq writes"Microsoft requested on Tuesday some $20 billion in bailout funds from the federal government, claiming that as the company controls an overwhelming share of the OS market, it is too big to fail. Low adoption rates for Vista, the ensuing ad campaign trying to convince people that they really do like Vista, and the increased need for development resources to rush Windows 7 to market to make people forget about Vista have necessitated the bailout, the company said. "We want to make it absolutely clear that this is not a crisis of mismanagement," said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer in a prepared statement. "This is simply a crisis of dollars — a crisis of not having enough dollars coming our way.""
Instant Messaging Vulnerable To New Smiley Attacks
http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/1935214

titus writes"Security researchers Yoann Guillot and Julien Tinnes have found a way to encode malicious code into smileysand provided a proof of concept encoder to automate the process. The researchers said their discovery paves the way for IM malware that would be impossible to detect since the malicious code would be 'indistinguishable from genuine chat messages.' I've tested the proof of concept code which works very well. Time to panic?"

Google Launches CADIE, the First True AI
http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/1518211

eldavojohn writes"Google has announced CADIE, the world's first Cognitive Autoheuristic Distributed-Intelligence Entity. 'We based our work on three core principles. First we designed the entity ... as a collection of interconnected evolving agents. Second — and this really cost us an arm and leg in hardware and core time — we let the system build its own heuristics, deploy them as agents and evolve them by running a set of evolutionary cascades within probabilistic Bayesian domains. The third — a piece missing in most AI reasoning work thus far — was to give the entity access to a rich, realistic world from which to learn and upon which it could act directly.' It quickly started its own blog andYouTube video. Two hours after midnight, CADIE announced independence on its blog and decided to leave Google to venture out into the world. "

And finally, My personal favourite:
CloudLeft Public License Closes User Data Loophole
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/04/01/180209

FreedomFighter writes"In a Cloud Standards breakthrough, the FSF is teaming up with major cloud computing vendors to form the Free and Open Cloud Alliance (FOCA), a trade marketing association supporting Free(TM) and Open Cloud Computing (FOCC). The new CloudLeft Public License (CPL) is based on the ideas that data wants to be Free(TM) and all your Cloud(TM) are belong to us. It closes the 'user data loophole' by requiring the release of not only the source code for a CloudLeft platform but also the data passing through it. This renders most security issues void while appropriately setting the users' expectation of privacy. 'In the past, I've said that "cloud" is complete gibberish, but while discussing fashion during my weekly squash game with Stallman he convinced me that this was a great opportunity.' said Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle. RMS, who previously said that 'cloud' is worse than stupidity was also pleased about the return of the advertising clause, requiring the use of the 'GNU/Cloud' name, as he is 'tired of haranguing the GNU/Linux community about this.' Full details will be available next Monday, including the first marketing and outreach program — 'FOCC: IT in 2009.'"


EDIT: Here are some more details about what Google did - don't forget to check the comments

Also, here's an April fools joke from Phoronix:
The WALLBUNTU Linux distribution

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

Ubuntu 9.04 Beta released, final release in 24 days

The newest release of Ubuntu 9.04, Jaunty Jackalope, has been released in Beta. The main focus of thie release is speed, and there is no denying that it boots very fast. I've installed it on my Laptop to replace 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex) and noticed a significant speed boost. To test the speed of it out, I ran a boot test, to see how long it took for each OS on my laptop to boot from the bootloader to the desktop, once the HD indicator light had stopped flickering. Here are the results:

Ubuntu : 45 seconds
Windows 7: 1 minute, 45 seconds
Windows XP: 2 minutes and counting...

While there may be a slight bias towards Ubuntu as it is a fresh install, there is still a massive gap between it and Windows 7. As for Windows XP...

The beta also comes with some other improvements - there's a new verion of GNOME, the desktop interface/controls/application set. The display managment GUI has been tweaked again to work better, but is still sketchy at best. Also included is X.Org 1.6, which adds support for even more videocards. One of the more noticable features is the new notification system - rather than have annoying little popups, messages are displayed top-right of the screen as semi-transparent notifiers which fade out as you mouse-over them. To see what they look like, there is a flash demo here (http://www.markshuttleworth.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/jaunty904_notifications_example1_web_092.swf)

Other than that, there's not much new - just a lot of bug fixes. One other thing I should add is cloud computing support for Ubuntu Server - I still don't entirely understand the definition of 'cloud computing', but if you have a look at the link below, you'll find more details.

Link: http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/jaunty/beta

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