technorati tags:Star_Wars, humor, flash
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technorati tags:Star_Wars, humor, flash
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Last August I tallied up the "Xbox 360 experience" on Kotaku. The idea at the time was that while the Xbox 360 was as little as $300, that didn't really deliver the full experience and even $400 didn't give you everything you really needed to fully appreciate the Xbox 360.With a little more than two months before the PS3 launch I think it's time to put Sony's next-gen console through the same ringer. Unfortunately, there are a few key numbers missing, so right not this is just a comparison based on a few best guesses. Please keep that in mind while reading.
Price Check: Xbox 360 Vs. PS3 - Kotaku
Kotaku did an interesting attempt to figure out if you bought the same features for both consoles what the final cost is. Their conclusion is that if you try to match feature for feature the 360 is more expensive than the PS3! $839.94 versus $688.97
Now the real slight of hand here is that to make the 360 match the feature set they buy a wireless adapter and the HD-DVD add-on. They also presume the HD-DVD add-on will cost $200 but that's a reasonable guess. So somebody can argue "I don't want the HD video playback so lop off the $200", and that's a reasonable argument - although it's still really close unless you argue that the WiFi adapter is a stupid addition - and it clearly isn't.
I'll put my new disclaimer on this post. If you're somebody who hates all discussion of HD and you're convinced that all of America still loves themselves some NTSC and you are preparing to froth at the mouth about how DVD is so good that we don't need a replacement format - don't. I'm tired of that discussion. Now, there are some major flaws with HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, and the format war is stupid. I'd love to have rational discussion about those issues, but I'm barring the gate to people who have a reasonably informed opinion about HDTV - and that means having seen real HDTV in action, that means being aware of the numbers in terms of HDTV sales and US market penetration. If your "research" will be anecdotal evidence about who you know who doesn't have a HD set I'm not interested.
technorati tags:Xbox, PS3, HDTV, gaming
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The problem with Gamefly is that games don't work the same way as movies, so they don't have some of the same luxuries that Netflix does. Which is to say that I have a deep Netflix queue and it's all stuff I want to watch. Even if something has been on my queue for a long time, I probably still want to watch it.
At the moment I have two games I really want to try out (Saints Row and Dead Rising), and one game that I'm so-so on checking out (Enchanted Arms). Also a couple of releasing soon games in the queue, but I can't blame them for not shipping those.
I've sent three games back now, hoping to get Dead Rising, and for two of those returns I would have very happy with Saints Row instead. But instead I received Gun, and then Prey. Those were OK selections so I only grumbled a bit inside my head. But they just sent me a note saying that they sent me Rub Rabbits for the DS. Which is pretty much down in the swampy morass of "well, maybe I'd try that someday if there was nothing better to play" at the bottom of my queue.
Dead Rising in particular has basically never been available since release, several weeks ago. Hey Gamefly, maybe you should buy another couple of copies of that?
Anybody else using Gamefly? Getting the titles you want? I've had the occasional problem with not getting the top game on my list, but this is the first time I've ever had a particular title persist in being unreachable over several weeks. It's also the first time they've passed up SEVERAL titles in my list for something lower down.
I think I'm going to delete out the rubbishy things at the bottom of my list. I'd honestly rather they waited a day or two to get something better than sent me something that I'm likely to send back after a day or two.
technorati tags:Gamefly, gaming
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Flickr RSS's support is slightly uneven. The first problem (which appears intractable) is that the RSS feed for pictures from your contacts is not the same content as the web page. The RSS feeds don't show you anything marked as "only for family" or "only for friends". The short form is that you aren't logged into Flickr, so you don't get to see anything locked, just public stuff. Fair enough, but I wish they supported something like the LiveJournal trick I discussed here to allow your RSS reader to login and pull the full list.
Another thing that bugged me is that I can subscibe to comments on my photos, but not to comments on say Karin's photos. (I should note here that apparently this suffers from the same problem as the first paragraph - if you lock a picture you won't see comments on it in your comment thread.) However, I got to thinking about it and realized that doesn't make sense. If I wasn't logged in then there is no way for Flickr to know what comments came from "my account". So I poked around. Sure enough, if you do some judicious URL editing you can create a comment stream RSS for any Flickr user. Here's the scoop.
If you click the link that says "Feed – Subscribe to recent activity on your photos" from your Flickr page you get a URL that looks something like this:
http://api.flickr.com/services/feeds/activity.gne?id=35766250@N00&format=rss_200
(This is my own activity feed.)
That id=xxxxxxxx is the interesting part. From any Flickr user you can click "subscribe to photos" at the bottom of the page and you'll get a URL that looks like this:
http://api.flickr.com/services/feeds/photos_public.gne?id=35766250@N00&format=rss_200
(Again, that's a RSS feed for my photostream. All six photos.)
Now, you have a URL for comments for a given user, and you know how to extract the ID for any given User. So if you want to see the comments for some other user what you have to do is extract the id=xxxxxxxx field from their photo feed and paste it into the activity URL above and voila - that other user's recent comments!
All the usual disclaimers apply - this might not work for everybody, Flickr might break it at any time, yadda, yadda. I didn't get into the significance of the format= part (although Flickr does document that here.) I'm also not sure about the @N00 part. In my small sampling everybody has that, but that might change for Pro users or something. In general I'd suggest taking everything from the id= part and pasting it across.
technorati tags:flickr, RSS, software, web
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So I just finished watching the season 1 Lost finale. The funny thing is this - throughout the last two years I've been cognizant of an ongoing debate in the "SF community"* about whether Lost was sci-fi or not. Reach the end of season one and I realize that not only is it SF - it's frigging steampunk. What's more, they've been making audio hints in that direction throughout the first season! Anyway, I'd like season 2 to start . . . oh now, thank you very much Netflix!
technorati tags:Lost, Television, Sci-Fi
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