tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-98857292024-02-20T01:00:42.418-08:00David 2's Brutally TechThe Blog for tech issues. Written by Brutally Honest columnist David Matthews 2.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.comBlogger40125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-89282889279291036422012-12-21T16:40:00.000-08:002012-12-21T19:38:08.828-08:00An Open Letter to MMO Developers <p align="center"><span class="CharChar"><font size="6">An Open Letter to MMO Developers</font></span><b><font size="6"> </font></b><br><font color="#FF0000"><i>– by David Matthews 2</i></font></p><p>This is an open request to Massive Multimedia Online Role-Playing Game developers and their corporate managers:</p><p>Stop trying to kill World of Warcraft!</p><p>That may sound a little confusing, so bear with me while I clarify.</p><p>I keep hearing the phrase “WOW-Killer” from reviewers and developers as though the purpose of any MMO program is to utterly destroy World of Warcraft <i>(aka “WOW”)</i>. I know it’s more of a competitive mindset and a somewhat lofty goal to be able to knock the biggest name in MMORPG off its pedestal. But if that is truly your goal, then in all likelihood you will fail at it.</p><p>Is it impossible to defeat the Elite Boss of MMOs? No. Warcraft can be beat. But it’s not going to be beat by a company that is fixated on just doing that.</p><p>The MMO market is in a bit of a transition right now. The old subscription-based model worked when the economy was capable of keeping people employed with a steady income. But those days are over with and the Great Recession really stripped a lot of income away from the very users that would otherwise be paying for a regular subscription. Today the trend is the hybrid of subscription along with free-to-play and pay-for-features. Free-to-play gets the users to start playing the game, and to allow normal subscribers to keep playing the game should the economy force them to drop their subscription for a limited time. And pay-for-features allows MMO developers to figure out which features are really popular with the user-base.</p><p>So that’s really what the MMO developers and their corporate managers need to focus on first and foremost: survival. You’re not going to be able to beat Warcraft if you’re not still standing after they fall.</p><p>Another thing that self-professed “WOW-Killer” companies fail to do is they fail to advertise that their MMO even exists. </p><p>I’ve never played World of Warcraft, but I can tell you that their latest expansion is called “Mists of Panderia”. How do I know this? Because Blizzard Entertainment spends big money into letting people know about it. It’s on the TV and in magazines. You go to your local big-box superstore and you’ll find it displayed in their electronics section. In fact, you’ll probably find it easier than you would the latest Microsoft operating system or the newest anti-virus security suite.</p><p>Yes, Blizzard Entertainment spends the money for Vern Troyer and Mr. T and William Shatner to talk about the joy of being gamers. T can even brag about his “Mohawk Grenade” and claiming to know something about being a programmer. It’s funny. But the question to those other companies that claim to want to beat Warcraft is this: where’s your TV spot? Oh, and “YouTube” is not an acceptable answer.</p><p>You want to beat Warcraft? There is the venue that you’ll need to play in to do it. If you’re not willing to pony up the money for that kind of advertising, then don’t even start trying to claim to be able to compete with them, much less beat them.</p><p>Then there’s this: how can you “beat” Warcraft if your MMO is just like it?</p><p>Take a look at your MMO. Can you describe it without you making any comparisons to Warcraft? If the person you’re describing this to responds with “So it’s like Warcraft but…”, then you’ve failed.</p><p>“It’s a fantasy world of swords and sorcery where you develop your skills and relationships through team activities.” Sorry, but that’s Warcraft.</p><p>“It’s a fantasy galaxy of lasers and blast-cannons where you advance in rank and create your army through team activities.” Sorry, but that’s Warcraft in space.</p><p>“It’s a fantasy city of capes and cowls, where heroes develop their powers and organize into super-legions with other heroes.” Sorry, but that’s Warcraft with capes.</p><p>Take a look at Star Wars: The Old Republic MMO. <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; " href="http://www.blisteredthumbs.net/2012/11/mmo-grinder-ep33/">One MMO reviewer</a> came to the realization that the whole player interface was pretty much ripped off from Warcraft. In fact, he even showed the screens of the two games and showed how SWTOR mirrored Warcraft’s activities.</p><p>I’m going to go on a limb and make a prediction here: the MMO that replaces Warcraft on the top of the heap will be something that is so different that people won’t make comparisons to Warcraft.</p><p>The last way that you can beat World of Warcraft is this: by not continually competing against it. </p><p>The now-defunct City of Heroes MMO earned a huge support base because the developers didn’t try to compete against Warcraft. Rather, the developers at Paragon Studios worked to make their MMO to be the best possible in the superhero genre, so when all other superhero MMOs came out, from Champions Online to DC Universe Online to the future Marvel MMOs, those MMOs were compared to City of Heroes instead of Warcraft. The MMO was bringing in over two million dollars a year in steady income with almost no advertising whatsoever. That’s all from the steady user-base. And when NCSoft made the mistake of shutting that game down, the whole MMO world knew about it, and even their competition <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; " href="http://co.perfectworld.com/news/?p=772781">showed their respect and appreciation</a> for the game. </p><p>And, really, the biggest threat for World of Warcraft is not the competition, but rather it is the corporate hands that feed them. Paragon Studios and City of Heroes found out about that all-too-well with their own parent company, and, one day, the people behind World of Warcraft will realize it with Blizzard.</p><p>Maybe there’s a new MMO that people are flocking to. Maybe the gold-farming spammers have overwhelmed the servers. Maybe there’s a team of <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; " href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Griefer">game griefers</a> that make the experience too troubling for the others. Maybe the developers make the mistake of not listening to the users and come up with things that nobody wants to pay for. Maybe Blizzard has another MMO that they want to re-focus their corporate love. Maybe the Blizzard bean-counters will simply declare the game unsustainable. Whatever the reason, at some point the Blizzard execs will make the inevitable decision to shut down World of Warcraft, and then whichever MMOs are still around will be able to compete for the title of “King of the MMO Mountain”.</p><p>So the name of the game for MMO developers that really want to beat World of Warcraft is this: don’t try to be like Warcraft. Be your own MMO. Support and promote it. Earn the respect and support of your user-base by making it the best in its own genre. And when Warcraft does itself in, you’ll be in position to be the new measuring stick.</p><hr><i><font size="2">David Matthews 2 is a freelance writer living in Georgia. He has been around computers in one form or another since the 1980’s. </font></i></p><p><i><font size="2">This article may be distributed freely only so long as it is reprinted in its entirety, with all proper credit given to the author.</font></i></p><p><i><font size="2">2012 – Get Brutal Productions</font></i></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-14316028005709720472012-12-03T06:42:00.001-08:002012-12-03T06:42:37.677-08:00What is Microsoft Doing?<i>(The following is reprinted from <a href="http://brutallyhonestcolumn.blogspot.com/2012/12/week-of-12032012.html">"Brutally Honest"</a> with permission of the author)</i>
<p align="center"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-weight: 700"><font size="6">What is Microsoft Doing?</font></span><span style="font-family: Times New Roman; font-weight:700"><font size="7"><br></font></span><font color="#FF0000"><em>– by David Matthews 2</em></font></p><p>When it comes to Microsoft’s new Windows 8 operating system, I have one simple question…</p><p>Why?</p><p>That one question encompasses a whole bunch of other questions such as… Why now? Why shove us into a new operating system that abandons pretty much everything we’ve been taught to adapt to with Windows 7? Why should we care about upgrading? What is it about Windows 8 that will make us want to abandon what we’ve been doing with the previous versions of Windows?</p><p>Instead of getting answers, we get slick mindless ads for their “Surface” tablets. We hear about “live tiles” on the Windows cellphones. We watch a little girl painting stuff that eventually gets printed up and posted on a bedroom wall while she talks to her father via Skype. We see people dancing and prancing and doing acrobatics and pretending to be cool.</p><p>What is not being sold is why current Windows users should upgrade or even be excited about Windows 8.</p><p>There are many reasons why the push for Windows 8 at this time is just plain wrong, with timing being the first reason why.</p><p>It was only three years since Windows 7 came out, which was supposed to be better than Windows Vista, which was supposed to be better than Windows XP and Windows XP Media Center Edition. And now that people are getting used to Windows 7, we’re being told that we now have to completely scrap everything we know about Windows and embrace the new “Live Tiles” concept with the big ugly boxes that you’re supposed to scroll on through with a flick of a finger… if the ads are to be believed. <i>(For the record, I’ve tried it. It’s not to be believed.)</i></p><p>So people that have gotten used to XP get barely used to Vista, get shoved Windows 7 down their throats, and then three years later are told to scrap all of that for Windows 8. Why? Because some slick advertising campaign featuring leaping lunatics says it’s “cool”?</p><p>Timing also plays a key role when it comes to the business user… and that’s supposed to be important because Microsoft has always been known as the company that favors businesses with programs like the Microsoft Office suite. Corporations do not embrace sudden change like Microsoft does, especially when that change affects their own operations.</p><p>I’ll give you an example: suppose you’re in a company that uses a specific proprietary program to function. This program has worked for all the previous operating systems without too much difficulty… until Windows 7 comes along. Windows 7 has a different kind of authentication security that doesn’t recognize the certificate from previous versions. This means that your long-running proprietary program that your business relies on as part of its economic survival no longer works for computers that are running on Windows 7. That company will not upgrade their computers if those computers cannot use that proprietary program. It will destroy their company. So now the company’s IT department have to find a way to either craft a new authentication certificate to recognize that proprietary program, or they have to completely redesign their proprietary program specifically for Windows 7 and then thoroughly test this program to make sure that it works. All of that takes time. We are talking months; not hours or days. And now, while the IT people are still trying to get their company’s proprietary programs to work on Windows 7, here comes Windows 8.</p><p>There are companies that still use earlier operating systems for that very reason, and they are not going to rush to upgrade to anything that endangers their own operations. That is a business fact of life that Microsoft needs to accept if they still want the business crowd.</p><p>Money is another reason why this is a bad time to shove a new operating system down our collective gullets. America is still trying to get out of the Great Recession, something that our own government refuses to acknowledge is still going on, and that means that a lot of people don’t have the money to replace all of their computers just so they can use that new operating system.</p><p>Upgrade, you say? That depends on whether or not their computer can handle it. Here’s a hint: if your computer is still running on Windows XP, then it will not handle Windows 8 without spending a lot of money on hardware upgrades. </p><p>Another established fact of life is that every new operating system requires more and more resources from that computer. More hard drive space, more RAM, faster CPU speeds, and updated drivers for all of those peripherals, and not all of those things are readily available. If Intel or NVidia or AVG decide to sunset a certain graphics card, then there will be no new drivers for that card. In many cases, it would be cheaper to simply buy a new computer than to upgrade the one that you have, and if money is an issue, then neither option is viable.</p><p>This is why a lot of people are still using old computers with Windows XP or Vista on them. Being stuck in the Great Recession means having to make do with what you have, and to hell with Moore’s Law.</p><p>Speaking of security, one of the new complaints about Windows 8 is that <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; " href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-pavley/windows-8-game-over-man_b_2031123.html">many of the major gaming companies</a> are finding themselves shut out from all of the techno-pop celebrations. If you play Worlds of Warcraft or Diablo 3, for instance, the developers of those programs have said that Windows 8 is a <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline; " href="http://www.tomshardware.com/news/Rob-Pardo-Gabe-Newell-Windows-8-Catastrophe-Blizzard,16478.html">“catastrophe”</a>.</p><p>Time for a little history lesson. Remember when Bill Gates ran Microsoft in the 1990’s? One of the things that he did that set Microsoft apart from Apple was that he pretty much handed out certifications to whoever wanted to develop programs for Windows. Good programs, bad programs, mindless games, office applications, financial software, publishing aids, it didn’t matter. It was far easier to develop those programs for Windows that it did for Apple, and that allowed Windows to become the dominant operating system. You could walk into any computer store and find rows after rows of Windows programs, and then you’d be lucky if you saw only one rack set aside for programs designed for Apple. Apple set their own bar too high to be competitive.</p><p>Now fast-forward to today: if you’re an online gamer and you’re being told by the developers of your favorite MMO that they cannot support your favorite program being used on Windows 8, do you really think that you’re going to be in a rush to upgrade your computer to that new operating system? I didn’t think so. Especially if you’re spending money on a regular subscription to that game. All of the leaping lunatics dancing to techno-pop music will not change that fact.</p><p>Bear in mind that I understand where Microsoft is going with Windows 8. I do. Let’s get brutally honest here… Microsoft is trying to develop a sense of portability, just like Apple. They want to be able to have your PC, tablet, cellphone, and Xbox game system all connected, so you can do common functions like check your email or watch a movie or play a game anywhere from any device. So you can take a picture with your cellphone and send it to your other applications, or order a movie through Netflix on Xbox and then watch it on your tablet or cellphone. That’s what the whole business with “Cloud” was about a few years ago; they’re just taking those things to the next step.</p><p>But just because I understand where they are going, that doesn’t mean that I agree with the method. Windows 8 essentially turns your computer and tablet PC into glorified cellphones. This is especially the case with the new cellphone-like applications that Windows 8 users will be able to acquire.</p><p>One may even argue that Windows 8 could be used to eliminate the personal computer altogether, since the operating system is designed to be used primarily by the touch-screen interfaces seen in tablet PCs and cellphones, instead of the traditional hands-off monitors and mouse-cursor peripherals of the desktop PCs. One only has to look at the computer stores pushing laptops instead of desktop computers to see where the trend is heading. I would hope that this is not the case, though, as there is still a use for the personal computer for the end-user.</p><p>The executives at Microsoft need to understand that they did not become the 800-pound gorilla that they are now by trying to be like Apple. They became the major corporation that they are now because they reached out and encouraged development. They didn’t shove things down our throats and told us to simply accept it. </p><p>In other words, they out-did Apple by not behaving like Apple.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-56478501572543226422010-12-26T08:40:00.000-08:002010-12-26T08:42:01.408-08:00Flying and Tech<p style="text-align: center;" align="center"><span style="font-weight: 700;font-family:Times New Roman;font-size:180%;" >Flying and Tech</span><br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><i>- by David Matthews 2</i></span></p><p>Over the past ten years, there have been two things that have been on the steady increase… airport security and personal technology.</p><p>Airport security has had to go on the increase because of the ever-present fear of terrorism. This has required passengers to be inconvenienced as they take off their shoes, their coats, their belts, and also take special considerations to make sure that their personal technology doesn’t get damaged from those same enhanced security measures.</p><p>Quite recently, this author had to take a trip to Oklahoma City to visit <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://www.shocknetradio.com/">with a radio station that I work with</a>. Having been taken to the airport extremely early to avoid hassles with security and the various check-in times, not to mention having my return flight delayed six hours due to weather, I had the opportunity to check out some of the provisions that the airports in Atlanta and Oklahoma City have for personal technology. The two airports that I visited were Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, and the Will Rogers Airport in Oklahoma City. <i>(Fortunately these were both direct flights, so there were no layovers.)</i> </p><p><b><u>Security</u></b></p><p>As far as security goes, despite the media hype about pat-downs and body scanning, both airports I visited were using enhanced device-detection equipment, but not the “see through your clothes” scanners. This still required the removal of your coat and shoes, but it also meant removing my belt, watch, ring, and emptying my pockets of everything, even my wallet, pocket change, and plastic comb.</p><p>Most of the equipment I brought with me was in my computer carrying case or in my pocket. This consisted of my laptop computer, cellphone, Bluetooth earpiece, and a thumb drive for my data. Additional equipment, such as my plug-in electric razor and the chargers for my cellphone and earpiece, were checked in with my luggage. </p><p>When going through the security line, they provide a series of plastic bins for you to put in all of the items that have to be screen separately. Sensitive equipment like laptops and cellphones are not scanned for obvious reasons, and you are required to take your laptop out of the case. A good suggestion for travelers is to put all of your sensitive equipment (including thumb drives) in the same bin to keep them all together. Make sure this is the very first bin (or bins) scanned. And make sure you keep an eye on it after you go through it yourself to make sure that you recover everything you scanned. Due to the large volume of people that have to go through the system, it is very easy to forget something in the rush, and in both flights I heard announcements of personal belongings left behind.</p><p>Unfortunately, while both airports made accommodations for the large volume going INTO the security screening area, they fell painfully short in providing accommodations for passengers LEAVING the same area.</p><p><b><u>WiFi Access</u></b></p><p>Both airports offered wireless network access for “convenience”. While this sounds like a good service for people with laptops, when I searched the networks at Will Rogers Airport, it was listed as “unsecured”. This is not good for Internet users, and in fact some <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://wsbradio.com/localnews/2010/12/wsb-scam-alert-free-wifi-risks.html">recent news stories</a> have suggested that hackers have been taking advantage of airports providing this service to go after your personal laptop information.</p><p>Unfortunately any kind of security improvements that would make this service usable could easily be countermanded by the quest to keep the airport “safe”. So it is best to not take them up on this offer.</p><p><b><u>Kiosk Service</u></b></p><p>Another service that I saw at both airports was a kiosk for Internet access. This wouldn’t be too bad for a quick access for news or sports scores, but when it comes to personal email, even web-based email services, this would be extremely risky.</p><p>First, there is no way to make sure that your personal information wouldn’t be collected, and one should presume that with a public service like this, there would be NO privacy whatsoever. </p><p>Second, these kiosks aren’t free. They do want you to pay for the service, which means putting in your credit or debit card in there, and that is risky as well. Besides, most airports have free TV service that provide basic news, weather, and sports scores, and let’s not forget the mainstay of an airport - the newspaper stand. So there really is no need to use the kiosk for those reasons.</p><p><b><u>Tech Store</u></b></p><p>One feature that Hartsfield had at the airport terminals was a specialty store for the tech-friendly traveler. Here one could get battery chargers, replacement earphones, spare portable hard drives, and pretty much anything else that you would need for your cellphone, laptop, PDA, Blackberry, or iPhone that you may have forgotten about or got lost in your travels.</p><p>This is actually one of the better ideas for airports to include along with the array of fast-food franchises, book-and-memento stores, and the terminal bar to get people drunk before their flights. With more and more tech-friendly travelers bringing their equipment with them on the plane, there exists a great opportunity for merchants if they know how to market it right.</p><p>The one thing that I noticed, though, was the high-dollar value on some of the devices for sale. While I could see travelers getting a spare battery or some thumb drives for their laptop, I really don’t see them getting video projectors at an airport.</p><p><b><u>Tech-Friendly Areas</u></b></p><p>Finally we get to the biggest part of the airport experience… waiting around. Whether it is because you had to arrive incredibly early to avoid the traffic, or if you were forced to wait while your flight was on hold due to the weather (and I had to endure both), the terminal gate at both airports were FAR from friendly for passengers waiting for their flights.</p><p>Sadly, airport gates were never really designed for people who had to wait for any length of time. Every gate at every airport that I’ve been to have all been identical in terms of the same padded bleacher seats, an occasional table, and absolutely no place for a traveler to plug in a laptop. That’s good if your wait time before boarding was maybe ten or fifteen minutes. NOT if you’re held over for two hours.</p><p>That means if you want to set your laptop down and work on that project you need to finish, you have to go to one of the food courts or airport lounges so you can use their tables. Either that or try to find some way to get comfortable with the laptop on your lap… which, despite its name, is not always easy to do. Even then you’re at the mercy of your laptop’s battery.</p><p>Fortunately, Atlanta’s Hartsfield Airport has tech-friendly stations at their food court area in the middle of their terminals. These are bar-style eating areas with power strips running down the middle of the counter; perfect places for you to charge up your cellphone or to use your laptop without running down the battery.</p><p>Hopefully other airports can follow Hartsfield’s example in this regard, especially given the demand being made for travelers to check in earlier and earlier, plus the additional time needed to get through security. They don’t necessarily have to revamp their terminals, but to have someplace where people could sit down, plug in their electronics, and work while they wait to board their flights would certainly make the experience tolerable.</p><p>---</p><p align="left"><b><i><span style="font-size:85%;">David Matthews 2 is a freelance writer living in the greater Atlanta area. He is a longtime computer user and has been involved with computers since the 1980’s. This article can be distributed freely provided that it is unaltered and all proper credit is given to the author.</span></i></b></p><p align="left"><b><i><span style="font-size:85%;">2010 – Get Brutal Productions</span></i></b></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-10714560127438947072010-04-21T19:11:00.000-07:002010-04-21T20:27:41.607-07:00McAFail9am ET: McAfee sends an update to their security suite.<br /><br />Not long afterward, users of Windows XP get a message saying McAfee found a critical virus and needs to reboot to remove it.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://i.i.com.com/cnwk.1d/i/tim//2010/04/21/virusscanalert.jpg?tag=mncol;txt"><img style="display: block; margin: 0px auto 10px; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 265px; height: 149px;" src="http://i.i.com.com/cnwk.1d/i/tim//2010/04/21/virusscanalert.jpg?tag=mncol;txt" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />And BOOM there goes your computer!<br /><br />Well, thankfully not mine.<br /><br />McAfee officials were red-faced to explain how they overlooked the fact that their <a href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-20003074-83.html?tag=newsLeadStoriesArea.1">latest virus update</a> would declare a crucial element of the Windows XP operating system a virus, and that removing that crucial element would force XP users into a continual reboot-and-crash scenario. Even after tens of thousands of irate McAfee customers sounded off, McAfee officials claimed that evening that they had "no idea" of the impact of their "modest mistake".<br /><br />The digital fail only affected computers that used the Microsoft Windows XP SP3 operating system. The same operating system that Microsoft has been trying to force into oblivion for several years. But that still doesn't change the fact that THOUSANDS of computer users who pay for their security service were without their computers, and some of those users could not afford to be without those computers. We're talking government agencies that suddenly had to back to the 1970's, or else shut down their computer-aided services.<br /><br />Even <a href="http://siblog.mcafee.com/support/mcafee-response-on-current-false-positive-issue/">their own website blog</a> didn't even TRY to sound apologetic for what happened, acting instead as though it was a minor inconvenience to a vast minority of computer users.<br /><br />This is a huge mistake for McAfee, and not just in terms of public relations. Police departments, jails, colleges, even hospitals were affected by this gross shutdown. The deputy chief of information in the District of Columbia has now put McAfee on his blacklist. These people will probably not continue using McAfee in the near future. <br /><br />It is precisely this kind of corporate indifference that Americans have come to despise, no matter the company or how essential their services are. McAfee's money isn't just in immediate software sales, but in long-term SUBSCRIPTION sales. If people cannot feel they can trust McAfee, they WILL find some other service. That is a fact of business that McAfee executives need to realize and immediately address.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-9560329232391632422009-10-22T08:01:00.000-07:002009-10-22T08:02:44.044-07:00The new Windows...<span style="font-weight: bold;">Windows 7</span>: should you upgrade? Should you rush right out and get it? Should you even be buying a computer right now?<br /><br />I'll talk about that this Saturday on my weekly show <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">"Brutally Honest"</span> on <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.shocknetradio.com/">ShockNet Radio</a>.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-22492358969268741892009-10-11T14:31:00.000-07:002009-10-11T16:31:26.471-07:00MMOs are broken? Really?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://fc02.deviantart.com/fs47/f/2009/183/e/c/Atlas_Plaza_by_djmatt2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 461px; height: 276px;" src="http://fc02.deviantart.com/fs47/f/2009/183/e/c/Atlas_Plaza_by_djmatt2.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><p>SyFy's Fidgit writer Tom Chick <a href="http://fidgit.com/archives/2009/01/five_ways_mmos_are_broken.php">penned a column back in January</a> talking about five reasons why he believed that the Multiplayer Online games are, in his words, "broken". Of course Tom used <span style="font-style: italic;">World of Warcraft</span> for his visual features... I prefer <a href="http://www.cityofheroes.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">City of Heroes</span></a>.<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://fc08.deviantart.com/fs51/f/2009/284/8/8/Brickstown_Trio_by_djmatt2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 319px; height: 152px;" src="http://fc08.deviantart.com/fs51/f/2009/284/8/8/Brickstown_Trio_by_djmatt2.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />But as a writer myself and the manager of <a href="http://battlerockx.blogspot.com/">my own MMO blog</a>, here is my take on this whole subject...</p><p style="font-weight: bold;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://paragonwiki.com/w/images//d/d5/Vault_Reserve_Heroes.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 296px; height: 202px;" src="http://paragonwiki.com/w/images//d/d5/Vault_Reserve_Heroes.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>(5) Subscription Fees.</p><p>How can this be a sign the MMO world is "broken"? Seriously. This is the fuel that feeds the fire that is MMOPRG. The companies that invest in these programs, that house the servers, that make the changes that people want and need and appreciate, they don't do these things out of the goodness of their hearts. They're in it to get paid.</p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://fc03.deviantart.com/fs48/f/2009/199/3/b/Heroes_In_War_by_djmatt2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 304px; height: 190px;" src="http://fc03.deviantart.com/fs48/f/2009/199/3/b/Heroes_In_War_by_djmatt2.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><p style="font-weight: bold;">(4) Aggro</p><p>This is a problem? Okay, so we have different classes and different categories for characters and you have to come up with a way to differentiate them to a computer.</p><p>You know what one of the most prolific discussions are in the CoH message boards? What kind of category <a href="http://www.dcuguide.com/who.php?name=BATMAN">Batman </a>would fall under. He's a <a href="http://paragonwiki.com/wiki/Scrapper">scrapper</a>, okay, but he does have some stealth abilities, which is a <a href="http://paragonwiki.com/wiki/Stalker">stalker </a>trait (villain category). He's a fighter and a martial artist, but are his reflexes "<a href="http://paragonwiki.com/wiki/Ninjitsu">ninja</a>" reflexes or are they "<a href="http://paragonwiki.com/wiki/Willpower">willpower</a>" reflexes?</p><p>Don't want aggro? Simple: get rid of the classifications, archetypes, roles, whatever it is that differentiates types of characters. Just create characters and then mix-and-match types of powers. I understand that <a href="http://dcuo.station.sony.com/">DC Universe Online</a> will be doing just that.</p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://paragonwiki.com/w/images//5/55/Purple_fire_control.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 327px; height: 173px;" src="http://paragonwiki.com/w/images//5/55/Purple_fire_control.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><p style="font-weight: bold;">(3) Button Lock</p><p>Yes I hate waiting around for a power to "recycle" too! Punch - wait 5 - punch - wait 5-punch... it gets annoying at first. Then you develop more powers and then you create combinations. Punch-jab-kick-jab-roundhouse-punch-jab-roundhouse-knockout-punch. Once you get used to it things just move.</p><p>You want a solution? I have one. Instead of "locking" a power until it fully charges, how about being able to use it depending on how long you recycle it? So the first punch is at 100%. If you wait another 5 seconds it will be back at 100%. If you punch immediately afterward it's at 20% power. If you wait 2 seconds it's at 40%. If you wait 3 it's at 60%. At 4 it's at 80%. That's what the human body does. Of course that requires another level of programming to make it all work.</p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://paragonwiki.com/w/images//3/33/Screen_invasion_05.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 324px; height: 236px;" src="http://paragonwiki.com/w/images//3/33/Screen_invasion_05.JPG" alt="" border="0" /></a><p style="font-weight: bold;">(2) Static Worlds</p><p>This is an eternal problem for City of Heroes players too. Take, for instance, the Rikti invasions. Wave after wave of alien ships bomb the city, blow up streets, and yet the monuments are undamaged. The buildings that were standing before are still standing afterward. The cars are still running and the people are still walking. There are no rescue operations after the invasions to free trapped citizens in burning buildings or from cars damaged from the bombs. Giant monsters can go rumbling about and then five minutes later there is no sign that they ever were there. Now that is one GREAT city maintenance job!</p><p>There IS a solution for this, but it would require additional programming.</p><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://fc02.deviantart.com/fs44/f/2009/081/b/f/Positron_and_Omega_Shift_by_djmatt2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 295px; height: 230px;" src="http://fc02.deviantart.com/fs44/f/2009/081/b/f/Positron_and_Omega_Shift_by_djmatt2.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><p style="font-weight: bold;">(1) You can't play with the people you want to play with.</p><p>I'll one-up this. See the girl on the above image? That's a player-created character. The male character on the left of her is a non-player character (hence the yellow ring at his feet). Rather than having him just stand there giving out missions, why can't she team-up with him? He's got the experience.</p><p>When it comes to other players, City of Heroes has one-upped the original author's complaint with their <a href="http://paragonwiki.com/wiki/Issue_16#Super_Sidekicking">super-sidekicking</a> feature, which elevates or hinders all team members to the level needed for the mission. But how about bringing in those legendary heroes or villains to work WITH you?</p><p>On the plus side, DC Universe Online is supposed to allow you to work side-by-side with their legendary characters. I hope this will really be the case whenever they go live with it.</p><p>Now I DO have an issue that the author didn't mention...</p><p><span style="font-weight: bold;">(0) Dice-Roll</span></p><p>Okay, so my character has immobilized a thug. The thug cannot move. Why is it I cannot hit that thug each and every time from point-blank range if the thug cannot move?</p><p>The problem is that games like City of Heroes are still based on the old Dungeons-and-Dragons rules, which meant that you rolled dice and then your attack depended on chance. But the real world is not that random. If you immobilize a person, they cannot move. If you attack them at point-blank range, then you should ALWAYS be able to hit that person.<br /></p><p>MMOPRGs have obviously grown from the days of the old Ultima game, and even from the original paper-and-dice incarnations, but clearly there is plenty of work that needs to be done before they can resemble the intricacies of the real world.<br /></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-3025013522364755392009-08-07T07:46:00.000-07:002009-08-07T07:51:02.957-07:00A Blast From the PastHow times have changed!<br /><br />Once upon a time this USED to be the hottest thing on the market. This was before the days of the Macintosh and back when Microsoft was just another version of the DOS operating system.<br /><br />Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the hottest thing in 1988... the COMMODORE AMIGA.<br /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="450" height="355" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" src="http://www.archive.org/flow/flowplayer.commercial-3.0.5.swf" w3c="true" flashvars='config={"key":"#$b6eb72a0f2f1e29f3d4","playlist":[{"url":"http://www.archive.org/download/amiga_2/format=Thumbnail?.jpg","autoPlay":true,"scaling":"fit"},{"url":"http://www.archive.org/download/amiga_2/amiga_2_512kb.mp4","autoPlay":false,"accelerated":true,"scaling":"fit","provider":"h264streaming"}],"clip":{"autoPlay":false,"accelerated":true,"scaling":"fit","provider":"h264streaming"},"canvas":{"backgroundColor":"0x000000","backgroundGradient":"none"},"plugins":{"audio":{"url":"http://www.archive.org/flow/flowplayer.audio-3.0.3-dev.swf"},"controls":{"playlist":false,"fullscreen":true,"gloss":"high","backgroundColor":"0x000000","backgroundGradient":"medium","sliderColor":"0x777777","progressColor":"0x777777","timeColor":"0xeeeeee","durationColor":"0x01DAFF","buttonColor":"0x333333","buttonOverColor":"0x505050"},"h264streaming":{"url":"http://www.archive.org/flow/flowplayer.h264streaming-3.0.5.swf"}},"contextMenu":[{"Item amiga_2 at archive.org":"function()"},"-","Flowplayer 3.0.5"]}'> </embed><br /><br />And under $1000 back then? That WAS cheap!David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-14192357391684206542009-04-09T12:42:00.001-07:002009-04-09T12:43:02.481-07:00Where old data goes..<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyimages/1231.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 415px; height: 531px;" src="http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyimages/1231.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-84420776346014579702009-01-25T06:16:00.001-08:002009-01-25T06:24:18.547-08:00Mac at 25: Has it really been that long?Has it really been twenty-five years ago that I was playing with a Mac? That I was writing articles and doing my reports on a Mac? That I thought that grayscale and lined textures were cool? That a little 3 1/2" square device could hold everything?<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyimages/1200.gif"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 425px; height: 602px;" src="http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyimages/1200.gif" alt="" border="0" /></a>Seems more like 50. And btw, my new technolust is a <a href="http://www.computers.us.fujitsu.com/images/swf/A1110/">Fujitsu Lifebook</a>.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-59402353805466323422008-12-21T08:32:00.000-08:002008-12-21T08:52:05.550-08:00This is why Wii controllers have armbands<object width="320" height="265"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/6hUviDl1Dlk&hl=en&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/6hUviDl1Dlk&hl=en&fs=1&color1=0xe1600f&color2=0xfebd01" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="320" height="265"></embed></object><br />Also don't they tell you to keep some distance away from the screen?David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-17600977449879724592008-11-17T07:21:00.000-08:002008-11-17T07:22:51.872-08:00MatriXP SP1I know it's been a while since I posted an article in a while, but I will soon.<br /><br />In the meantime...<br /><a href="http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=46346467">The Matrix Runs on Windows</a><br/><object width="425px" height="360px" ><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"/><param name="movie" value="http://mediaservices.myspace.com/services/media/embed.aspx/m=46346467,t=1,mt=video"/><embed src="http://mediaservices.myspace.com/services/media/embed.aspx/m=46346467,t=1,mt=video" width="425" height="360" allowFullScreen="true" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"></embed></object>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-88931191107330062582008-07-17T16:37:00.000-07:002008-07-17T16:38:56.280-07:00Surface Demo - CES 2008Here's the latest on Microsoft Surface, the new tabletop interface.<br /><br /><embed src="http://www.metacafe.com/fplayer/1504698/microsoft_surface_demo_ces_2008.swf" wmode="transparent" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="345" width="400"></embed><br /><span style="font-size:78%;"><a href="http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1504698/microsoft_surface_demo_ces_2008/">Microsoft Surface Demo @ CES 2008</a> - <a href="http://www.metacafe.com/">Watch more funny videos here</a></span><br /><br />Go ahead Apple-heads... try to claim they stole this from Jobs!David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-7483009208819498242008-04-25T08:59:00.000-07:002008-04-25T09:02:20.401-07:00Microsoft's XP Problem<p span="" style="text-align: center;" align="center"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-size:180%;" >Microsoft’s XP Problem</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic; color: rgb(51, 51, 255);" class="bylineChar">– by David Matthews 2</span></p><p>Microsoft has a serious problem on its hands.</p><p>How do you get rid of an operating system that nobody wants to abandon?</p><p>For many years now, Microsoft users have been working with the Windows XP operating system. Sure it was buggy at first. Pretty much every operating system that has been cranked out by the House That Gates Built has had bugs and a plethora of required security fixes waiting for users the minute that welcome screen appears for the first time.</p><p>But it’s been over a year since Microsoft has come out with their brand-new operating system called Windows Vista and the response has been pretty much met with disgust. Not only are people NOT ready for a new operating system, but they are DEMANDING that they be allowed to continue to purchase and install Windows XP. Computer retailers like Dell are still offering computers with XP installed instead of Vista. Worse yet, big companies, which are usually the backbone to computer sales, are categorically REFUSING not only to install Vista, but many of them have also REFUSED to upgrade their browsers to Internet Explorer 7!</p><p>Even worse, Microsoft has been forced to <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080413/D90153T00.html">push back their end-date</a> of their support for Windows XP to April of 2009, and quite possibly even later than that.</p><p>I’m sure the Microsoft geeks and suits are pulling the remaining hairs out of their balding heads trying to figure out why. After all, weren’t these the same geeks and nerds that were complaining about XP being buggy? Sure they were! Wouldn’t they relish the new security features that are incorporated into Vista? Maybe.</p><p>But there’s more to this than just hesitation about a new system. Microsoft has really handled the Vista rollout in a way that has done the product and themselves a huge disservice.</p><p>Let’s take it by the numbers…</p><p><b>Bad Minimums</b> – When Microsoft cranked out the specs for computer retailers and manufacturers to determine if their product is “Ready for Vista”, they set the bar TOO low. Sure many computers COULD run Vista. It would be slower than molasses and you wouldn’t be able to add any other programs that would use up memory on top of the basic operation of the program, but it COULD run on Vista.</p><p>As a result, there were plenty of computer systems where even the salespeople were telling you NOT to buy because it barely operated with Vista on it as opposed to XP.</p><p>Basic rule, boys and girls… EVERY new operating system demands more and more memory, more and more hard drive space, more and more processor power, and more and more of pretty much everything else a computer would use. Microsoft or Apple, it doesn’t matter. If you want a bare-bones operating system, switch to Linux. Otherwise, consider every new OS a bloated monster.</p><p>Microsoft’s “minimum” requirements were simply TOO LOW. They needed to shoot for OPTIMAL requirements, not MINIMAL.</p><p><b>FORCED to go Cold Turkey</b> – This was actually a problem going back to Internet Explorer 7, which they declared to be a REQUIRED CRITICAL upgrade. Their intention was to FORCE people to upgrade, whether they wanted to or not.</p><p>The same principle was used with the roll-out of Vista. They told the retailers that whatever leftover computer was in stock HAD to be upgraded to Vista, whether it would run or not, and then they were planning on shutting off support for XP only six months after the roll-out before the social pressure forced them to change that.</p><p>This has been an EXTREMELY BAD idea, and it is probably one of the chief reasons for resistance to getting people to upgrade both to Vista and to IE7. People don’t like being FORCED to upgrade unless it involves something like a security patch or updated drivers. Telling people that they need a whole new Internet browser or a whole new operating system and calling that a REQUIRED upgrade is simply demanding too much.</p><p>Bear in mind that some companies are STILL using computers that are running on the Windows NT, Windows 2000 and Windows 98 operating systems, and even a few are using Windows ME! They’re not changing because they’re afraid of change, they’re staying with a particular operating system because that what they are using right now WORKS for them. Maybe they have specialty programs that they can’t use with an upgraded operating system. Maybe it’s just not feasible for them to change computers and upgrade to the latest-greatest toys. This is where Microsoft SHOULD be encouraging people to upgrade, and instead they are simply being told “do this because WE SAID SO.”</p><p><b>Bad Legacy</b> – One of THE most annoying things about game systems is their lack of compatibility with previous systems. You spend money on a game system like an Xbox or Playstation 2 and they produce a whole plethora of games designed for it, and then they come up with Xbox360 or Playstation 3, and you discover that NONE of the games you had spent all of that money on work on the new game systems! That’s why sales of Playstation 2 actually beat out all of the “new” game systems back in 2006.</p><p>Well the same premise applies to upgrades in operating systems. The key requirement for businesses to upgrade is to make sure that the new item works with their current applications. You want to make sure that your call center software or your modem or your database or your printer works with the new operating system or platform. That’s why businesses continue to use outdated operating systems, because it would cost them a lot more to upgrade than just changing the programs or even changing the computer. You’re messing with the things that make their businesses functional!</p><p>Sure some operating systems were really just glorified bug fixes. For instance, Windows 98 and Windows ME were both glorified bug fixes for Windows 95, and Windows 2000 was a glorified bug fix for Windows NT. But with Windows XP you weren’t just fixing bugs, you were abandoning the MS DOS framework and embracing the NT framework. You were also changing file compression standards to the new FAT32 system. And Vista changed things even more. We’re talking not just some extra features and some new Graphical User Interface goodies. The whole operation of the program changed with Vista.</p><p>And this is where Microsoft has fallen flat, both in XP AND in Vista. They really don’t provide adequate support for backward compatibility and instead DEMAND that any applications that use their new operating system have brand new drivers for those applications. So if you have a 5-year old monitor that was made obsolete by the manufacturer, it won’t work on Vista because you lack the required drivers for it and Vista refuses to recognize the ones for XP.</p><p>Sure, Windows XP set up a “shell compatibility” system. It would mimic an earlier operating system for certain programs, but it would be just that… a mimic. It would be a shell, so it wouldn’t really integrate into other systems. So if you have a custom database program that needs to work with your email service, it really wouldn’t function in this “shell” environment. And you couldn’t guarantee that it would work in every situation either. I have tried the shell environment on some of my older programs and they really didn’t work the same.</p><p>One of the larger groups that complained about this incompatibility were the massive multiplayer online gaming community. Game-players for popular MMORPGs like Worlds of Warcraft and City of Heroes that got themselves new computers or upgraded their operating systems suddenly found their paid-subscription services no longer working because they lacked the needed drivers for Vista. Not exactly the kind of news you want to hear when you’re rolling out a new operating system and you want everyone to sign up on it.</p><p>This is something that Microsoft really needs to work on in addition to getting the bugs fixed with their new systems.</p><p>And finally…</p><p><b>New Corporate Security Rules</b> – Corporate accountability! This is probably the biggest stickler to getting companies upgraded to Vista, and also one that Microsoft probably never imagined they would get caught up in.</p><p>There are plenty of reasons why corporate accountability is such a big issue. </p><p>You can start with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the all-encompassing federal law that REQUIRES that corporations sacrifice whole forests so they can document everything that they do, including their software testing. Companies now have to hire auditors to make sure that everything is in compliance, and auditors expect a full accounting of every program on the workstations, who has access to the company’s servers, and how they access it, and why they need to.</p><p>Add to that the push from software companies like Adobe for copyright and licensing accountability. The bean counters need to make sure that every computer uses a program has a license for it and can trace the purchase of that license. </p><p>And then throw on top of that the rise of identity theft and security breaches either through hackers or stolen equipment, or even through malicious software that gets downloaded. You know that “really cute program” you found on the Internet? You know, the one you got from a friend, that you forwarded over to another friend? It’s not that “cute” when it ends up putting a hole in your company’s server firewall and sending the server’s IP address and your username and password to a hacker in Hong Kong.</p><p>Put all of those things together and you have a corporate environment that is outright HOSTILE to any kind of change, much less one that Microsoft expects should be done immediately.</p><p>Microsoft’s biggest problem is they have an unrealistic expectation of change for their customer base, be it corporate or the personal user. Most people are not quick to make changes to their system, and not everyone is eager in getting the “latest-greatest” as they used to. Changing an operating system or changing a web browser is not the same as installing a security patch, and it should not be treated as such. </p><p>Getting people off an operating system is not something that can be done in a matter of a few months or even a year. We’re talking a process that takes YEARS to test, diagnose, test, fix, and test again. As much as the corporate executives would love to speed up that process, it’s not as feasible as it used to be.</p><p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>-----</i></span></p><p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>David Matthews 2 is a freelance writer living in the greater Atlanta area. He is a longtime computer user and has been involved with computers since the 1980’s.</i></span></p><p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>This article can be distributed freely provided that it is unaltered and all proper credit is given to the author.</i></span></p><p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>2008 – Get Brutal Productions</i></span></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-66115168599592129312008-03-31T04:32:00.000-07:002008-03-31T04:33:43.195-07:00HDTV: What a SCAM!<p>I’ve been having to price digital TVs of late… my old one is over a decade old and beginning to show its age.</p><p>Don’t get me wrong, it’s a nice 38” old-fashioned TV. Weighed a TON. It’s a bitch to carry, and I had to help carry it up a hill and up a flight of stairs to move it to my apartment. It was on discount, and we didn’t know why until I tried to plug in some external speakers and found out that one of the jacks were dead. But other than that, it was a great system. Picture-in-picture option (when the remote buttons worked), multiple input options, S-video and digital audio where available (back then those were brand new options), surround sound audio (when available of course). It’s a nice TV and it would STILL be a nice TV if not for the fact that the on-screen displays are screwed up and the remote that is heavily tied into the TV functions has lost some of the essential buttons. </p><p>And now the color is starting to go away on it. When you turn it on, everything has a red tint to it that sometimes stays there for several hours, no matter what you do to try to fix it. Then when the TV corrects itself, everything comes out greenish-blue because you’re used to seeing the red hue.</p><p>Yup, it’s time to get a new TV set.</p><p>And now I’m running into a REAL case of sticker shock!</p><p>I start pricing TV sets, and I’m finding that pretty much every store I go to wants me to spend at least $1000 or more on a TV set that is SMALLER than the one I have right now!</p><p>Bear in mind that my 38” TV set when I got it in 1995 cost about $550 and it was at the time considered state-of-the-art! Today you’re lucky if you can find a 30” HDTV system for slightly more than that! And you have to dig for those, because the stores don’t want you to find those TV sets. They want you to see the ones that cost you $2000 or more!</p><p>Oh, you want something affordable? Well we have some 19” HDTV sets for $600 for you. How about it? We’ll even arrange financing!</p><p>And all I can think of is…</p><p>WHAT A FRIGGING SCAM!</p><p>Why is it a scam, you ask? Well try this… </p><p>You can get a <a style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;" href="http://shop2.outpost.com/product/5533960?site=sr:SEARCH:MAIN_RSLT_PG">PlusTV video converter</a> for about $90 at your local computer store that can turn a computer monitor into a TV set. No computer needed, just the monitor and some speakers. So you go to Best Buy or Wal-Mart or Fry’s or whatever your local store is that sells computer monitors, and you buy a 19” widescreen monitor for $200 along with the video converter and a pair of $20 speakers. </p><p>Total price: $310</p><p>I just cut the price of a 19” TV IN HALF!</p><p>Better yet, the computer stores are DYING to get rid of widescreen computer monitors, so you can get a LARGER widescreen monitor and even at $400, I just saved you half the cost of the HDTV!</p><p>So why do these stores think that we should pay that much for a little itty-bitty TV set? It’s really not worth it.</p><p>Look, if I’m going to get a TV set, I’m not going to get one that is the same size as my computer monitors. And I don’t have $3000 at my disposal. If I did, I would spend it on something more meaningful than a 50” TV. If I won the lottery or got my best-selling book published and I was looking at building my dream home with the theatre room, THEN I’d consider getting those 72” screens. </p><p>But for now I guess I’ll just have to keep on looking and hoping for some economic SANITY to hit the TV market.</p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-80740325129411680652007-12-30T04:51:00.000-08:002007-12-30T04:59:24.857-08:00Whither Netscape<p class="MsoNormal">Hang your heads low, boys, hang your heads low.</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><a href="http://blog.netscape.com/2007/12/28/end-of-support-for-netscape-web-browsers/">Netscape will soon be no more.</a></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Netscape was THE original Internet browser!<span style=""> </span>Back in the days when the Internet was still seen as just a “geek’s toy”, Netscape was THE browser! <span style=""> </span>Yes, Microsoft still had Internet Explorer, but guess what?<span style=""> </span>IT SUCKED!<span style=""> </span>It SUCKED along with pretty much every other web browser that other people were cranking out, including the big online services such as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AOL">America Online</a>.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">The folks at the Mozilla Foundation came through with Netscape and they put it out on the Internet and they told everyone “Hey, come on over and download this FOR FREE! <span style=""> </span>No strings attached!”</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Web designers began using Netscape as the standard for their websites. <span style=""> </span><i style="">(And, yes, that included<a href="http://members.aol.com/DJM2/D2page.html"> the original Brutally Honest website</a> when it got started in 1996.)</i><span style=""> </span>Mozilla even released the source code for its browser back in 1998, which was seen as a MAJOR step for designers to develop add-ons and find ways to improve the program.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Netscape helped early Internet Service Providers like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mindspring">Mindspring</a> <i style="">(now <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EarthLink">Earthlink</a>)</i> compete with the online giants AOL, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prodigy_%28ISP%29">Prodigy</a>, and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CompuServe">CompuServe</a> <i style="">(two of which no longer exist)</i> not only by providing a web browser, but also later email and newsgroup applications which rivaled <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudora_%28e-mail_client%29">Eudora</a>.<span style=""> </span>They gave people more and more reasons to just get a simply ISP instead of the supposed “content-rich” Online Service Providers like AOL.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Here’s the funny thing: when Microsoft realized that their Internet Explorer SUCKED compared to Netscape, guess whom they turned to? <span style=""> </span>Yup!<span style=""> </span>They brought in the Mozilla Foundation to fix Internet Explorer!</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Sadly, Netscape’s demise was probably sealed back in 1999 when America Online bought it out from Mozilla.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">AOL COULD have incorporated Netscape into their system. <span style=""> </span>They COULD have used it to enhance their email and web browsing capabilities instead of using elements from IE. <span style=""> </span>But, no, that would have required THINKING.<span style=""> </span>AOL executives weren’t really THINKING back then. <span style=""> </span>They were too busy going on BUYING SPREES! <span style=""> </span>They bought out Netscape for the same reason that they bought out ICQ… BECAUSE THEY COULD! <span style=""> </span>They didn’t DO anything with it.<span style=""> </span>They just bought it.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Well Mozilla washed their hands clean of Netscape and then came up with an even BETTER web browser called <a href="http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/">Firefox</a>! <span style=""> </span>And of course because this was a completely open source project, it wasn’t long before elements of Firefox showed up in Internet Explorer 7 and AOL’s “revised” Netscape.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">So now it’s officially the end of the road for Netscape. <span style=""> </span>America Online will stop all updates and upgrades after February 1<sup>st</sup> of 2008, almost nine years after they bought their precious “toy”.<span style=""> </span>After that, users will be on their own.<span style=""> </span>Well, as I understand it, if they’ve been using Netscape as their primary browser, they’ve been on their own for a while now.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Oh, by the way, you should check out <a href="http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/asa/archives/2007/12/its_about_time.html">this blog entry from one of the Mozilla people</a> about his experience with the AOL-owned Netscape.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">If there’s anyone who still uses Netscape <span style="font-style: italic;">(and yes, I have a copy of it too)</span>, I SERIOUSLY recommend that you just switch to Firefox.<span style=""> </span>This is going to infuriate the folks at Microsoft, but the Firefox really IS the new standard!</p><p class="MsoNormal">Feel free to lament about Netscape's demise in the comments section.<br /></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-77579746972542477042007-12-25T06:17:00.000-08:002007-12-30T05:10:08.102-08:00Dude, you bought an iDud!This is what happens when you're obsessed with getting the "latest-greatest" toy... you end up with a $4000 phone bill!<br /><br />This is for real. Check it out!<br /><br /><a style="left: 0px ! important; top: 15px ! important;" title="Click here to block this object with Adblock Plus" class="abp-objtab-05692661301139824 visible ontop" href="http://www.youtube.com/v/fE7d7ji7aAo&rel=1"></a><object height="355" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/fE7d7ji7aAo&rel=1"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/fE7d7ji7aAo&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" height="355" width="425"></embed></object><br /><br />Wow, and I thought I went through the worst fifteen years ago when my sister ran up a $400-per-month phone bill signing on with Prodigy through long distance lines.<br /><br />Oh, and dude, you're on Abum, not YouTube... because I can't find it on YouTube! Here's a hint... it's not good to name-drop on vids that end up on other websites.<br /><br />(12/30 Update: I had to do a little more digging, but I finally found the YouTube video, so I replaced it, because the embedded Abum player continually started their video automatically, which really SUCKS!)David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-45560739545904297392007-11-03T14:06:00.000-07:002007-11-03T14:30:00.105-07:00Speaking of which...Hey, speaking of that unnamed store<a href="http://d2brutallytech.blogspot.com/2007/10/getting-talked-out-of-sale.html"> in my previous post</a>..<br /><blockquote style="font-style: italic;">As has been typical for this store, once the salesman leaves you to go check on other people, you pretty much won't see him again.</blockquote><br />What's up with that? What's up with that whole idea that the salesman will disappear after talking with you, especially after he's leaving you to ponder something over?<br /><br />For instance, you go check out monitors... the salesman immediately comes up and asks if you need any help. At THAT moment, you don't. So he leaves. But then you make up your mind and you NEED his help to get the item, and he isn't there! He's talking to a few dozen other customers, or he's gabbing away with the other salespeople. You have to wait until ANOTHER salesperson shows up and realizes that you're not just browsing.<br /><br />Hey, like I said in the previous post, a person with a shopping cart in that kind of store is NOT there for browsing. They have it in their head that they are going to BUY something, and usually not the kind of stuff that they can just hold in their hands. You don't need to dog that person RIGHT as they're showing up in your department, but understand that you have a REALLY good chance that you're going to make a sale off this person. So don't blow it!<br /><br />Oh, btw, for those stores who pride themselves in saying that their salespeople don't work on commission... just because they're not getting a commission for the sale doesn't mean that they're not putting in the heavy sale for things like your overpriced insurance program, and that can be a turn-off as well. Offer it, but once they say "no", respect it. I don't know why that is so hard for salespeople to understand; especially if, as you claim, they have nothing to gain either way.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-30876350125279774962007-10-28T14:48:00.000-07:002007-10-28T17:06:38.183-07:00Getting talked OUT of a saleOkay, this is an impromptu rant that really needs to be made.<br /><br />Came across what I though was a really good computer deal for under $200. I won't say which store, but I will say it was the same franchise <a href="http://d2brutallytech.blogspot.com/2007/01/computer-that-almost-never-was.html">that I had the online sale problems with</a> from my earlier article. I needed to get a replacement second computer because my current one is literally dying, and money, unfortunately, was once again a problem.<br /><br />So after a little hashing over between last night and this afternoon, I came to the decision to go buy that computer.<br /><br />I show up there WITH a shopping cart and ask the first salesman who dogs me to tell me about that computer other than what I can read on the little information tag.<br /><br />"You really don't want to get that one."<br /><br />Excuse me? Here I am with a shopping cart IN HAND ready to make a sale RIGHT THERE, and this guy is actually talking me OUT of a sale!<br /><br />He tells me that this computer is running Windows Vista Basic. Yes I know this.<br /><br />He tells me that it only has 512MB RAM. Yes I also know this.<br /><br />He tells me that the system will run VERY slowly because of the RAM.<br /><br />You're not dealing with a noobie, gramps. I've been playing this game before you even knew what a computer looked like!<br /><br />I tell him EXACTLY what I would be using this for. I tell him that I'm replacing a 6-year old computer that is running on 256MB RAM, a 60GB drive that is FAILING, and a video card that refuses to work on a cold startup. I tell him that I would be using this for playing music and some modest web surfing. I even point out that I ALREADY <a href="http://d2brutallytech.blogspot.com/2007/01/computer-that-almost-never-was.html">have another computer</a> that I do the bulk of my work with.<br /><br />But no, he still wants me to look at some of the other computers with more RAM. Oh, hey look at this one... 1GB of RAM, only $400! And here's another one for $599!<br /><br />Okay gramps, I'll humor you this one time... I'll look around. And then I'll return to the other computer and either you will make the sale for me or someone else will do it and HE will get his name for making the sale.<br /><br />As has been typical for this store, once the salesman leaves you to go check on other people, you pretty much won't see him again.<br /><br />Now mind you, as I'm trying to get talked out of this sale, ANOTHER person comes up, sees the same computer as I'm looking at, and he is ALSO getting talked out of the sale! Now this guy starts spouting off how much of a deal it is because he can tell you how much it costs to actually MAKE a computer by buying all of the components (which you can also do right there in the store). But he's also hearing the same spiel from a different salesman. "No, you don't want this, you want the more expensive computers over on the other sales island."<br /><br />So needless to say, after another twenty minutes of pacing around the little sales island and looking at all of the computer and then coming back to that computer, another salesman figures out that I'm looking for some help. I tell him that I want to buy THAT computer...<br /><br />"Um... I really don't think you want to get that computer.... it'll run a little slow."<br /><br />Here we go again!<br /><br />I give him an even SHORTER version of the story. I'm using this to replace a backup computer that is running on 256mb RAM, a 60gb drive that is FAILING, a video card that is FAILING, and it would be used for music and some modest web surfing. I tell him that I am hampered by two things, necessity and money. I've SEEN the other computer offers, and they are all outside of the affordable price range. Now can you PLEASE get me that computer?<br /><br />He goes to the back, five minutes later he returns (after talking to another customer), and tells me that he just can't seem to find that computer anywhere on the shelves. Maybe there's another computer they can get for me?<br /><br />Nope, there isn't. Goodbye.<br /><br />And I walked. Actually I was TOO kind in that I returned the shopping cart. I should have just left it right there at the other end of the building to remind them that they LOST a sale!<br /><br />They didn't even offer to box up the computer on display! If they were so desperate to sell out that series (which was their last excuse) then they should have at least offered to do that.<br /><br />This store made SEVERAL mistakes that cost them a sale.<br /><br />First: a person who walks into that store with a shopping cart is NOT someone who is causally browsing! That person is looking to BUY. That means that you have a REALLY good chance of making a sale right there. So the very last thing that you want to do is to talk someone OUT of making that sale!<br /><br />Second: if that person is looking to make a purchase and you think that there is a problem with the product in question, then you don't try to talk that person into trying to buy a more expensive computer. The consumer sees this as <span style="font-weight: bold;">bait-and-switch</span>! If they know that you have some complaints about the product and they still want to make the sale then you <span style="font-weight: bold;">MAKE THE SALE</span>!<br /><br />Third: if the product is REALLY sold out - and it's not just a convenient lie to get people to not buy the product for fear that you may have to restock it later when it is returned - then you sell the demo model at a discount! Or you offer to add something to it! If the problem really is with available RAM, then you offer to increase the RAM. That's not bait-and-switch - that's actually showing that you CARE enough to want them to enjoy the purchase.<br /><br />Now the hard part... figuring out what I'll do to replace the computer that is dying. I'll probably have to go to some discount computer shop and see if they have any refurbished XP systems for that same price range. At least the people there care enough to want a sale made.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-88098199014141507352007-07-10T09:55:00.000-07:002007-07-10T10:20:20.095-07:00Apple's dirty little iPhone/iHype secretMSNBC's Red Tape Chronicles <a href="http://redtape.msnbc.com/2007/07/why-was-iphones.html">came up with something rather disturbing</a> for all of you who got suckered into the whole iPhone iHype.<br /><br />It seems there's an additional cost for the BATTERY.<br /><br />Anyone remember the iPod's dirty little secret about its battery? You know which one... where you have a finite number of times you can charge it up and then that's it, it's dead. And you can't swap batteries without breaking the seal. The whole thing was designed so that iPod addicts would have to buy more iPod devices once their batteries die.<br /><br />Well guess what? The iPhone is just as bad!<br /><br /><blockquote style="font-style: italic;">"The iPhone battery will only survive about 300-400 recharges, the company says. Because the unit is sealed, consumers can't swap out dead batteries. Instead, dead phones must be sent to Apple, where battery replacement will take three business days and cost $79 plus a $6.95 shipping charge. Those who can't live without their cell phones for those three days can rent a spare iPhone for $29.<br /><br />This pricey, and apparently inevitable, aftercharge never made it into any of the voluminous news stories written and filmed about the iPhone prior to its launch on June 29. Why not?<br /><br />According to the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, Apple's Web site made no mention of the battery fee on the morning of June 29, when thousands of Apple faithful lined up all around the country to buy the phone, which costs $500 or $600, depending on model."</blockquote><br /><br />Worse yet, bloggers and MSM hacks who were ga-ga-ing over the iHype actually KNEW about this little "defect" AND SAID NOTHING, or worse yet they glossed over it.<br /><br />Folks, we're not talking about a $30 music player here. We're talking about a SERIOUS $500-600 investment for the iHype ALONE. You can buy a low-level computer for that price. You can buy a Playstation 3 or an Xbox 360 for that price! And that's not covering the full service package and setup costs and everything else.<br /><br />And all for an overhyped product that will spoil like the milk in your refrigerator.<br /><br />If anything I'm disappointed with the bloggers for drinking the Apple Kool-Aid over the iHype. I can understand the MSM players for being essentially iHype whores, but the bloggers who joined in with it really need to rethink their game.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-56922202584149647402007-07-08T12:34:00.000-07:002007-07-08T12:36:22.420-07:00Why idiots and tech should never mix<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyimages/980.gif"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px;" src="http://www.geekculture.com/joyoftech/joyimages/980.gif" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />They probably have emails that end with "@aol.com" too.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-50025124902537591392007-05-19T04:12:00.000-07:002007-05-19T10:16:46.155-07:00The other side of Apple's adsThis the reason why I'm in tech support.<br /><br /><object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/MVwbhsqEyNI"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/MVwbhsqEyNI" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object><br /><br />These are the kinds of sentiments I have to deal with, even though I work with PC-people.David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-73292976265826819892007-03-10T15:51:00.000-08:002007-10-28T17:08:02.943-07:00Whither CompUSA – at least in Atlanta anywaySad tech news for all <st1:city st="on"><st1:place st="on">Atlanta</st1:place></st1:city> techno-geeks.<span style=""> </span>CompUSA has announced this week that they will close off over 100 stores, including ALL SIX stores in the Metro Atlanta area. <p class="MsoNormal">That’s a serious kick in the nads for people.<span style=""> </span>I mean, normally you’d hear about two or three stores closing in a certain area, but not EVERY store in that chain.<span style=""> </span>That’s a “save us from bankruptcy” move.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">CompUSA has pinned the blame of this decision on extremely bad sales.<span style=""> </span>Well I gotta call BS on that one!</p> <p class="MsoNormal">It’s not bad SALES that is doing them in… it is bad SALES DECISIONS.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Let’s see if I can break this down for you so that even a corporate executive can understand what I’m trying to say here…</p> <p class="MsoNormal">The name of the chain is <b style="">CompUSA</b>.<span style=""> </span>It was set up to sell computers and computer-related items.<span style=""> </span>That is its claim to fame.<span style=""> </span>That is what got the techno-geeks and techno-newbies showing up.<span style=""> </span>Once upon a time it was very good at doing just that.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">It is NOT called <span style="font-weight: bold;">CellphoneUSA</span>.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">It is NOT called <span style="font-weight: bold;">DVD-PlayerUSA</span>.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">It is NOT called <span style="font-weight: bold;">Home-Theatre-Surroundsound-SystemUSA</span>.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">It is NOT called <span style="font-weight: bold;">Plasma-Screen-TVUSA</span>.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">It is NOT called <span style="font-weight: bold;">TiVOUSA</span>.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">And yet all of these things started taking prominent shelf space in the local CompUSA stores, pushing the computer-related items to the far extreme walls.<span style=""> </span>And by no coincidence, that’s also when they started experiencing the slacking sales.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Now I can understand the executive stupidity behind it.<span style=""> </span>They feel that they needed to “compete” with Best Buy and with Fry’s Electronics and with all of the other electronics superstores that get into selling a wide variety of electronic goodies.<span style=""> </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal">There is just one simple problem: the other stores didn’t pride themselves at ONLY being a computer superstore!<span style=""> </span>It’s like walking into a KFC restaurant and seeing nothing but cheeseburgers and fish sandwiches and then having to ASK for fried chicken.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">Krispy Kreme beats out Dunkin Doughnuts every time.<span style=""> </span>Why?<span style=""> </span>Because Krispy Kreme still sells doughnuts and the folks at Dunkin Doughnuts have to be reminded what the name of their franchise is.<span style=""> </span>Or maybe they should just go ahead and change their name to Croissant Cuisine.</p> <p class="MsoNormal">CompUSA dropped the ball when it came to selling computers.<span style=""> </span>There is really no other way to put it.<span style=""> </span>They dropped the ball and Best Buy and the other stores picked it up.<span style=""> </span>Now Best Buy is making mad money and CompUSA is closing down stores just to stay solvent.<span style=""> </span>If they want to get back what they lost, then they need to remember what the name of their store is and stick to it.</p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-13867668919814399832007-02-03T08:45:00.000-08:002007-02-03T08:48:52.667-08:00"Console Wars"... guess who won?<p class="MsoNormal">Back in November I posted an article about the “<a href="http://d2brutallytech.blogspot.com/2006/11/new-console-games-just-not-worth-hype.html">new console wars</a>” and how there was just too much damned hype about it and that they really weren’t worth the fuss and aggravation.<span style=""> </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Here’s a quick snippet:</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt 0.5in;"><i style="">Listen, all you're really doing is feeding the selfish nature of your children when you buy into this hype. I'm sure the graphics and sound are phenomenal, but you shouldn't go broke looking for these things. If your kids don't have a game console at all, look a little further up the isle and grab a PS2 instead of a PS3. You'll save about $300 and your kids will have a larger number of games to pick and choose from. You buy the new console now and you're going to have to wait for the really good stuff to come out!<o:p></o:p></i></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Bear in mind that this was back in November, when the “new console wars” were just beginning.</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Well the people at MSNBC <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16833561">have declared the “new console wars” to be over with</a>, and guess who came out on top?<span style=""> </span></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">I’ll let them break it to you…</p> <p class="textbodyblack" style="margin: 5pt 1in 5pt 0.5in;"><i style="">Much ink has been spilled over the so-called “console wars” between the new Nintendo Wii, the PlayStation 3 and the year-old Xbox 360. So now that 2006 is over and the numbers have been tallied, who won the home-console slugfest?<o:p></o:p></i></p> <p class="textbodyblack" style="margin: 5pt 1in 5pt 0.5in;"><span id="byLine"></span><i style="">The PlayStation 2.<o:p></o:p></i></p> <p class="textbodyblack" style="margin: 5pt 1in 5pt 0.5in;"><span id="byLine"></span><i style="">That’s right. The PlayStation 2 outsold all next-gen consoles by a fairly wide margin. <o:p></o:p></i></p> <p class="MsoNormal">And the reasons given for this “shocker”?<span style=""> </span>The unrealistic price of $500 per game system, and the lack of games to play on that system.<span style=""> </span>The very reasons why I was telling folks to not spend their money on the system.</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">As has been demonstrated time and time again, when I’m right, I’m right.<span style=""> </span>That’s not arrogance… that’s experience.</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">And I’m GLAD that I’m right in this case.<span style=""> </span>I’m sick and tired of these companies cranking out needless hype for game systems that they KNOW they will never have an adequate supply of, to play on games that they KNOW would not be available during that time, and to demand a price that they KNOW is more that it would ever be worth!<span style=""> </span>I’m sick of it!<span style=""> </span>And I’m glad to hear that the consumers are sick of it too!</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">If Sony and Nintendo and Microsoft want us to buy their “next generation” console system, then they need to add two words to their vocabulary: <b style="">REVERSE COMPATIBILITY</b>!<span style=""> </span>Sony should have designed their PlayStation 3 to allow us to play PS2 games on it.<span style=""> </span>Same for Microsoft’s Xbox360.<span style=""> </span>They’re running on CD-ROM discs!<span style=""> </span>How difficult would it be to adapt?<span style=""> </span>Cripes, they probably could do that right now and release it as a firmware upgrade!<span style=""> </span>Why have us use TWO separate game consoles to play these games, especially when the really cook games for the new system wouldn’t really be ready for a few more months or years?</p> <p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p> <p class="MsoNormal">Anyway, kudos to those of you who DID NOT drink the Jonestown Kool-Aid of hype.<span style=""> </span>Maybe the console makers will actually learn something from this so that there would not be another “console war” and they will instead release games that we would really WANT to buy.</p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-44645441619802204702007-01-28T11:55:00.000-08:002007-10-28T17:08:28.584-07:00The Computer That ALMOST Never Was<p align="center"><b><span style="font-size:180%;">The Computer That ALMOST Never Was</span><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">My Misadventures With Online Ordering</span></b><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 255);"><i>– by David Matthews 2</i></span></p> <p>I needed a new computer.</p> <p>Not “want” or “would like”, but NEEDED.</p> <p>The desktop computer that I was using has served me very well for over the past few years, but now it can’t handle what I need for it to do. I was running out of space, the latest version of my browsers and media programs require more RAM than my system has, and I don’t have the luxury of using my parents’ computer for things like burning video files to DVD. I’ve stopped buying games for the PC a while ago and I’ve been trying to figure out which programs I don’t use anymore just so I can squeeze some more hard drive space in for the stuff that I DO use it for. I can’t even consider upgrading the Office programs with the system I have now, and my versions of those programs have long since been “retired”.</p> <p>I needed a new computer.</p> <p>And yes, I am a techno-geek, but that doesn’t mean that I have money coming out of my butt to buy the latest, greatest, most advanced system available. My last name is neither “Gates” nor “Jobs”. Besides, I’m not the kind of hardcore techno-junkie that drools over the specs of the latest processor. I won’t be offended if my computer doesn’t have the LATEST processor or FASTEST video card. My interest in technology is tempered by reality. I care about computers because they are a means to an end. The “end” in this case is to get what I need to do done.</p> <p>So buying a computer for me means to look at what I can afford to get. I have a certain set of conditions and a pretty low price range to work with. I wasn’t going to get a new computer that is “just slightly” faster than my current one. Unfortunately all of the computers that I was looking at that have what I’m looking for were OUT of my current price range.</p> <p>Then, in my umpteenth online search, I came across a certain store sale. A brand name computer, 200 gigabyte hard drive, 1 gigabyte RAM, DVD burner, Windows XP Media Center operating system… all of the things that I’m looking for at JUST UNDER $400! It was just within my price range, so I go ahead and place the order.</p> <p>Bear in mind that this is an online sale only. I could not purchase this computer at the website’s physical store just up the road from where I live. And the computer on sale is offered as “refurbished”. “Refurbished” can mean pretty much anything. “Refurbished” can mean the previous owner simply returned it. “Refurbished” could mean the computer had a defect that needed to be returned and then the store fixed the defect and restored it to its original factory specs and now needs to get it out of inventory. “Refurbished” could mean that the computer had a scratch or came without a manual. It’s potluck, but at $400, I was willing to roll the dice.</p> <p>So, like I said, I placed the order. I put in the shipping information, the billing information, click send, and then wait. Hey, it WAS after business hours after all. And I’m all excited, because I though this was a GREAT deal I was getting.</p> <p>The following morning I get the confirmation email. By the end of the day I got another email from the company. I thought this would be the acknowledgement that the order was shipped.</p> <p style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt;"><i>Thank you for your order! It has become necessary to cancel your order due to discrepancies in the information provided to us, in either the bill-to or the ship-to portion of your order.<br /><br /></i></p> <p style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt;"><i>Under the circumstances, we recommend that you contact our sales or customer service department by e-mail to have a sales person assist you in placing the order.<br /></i></p> <p style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt;"><i>Your order number is ########.</i></p> <p style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt;"><i> </i></p> <p style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt;"><i>We apologize for the inconvenience and thank you in advance for your assistance.</i></p> <p>Bill-To and Ship-To were one and the same. The Bill-To had my credit card information.</p> <p>Well I did send out the email asking for an explanation, but I also called their toll-free number and asked for customer service. And I waited. And I waited. And I waited…</p> <p>A full forty-five minutes goes by before I get a very polite human who was quick to look up the order and say that there was something wrong with the credit card information and it got kicked back. He didn’t say what it was, and that it could be anything, even so much as a phone number being off, but that I should contact the credit card company to find out why. But if there’s nothing wrong with the credit card, then I should just go ahead and submit a new order.</p> <p>Fortunately for me, my credit card statement was right in front of me, so I called the credit card company. Even though it was after business hours, there was no waiting with them. I spoke with a very kind and courteous woman whom I could barely hear who confirmed that my credit card was still active and in good standing. She connected me over to the bank. Again, no waiting at all, and the person I spoke with was kind and courteous and she also explained to me that not only was the card in good standing, but nobody’s made any kind of inquiry or approvals in several weeks. If any inquiries got made and then kicked back, they’d know about it.</p> <p>So someone’s lying to me at this point. It probably wasn’t the human I was speaking to on the phone from customer service. The person who makes an arbitrary yes-no decision usually knows specifically what went wrong to cause the “no” decision.</p> <p>To be safe, I re-did the online information – line by line – exactly as the bank has it in their records. Phone information, home address, everything. Then I submit a new order to the online company. I also send an email back to the service department explaining everything to them and telling them that if they have a problem again to please contact me immediately so we can resolve it.</p> <p>The next morning, I get the acknowledgement email. An hour later, I get another email….</p> <p class="MsoBodyText" style="margin: 0in 1in 0.0001pt;"><i>Thank you for your order! It has become necessary to cancel your order due to discrepancies in the information provided to us, in either the bill-to or the ship-to portion of your order.</i></p> <p>At this point I’m pissed. I’m really pissed. Bear in mind that this is the SECOND arbitrary rejection, and one that comes after a SPECIFIC request to contact me if there is a problem. Why ask even for my work and home phone numbers if you’re not going to use them? (Well, I can guess why, but that’s for another subject.)</p> <p>So I spend my lunch hour on the phone… on hold… waiting for a human. </p> <p>Since I was pissed and on hold, I figured that I’d use my trusty old computer to do a little background check. I type in the company’s name and the word “complaints” in the search engine. Oh did I find PLENTY of reading material to keep me busy while I was on hold!!! Horror stories the likes of which would make miserly Scrooge look like the world’s greatest philanthropist in comparison.</p> <p>A little word of advice to all companies with customer service numbers… you DO NOT want people to be sitting and stewing on hold for more than ten minutes. That just invites people to find ways to keep themselves pissed off. And if your company has a bad track record with customer service, then keeping people pissed off for more than ten minutes invites more trouble for your company.</p> <p>This time I was on hold for only thirty minutes before I got to speak with a human. Again, she was very polite and listened as I explained everything to her, including how I spoke with both the credit card company and the bank to verify that everything was working and that they had not gotten any kind of notice that the card was rejected. She then says that she will manually submit the order herself.</p> <p>Oh, but hold on…</p> <p><i>“I need to get authorization. Apparently the price on this just went up to $449.”</i></p> <p>I didn’t need to hear that! Here I am trying for three days now to get this computer and suddenly the price goes up? Red lights are flashing in my head. I’m trying to decide if I even want to go another round if I’m having to pay even more for this computer. And what happens if this one fails? Will the price go up again? Do they even have the computer or are they all sold out and they just don’t want to admit it?</p> <p><i>“Okay, you’re all set. I’ve submitted a new order for $399.”</i></p> <p>It’s at the same price, so I’m breathing a sigh of relief. She gives me my new order number and tells me that she’ll be sending me a new email acknowledgement and says that if this doesn’t work that I should contact my credit card company.</p> <p>Actually at this point I’m thinking a lot more than that. I’m thinking that if this order gets rejected that there will not be a fourth attempt! Three strikes and you’re out. And I’m not going to be submitting a new order if the price of that computer is going to be edging up over my range. </p> <p>A whole slew of options start running through my head. Whom to contact, who to complain to, and what to do. Should I call consumer reporters like Clark Howard for help? Should I join my voices in the choir of dissatisfied people from my little lunchtime reading list? Maybe I should just write an article and send it out? (Well obviously I went ahead with this idea.)</p> <p>Out of laughs and giggles, I visited the physical store of this online company. It’s a national chain of stores, although it’s still not big enough for most people to recognize. I go searching for two things. First, what kind of computer I could get off the shelf, cash in hand, for the price that I’m trying to pay for the computer in question? Second, how much would a brand-new, factory-sealed, version of that computer cost?</p> <p>The answer to the first question shocked me. For roughly $400, I could only get a computer that is SLIGHTLY faster or larger than my current one. Double the current RAM, maybe a slightly larger hard drive, a CD-ROM burner, and the same operating system. In other words, I’d be better off sticking with my old and faithful (and crowded) computer.</p> <p>The answer to the second question didn’t really surprise me. If I bought that same computer at the physical store, I’d be paying $600 for it. That was clearly outside of my current price range.</p> <p>The next morning, I get a new message. This time the message has the order number attached to it.</p> <p class="MsoBlockText">We are happy to inform you that your order has been completed and will be shipped to you.</p> <p>This was followed by a link to their website that allows me to track the progress of the package so I know when it will arrive.</p> <p>Well that’s great! Problem averted. Now it’s just a waiting game to see if my potluck gamble will pay off.</p> <p>Fortunately the computer did show up as scheduled, although it wasn’t entirely a great ending. It appeared that someone didn’t plug the hard drive power cable, or that they didn’t plug it in properly and it got unplugged during boxing and shipping. In other words, when it started up, I was told I had no hard drive. Fortunately with a little help from the manufacturer’s support desk and a little experience of my own, everything was up and running.</p> <p>By the way, I did eventually get a response to my initial email inquiry as to why the first order was rejected. It showed up in my inbox a couple of hours after I got the approval notice. The response was: “it appears that this matter has already been resolved.” No apologies or explanations (as requested), just that it was resolved and that was it.</p> <p>So… why bother talking about this whole experience if there is a happy ending to it all? The deal has been made, the order was shipped, and the product is here… case closed.</p> <p>Well that’s part of the problem right there. This whole episode was fraught with customer mismanagement, and nobody wants to talk about it because the end result is all that matters to most people. It is certainly all that the business is concerned about, and that is not good for them, especially if they’re trying to truly become a big-name brand company.</p> <p>The truth of the matter is that this was a really good deal that almost did not happen! </p> <p>If my need for a new computer wasn’t as strong as it was, I probably would have just called the whole thing off after the second email cancellation. I may not have even stayed on the line while being on hold for a half an hour on that second call after reading all of the horror stories about this company if I wasn’t determined to make this deal work. My otherwise cautious and cynical online mind would have told me not to go through with this.</p> <p>I understand that sometimes online orders just don’t go through. Maybe the wrong numbers were put in. Maybe I put in a 6 instead of a 9. Those things happen even to the best of us. But that second rejection should not have happened if everything was double-checked and put in correctly. </p> <p>At the very least an attempt should have been made to contact me before making that second cancellation. Why go through the process of getting a person’s phone number if you’re not going to use it for what it was intended for? That in and of itself sets off a few red flags. Anyone remember how telemarketers end up with our phone numbers?</p> <p>The person who has to go through with a second order is already uneasy about it. Extra effort needs to be made on behalf of the company to make sure this order goes through on the second try, and it didn’t happen.</p> <p>Also, it goes without saying that long waiting periods for customer service calls – or sales calls for that matter – are things that should not be tolerated. A person who calls customer service is already not a happy shopper to begin with, and they certainly should not be left to sit and stew for any longer than ten minutes. That only serves to further aggravate the situation.</p> <p>Online companies need to remember that all of the jazzy sales and slick website promises in the world mean absolutely nothing if they cannot get the customer through the point-of-sale and actually deliver the product. I can understand how people can get upset at certain big-name computer distributors if their experience with customer service was anywhere as frustrating as mine was. I would have serious hesitations about making another online purchase with this company, although I have yet to say anything bad about their physical store and will probably rely on making all future purchases from there.</p> <p>Ten years ago it would have been understandable to say that an online store would have problems with its customer service. But today, with dozens of online marketplaces ready to step in and provide the consumers with what they’re looking for, even the smallest of businesses really need to remember that customer satisfaction is more than just a fancy website and great sales offers. In the online world of business, customer satisfaction starts with the point of sale and it only ends when that customer is happy enough with his or her experience to let others know about it. If you cannot provide it, then you lose the very support you need to keep that business going.</p> <p>------</p> <p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>David Matthews 2 is a freelance writer living in the greater Atlanta area. He is a longtime computer user and has been involved with computers since the 1980’s.</i></span></p> <p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>This article can be distributed freely provided that it is unaltered and all proper credit is given to the author.</i></span></p> <p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>2007 – Get Brutal Productions</i></span></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9885729.post-87746168047199681952007-01-14T10:42:00.001-08:002007-01-14T10:45:03.661-08:00Next-Gen: Real and Phony<p align="center"><span style="font-size:180%;"><b>Next-Gen: Real And Phony<br /></b></span><span style="font-size:85%;color:#0000ff;"><i>– by David Matthews 2</i></span></p> <p>Apple Computer’s quasi-deity <i>(and sometimes chairman)</i> Steve Jobs recently made two "stunning" announcements at the 2007 Macworld Expo. The first was that Apple Computers was getting rid of the "Computers" part of its name and simply calling itself Apple Incorporated. Since they managed to resolve their trademark lawsuit with the Beatles over the word "Apple", no doubt the company was just itching to simplify themselves to just the one-fruit reference.</p> <p>The second announcement was the unveiling of their latest toy: the iPhone! The merger between an iPod music player and a cellphone! You can surf the web, download music and video files, play games, AND talk on the phone!</p> <p>Isn’t that great? Isn’t that wonderful? Here’s the NEXT GENERATION of technology! Here is THE FUTURE!</p> <p><em><strong>ZZZZzzzzzzzzz…</strong></em></p> <p>Somebody wake me up when the mindless jabbering settles down.</p> <p>Don’t get me wrong… I’m all for technical advances. But the merging of a music player and the cellphone is NOT "next-gen"! It’s actually the status quo.</p> <p>That’s the ugly and bitter truth when it comes to the iPhone: it’s neither the latest, nor the greatest, nor the next best thing since the microprocessor. It’s basically the same kind of cellphone available today with a larger hard drive for music, a Macintosh operating system, and a jazzy "iTitle" on it.</p> <p>Meanwhile other computer makers are busy transforming their systems to conform to what they believe "next-gen" will be. They think that the computers of the future will no longer be beige metal boxes sitting with its own space. They think that the computer will actually be sleek and thin and fit underneath a huge flat-screen TV as just another component in a mammoth entertainment center.</p> <p>If that’s all that they think computers will be in the future, I have some SERIOUS doubts about our technological progress.</p> <p>For the past few decades, there have been two conflicting trains of thought about computers and where they should be heading.</p> <p>The first train of thought is that computers are for business purposes only. This was the mindset of computer makers like IBM, who made their money creating huge mainframe systems that cost a fortune to have and another fortune to maintain and operate. It also wasn’t hard to figure out why since computers at that time could do very little except crunch numbers and run very limited programs.</p> <p>But as computers got smaller, more affordable, and could do a whole lot more than just crunch numbers, a second train of thought developed that said that computers were for ENTERTAINMENT purposes only. They believe that computers should be playing games and keeping the masses entertained. This is the train of thought of companies like Apple as they made computers very user-friendly. It was also the train of thought of arcade video game makers like Atari, and later Nintendo and Sega. The rise of the Internet in the 1990’s solidified this train of thought as people began using the computer to play online games, download music and video, and to chat with friends, family members, and even total strangers all around the world.</p> <p>Both mentalities think that theirs is the true "next-gen" mentality. The business-only people scoff at the entertainment-only people and think that playing games and stuff are just fleeting fads. The entertainment-only people think that the business-only people suck and are fanatically obsessed with security.</p> <p>The truth of the matter is that NEITHER side has the exclusive on what "next-gen" will be. They don’t get it, because it won’t just be about either mentality. It will actually be both, neither, and everything in between.</p> <p>Do you want to know what "next-gen" will be? Do you want to know what will be the REAL steps forward in technology? The REAL driving force for the next decade?</p> <p>One word, my friends: Networking.</p> <p>The name of the game for the next few decades will be getting everything interconnected. It won’t be JUST about business or JUST about playing games or JUST about surfing the web and keeping tabs with your friends, relatives, and complete strangers all around the world. It will be bringing together the things that you use in your everyday life.</p> <p>Imagine buying a watch that will never need to be set or reset. A watch that will automatically correct itself and adjust for things such as Daylight Savings Time. It will always give you the correct time. If you travel from one time zone to another, your watch will automatically adjust to give you the correct time no matter where you go. This watch will keep up with your daily schedule and remind you of important events as they are occur. And it will remind you when its battery is about to expire or to let you know if there is a problem with it.</p> <p>Impossible, you say? Right now, yes. But in a few years that watch will be as commonplace as iPod players are today. In fact, elements of those features are ALREADY present in other devices such as your cellphone and your computer.</p> <p>That’s just one common device. There are plenty of others to go along with it.</p> <p>You may have seen the commercials of the cars that will send an email report of how it is doing and when it will be due for service. That too is an example of next-generation networking, and it eventually won’t be just for expensive luxury vehicles. Pretty soon your car will be doing everything related to its own service except driving itself to the service station and giving itself an oil-change. Hopefully by then we will also eliminate the whole oil and petroleum dependency.</p> <p>Over the past few years we’ve seen homes constructed already wired for networking. Putting in Cat5 cable and installing network switches is pretty much old hat. First, Cat5 cable is being replaces by Cat6, which can handle much more data than its predecessor. And second, the trend now is wireless. Oh, there will be some physical network connections still needed in the short-run, but eventually all devices will be speaking to each other through one common home network system transmitted through wireless frequencies. </p> <p>You may have heard the word "bluetooth" in regards to cellphones. The wireless technology behind bluetooth appliances will eventually become the technology that connects other devices to that common home network system.</p> <p>Imagine a touchscreen terminal in your kitchen. You tell the terminal what you want to cook. Your computer will do an inventory of your current supplies to determine what you have and what you need to get. It will compile a list for you of what you need from the store. Then it will give you the option to either print out the list so you can do the shopping in person, to prepare an electronic list for you to export, or it will allow you to electronically order the items and then pay for them in advance through your bank account. Then you can either pick them up at the store or else have them delivered to you for a nominal fee. </p> <p>And again, elements of that idea are already present! There are refrigerators with network-connected touchscreen computers. They’re hard to find and expensive, but they exist. Touch-screen terminals for the kitchen are already in the works. And the idea of online grocery shopping and personal delivery? Already dabbled with several years ago but only failed because the idea was simply started way before its time.</p> <p>How about shopping itself? Here’s how that would be done by next-gen technology: You get to the grocery store and you check in with a network-connected shopping cart with a scanner, scale, and wireless terminal built in. You upload your list or use the touch-screen to input what you need, and the terminal will tell you where in the store those items are. It may even let you know as to which item is on sale or has an electronic discount coupon. As you put each item into the cart, the scanner reads the item into the system and checks them off your list. You can use a scale to weigh certain items like fruit and then have that amount entered into the system. When you get to the cashier, he or she visually verifies the items in the cart compared to what’s in the system, and then you electronically pay for it. No more "price check" calls or questions as to how much an item costs. It’s all figured out by the time you get there. You just approve the purchase and you’re on your way. Your time at the cashier’s counter will be measured in seconds, not minutes.</p> <p>That is real next-gen technology!</p> <p>We hear about merging cellphones with music players and game consoles and cameras and video recorders, but that is really just a baby-step compared to the REAL next-gen technology. REAL next-gen means getting the computer OUT of the office and OUT of the living room.</p> <p>There will still be an entertainment center, but rather than having the computer be just another component of it, the entertainment center itself will be the component of the home network system. Your favorite shows can be downloaded and available for you to watch at your leisure from any TV monitor in your house. You go from room to room and if there is a monitor, that feed will be available for you. You want to listen to music? Either stored or streaming audio can be sent to wireless speakers in any room you want to be in.</p> <p>Phone messages can be sent to a personal communication device similar to a bluetooth earpiece. Instead of dialing a number, you simply tap the earpiece and tell the computer to dial either a number or a preset name. The earpiece would be personalized so that a call coming in for you will be sent to just YOUR earpiece. </p> <p>Again, this isn’t science fiction! The bluetooth technology for telephone voice command exists right now!</p> <p>Of course, these technical visions of the future, as incredible as they may be, will come with their own problems as well. The biggest issue in making things interconnected and available on a common network is one that we haven’t even begun to deal with… namely privacy.</p> <p>Current cellphones have GPS devices on them to track where you are in the event of an emergency. Some companies have capitalized on this by allowing you to see where your friends and family members are at all times. Well what is to prevent a former boyfriend or girlfriend from using that same technology to track where you are at all times? What is to prevent the government from using that technology to track where you are at all times for any reason whatsoever?</p> <p>The next-gen home networks will have plenty of personal information about you at its disposal, including your bank records, online purchases, favorite movies and songs, and all sorts of contact information about the people you deal with on a regular basis. That’s prime information about you and your life that anyone, including telemarketers and the government, would KILL to get!</p> <p>Needless to say, if we don’t firmly deal with the issue of privacy now, we certainly won’t be able to when the REAL next-gen technology is here.</p> <p>The fact the matter is that there is a definitive difference between REAL next-gen technology and hype pretending to be next-gen. REAL next-gen moves us ahead through a particular vision. Hype pretending to be next-gen is just about selling a product. We need to stop looking at the hype and start looking at what’s really coming up.</p> <p>------</p> <p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>David Matthews 2 is a freelance writer living in the greater Atlanta area. He is a longtime computer user and has been involved with computers since the 1980’s.</i></span></p> <p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>This article can be distributed freely provided that it is unaltered and all proper credit is given to the author.</i></span></p> <p><span style="font-size:85%;"><i>2007 – Get Brutal Productions</i></span></p>David 2http://www.blogger.com/profile/12138208895799312312noreply@blogger.com0