Well, its Saturday 22nd December and we're all still here. What did I say? There are a lot of people with a lot of egg on their collective faces right about now. A lot of people who sold everything/gave everything away because they thought the rapture was imminent. Again I say: fucking idiots. Excuse me while I lay here and gloat. Aaaaah. Gloating is good. Not so good when you're being gloated at, mind. But meh.
I managed to knock up a pretty convincing tilt shift photo using that website I linked to in my previous tilt shift-orientated post. I think the effect only really works if you've got the right sort of photo to edit in the first place. To whit - I took a photo of a street scene from afar with the fucking immense zoom lens stuck to the front of the HS30 EXR (serious piece of kit, seriously), and then tilt shifted the fuck out of it:
Now that is impressive in my opinion. Look at the tiny cars! Now to STAND ON THEM! Crush them and kick the roofs off the houses and take a massive shit in the town centre. Piss in a river and leg drop the town hall. Just me? Oh...OK. I get a bit carried away when the opportunity to act like Godzilla presents itself. Did I mention the Mayan apocalypse totally failed to happen? Just saying.
Saturday, 22 December 2012
Wednesday, 19 December 2012
Apocadicks
Listen up. According to various news websites, people around the world
are stockpiling candles, torches, tinned food and salt (?) at the moment just
to be on the safe side when the predicted apocalypse hits on Friday. This, to
me at least, seems about as pointless as the Wii Mini. See, if it’s the
apocalypse, then the world is going to end...so what good are a few candles and
a tin of Spam going to be? Fucking idiots. I don’t know why I’m even bothering
to mention this guff – it’s pretty clear to anyone with an ounce of brain
tissue inside their skull that the world isn’t going to suddenly ‘end’ on
Friday.
Speaking of despots, and taking into consideration the new Hobbit movie is out (mildly tenuous segue, I know), have you ever wondered what Sauron might use to write his Christmas list? Wonder no more, filthy Hobbitses:
Forged in the fires of Mount Doom, this delightful writing utensil is available here for the meagre sum of £10,000. I'll have two, then.
It might feel like it has to many of the people who are out on Friday
night for the annual 'mad' Friday celebrations – the curious (British?) tradition of going
out drinking on the last Friday before Christmas and consuming so much alcohol
that you can’t even taste your kebab on the way home – but surely their
world-ending epoch won’t really begin until Saturday morning when they’re
hunched over the toilet bowl throwing the same minced offal up again?
This
whole ‘end of the world’ shite is literally just that – something that somebody
got wind of and was then twisted out of all proportion by the media and adopted
as truth by other equally dense people. As far as I can see, the only evidence
for any of this crap is that the Mayans' calendar sort of ends around about now
(after much shoe-horning and contriving of data so that it sort of looks comprehensible...at
a push). See, the peoples of ancient antiquity didn’t really have days of the
week, or years or months as we know them, so the very notion of ‘Friday the 21st
of December 2012’ would have been complete gobbledygook to your average Mayan
bloke. So where has this magical date come from? I don’t really know or care to
be honest. What I do know is that all these fool s buying candles and salt are
gonna have some ‘splaining to do come Tuesday morning when their kids are
unwrapping cylindrical, waxy gifts.
It kinda makes me a little bit sad for the
human race reading all these news reports about large communities in supposedly
developed and enlightened countries panic buying essentials ‘just in case.’
Just in case what? A wave of fire and brimstone comes sploshing down the street?
The dead rise from their graves and shuffle about a bit? An asteroid smashes the world to tiny fragments like a drunk tramp punching a goldfish bowl? A
despot* presses a button and starts a nuclear war? In the event that any of
those improbable things happen (they won’t), again I ask – what fucking use
will candles and Spam be?! See you on Saturday morning, dickheads.**
Speaking of despots, and taking into consideration the new Hobbit movie is out (mildly tenuous segue, I know), have you ever wondered what Sauron might use to write his Christmas list? Wonder no more, filthy Hobbitses:
It uses children's tears instead of ink |
Forged in the fires of Mount Doom, this delightful writing utensil is available here for the meagre sum of £10,000. I'll have two, then.
*My money would be on that triple-chinned North Korean bloke if I was a betting man. But I'm not.
**And if I'm wrong, then fuck it - I've got some Spam in the cupboard somewhere. And a colour-changing lamp. Yeah bitches.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
Ouya? Oh Yeah!
In
recent posts I’ve looked at the new Nintendo consoles and basically poured
scorn on them both. The Wii Mini looks like the most pointless thing I’ve ever
seen – a Wii without internet functionality and no backwards compatibility; and
the Wii U...well, my opinions of that turd are fiercely negative and I make no
apologies. This week it came to light that due to some arcane European
legislation, if you’re stupid enough to have bought a Wii U and wish to
view/download ‘adult’ content (i.e. anything that’s rated 18 / Mature), you
have to wait until between the hours of 11pm and 4am for it to be visible in
the online store. And there I was thinking Nintendo were over the whole ‘green/no
blood in games’ thing.
To be fair, I don’t think this is necessarily something that Nintendo has implemented of its own accord, but both Xbox Live and the PS Network marketplaces do not impose this bizarre censorship and yet they operate in a European environment too. Way to go, Nintendo. First – bring out two new consoles, both of which are similarly titled to your existing one. Then send mixed audience messages by releasing a glut of child-friendly launch titles alongside more adult-themed ones...but then impose a kind of watershed on mature online content. Brilliant. There are two other consoles on the horizon though. And no, I’m not talking about the next offerings from Sony or Microsoft. They’re Ouya and Neo Geo X.
You’d be forgiven for never having heard of either of these consoles, and in all honesty the Neo Geo X will probably be born into a cloud of apathy before vanishing into the mists of time (but not before sprouting eBay listings advertising it as ‘**RARE!!!**’); but the Ouya has the potential to be a bit of a game changer (sorry). Ouya started life as a Kickstarter project that went on to attract donations of over $8m and is in essence an indie gamer’s dream – a true modder’s console that runs a bespoke version of the Android OS, and that the creators are marketing as a console that will actively encourage homebrew creativity. So, it’s kind of like that GP2X thing that nobody bought, but in console form.
The thing that sets Ouya apart from the other ‘modders/homebrew/indie’ consoles is that it offers so much for such a meagre price tag: It’ll apparently retail for $99 (which using the usual gaming hardware conversion techniques will no doubt equate to £99, and not the more realistic £60ish) on launch, and offer loads of cool stuff straight out of the box, such as compatibility with On Live and a fully featured app/game store. The Ouya’s creators are also quite happy for gamers to open the console itself and tinker with the actual hardware inside, which as far as I know, is completely unprecedented for a console. Fair enough, you can buy things like Raspberry Pi and you can always mod a PC...but official modding support from a console manufacturer is a new one on me. I’m not sure if I’ll buy one, but Ouya looks quite intriguing especially as the quality of Android games is improving all the time (those Modern Combat games are getting very good, even if they are blatant rip-offs of Modern Warfare...and technically I’ve only played the Blackberry OS versions, so not really Android...but fuck it. You know what I’m getting at). Ouya is out next March in the US...and a UK release date isn’t even hinted at yet (surprise).
The other new console I mentioned is the Neo Geo X from SNK Playmore. SNK is a company that I always associated with impenetrable fighting games like King of Fighters and stupidly hard side-scrolling shooters like Metal Slug, and the original Neo Geo console (and its variants) was something I never actually played on because I didn’t know anyone who a) had one; or b) could afford one.
There was a guy at my school who told everyone he had a Neo Geo, but when me and my brother went round one evening to have a go on it, he came out with some bullshit story that his mum had seen it in his room, not known what it was and then proceeded to throw it in the alleyway behind his house. He then went and pretended to be looking for his Neo Geo in said alley for about 20 minutes before giving up. Unimpressed by the quality (or lack thereof) of this blatant attempt to hoodwink us, my brother and I left soon after and our acquaintance never mentioned the Neo Geo again. Certainly not when either of us was in the vicinity, anyway.
But I digress. So the Neo Geo then – a fabled and rarely seen console that boasted some (apparently) excellent 2D fighters, shooters and...well that’s it as far as I can tell. Enter the Neo Geo X – A strange hybrid console that consists of a hand held Neo Geo console that is pre-loaded with 20 of SNK’s best retro games...that fits inside a case that looks like the original Neo Geo so you can hook it up to a TV. The console comes with a gargantuan joystick/pad thing too so you can get that true 1990s import gamer nostalgia going on. Reports that it comes with a free Tango & Cash poster are unconfirmed. Oddly, the Neo Geo X doesn’t take original Neo Geo carts (mainly because the plastic case is just that – a mock up of the original AES shell without any functioning parts) as the games come on some kind of SD-like memory card that are plugged into the little handheld unit. You’d have to be a bit of an SNK nutter to shell out the $200 asking price for one of these things in my opinion, especially since most of the games available have either already been ported to other consoles or are available for free (cough) on certain (cough) websites (cough). Cough. As with the Ouya though, there isn’t a UK release date or price as yet. I’d be surprised if we ever see the Neo Geo X officially released on these shores though, especially as the original Neo Geo consoles never made an impact here and the Neo Geo Pocket Colour sold about 3 units. Saying that, if you did happen to find a Neo Geo CD system in a Moss Side alleyway in about 1995 (just up from where Maine Road used to be); could you get in touch via the comments section? I might owe an apology to an old school friend.
I downloaded a little game last night called Braid. I’d heard lots of talk about it when it launched on Xbox Live, but I never got it because I find the whole ‘Microsoft Points’ thing a bit shit. If you could just buy things with real money out of your debit account like you can on the App Store/iTunes and the Blackberry Appworld, then I might be more inclined to do so...but I just don’t really like the way you can only buy certain amounts of Microsoft Points and then be left with a useless number of them after buying something. I’ve had 180 points in my account for about 3 years now...and 180 is just about enough to buy absolutely fuck all. However, I saw Braid on the App Store on the Mac last night for £2.99 so I bought it. And what a delightful little romp it is too.
It’s basically a platform game with a great hand-drawn art style. The story and locations appear a little on the surreal side, as does the way you can rewind time if you fall to your death...but you also have to use this function to solve puzzles involving cannons firing clouds. Quite. I’ve looked around on the interwebs quite a bit and discovered that Braid is actually about a nuclear war or something...which just adds a bit of intrigue to the story in the textbooks you come across in-game. Only played the first two ‘worlds’ thus far, but it was definitely worth £2.99 in my opinion. You can’t even get a pint for £2.99 these days (unless you go and jostle with the alcoholics and bums in your local Wetherspoons) so money well spent. I might attempt to do a little video review some time. But then again, I might not.
To be fair, I don’t think this is necessarily something that Nintendo has implemented of its own accord, but both Xbox Live and the PS Network marketplaces do not impose this bizarre censorship and yet they operate in a European environment too. Way to go, Nintendo. First – bring out two new consoles, both of which are similarly titled to your existing one. Then send mixed audience messages by releasing a glut of child-friendly launch titles alongside more adult-themed ones...but then impose a kind of watershed on mature online content. Brilliant. There are two other consoles on the horizon though. And no, I’m not talking about the next offerings from Sony or Microsoft. They’re Ouya and Neo Geo X.
You’d be forgiven for never having heard of either of these consoles, and in all honesty the Neo Geo X will probably be born into a cloud of apathy before vanishing into the mists of time (but not before sprouting eBay listings advertising it as ‘**RARE!!!**’); but the Ouya has the potential to be a bit of a game changer (sorry). Ouya started life as a Kickstarter project that went on to attract donations of over $8m and is in essence an indie gamer’s dream – a true modder’s console that runs a bespoke version of the Android OS, and that the creators are marketing as a console that will actively encourage homebrew creativity. So, it’s kind of like that GP2X thing that nobody bought, but in console form.
The thing that sets Ouya apart from the other ‘modders/homebrew/indie’ consoles is that it offers so much for such a meagre price tag: It’ll apparently retail for $99 (which using the usual gaming hardware conversion techniques will no doubt equate to £99, and not the more realistic £60ish) on launch, and offer loads of cool stuff straight out of the box, such as compatibility with On Live and a fully featured app/game store. The Ouya’s creators are also quite happy for gamers to open the console itself and tinker with the actual hardware inside, which as far as I know, is completely unprecedented for a console. Fair enough, you can buy things like Raspberry Pi and you can always mod a PC...but official modding support from a console manufacturer is a new one on me. I’m not sure if I’ll buy one, but Ouya looks quite intriguing especially as the quality of Android games is improving all the time (those Modern Combat games are getting very good, even if they are blatant rip-offs of Modern Warfare...and technically I’ve only played the Blackberry OS versions, so not really Android...but fuck it. You know what I’m getting at). Ouya is out next March in the US...and a UK release date isn’t even hinted at yet (surprise).
The other new console I mentioned is the Neo Geo X from SNK Playmore. SNK is a company that I always associated with impenetrable fighting games like King of Fighters and stupidly hard side-scrolling shooters like Metal Slug, and the original Neo Geo console (and its variants) was something I never actually played on because I didn’t know anyone who a) had one; or b) could afford one.
There was a guy at my school who told everyone he had a Neo Geo, but when me and my brother went round one evening to have a go on it, he came out with some bullshit story that his mum had seen it in his room, not known what it was and then proceeded to throw it in the alleyway behind his house. He then went and pretended to be looking for his Neo Geo in said alley for about 20 minutes before giving up. Unimpressed by the quality (or lack thereof) of this blatant attempt to hoodwink us, my brother and I left soon after and our acquaintance never mentioned the Neo Geo again. Certainly not when either of us was in the vicinity, anyway.
But I digress. So the Neo Geo then – a fabled and rarely seen console that boasted some (apparently) excellent 2D fighters, shooters and...well that’s it as far as I can tell. Enter the Neo Geo X – A strange hybrid console that consists of a hand held Neo Geo console that is pre-loaded with 20 of SNK’s best retro games...that fits inside a case that looks like the original Neo Geo so you can hook it up to a TV. The console comes with a gargantuan joystick/pad thing too so you can get that true 1990s import gamer nostalgia going on. Reports that it comes with a free Tango & Cash poster are unconfirmed. Oddly, the Neo Geo X doesn’t take original Neo Geo carts (mainly because the plastic case is just that – a mock up of the original AES shell without any functioning parts) as the games come on some kind of SD-like memory card that are plugged into the little handheld unit. You’d have to be a bit of an SNK nutter to shell out the $200 asking price for one of these things in my opinion, especially since most of the games available have either already been ported to other consoles or are available for free (cough) on certain (cough) websites (cough). Cough. As with the Ouya though, there isn’t a UK release date or price as yet. I’d be surprised if we ever see the Neo Geo X officially released on these shores though, especially as the original Neo Geo consoles never made an impact here and the Neo Geo Pocket Colour sold about 3 units. Saying that, if you did happen to find a Neo Geo CD system in a Moss Side alleyway in about 1995 (just up from where Maine Road used to be); could you get in touch via the comments section? I might owe an apology to an old school friend.
I downloaded a little game last night called Braid. I’d heard lots of talk about it when it launched on Xbox Live, but I never got it because I find the whole ‘Microsoft Points’ thing a bit shit. If you could just buy things with real money out of your debit account like you can on the App Store/iTunes and the Blackberry Appworld, then I might be more inclined to do so...but I just don’t really like the way you can only buy certain amounts of Microsoft Points and then be left with a useless number of them after buying something. I’ve had 180 points in my account for about 3 years now...and 180 is just about enough to buy absolutely fuck all. However, I saw Braid on the App Store on the Mac last night for £2.99 so I bought it. And what a delightful little romp it is too.
It’s basically a platform game with a great hand-drawn art style. The story and locations appear a little on the surreal side, as does the way you can rewind time if you fall to your death...but you also have to use this function to solve puzzles involving cannons firing clouds. Quite. I’ve looked around on the interwebs quite a bit and discovered that Braid is actually about a nuclear war or something...which just adds a bit of intrigue to the story in the textbooks you come across in-game. Only played the first two ‘worlds’ thus far, but it was definitely worth £2.99 in my opinion. You can’t even get a pint for £2.99 these days (unless you go and jostle with the alcoholics and bums in your local Wetherspoons) so money well spent. I might attempt to do a little video review some time. But then again, I might not.
Monday, 17 December 2012
Glow Lamp Video Review
Thought I'd knock up a quick video review of the lamp I was on about in my previous post. I shot it with the HS30 EXR and I have to say I'm really disappointed with the sound quality I ended up with. There was a weird buzzing noise in the original clips that I tried to reduce in iMovie, but all that did was muffle the sound. Odd. Anyway, enjoy:
Glow Your Own Way
Howdy. Been sorting out my big move back to the capital of the
North over the last week hence the lack of updates. Took the Goose up the line
on Friday morning and stashed it in my brother’s garage before getting the
National Express back late last night. I set off at about 6.30am on Friday
morning in an attempt to escape the biblical storm that was sweeping across the
country and I almost made it – it was only in the last half
hour of the journey that the rain finally caught up with me and soaked me to
the bone. I know I’ve moaned about this many, many times over the last year –
but Christ. Every single time I get on that fucking thing, the heavens open.
All last week it was dry as a bone. Ridiculously cold, but dry. And then as
soon as I decide to get on the bike and transport it, the rain starts. I’m not
stupid enough to actually believe that some arcane rain god has it in for me,
but it just always seems to be that no matter how nice the weather is, as soon
as I get on my motorbike, it turns shitty.
As soon as I saw it I had to have it, so I shelled out £30 for it and transported it back halfway across the country with me. What else? Oh yeah – I sold my old iPod on Gumtree as well as my laptop in order to fund my latest ‘big’ purchase – an iPod Classic 160GB. It’s silver and matches the new MacBook Pro I got last week. I’m becoming everything I ever hated buying all this Apple stuff, but you know what? I think I can see why people desire Apple stuff: it just fucking works. It comes out of the box, you turn it on...and it just works. As simple as that. I’ve had no issues whatsoever with the MacBook, and the iPod is just the same. None of those stupid Windows dialogue boxes popping up with error messages accompanied by that stupid alert noise. Nothing but silky smooth performance. Sure, the MacBook is only a week old so that’s what you’d expect, but the OS is so much better than anything gaudy old Windows 8 could ever be, what with its hideous neon squares and incompatibility issues. Urgh. I played around with a Windows 8 PC in Curry’s last week and I was pretty horrified by how clunky it felt compared to Mountain Lion...and that was after using the Mac for about 3 days. Am I an Apple convert? Well, I was always slightly into Apple macs anyway (my first job after Uni was selling and demoing Apple G5 Powermacs), and I did all the online exams to gain ‘Apple Product Professional’ status (those RAID exams were fun, let me tell you), so I don’t think it’s a question of being a convert. More a case of ‘I ditched Windows because Mountain Lion kicks ass.’ Or something like that. In other iPod news, I’ve managed to download a piece of software that converts DVDs into mp4 movies that can be played on the iPod – so now I can watch movies on the cross trainer in the gym. Which, frankly, is awesome. Right, that’s enough from me for the moment. Until next time.
Apart from the rainy (windy and
dark) journey on Friday morning, the weekend was quite pleasant. Spent Friday
night at my dad’s and Saturday night I went to a friend’s house party/Christmas
do that eventually spilled out into a few pubs. It was in a place called
Ramsbottom on the outskirts of Manchester and was a really good event, not
least because the pubs around that area mostly seem to be proper ‘real ale’
pubs with good friendly atmospheres. I don’t really know Ramsbottom that well,
but from the few times I’ve been there to visit this particular friend, I have
quite a positive opinion of it. The place seems to be very ‘old fashioned,’ but
not in a horrible, urban decay way – more in a ‘dry stone wall’
way, where a lot of the buildings are made of those grey odd-shaped bricks. There’s also a
proper steam railway around there somewhere, so it gets a thumbs up from me. I
fully intend to dress as Isambard Kingdom Brunel and ride that quaint fucker
one day.
I went to Minehead a few years ago and we went down to the station
there to have a ride on the steam train, but the twat wasn’t running so we just
went to the pub instead. So yeah, Saturday night was a bit of a blur involving
lots of ale and party food. Earlier in the day I got lost on the ridiculous
motorway network encircling Manchester and ended up somewhere near Liverpool
when I was trying to get to Stockport (and predictably I also got piss wet
through), but apart from that, it was a chilled weekend.
I got the coach back
from Chorlton Street in Manchester and discovered to my horror that it isn’t
only Birmingham coach station that charges 30p for the pleasure of being able
to have a piss or shit in their toilets. Personally, I think that this kind of
thing is disgusting. Charging people to carry out essential bodily functions. I
remember when I went to Hull a few months ago and was bursting for a piss, but
the toilets in the train station were even more expensive than the two aforementioned
coach stations! I can’t remember how much, but I’m pretty sure it was more than
the already outrageous 30p levy at Brum and Manc. In case you were wondering, I
didn’t use the bogs at Hull, I just emptied my effluent all over the main High
Street instead – not that you could tell (this is a joke, by the way – I think
Hull’s a pretty nice place, especially since they built that new shopping area).
But anyway, enough of my boring life story.
When I was in Manchester waiting
for my coach, I stepped into a shop called Clas Ohlson, which to me at least,
appears to be Ikea without the furniture. It’s full of all sorts of tat – from garden
tools and kitchenware to electrical and computer accessories. I love it, and
could spend ages wandering around just looking at stuff. One thing I did see
was this:
768 colour combinations apparently. Not sure about that. |
It’s a lamp. Not just any lamp though - its called 'Glow' and it comes with a remote
control that lets you change the fucking colour! How insanely cool is that?!
Each button changes the colour, the ones on the right adjust the brightness |
Standard 'orange' mode |
Probably should've tidied up before taking these pictures |
As soon as I saw it I had to have it, so I shelled out £30 for it and transported it back halfway across the country with me. What else? Oh yeah – I sold my old iPod on Gumtree as well as my laptop in order to fund my latest ‘big’ purchase – an iPod Classic 160GB. It’s silver and matches the new MacBook Pro I got last week. I’m becoming everything I ever hated buying all this Apple stuff, but you know what? I think I can see why people desire Apple stuff: it just fucking works. It comes out of the box, you turn it on...and it just works. As simple as that. I’ve had no issues whatsoever with the MacBook, and the iPod is just the same. None of those stupid Windows dialogue boxes popping up with error messages accompanied by that stupid alert noise. Nothing but silky smooth performance. Sure, the MacBook is only a week old so that’s what you’d expect, but the OS is so much better than anything gaudy old Windows 8 could ever be, what with its hideous neon squares and incompatibility issues. Urgh. I played around with a Windows 8 PC in Curry’s last week and I was pretty horrified by how clunky it felt compared to Mountain Lion...and that was after using the Mac for about 3 days. Am I an Apple convert? Well, I was always slightly into Apple macs anyway (my first job after Uni was selling and demoing Apple G5 Powermacs), and I did all the online exams to gain ‘Apple Product Professional’ status (those RAID exams were fun, let me tell you), so I don’t think it’s a question of being a convert. More a case of ‘I ditched Windows because Mountain Lion kicks ass.’ Or something like that. In other iPod news, I’ve managed to download a piece of software that converts DVDs into mp4 movies that can be played on the iPod – so now I can watch movies on the cross trainer in the gym. Which, frankly, is awesome. Right, that’s enough from me for the moment. Until next time.
Labels:
Gadgets,
Manchester,
Moving,
Piss and Moan,
Suzuki Goose
Tuesday, 11 December 2012
Tilt Shift
Ever heard of tilt shift photography? Neither had I until today. Well, I had...I just didn't know it was called tilt shift. You probably have too. Look at this:
It's a technique that involves the use of a special, sickeningly expensive camera lens that turns ordinary scenes of humdrum life into images that make everything look like toy town. See, the perspective shifts or something, tricking those dumb-fuck balls of fat stuck into the front of your head into thinking that they're looking at a bunch of models. Models made of wads of human hair and dried faeces. Possibly. If you don't own a tilt shift lens, there are several sites online that will allow you to upload your own shots of everyday drudgery and turn them into pseudo tilt shift-esque images. Look:
As you'd expect, they don't really measure up to the majesty of the ones shot with a proper lens, but it's a mildly distracting activity for those who have nothing better to do with their time.
If you'd like to know more about this fascinating branch of photography, check out this website for a much more detailed explanation than I could ever craft. There's also a guide to creating perfect tilt shift images. Winner!
Go, tiny USA! |
As you'd expect, they don't really measure up to the majesty of the ones shot with a proper lens, but it's a mildly distracting activity for those who have nothing better to do with their time.
If you'd like to know more about this fascinating branch of photography, check out this website for a much more detailed explanation than I could ever craft. There's also a guide to creating perfect tilt shift images. Winner!
Golden Joysticks
Firstly – what the fuck have they done to the Games Radar
site? Jesus, talk about fucking up something that didn’t need to be fucked
around with. Seriously – go there and have a look at the new layout. It didn’t
look like that until yesterday; previously it was a bit like a blog where every
new story would just go to the top and push the previous ones down and off the
bottom of the front page onto page 2. Now it looks like Lawnmower Man has
thrown up all over the screen – there doesn’t seem to be any logical
arrangement to the articles...just complete random chaos. Sheesh. Think I’ll be
going elsewhere for my daily gaming news until they sort that design car-crash
out. Ho-hum.
In slightly related, but not at all related news, I feel I must
pay homage to the late, great Sir Patrick Moore who passed away at the weekend.
Obviously, his main interest and knowledge sphere was astronomy and all things
extra-terrestrial (by which I mean planets and quasars and all that malarkey),
but to pretty much every gamer of a certain age, Sir Patrick was also the face
of Thursday night gaming television on Channel 4: he was the Games Master. Fair
enough, Dominic Diamond and Dexter Fletcher were also in there (the former much
more than the latter, I know), as were several other UK-based industry types (publisher
Dave Perry and developer Peter Molyneux among them), but it was the titular
Games Master who set the challenges and was the main focal point of the series.
For those who never saw Games Master, there were several series set over a few
years and it was a show I used to watch religiously whenever it was running.
The format was sort of like a game show where there was a presenter (the aforementioned
Dominic Diamond, and for one series Dexter Fletcher) and contestants who would
come on to take part in challenges set by the Games Master. The Games Master
was basically Sir Patrick Moore’s head with various CG overlays, who spoke from a
giant screen. If the contestant was successful in the challenge set, he or she
would walk away with a coveted Games Master Golden Joystick. The best bit was
that these challenges were usually set in games that were available to buy for
the consoles of the time, and if you watch the episodes back on Youtube, you
can sort of tell the era they were from by the games they were using. As well
as the challenges, there were reviews and news items focusing on the latest
games. Back in the early to mid nineties, gaming was still seen as a bit of a geek’s
hobby (and probably still is by most people) and Games Master went some way to
establishing the medium in the mainstream, certainly in this country.
Obviously, the PSX had a little bit to do with it too, but I’d say that GM also
had a fair part to play.
Alongside the TV programme, there was a magazine
(titled, er, Games Master Magazine) which I would get monthly as part of my
regular haul of gaming mags. It was a really cool mag, and was kind of like an
all-format Amiga Power-lite, in that it was written in a fairly adult tone,
with lots of references to real-world happenings. The magazine is still going,
but has since taken a bit of a diversion and is squarely aimed at the younger
gamer these days. I suppose that’s why GamesTM and Edge now exist; filling a
niche and all that jazz. But Edge is a self-important load of old toss, so we
won’t mention that particular mag again. So yeah, what I’m trying to get at is
that Sir Patrick Moore died at the weekend and I’m sure most people will
remember him fondly for the part he played in the whole Games Master saga.
Again,
following on in this games-related diatribe, I read last week that Nintendo
have re-launched the original Wii console (there it is, up there!). I say ‘relaunched’ but that’s
probably taking things a little too far – they’ve pooed out the Wii Mini into
Canadian stores (?). The Wii Mini is basically a stripped down original Wii,
with all the internet functionality and backwards compatibility taken out, and
repackaged in a rather garish looking black and red casing. The question
remains: why? They’ve already confused half the casual gaming world with their
Wii U, and now they’ve gone and added to the confusion further by releasing yet
another ‘new’ Wii. Baffling.
I took the Macbook to the Apple Store in Bristol
on Saturday. The two people I spoke to on the phone last week said that I could have the
chipped palm rest replaced in-store and even though I was slightly sceptical I
still traipsed down the M5 (and discovered I had a flat rear tire on the
way...which wasn’t fun) and took the Mac in to their ‘Genius bar.’ Genius?!
More like Retard bar! The guy didn’t know what he was talking about for a start
and then after he’d consulted his iPad for about 10 minutes just came back and
told me they couldn’t do the job (even though I had been told otherwise on the
phone by TWO different ‘Geniuses’). He did, however, go on to tell me at great
length that there was a place in Cheltenham that would do the repair, but “it
wouldn’t be cheap.” What happened to Apple replacing these palm rests for free?
I rang the place in Cheltenham and they said the same thing – they’d have to
send it off to their workshop blah fucking blah, and that it wouldn’t be free
unless I called Apple and got their approval. Yes – call Apple. And get their
approval for a free repair to my computer. As if that’s going to happen. I
fobbed the guy off and hung up.
Something made me go back into the Apple Store
though, I don’t know what. I suppose I just wanted to have a muck about with the new
Macbooks and stuff. It’s been a while since I’ve been into an Apple
Store and just had a play with the sexy gear on show. And it’s amazing what you
pick up just from being able to see the whole product range of a company just
laid out and easily accessible. For one, I didn’t know that the Macbook Air and
the new Macbook (with Retina display) don’t have DVD drives. Who the fuck
thought that was a good idea?! Sure, the omission of an optical drive reduces
weight...but what about being able to watch a DVD without having to lug an
external drive around with you? It’s almost as if Apple and Nintendo are
working together to wind people up by doing stupid things with their new
hardware (the whole ‘you can’t use a USB stick on two different Wii U consoles’
thing is equally strange). That neither of those two systems (and the new iMac)
have optical drives instantly makes me look elsewhere.
And as a matter of fact,
I did: at the Macbook Pro. The normal, £999, 13,” 2.5 Ghz, 4GB RAM, 500 GB HDD
model to be precise. What an amazing piece of engineering. I can see why people
love Apple hardware, with it's super-sleek aluminium casing and quality feel. I had a play around for a good while and instantly fell in
love with it – the two-fingered mouse pad commands were something I had never
come across but instantly didn’t want to live without. So I just went and bought one. Right
then and there I just went up and asked for a 13” Macbook Pro and paid for it
outright. And I have to say it’s the greatest purchase I’ve ever made (apart
from the HS30 EXR, naturally...but they go hand in hand what with iPhoto and
all the other cool Mac photo shit). It’s been two days now and I’m still
fascinated by the thing and all the cool stuff it does. Not too impressed that
you can’t plug normal headphone-jacked speakers into it without getting this
weird buzzing noise (something to do with feedback of the current or some crap),
but I’m totally blown away...and while it doesn’t have a Retina screen, it does
have a DVD drive so I can watch my Warehouse 13 series one boxset when I
eventually get around to it. I still have the used Macbook white sitting on a
shelf, but that badboy’ll be going on Gumtree by the end of the week.
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