3/23/2005

I’m hopping on the PSP bandwagon.


I want a Sony PSP. I’m not afraid to admit it. I’ve been fairly lukewarm about gaming handhelds in the past, but I really want this one. It’s just my tech geekiness flaring up, I know, but this thing just looks sharp. A decent launch lineup plus more games in the pipeline make for a strong outing against the relatively uncontested marketshare of the Nintendo DS. Sony is relatively quietly releasing the PSP tomorrow across the US, to the delight of hundreds of thousands of fanboys. Some are a little more excited than others. I don’t actually think availability will be an issue tomorrow, but we’ll see, I guess.

In anticipation of the great buyout of Sony merchandise tomorrow, I figured I’d do my part to promote the PSP. Enjoy!

Information

PSP Space — digital download and PSP news headquarters.

PSP Home — “Here at PSP Home.com we aim to provide you with everything you need to know about the Sony Playstation Portable, better known as the Sony PSP.”

PSP 411 — More collected information on the PSP.

PSP Vault — News updates regarding the PSP.

PSP Forums — community of PSP fanboys.

PSPcasting?

The principle here is very cool. Similar to podcasting, but with video, the idea of combing bittorrent, RSS, and video encoding is quite enticing. The application probably isn’t quite there yet, but being that the PSP hasn’t been released yet to build up marketshare, that’s not surprising. It’ll be interesting to see what this will be like in a year.

PSP Video 9 — “PSP Video 9 is a free PSP video conversion and management application. It can convert regular PC video files (avi, mpeg, etc) into PSP video files, as well as manage/copy these PSP video files between your PC and PSP. When combined with another application, Videora + PSP Video 9 form the first PSPcasting solution, allowing you to download, convert and copy video to your PSP, automatically using BitTorrent and RSS technology.”

Videora — “Utilizing BitTorrent peer to peer technology and Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds, Videora automatically and intelligently finds and downloads video you want to watch.”

Media On PSP

It’s nice to be able to convert your own DVDs for the road. Sure, UMD movies will be coming down the pipe, but if you already own a DVD, why not convert it yourself, if you’ve got the patience? Though Sony memory sticks aren’t cheap yet, they will probably drop in price before too long, making this even more attractive as time goes by.

Video 2 PSP — DVD to PSP conversion guide.

PSP Forums thread on converting video

There is a dark side to PSP owners, though. You can find sites that have torrent links to encoded video. I don’t imagine these sites sticking around very long, as neither the MPAA nor Sony take kindly to that sort of thing.

3/14/2005

Playing guilty pleasure video games.

Finally, wrestling I'd want to watch. Ah, the guilty pleasures in life. Finishing a pint of Ben & Jerry’s by yourself. Watching Gia or Tomb Raider for Angelina Jolie’s, um, acting talents. Sleeping in until noon on weekends. No one wants to admit to indulging in guilty plesaures, but love actually doing so…so long as no one else is watching. That’s what makes them a guilty pleasure: we know we love doing them, but would be embarrassed to actually admit to someone that we did them. It’s not something we would offer in answer to the question, “So, what did you do this weekend?” for fear of bitter, laughing, taunting reprisal.

As it turns out, guilty pleasures extend into the video game industry as well. There’s something enticing about unabashedly playing a game with little to no redeeming social value, that you somehow still find entertaining. I’m not talking about games like Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas (which, though gratuitous in parts, actually has decent production values, plot, and gameplay). I’m talking about the games that you pick up from Blockbuster, bring to the counter, and feel all shifty-eyed as you wait for the attendant to ring you up because you both know that you just picked up a terrible game. I’m talking about games like Sexy Beach 2, where you feel odd for actually calling it a game. When it comes to guilty pleasure video games in the mainstream, few games are as fitting as one of Konami’s releases, Rumble Roses.

Where to begin with this game…let’s see…if you were to put a bunch of horny teenagers together to brainstorm a killer game, it might come out a lot like Rumble Roses. How else would you describe a game whose only raison d’ĂȘtre is to get scantily clad virtual vixens to writhe around in various grappling positions? This is not exactly a game you’d feel proud to have played through. When I first started playing it, I was a little mesmerized — this game is really visually pretty. It ought to be, as that’s its selling point. The camera angles, moves, costumes, and, of course, the women all make for a very pretty, shiny package. Plus, they’ve covered pretty much every adolescent fantasy you can think of here: hot teacher, cowgirl, lady cop, dominatrix, hot nurse, and several more. However, after the newness wore off (which took about an hour, I’d say), I was pleasantly surprised to find that the gameplay itself was also both compelling and interesting too.

I haven’t played many wrestling games in my life. In fact, the last wrestling game I’ve played that comes to mind is Pro Wrestling for the NES. (If you haven’t played Star Man, Fighter Hiyabusa, Kin Corn Karn, or The Amazon, you’re missing out on some classics of gaming history.) Hence, though there has been a continuous evolution and production of wrestling titles through the years, I haven’t been paying attention. I could watch scantily clad virtual guys writhing around in various grappling positions, but that’s not usually my idea of a good time.

So, when I say that I find the wrestling controls of this game are actually compelling, I’m not basing it on years and years of research into existing wrestling game mechanics. Yet, that’s the strange thing about this game. The veneer of strangely tantalizing visuals gives way to gameplay that is quite rewarding. The engine behind this game is actually quite good, though probably not on par with the top wrestling games of late. (I hear this is because it’s based around the engine for Smackdown!, but I have no comparison.) The moves seem like they do some damage, and I found myself uttering an “Ohh!” aloud on occasion as one of the characters pulled off a nasty maneuver. (This is ironic, considering how little damage I think actually occurs in real pro wrestling.) Well, maybe not the figure 4 leg lock; that doesn’t look very painful in the game. What the hell is that supposed to do? The “killer” and “lethal” moves do look quite devastating. But, what’s with the “humiliation” move? It’s a little weird that you build up “humiliation points” to execute a humiliation move, but what do you expect from an exploitative wrestling game? This is a pretty strange twist, but if you’re buying this game, you’re probably not buying it for the technical wrestling. The gameplay is pretty simplistic overall, so while you may grasp a working familiarity quickly and a pretty full familiarity after a few hours, you won’t find much to get out of gameplay after that.

Despite the interesting gameplay mechanics, what quickly becomes apparent is that the structure of the game is terrible. There’s an exhibition mode, which allows you to wrestle one or two player in a regular bout or title match. There are two sides to each character, one good, one bad. In a regular bout, you can set a series of vows, which basically state whether you’re a face (good person wrestler) or heel (bad person wrestler); as you go one way or the other, you character can switch between these two sides, complete with different moves and outfits. Hence, while there are only ten wrestlers in this game, it feels more like twenty. As something that could only arguably be considered a bonus, if you win a title match in exhibition mode, you unlock “gallery mode” for whatever lucky lady managed to snag the crown. This is basically where you see this virtual woman bouncing around in warmup routines in a locker room, while you can change camera angles. Creepy.

There’s also a laughably bad story mode. If you’ve done one story line for a character, you’re going to find the remainder quite familiar to the point of redundant redundancy. The same matches, same locales, same final bosses will make each succeeding character’s story mode you attempt even less interesting than the previous. Plus, there are the terrible plot lines, bad dialogue, and absolutely horrid voice acting with which to contend, which makes the game painful to suffer through after a few hours. At some point while playing through story mode, you’re going to say to yourself, “I am so *sick* of watching these ladies wrestle in mud.” Think about that for a moment.

It’s the structure that really annoyed me about this game in the end. They got in the hook with the pretty, polished visuals. They kept my attention with interesting gameplay mechanics. They lost me on longevity, though, because after a point, there was no real reason to keep playing this game. It’s just the same thing, over and over, with no real sense of completion. There was very little reason for me to want to finish off story mode, or to unlock all the (ugh) gallery modes.

So, that’s how I spent my weekend: indulging in a rather ephemeral, pointless video game. I didn’t better myself, help others, or otherwise contribute to the greater good. I don’t regret the waste of a weekend, but I’m obviously not proud of it either. When asked, “You’ve spent a weekend playing that game. Haven’t you had enough of it?” I might reply, “No, not yet.” For though I don’t think I’d find it interesting to keep playing the game repeatedly, I could see myself playing it again at some point…but I’d feel guilty about it. That’s the point, I think. Now if I just had a pint of Ben & Jerry’s to go with it.

Rumble Roses at GameFAQs
Gamespot Review
Rumble Roses Official Site

3/11/2005

Bit Torrent isn’t inherently evil.

Bit Torrent has gotten a bad rap lately, due to its rampant use in copyright infringement. That’s why it wasn’t surprising to find sites like SuprNova.org shutting down, rather than face the wrath of music and movie lawyers who are turning the legal system into a volume business.

This is unfortunate, because Bit Torrent is one of the neatest developments to hit the net in a while — it’s an Internet representation of memes. For those not in the know, Bit Torrent is a distribution system, where you upload parts of the file while you download parts of the file. So, say you download the first quarter of a file. You can then act as a server for other people who are looking for that first quarter, and provide it to them for download, while you’re trying to download the remaining three quarters of the file. You, in turn, are downloading the remaining three quarters from others who have downloaded the file. The more people who try to download, the better off everyone is, as this gives you more places to download from simultaneously. Hence, the more in demand a file is, the larger and stronger the torrent. A meme in action! This has the benefit of not forcing the provider of the media to pay for all of the downloaded bandwidth, which is a good thing. It distributes that bandwidth load to the downloaders, which seems to be a sort of poetic justice.

So, despite the bad press that Bit Torrent seems to draw, this technology is quite good. Fedora allows people to download the latest versions of their Linux via Fedora torrent. South By Southwest provided their entire SXSW 2005 Music Festival catalog of 750 songs in a publically available torrent. If more people would use this system, providers of media could reduce their costs (allowing them to provide more media in the future), and downloads would be quicker for all.

The following sites provide legal Bit Torrents. As torrents need people participating to have power, install Bit Torrent and jump right in!

bt.etree.org: Live concert recordings of trade-friendly artists are featured here. Looking for a recording from the last Phish show? This is a good place to start.

LegalTorrents: LT is a clearinghouse of various freely available music, books, and movies.

Prodigem Torrents: An eclectic mix of mostly tech-related torrents.

torrentocracy: Mostly political torrents.

Click on, download, upload, enjoy. Not everything is evil, despite what the news tells you.

3/2/2005

Nigerian scammer preys on tsunami sympathy.

mail.jpg I don’t expect Nigerian email scammers to win any awards for good citizenship. These scammers (also known as 419 scammers) are out to bilk money from naive Internet users, so unhealthy behavior is sort of the name of the game. Though I find it annoying that they both fill my inbox with solicitations as well as steal money from people, it’s rare that they actually piss me off. Then, today, I got the following email message:


TSUNAMI SURVIVORS RELIEF & REHABILITATION SERVICES

Good Day,

My name is Mark S Paylor, i am a victim of the Tsunami quake flood, i came to london some few days (6th of Dec. 2004) before the quake flood happen (26th Dec. 2004) i got information from skynews while in London that the quake flood killed people in my country Somalia and other countries, its realy sad for me cause i spoke with my parents few days before the quake flood, i went back to Africa Somalia, and find out that all my family was gone, my father and mother was dead left with only my sister of 8yrs and my self are the only surviving children of my family,go to this link for more information.
[DELETED]

my father was a gold marchant and a top contractor in my country who had made so much money in Gold Business, he has a company in Somalia but all was gone, i saw my father lawyer in Somalia and he gave me all my father documents and testament of my late father and i am the next of kin to my late father, i found out in the documents that my dad has deposited some money ($18million usa
dollars) in a Security Company in Ghana and i called the company for the clam of the funds, but they told me that my dad has already registered the funds unexpress transfer to live Africa, that i need a foregin partner to help me cliam the funds.

I need your help so i can cliam the funds and i want to contribute the funds to the TSUNAMI RELIEF FUNDS, i will give to you 30% if you can help me contact the company with your delivery address so this funds can be delever to you, i will be going to Ghana next week to make arrangement with the company on the transfer of the funds to you.

May God bless you, please you can email me back so i can give you more information.

Best Regard,
Mark Paylor.

NB: CONTACT ME ON: ( mark_s_paylor@yahoo.co.uk )

This is the first 419 scammer I’ve seen that was using the tsunami disaster to scam people. He’s actually preying on two emotions: sympathy for tsunami victims and philanthropy. (Well, that and greed, but for greed, you get what’s coming to you.) Not only is this shameless, it really makes me wonder about the state of society where there is no sensibility, with anything being fair game for a quick buck. What’s next? A 9/11 disaster relief fund? It pisses me off that this guy is using the generally good human sympathies as a point of weakness. It’s hard enough to get people to feel sympathy or philanthropy for others, without people like this out there trying to make sure that people who do get burned.

Anyone want to scambait this guy?