Author: Serkadis

  • SEAT Begins New Adventure With Shakira

    VW’s Group’s latin brand, Seat, will release a new episode of its marketing campaign which uses Shakira’s image.

    A publicity spot for the automaker has been created using digital animation. It was shot last December in Madrid, with the all-important post-production stage being completed in London. The advert will bring Seat and Shakira to home viewers’ attention starting from March, when it will be introduced on television.

    The spot brings the audience to SEAT and Shakira’s Wonderland, a p… (read more)

  • US PSN Store update 02/04

    The weekly Store update’s up now, but just in case you want the full 411 on the entire list, here it is and check it out. Quite a few games went on sale this week, including those

  • Fast and Furios: Fast Five with Diesel, Walker Comes in 2011

    It’s official, fast and furious fans of the…Fast and Furious franchise: the fifth movie in the famous series will be called Fast Five, will be released in 2011 and will star the ones which started it all, Vin Diesel and Paul Walker. The movie will be directed by Justin Lin and produced by Neal Moritz and the Universal Studios.

    The script for the fifth installment is being written by Chris Morgan, marking the third time when he partners with Lin for a Fast and Furious movie, Variety report… (read more)

  • The Toilet Paper Article of the Week: Knock ‘Em Dead Kid

    TTP-logo-masthead

    Here’s an article from our friends over at The Toilet Paper. To subscribe to their free ball busting daily newsletter, click here.

    Most 16-year-old girls are concerned about pimples, prom, and being popular. For Californian teenager Abby Sunderland, being hi-jacked by pirates, crushed in blinding squalls, or starving to death top the list.

    Last Friday, the young sailor hopped aboard her boat Wild Eyes and set out to be the youngest person to sail around the world. Crazy? You bet your sea cock. But with social networking, bullying, pregnancy pacts, gang violence, and all the other dreck facing many teenage girls attending high school today, spending 150 days on a boat alone doesn’t sound so dangerous.

    Number

    24,500 – Miles of Abby’s planned trip. Some items she will be taking with her are some books, her iPod, a couple of cameras, and six months of dehydrated food.

    We’d throw on 40 skids of beer for ballast.

    Quote

    “A whale ship was my Yale College and my Harvard.”

    Herman Melville, author of Moby Dick

    So, like a paper on harpoon maintenance and a final on scurvy? What’s the big deal?

    Word

    circumnavigation

    noun. 1. Sailing or flying around; making the circuit by navigation. 2. Preliminary fly-by the doctor does before snipping the turtleneck off your wang.

    Fact

    Abby’s brother Zac Sunderland was 17 when he sailed around the world on a 36-foot Islander sailboat he bought for $6,000. It took him 13 months and 2 days. His sister plans to do it in 5 months. No one likes a one-upper, Abby.

    The List

    The Young and Ambitious

    Braxton Bilbey, 7 – Youngest person to swim from Alcatraz to San Francisco. No that is not shrinkage, folks; he is seven.
    Victoria Rae White, 10 – Youngest person to ski on all seven continents. Incredibly difficult to do, unless of course your parents are … rich!
    Adám Lörincz, 14 – Youngest person to compose a musical. Surprisingly still picked last for kickball.
    Katie Walter, 17 – Youngest person to reach the South Pole. It is unknown whether or not she did it for the cute winter outfit.

    For more in-your-face news blasts, click here to subscribe to The Toilet Paper now.

    Related posts:

    1. The Toilet Paper Article of the Week: Back In The Ring
    2. The Toilet Paper Article of the Week: Been Caught Stealin’
    3. The Toilet Paper Article of the Week: Fathers, Don’t Let Your Daughters Date…(John Mayer)

  • New Skoda Octavia renderings

    New Skoda Octavia renderings

    The new Skoda Octavia will arrive in 2013, and will continue to be available in both sedan and five-door versions, as well as the Octavia Wagon or “Combi” family car. The new Octavia will share the same platform as other cars from the Volkswagen group such as the Audi A3 and the and Volkswagen Golf. The new platform will emerge in 2011, firstly with the new A3, and then the Golf 7 will adopt it in 2012.

    The new Skoda Octavia will have a sporty style and we should also see a jump in quality, while keeping its reputation for comfort. The Octavia might adopt the Twin Door system seen on the Superb, and the new generation will be slightly larger, gaining six centimetres in with and being 4cm longer in the wheel base for a total of 262 cm.

    Both occupant and boot space will be larger in new Octavia, and we should see some new engine technology, including Start&Stop as standard. The 1.2-litre TSI engine will have Greenline technology emitting less than 100 g/km of CO2, while the top of the range will be represented by the RS versione with the 2.0-litre TSI with 270 hp (the same engine as that of the Golf R). The Octavia Wagon will also have 4×4 and Scout versions.

    New Skoda Octavia renderings New Skoda Octavia renderings New Skoda Octavia renderings

    Source | L’Automobile Magazine


  • Why so much FAIL in the digital world?

    CAROP_1_998 
    Progress seemed inevitable when Disney's Carousel of Progress ride opened in 1964. Not anymore. Image courtesy, Disneyworld.disney.go.com

    Lately, Internet users have been poking fun at each other at record rates, using sites with names like EPIC FAIL to chronicle technological foibles and missteps. Perhaps they are laughing to stop from crying.

    Technology letdowns such as dying cell phone batteries or lost computer files can to lead to everything from pesky annoyances to computer rage, clinical depression, or worse. A growing body of research suggests that the invasion of the digital age is literally rewiring our brains, eroding skills once considered essential for a happy adult life. Gadgets were supposed to make our lives easier and save us time. Instead, we are more stressed and have less time than ever. What is the cause of this epic failure?

    Millions of Americans were carried into the modern era by Walt Disney's "Carousel of Progress" ride, invented for the 1964 World's Fair.  The ride offered a quick look at five eras in American history — beginning with a housewife complaining about spending five hours doing laundry. In the last scene, "The glories of today" are revealed, with clean modern living and "a kitchen that all but runs itself." The happy result: seemingly boundless leisure time.  Visitors left the ride humming "Great Big, Beautiful Tomorrow."

    We're still waiting.

    "Technology promised us extra time. Well, that didn't come true. We are shorter of time now, busier, then we've ever been as a society," said psychologist Michelle Weil, author of the book “Technostress.”

    Technology has filled our world with modern miracles — instant global communication, frictionless commerce, information available to all for free and, most important, millions of lives saved and improved by medical science. But all this progress has not come without a price. It would be ignorant to argue that technology hasn't made the world better. But often we are blind to the fact that technology creates almost as many problems as it solves.

    "We weren't prepared for that,” Weil said. “We were prepared for a smooth ride literally. We were not prepared for more issues in our lives. We have enough issues."

    Working in an office with a poor cell-phone signal. A laptop battery that won't hold a charge any longer.  A car charger that short-circuits when the oversized coffee cup falls out of the cup-holder and spills.  These daily headaches — let's call them technoflubs — have become a way of life. Stack them together in one bad day and you have something Weil called technology's version of a "bad hair day." String a few of those bad days together and you get something much worse.

    "When gadgets let us down, we feel frustrated, stumped, upset, scared, we feel stupid, like we did something to mess it up, and we feel helpless,” she said. “Those are all the same feelings you have when you are depressed. The issue is literally a dependency issue, and it works like any other kind of dependency on alcohol, drugs, gambling, sex. We have come to expect technology to do certain things for us, and when it fails — which it does often — and we have no clear answer, we become depressed."

    And sometimes, says Professor Kent Norman of the University of Maryland, we rage.  Five years ago, Norman introduced the world to the term "computer rage," following the viral success of a series of YouTube videos showing frustrated users smashing their suddenly impotent PCs into bits.

    Failure by the numbers
    There isn't great data available on the number of technoflubs that U.S. consumers encounter every day, but the Pew Internet and American Life Project took a stab at an estimate two years ago. Here are the sobering results.

    *Nearly half (48 percent) of adults who use the Internet or have a cell phone say they usually need someone else to set up a new device up for them or show them how to use it.

    *44 percent with home Internet access say their connection failed to work properly for them at some time in the previous 12 months.

    *39 percent of those with desktop or laptop computers have had their machines not work properly at some time in the previous 12 months.

    *29 percent of cell phone users say their device failed to work properly at some time in the previous year.

    *26 percent of those with Blackberries or other personal digital assistants say they have encountered a problem with their device at some time in the previous 12 months.

    Can't be fixed
    What can consumers do when their gadget breaks?  Generally nothing.  Unlike old-fashioned mechanical devices, few electronic devices have user serviceable parts, making consumers even more helpless and vulnerable to failures. 

    "Think about a car. Your grandparents could fix basic problems that a Model T had. In fact, a prerequisite of owning a car was that you could fix it,” said Lee Rainie, a Pew project spokesman. “Now, you just have to take a (broken gadget) into the store and ask for help.”

    And break, they will. You may love your simple phone, and that basic PC might be good enough for your mom to type letters and e-mail, but the idea of owning an appliance until it dies a natural life is antiquated.  Given the perpetual upgrade cycles, software patches, network requirements and so on, gadgets are not built to last.

    "If you have a phone you like and it breaks, you can't get that phone again; it's gone," Weil said. "You only have the choices they give you."

    Even on days when our computers and gadgets don't fail us, the pressure is always there, Weil warns. Cell phone users spend many evenings glancing nervously at their battery strength, hoping the gadget will work long enough to accept that critical phone call on the commute home.

     "We think about looking at our batteries more than we think about eating," Weil said. "You constantly have to bring the charger so you can plug it in in the car. You have to make sure you plug it in at night or you are going to have difficulty. It's another thing you have to think about all the time."

    There are varying degrees of failure, of course. When a car breaks down in your driveway, it's far less serious than a breakdown in the middle of the Arizona desert.  But if technostress seems to be growing, Rainie said, it's because we are taking far more trips through the digital desert these days.

    "The problems that people have grow in urgency the more they rely on their technology,” he said. “Our expectations for technology are growing. The frustration is in direct proportion to dependence on the instrument. Once you become used to perpetual contact with everybody, all of the sudden the loss of contact becomes a much more meaningful thing."

    Constant conversation
    Richard Ling, a technology professor at the University of Copenhagen, has been studying the concept of constant contact for a decade.  No longer do people call each other at home or at work, hoping to find them. Smart phone mean that calls, texts, and e-mails always find their targets. That means friends and family are never really separated.

    "This is a constant conversation we are in, an ongoing dialog," Ling said. "I know what's going on with people I care about at a different level now. I know what's in the refrigerator at my friend's house."

    Some consequences of this are obvious — the drunken text or the raging e-mail that we regret moments after sending.  In the past, time and distance might have served the function of "taking a deep breath." No more. Instant communication means having to say you’re sorry.

    Other downsides might not be so apparent.  Being in constant connection with friends, family or employers can be both stressful and demanding.

    But in a more subtle way, constant contact seems to be cheating people of the ability to plan, and to commit to plans, Rainie said. Witness a typical negotiation among teens or 20-somethings about Friday night fun.  The discussion begins with frantic texting during seventh period, or at 3:30 p.m.  Rendezvous places are picked and discarded, and meeting times considered mere approximations. Texting continues as the night begins. "Running late," "I'll meet you inside," and then, "It's lame here, let's go the other bar instead."   The mental satisfaction of having a plan come together never arrives.

    'Continuous partial attention'
    Some experts think these subtle changes are causing great harm to our neurological well-being.  Gary Small and Gigi Vorgan made a series of dramatic claims about the way digital devices are rewiring young brains in their 2008 book “iBrain, Surviving the Technological Alteration of the Modern Mind.”  Most of their assertions aren't pretty. Given that adults commonly consume two, three or even more gadgets at once now — all while carrying on conversations with people – they are beginning to lose their ability to focus and concentrate, they say. They describe a phenomenon called "continuous partial attention," a state of divided attention which leaves people unable to perform tasks that require concentration. Worse, it leaves its victims less and less able to connect with and empathize with each other, they said. 

    "When our minds partially attend, and do so continuously, we scan for an opportunity for any type of contact at every given moment," they wrote. "(People) no longer have time to reflect, contemplate, or make thoughtful decisions. Instead, they exist in a sense of constant crisis — on alert for a new contact or bit of exciting news or information at any moment."  Under that kind of stress, the brain secretes cortisol and adrenaline, creating a temporary high followed by depression, leading to something the authors call "techno-brain burnout."

    In children, the effects can be worse, they said.  When face-to-face contact is replaced by excessive digital media, a child's neural circuits can atrophy and the brain may not develop normal interactive social skills. Small and Vorgan believe this is a big problem, and that a class of young heavy media users they call Digital Natives are suffering from extreme antisocial tendencies.

    "Several studies in both children and adults … tie frequent technology use to conditions such as ADD, ADHD, autism, depression, anxiety and even sociopathic behavior," they said.

    The Dumbest Generation
    Emory University English Professor Mark Bauerlein sees other risks in this phenomenon, and laments them in his book, “The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future. “ He's worried that technology that was supposed to make our kids learn faster and smarter is actually robbing them of the ability to think.

    "The Internet doesn't impart adult information; it crowds it out," he wrote. Students — even top college students — read rarely now, and the slang used for online chatting is eroding writing skills.

    Bauerlein's work was featured in a new PBS documentary “Digital Nation,” which premiered this week. The show took on the issue of divided attention, quoting professors who struggle to keep the interest and attention of students they know are playing with Facebook during class.  While the professors complained, students asserted that they were perfectly capable of effectively multitasking.

    Hardly, Bauerlein argues. Students may manage to pass tests in school, but thanks to distractions the students retain little knowledge required for culture, citizenship or good consumerism.  The reason Jay Leno's "Jaywalking" segment — when random adults seem unable to answer basic questions such as how many stars are on the U.S. flag — is so funny is because it's true.

    Sticking up for tech
    There are many valid defenses for technology.  It's just a tool, of course — the Internet doesn't kill brains, people kill brains.  Obviously, a tool that allows people to find virtually any fact ever known within a few seconds can help make people a lot smarter. 

    Even Weil, the “Technostress” author, is quick to say that technology is not the problem: "The problem is the way people use technology, and the expectations they have for it," she said.

    People have come to depend too much on gadgets, and fail to plan for the logical possibility that they will occasionally break down.  Having simple backup plans in place – in case my phone dies, I’ll meet you at 8 – can relieve much of the dependency-related stress.

    HerbboxMeanwhile, too much alcohol, too much chocolate cake, too much exercise  — all these things can be bad for people, just like too much digital exposure. Most technology reporters who cover the dark side of the Web — porn, gambling, privacy, electronic crime — eventually come around to the notion that technology changes nothing.  All those bad habits existed before the Web and continue to exist in spite of the Web.  It's fair to ask, then, where the fault lies for "The Dumbest Generation" — with overexposure to digital media, or with adults who don't force the kids to turn off the laptops and listen once in a while.

    Blaming youth would be a mistake, too, as brain studies show the deleterious effect of too much digital media impacts all ages.  In fact, older people are less equipped to deal with overstimulation and hyperconnectivity. 

    Meanwhile, Ling offers this reminder: Global connectivity creates millions of small success stories every day. Unlike television, which can be isolating, cell phone technology can help create feelings of true intimacy. 

    This week, his daughter bought her first computer and called him on her way out of the store.

    "I was able to share that exact moment with her, even though she was 2,000 miles away (at school). Now that was wonderful," he said. 

    Note: An earlier version of this column said the transistor was invented in 1964.  As readers have correctly pointed out, that was an epic failure — it was invented in 1947.

    Become a Red Tape Chronicles Facebook fan or follow me at http://twitter.com/RedTapeChron

  • Maserati Associates with Damiani Luxury Jewelry

    It’s common knowledge that birds of a feather flock together, so Maserati and luxury jewelry brand Damiani announced a licensing agreement. As a result, people will soon be able to match their Maserati car to their Maserati earrings.

    The announcement was made during a dinner meant to celebrate the launch of Damiani in London, held at The Connaught Hotel in Mayfair. Some of the celebrities arrived in a fleet of Maserati Quattroportes and GranTurismos, including supermodel and TV presenter Jod… (read more)

  • GM to Boost Crossover Production with Manual Body Shops

    General Motors is experiencing an impressive sales boost in its domestic market, as crossover deliveries have grown so much that the former bankrupt automaker is not able to cope with local demand. Since the company struggles to honor all orders and setting up a new automated body shop would take around 20 months and more than $100 million, General Motors would establish some manual lines in the next three months.

    Or at least, this is the estimated time for setting up a manual body shop, the … (read more)

  • Quick gaming overview on the HTC HD2

    The large screen and snappy processor on the HTC HD2 just calls out to be used for gaming.  This YouTube video by XDA member Piensyto shows some of the games which not only have great user interfaces, but makes good use of the special attributes of the HTC HD2.

    The games shown are Resco Bubbles, Flight Commander, Resco Snake, Asterix & Obelix, Zen Table Tennis, Ferrari GT Evolution and Resco Brain Games.

    What are your favourite games on your smartphone? Let us know below.

    Via FuzeMobility.com

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  • Weather Forecast Suggest Rain Will Hit Jerez Test Next Week

    The teams that preferred to skip the maiden test meeting of the winter in Valencia – at the Ricardo Tormo Circuit – in order to further develop their 2010 single-seaters are now looking at the prospect of having even less than 12 days to prepare their cars for the season opening round in Bahrain.

    The FIA scheduled only 15 days of testing for the month of February for the development of the 2010 single-seaters, but only 7 of the 13 teams on this season’s entry list made the first one, in Valen… (read more)

  • Howard Stern “American Idol” Judge? Shock Jock Stern Courted To Replace Simon Cowell

    Producers of American Idol are courting no-holds-barred radio shock jock Howard Stern to become reality TV’s next Mr. Nasty.

    Idol informants claim FOX bosses are eager to bring Stern on board to replace Simon Cowell as the acid-tongue pundit on the show’s judges panel. Cowell will bid farewell to Idol in May as he prepares to launch an American adaptation of his UK ratings juggernaut The X Factor. Stern, on the hand, is the highest-paid radio personality in the country and threatening to jump ship on his Sirius Radio if the satellite service provider makes good on a promise to slice his $100 million a year deal.

    Producers are believed to have approached Howard after he repeatedly mentioned on-air that his exclusive Sirius XM Radio deal ends next January and he would be willing to consider other offers.

    “It’s one of the few shows that could compete with Stern’s $100 million-a-year Sirius contract, and ‘Idol’ bosses think he’d be even nastier than Simon.”


  • Land Rover January Sales Grow in the UK

    This year is off to a good start on most auto markets, as some car dealers have seriously improved their sales figures compared to the same period last year. Going in the same direction, Land Rover’s sales in the UK were also boosted by the hard winter and difficult road conditions experienced over the last month.

    Compared with last January, in 2010 Land Rover experienced a sales increase of 58 percent, nearly twice as much as the industry’s average figures. The British car manufacturer enjo… (read more)

  • Facebook’s Project Titan: A Full Featured Webmail Product

    Facebook is completely rewriting their messaging product and is preparing to launch a fully featured webmail product in its place, according to a source with knowledge of the product. Internally it’s known as Project Titan. Or, unofficially and perhaps over-enthusiastically, the Gmail killer.

    Facebook messaging has been the bane of users’ existence for years. My first public gripe was in 2008, when I said that urgent changes were needed. The biggest problem is simply deleting old emails. It takes so long that I have thousands of unread and read but not deleted messages in my inbox.

    But Facebook messaging is also only indirectly linked to the email, which is still the standard way that people exchange digital messages when not on Facebook.

    Facebook has occasionally dabbled with improvements to messaging, like adding the ability to search messages. But for the most part it has remained static. And not very useful.

    Even MySpace moved away from their aging messaging platform to a true webmail service in 2008 (albeit one that lacked POP or IMAP support).

    But now Facebook is getting itself back in the game. And if the details we’ve heard are accurate, Project Titan, or whatever it’s called when it launches, may be the kind of product people flock to.

    First, our understanding is that there will be full POP/IMAP support, meaning users can access the account other than through Facebook itself. Your email account name will be your vanity url[email protected].

    Email is all about identity. And Facebook is ahead of everyone else in the identity game via Facebook Connect. Facebook says more than 60 million people log in to 80,000 third party websites each month via Facebook Connect.

    Tacking a real webmail product on top of those vanity URLs and Facebook connect is something even Google may shudder at. Gmail killer? I don’t think so. But a strong product move nonetheless.

    Information provided by CrunchBase


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  • Simon Cowell Hopes His Haiti Charity Single Outsells “We Are The World” Remake

    Not even charity can kill Simon Cowell’s drive to crush the competition. The exiting American Idol judge recently coordinated an all-star lineup of vocalists — Susan Boyle, Mariah Carey and Rod Stewart, to name a few — to lend their voices to a remake of R.E.M.’s 1992 single “Everybody Hurts,” with all proceeds benefitting Haitian earthquake victims. Although the pre-orders for the song suggests the new “Everybody Hurts” will be Britain’s best-selling single in a decade, Cowell won’t be satisfied unless the charity single outsells Quincy Jones & Lionel Richie new star-studded rendition of “We Are the World.”

    “Simon is competitive about everything he does,” a Fly on the Wall whispered to PopEater’s Naughty & Nice Column this week. “He has to clean his teeth better than anyone, he has to earn more money than anyone — and he is determined that his single to benefit Haiti has to outsell Quincy Jones’ record.”

    More than 70 artists, including Barbra Streisand, Jennifer Hudson, and Snoop Dogg, were invited to sing on the “We Are The World,” a remake of the track that was first recorded to raise money for Africa in 1985. “We Are The World” went on to become the biggest-single charity single of all time. The group got together at the same Hollywood studio as the original was recorded. The new track will raise cash for the victims of the Jan. 12 earthquake in Haiti.

    In an interview with London’s New! Magazine last month, Simon made no apologies for his need to be the best: “I don’t like the idea that other people in this business might be doing better than me,” Cowell confessed. “That really bugs me — I mean really bugs me. If you are happy to see someone who does the same thing as you do well — even someone within your own company — then you haven’t got it, it’s as simple as that!”


  • MUST SEE VIDEO LINK: Climategate spreads like an ozone hole, RussiaTodayTV, Laura Emmett with Piers Corbyn & Tom Harris

    Article Tags: ClimateGate, Piers Corbyn, Tom Harris, Updated, Video Link, YouTube

    article image

    Scientists at the heart of the Climategate controversy face new allegations which cast further doubt about global warming. Analysis shows researchers had tried to suppress key details of their findings for twenty years

    New allegations swirl in Climategate, which began last November with an email leak at the University of East Anglia, suggesting that one of the world’s foremost centres for climate research had been manipulating data to prove the existence of man-made global warming.

    Now, it turns out data manipulation has been going on since at least 1990.

    Updated below with YouTube

    Source: rt.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • All-Electric Jaguar XJ Developed?

    Although some of you might argue that building a hybrid model before jumping directly to an all-electric version would be a smoother way to step into the green car sector, it appears that Jaguar wants to speed things a little and launched an all-electric XJ. In fact, the car is not publicly available but the guys over at autocar.co.uk went as far as to announce that Jaguar has already developed such a project which could be launched sometime in the near future.

    Even though this might sound a … (read more)

  • Ken Block Plans 3-Year Programme in the WRC

    Ken Block will debut in the World Rally Championship this year, at the wheel of a Ford Focus RS WRC, after securing some strong backing from Ford and Monster Energy drink. The newly-former Monster World Rally Team recently unveiled their livery for the 2010 season of the WRC, where Block will contest in 7 of the 14 rounds on schedule, starting the very Rally Mexico.

    The information mentioned above is no news to the diehard rally fans out there. Nor is the fact that competing in the WRC has be… (read more)

  • Sensorly aims to keep coverage maps honest

    Say you’re planning that next camping trip and you need to know whether you’re going to be able to incessantly check your work email every 10 minutes — do you trust a carrier’s coverage map of unknown age, origin, and honesty, or real-world experience? If French firm Sensorly has its way, you’ll soon be able to answer the latter thanks to the deployment of an app for your phone that continuously measures cellular and WiFi signal strength at your location and silently reports it back to the company’s servers where it’s compiled into color-coded maps predicting your ability to connect. The concept’s very similar to that being undertaken by another up-and-comer that’s been getting a good deal of coverage lately, Root Wireless, but the key difference is that Root’s system is still in private beta — Sensorly’s mobile app is available right now to anyone who’d like to download it and participate (albeit only for Android; iPhone and WinMo are in the pipe). It seems unlikely that they’ve got critical mass to provide meaningful feedback in most areas at this point, but if marginal boost in battery drain is tolerable for you, it might be worth giving it a whirl.

    Sensorly aims to keep coverage maps honest originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 05:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Xbox v1 games, systems no longer Live; Microsoft’s pulling the plug April 15

    It’s been no secret that original Xbox games have been the vestigial limb holding back much wanted features including raising the limit on our friends list to over 100 or mobile tie-ins, and on April 15 all that will come to an end. Even those Xbox Originals downloaded to the 360 or played via backwards compatibility will be cut off, so we’d suggest getting those last few rounds of Halo 2 in now or at least look into an alternative solution like XBConnect. Affected users should keep an eye on their inbox, Xbox Live GM Marc Whitten has promised “details and opportunities” to come for you as partners in this process — we’re figuring a coupon or two or an extended XBL subscription as the lights are turned out is the least they can do. For the rest of us already living in the future? The timing of this announcement mere days before the X10 event in San Francisco February 11 can’t be coincidental, we should find out what comes next by then.

    Xbox v1 games, systems no longer Live; Microsoft’s pulling the plug April 15 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 04:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |  sourceMicrosoft Gamerscore Blog  | Email this | Comments

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  • N900 gains PS3 Sixaxis control over SNES gaming (video)

    Even if the N900 isn’t quite ready for mass market appeal, that doesn’t mean that it’s not the perfect device for many of the Engadget elite. With impressive power and out-of-the-box hackability, this QWERTY handset is a tinkerers dream. In fact, Tomasz Sterna has already recompiled the kernel to add joystick (and mouse) support. He then pieced together enough code to turn the N900 into a portable Sixaxis gaming console that brings SNES gaming to any TV. Fire up the N900’s Bluetooth, then kick back and immerse yourself in a land of 16-bit dinosaurs and chubby Italian plumbers — good times. See the finished product after the break.

    Continue reading N900 gains PS3 Sixaxis control over SNES gaming (video)

    N900 gains PS3 Sixaxis control over SNES gaming (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 04:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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