Blog

  • DirecTV Pays Studios To Help Confuse Customers Further

    The film studios have convinced Netflix to sign deals that expand the company’s access to streaming film licenses — in exchange for agreeing to delay new releases by 28 days. Studios, of course, think this will somehow magically ramp up user purchases of physical DVDs, though it seems the primary result is going to be a lot of confused consumers, who see new releases for rent in one place, but not in another. But the studios are likely quite pleased with themselves, given the deal gives them more license negotiation power — and allows them to charge companies more money if they want a perceived leg up on Netflix. If nobody is willing to pay, the studios figure they’ve still managed to create a wider delay window (the exact opposite of what should be happening in the broadband age).

    But Blockbuster quickly jumped at the opportunity, throwing money at the studios, not only to avoid the new release delay, but so they could use the opportunity to mock Netflix instead of having to innovate. DirecTV has also now decided to play along, and will be paying for the honor of offering new releases under the “DirecTV Cinema” brand. Like Blockbuster, it didn’t take DirecTV long to brag that unlike Netflix or Redbox, they’ll be getting Avatar the same day it hits store shelves:

    As many as 400 new movies will be available this summer through DirecTV Cinema. Titles from Universal Studios Home Entertainment, Twentieth Century Fox and Time Warner Inc.’s Warner Bros. will be given to DirecTV subscribers 28 days before they can be rented on Netflix, said Paul Guyardo, DirecTV’s chief sales and marketing officer

    Granted this might not hurt Netflix much, given the fact that DirecTV agreements with the studios ban them from offering subscription service, so if users want these new releases — they have to pay between $4.99 and $5.99 per title — nearly the cost of a Netflix subscription. You also had better hurry up and watch your movie, given that under a 2008 DirecTV agreement with the studios, movies you store on your DVR will be automatically deleted after 24 hours. While the studios think layering restriction upon restriction onto how, where and when customers can consume their product is helping them save the traditional DVD — all they’re really doing is delaying the inevitable death of physical media, annoying and confusing customers, and making it harder for people to consume their product.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Após a renúncia de Montezemolo, John Elkann é nomeado presidente da Fiat

    Logo Fiat
    John Elkann, neto de Gianni Agnelli, foi nomeado ontem novo presidente do grupo automobilístico italiano Fiat, após a renúncia de Luca di Montezemolo.
    A nomeação de Elkann, de 34 anos, foi confirmada à Agência Efe por fontes da companhia.

    Durante a entrevista coletiva convocada pela companhia para explicar as mudanças na direção, Elkann disse que amanhã (hoje)será “um dia importante” tanto para Fiat quanto para ele.
    “Estou muito orgulhoso, feliz e agradecido a todas as pessoas que nestes anos me ajudaram”, declarou à imprensa e lembrou-se do patriarca do grupo, Giovanni Agnelli: “gostaria que meu avô estivesse aqui agora”.
    Elkann informou que a Fiat “não terá vice-presidente”, cargo que ele ocupava até agora.

    Montezemolo explicou que o anúncio de sua renúncia ocorreu para não interferir na apresentação do plano industrial e os resultados do primeiro trimestre.
    Mostrou-se completamente de acordo com este plano, que considerou de “extremamente ambicioso, importante e decisivo”.

    Fonte: G1


  • Heathrow Celebrates Resumed Flights with Android App

    Heathrow Airport is celebrating their resumed flights this week with the announcement of Heathrow Airport Guide for Android handsets.  As the official app for the United Kingdom’s largest airport, this title comes in both free and paid flavors.  Using Heathrow Mobile travelers can check for terminals, find restaurants and shops, and stay up to date with parking, fares, and directions. 

    For what we assume is a limited time, customers can download the PRO version at no cost.  The two big differences between this and the free version are live flight tracking and timetables.  If you find yourself traveling to and from the UK, you’ll want to grab this one up!  We’ve included the barcode for the PRO flavor below.  Scan it with your Android handset today!

    Scan/Click to Download Heathrow Airport Guide PRO

    Might We Suggest…


  • Seven lessons for Turqs of all ages

    Findings – Earth Day Challenge – 7 New Rules for the Environment – NYTimes.com

    April 19, 2010 NY Times
    For Earth Day, 7 New Rules to Live By
    By JOHN TIERNEY
    … Here are seven lessons for Turqs of all ages:
    1. It’s the climate, stupid. 
    2. You can never not do just one thing. 
    3. “Let them eat organic” is not a global option.
    5. “Green” energy hasn’t done much for greenery — or anything else.
    6. “New Nukes” is the new “No Nukes.”
    7. We are as gods and have to get good at it.

    Pundits response:

    Extremely refreshing article.

    I mostly agree mostly with John Tierney, and think “You can never not do just one thing.” is brilliant.

    The world is too complex to safely avoid only one perceived harm.

  • ZeaChem Wood-to-Ultra Cheap Fuel Process Validated

    Last Summer I brought you word of the potential for ethanol made from woody crops such as poplars with a yield of up to 2,000 gallons per acre… per acre. On top of that, the process could result in ethanol cheaper than $1.00 per gallon without any government support.

    And today ZeaChem, the company behind this groundbreaking process, announced that they have successfully completed a crucial step in converting wood to ethanol, proving that their core technology works and is commercially viable.

    (more…)

  • He’s back: Ed Whitacre stars in second GM commercial about repaying bailout

    General Motors Chairman and CEO Ed Whitacre

    General Motors’ Chairman and CEO Ed Whitacre is staring in his second commercial for the Detroit automaker. Whitacre uses the commercial to spread the word that it has paid back loans to U.S. and Canadian governments.

    “We have repaid our government loan in full, with interest, five years ahead of the original schedule,” GM said. “We still have work to do, but we are making progress toward our vision of designing, building and selling the worlds best vehicles. We invite you to take a look at the new GM.”

    Check out the commercial after the jump.

    – By: Omar Rana


  • iPad App Review: Goodreader

    Goodreader for iPad ($0.99) – By Good.iWare Ltd.

    iTunes Preview Link

    Pros: It’s cheap; Connects to popular cloud storage services; Allows users to download, view and manage documents effectively.

    Cons: Interface can be confusing initially; No connectivity option for Windows Live Skydrive accounts.

    Buying Advice: I highly recommend this app for any user that needs access to files stored on a local computer or a supported cloud storage account. 

    For business users, the iPad is definitely lacking in features that would make the device more functional for everyday office use.  There is no file manager or network explorer built into the device and the iWork Pages app is available as an add-on to provide some limited document editing and creation functionality, if you can figure out a way to get editable documents onto the iPad (via email or otherwise).  Goodreader is an app that has been available on the iPhone and iPod Touch for a long time as a document viewer, with some enhanced functionality available for the iPhone for an additional fee.  Goodreader for the iPad is fully functional without additional cost.  

    Goodreader takes a bit of exploring to discover its full potential, but after becoming familiar with all of the functionality it adds to the iPad, you’ll be scrambling to justify your expense of the device to your employer.  In addition to being an excellent document viewer, the most useful feature of Goodreader is its ability to connect to cloud storage services like Google Docs, Box.net, Dropbox, Mobileme, FTP and WebDAV servers, and POP3 and IMAP mail servers (to view email attachments).  

    Once connected to a cloud storage account, you may download virtually any file to Goodreader.  From there, you may use the “Manage Files” tab to open the file in another app (like Pages if it’s an editable document), move it into a folder, rename it, delete it, or email it.  

    The developer’s website includes a full list of supported file types as well as a basic user manual. While i can tell you that I’ve had to turn to the manual a time or two, it’s not been because of the slightly confusing UI, but more to learn how to fully use Goodreader’s extensive functionality.  One example of a feature more fully understood by reference to the user manual is Wifi File Transfer.  It’s a great feature for the technically inclined used to transfer files from a computer on the same wifi network as the iPad.

    While i wish the iPad included a native file system, Goodreader has proven a capable substitute. Hopefully, the developer simplifies the UI, adds support for importing files from Pages, and support for uploading files to cloud storage.


  • T-Mobile myTouch Slide seen in white, plus, new Espresso screen shots

    Hey, look over here. It’s the T-Mobile myTouch Slide in pristine white! [via TMoNews] This is the first time we’ve seen a white myTouch Slide in the wild and it sure looks clean. Remember, the myTouch Slide is coming in 3 colors (red, black, and white) and have seen a black version in real life as well. Honestly, we don’t know what’s the hold up with the release, the myTouch Slide looks pretty ready for release in our eyes. We’re pretty excited to use HTC Sense and Android 2.1 on a device with a hardware keyboard!

    And if that’s not enough, TMoNews also has new shots of the custom "Espresso" interface on this bad boy.

    read more

  • Is This The Next Volcano To Put A Halt To European Trade?

    Katla

    Europe is just starting to return to normal since the ash cloud from Eyjafjallajökull’s eruption abated.

    But there is the threat of an even more catastrophic eruption looming in Iceland.

    Katla has often erupted immediately after Eyjafjallajökull, in 926, 1621, and 1821. Eyjafjallajökull has also erupted on its own 22 times in the same time period.

    The eruption of Katla could potentially be 10 times as strong as Eyjafjallajökull, its impact on European travel even higher.

    Time to consider Trans-Atlantic boat travel again?

    Scared of Katla? Check out 10 other potential trade crushing volcanoes >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • “Worst Parking Job Ever” woman gets $500 fine, restricted from driving

    Filed under: ,

    The worst parking job – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Justice has finally caught up with the driver of a BMW X5 who thought she could get away with playing Monster Jam in the parking lot of the local gym. You may recall the tale of Tripta Kaushal. Last October, the 62-year old driver was attempting to park her Bavarian SUV at Extreme Fitness. Instead of coming to a controlled stop, Kaushal launched her ‘ute onto the row of parked cars across from her, backed off and then drove away. Luckily, the gym had parking lot surveillance, and police eventually nabbed the woman.

    On Tuesday, Kaushal pleaded guilty to failing to report a collision, and was issued a $500 fine. Even better, the lady has been banned from driving between the hours of 7 p.m. and 7 a.m., so you can bet your parking lot will be safe from dusk ’till dawn. The court also ordered her to pay restitution for the cars her X5 mounted last year. Makes us wonder what those poor folks were doing for transportation for the last five months.

    [Source: The Star]

    Continue reading “Worst Parking Job Ever” woman gets $500 fine, restricted from driving

    “Worst Parking Job Ever” woman gets $500 fine, restricted from driving originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 16:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Star Of Microsoft Kin’s Sexty Ads Has Sext Parody Video History

    Last week, Microsoft pulled some ads for the new Kin social media device after our prurient pals over at Consumer Reports pointed out that they seemed to promote sexting (In one of the shots, a teenager puts the gadget under his shirt and takes a picture). “Microsoft takes the issue of sexting very seriously,” said a Microsoft spokesman regarding the yank. Well they certainly must, reports ANIMAL, because that’s exactly the kind of content where they seem to have found Rosa Salazar, the campaign’s main actress. For instance, her starring role in the parodic safe-sext-take on Salt n’ Peppa’s 1991 smash hit, “Let’s Talk About Sex.”

    There’s also one where she plays a girl lying on her back in bed while her shirtless boyfriend atop her wishes Windows 7 would make him “last longer.”

    Pretty tame all around, and, while I’m not a prude and don’t really think the Kin ads are that bad, except in a “Welcome to the Social”-like way, Microsoft shouldn’t pretend like it didn’t know it was putting off a sexty vibe.

    SEXTING SENSITIVE MICROSOFT PICKS BRAND PERSON WITH HISTORY OF SEXTING PARODIES [ANIMAL]
    PREVIOUSLY: Microsoft Takes Back Its Naughty Ad For The Kin

  • Fully automatic sterile sampling system for liquids and pure steam

    GEMÜ has developed a completely innovative automatic system for the aseptic sampling of liquids such as WFI or AP water and pure steam in the pharmaceutical industry. With this new device, samples can be taken for both pure steam and liquids with the same unit.

    In order to monitor sterile piping systems in the pharmaceutical, food and beverage industries, samples are regularly drawn from the ring mains for WFI, AP water or Pure Steam and analysed in the laboratory for a possible contamination. For this purpose, there are various systems, in which sampling is carried out manually or semi-automatically. The operator of the plant or the lab technician usually has to monitor the entire sample extraction procedure. GEMÜ has refined the BioStar sampling system for pure steam introduced in 2008, so that it can now also be used for the aseptic sampling of liquids.

    The complete system consists of a multi-port sampling valve with pneumatic actuators, a sampling bottle as well as a compact control unit. The control unit is a Siemens PLC with a touch screen panel as part of the redesign. The new control system is more compact and provides improved menu guidance as well as easier operation. It is optionally supplied mounted on a mobile stand ready-to-connect or in two parts for fixed installation in a plant.

    After starting the program, the parameterised control process runs fully automatically. In the first program step, the entire system is sterilised or rinsed. Afterwards, the sampling process starts automatically until the set amount of steam condensate or liquid is reached. The system switches off automatically after the end of the program. The advantage of this new system is its significantly reduced sampling time for a completely sealed, faultless sample extraction. The sample extraction process for liquids lasts approx. 30 sec. for 250 ml, time also being required for sterilisation or rinsing. The standard system is compact and mobile and can also be connected to other sampling points in the ring main at any time.

    The parameters such as sterilisation time and condensate/liquid volume can be set individually between 15 (50) ml to 900 ml via the control panel. Once the parameters have been set, they are saved and enable direct reproducibility of the process.

  • Test leads with new Ø 4mm stackable plug

    Multi-Contact test accessories stand for safety and reliability, and have proven their worth many times in daily use. Now we have added a new type of test leads to our broad product range.

    The test leads XVF/XVS-4075 are equipped with a new Ø 4mm stackable plug. The plug part with lamella, the rear socket and the connection port is a one piece construction offering a particularly low contact resistance. The insulator is designed for safe use up to 1000V, CAT II or 600V, CAT III according to IEC/EN 61010-031. The test leads are pre-assembled with our highly flexible cable with PVC insulation (XVF-4075) or silicone insulation (XVS-4075). Available in various lengths and colours. Thanks to the high cost-benefit ratio of the finished test leads while maintaining the customary high MC quality, the new test leads are particularly attractive for the use in schools and laboratories.

    Further information and technical details are published in our new flyer Q Test & Measureline.

  • Acoustichoc® ceiling : high resistance to impact damage

    Acoustichoc® is a high density thermoacoustic panel manufactured from stone wool faced with a white glass fibre tissue reinforced with a glass grid.The reverse is lined with a natural glass fibre tissue. The panels with their specially designed facings are ideal for sports and industrial environments providing high resistance to impact damage and to humidity.

    Acoustichoc® has a maximum acoustic absorption : aw=1.

    It is available in white and 6 colours.

  • Workers found safe, but Gulf oil rig in danger of tipping

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    The Deepwater Horizon rig, pre-explosion and pre-tipping.Photo: TransoceanReuters is reporting that
    the 11 workers missing after an explosion on a Gulf Coast oil rig have been
    found safe.

    An explosion on a drilling rig 50 miles off the Louisiana
    coast late Tuesday night forced the evacuation of more than 100 workers and left
    the whereabouts of 11 in question. Seven others were critically injured and
    taken to hospitals, the New York Times reports.

    But the 396-by-256-foot rig is “leaning badly” and in danger
    of tipping over, according to a local parish official. That can’t be good for a
    marine ecosystem, even one accustomed to drilling, spills, and all manner of
    heavy industry.

    This comes within weeks of:

    The awful coal-mine
    explosion
    that killed 29 men under the criminal safety record of Massey
    Energy CEO Don
    Blankenship
    .
    The crash
    of a coal freighter
    into the fragile Great Barrier Reef as it tried to take
    a shortcut from Australian mines to Chinese furnaces.
    The Tesoro oil refinery explosion that killed five workers in Washington state.

    The spillage
    of 18,000 gallons of crude oil
    from a Chevron into a canal in the Delta
    National Wildlife Refuge, also in Louisiana.

    All in all, it’s been a pretty terrible month for fossil-fuel industry
    workers, defenders of the energy status quo, and organisms unlucky enough to
    live near coal, oil, or their shipping routes.

    This isn’t to say accidents can’t happen within the clean-energy
    industry—installing offshore wind farms must have its own risks, though they
    lack the combustible materials of a drilling rig. The point is that these human
    welfare costs should absolutely inform our national energy project. All the more reason to move to safer sources.

     

    Related Links:

    Bolivia’s Morales slams capitalist debt to global warming

    Brazil awards dam contract despite environmental protests

    Each party has a clean-energy plan in U.K. election






  • Coked-out Coca-Colla [sic]

    by Jen Harper

    High-fructose corn syrup in soda? Bad. Cocaine in soda? Depends
    on whom you ask. We all know Coca-Cola used to contain trace amounts of the
    narcotic back in the day, but, according to the UK
    Guardian
    via Fast
    Company
    , Bolivia’s kicking it old school with its coca-leaf containing soda,
    Coca-Colla (note the second L—I smell copyright infringement; it’s also black,
    sweet, and comes in a red-labeled bottle). Bolivia had previously tried to ban
    the production of the coca leaf—the raw ingredient of cocaine—but now that coca
    grower Evo Morales is president, the government is singing a different tune. And
    I’m guessing it’s a tune that sounds a little something like this:

    ——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

    Like what you see? Sign up to receive The Grist List, our email roundup of pun-usual green news just like this, sent out every Friday.

    Related Links:

    Bolivia’s Morales slams capitalist debt to global warming

    Power your house with poop

    The “people’s climate conference” in Bolivia kicks off with ambitious aims






  • Shaping IP Laws by Not-So-Gentle Persuasion: The Special 301 Report

    At the end of this month the United States Trade Representative’s Office will release its annual Special 301 report, a review of global intellectual property protection and enforcement standards conducted by the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR). Since 1989, the USTR has used the Special 301 Report to intimidate other countries into adopting more stringent copyright and patent laws by singling out particular countries for their “bad” intellectual property policies, naming them on a tiered set of “watch lists,” resulting in heightened political pressure and in some cases, the potential for trade sanctions, to encourage changes to their laws.

    In previous years, the the USTR has relied heavily on submissions from the entertainment and pharmaceutical industries to compile the rankings for the Special 301 report. This has resulted in particularly unbalanced assessment criteria. Countries have been listed for proposing exceptions to their national copyright laws, for failing to sign on to controversial international treaties, and for not mirroring specific parts of US law in their national laws. In other words, countries have been listed for failing to adopt the enforcement norms from U.S. copyright law, but also for attempting to create the same type of balancing exceptions and limitations to copyright holders’ exclusive rights that have allowed user generated content and technological innovation to flourish in the U.S.

    In 2006, the IIPA recommended that Chile be placed on the Special 301 Priority Watch List (a tier above the “Watch List” ranking) for considering fair-use style exceptions to copyright in Chile’s copyright law:

    During 2005, several Chilean government agencies reportedly were trying to amend the bill to incorporate very broad “fair use-like” exceptions which would allow copyrighted materials to be used without the rights-holders’ authorizations. It is likely that these provisions, if included, would also meet with the objections of the copyright industries.

    In 2009, Israel was placed on the Priority Watch List for refusing to adopt DMCA-style laws prohibiting the circumvention of copyright owners’ technological protection measures (TPMs) after intense parliamentary debate and doubts about whether DMCA-style anticircumvention provisions actually do anything to stop copyright infringement. This is an astute question, given that in the US, those provisions have caused considerable collateral harm to lawful users of copyrighted works while having no appreciable effect at stopping, or even slowing, digital copyright infringement. Again, this is not a matter of compliance with international law as it is frequently portrayed to be. Israel has chosen not to ratify the controversial 1996 WIPO Copyright Treaty and WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, and so is not required to adopt legal protection for copyright owners’ technological protection measures.

    In 2006, Canada was subjected to an Out of Cycle Review (because the USTR thought the country merited special attention outside the normal Special 301 schedule) after it released draft copyright legislation implementing those treaties that included legal protection for TPMs, but not close enough to the DMCA to satisfy the US copyright owners in the IIPA. And Canada drew the ire of the USTR again in 2009, for requiring its customs officers to have a court order before seizing items at the border — something that ACTA looks like it will overturn.

    As EFF noted in our joint submission with Public Knowledge, Special 301 neglects critical US foreign policy goals. The policies it advocates ignore the importance of the free flow of information for social and economic development, and the the need to support US technology exporters seeking new markets. We argued that the Special 301 process should account for the interests of all stakeholders in the knowledge economy — not just IP rights-holders.

    We also made a number of specific recommendations for addressing the procedural deficiencies in the Special 301 process, including that the USTR should make transparent the set of factors and standards it uses for evaluating countries in each year’s Special 301 Report, and arrange for independent external verification of country data and statistics submitted by the IIPA before making factual determinations based upon it; and that the USTR should provide a meaningful opportunity for public interest advocates to file comments in response to submissions provided by copyright industry rights-holders.

    The USTR opened up the Special 301 submission process this year to all interested stakeholders for the first time and received over 700 submissions. While we welcome this new approach by the Obama administration, the real test for sound policy-making will be whether the 2010 Special 301 Report takes account of the views of all stakeholders. We’ll find out shortly.

  • Facebook Used To Make Partners Delete Your Data After 24 Hrs. No Longer.

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced this morning that Facebook will toss a policy that made developers and partners with access your data to delete it after 24 hours. Now they can just keep it. Turns out the privacy policy hindered growth:
    Zuckerberg told Inside Facebook:

    Zynga [makers of Mafia Wars and Farmville] has had to download user information 100 million times per day because of our policy. Developers were having to architect entire systems just to do this. There aren’t any other changes in the policies on how developers can use the data,

    Coming soon after their announcement that some pieces of your personal information will never be private even if you set your profile to private, it’s becoming clearer and clearer that Facebook won’t let a little thing like respect for its users get in the way of its quest for total internet domination. And why should it? Most users won’t hear about the changes, or care.

    Facebook Removing 24 Hour Caching Policy on User Data for Developers [Inside Facebook]
    Facebook Crushes Privacy with Impunity [Valleywag]

    RELATED:
    Manifest destiny at Facebook’s F8 confab [Cnet]
    Facebook Kills More Of Your Privacy For Cash
    Delete Your Facebook Account Forever

  • Twitterfific for iPad 1.0.1 released

    Twitterrific iPad 1.0.1

    Our current favorite Twitter app, Twitterrific, has just been update to version 1.0.1, which includes a bunch of bug fixes and new features. Here’s the list:

    New Features:

    • Support for Instapaper via Settings app.
    • Support for 3rd party push services like Boxcar.
    • Audio notification control via Settings App.
    • Support for screen names vs real names via Settings App.
    • Support for old style RTs – Forward to Followers in reply actions.

    Bug Fixes:

    • Fixed a popover bug that could cause timeline scrolling to lock up.
    • Fixed a bug that allowed direct messages to be re-tweeted.
    • Fixed a bug that allowed direct messages to be marked as favorites.
    • Fixed a crashing bug that could occur when viewing certain tweets.
    • iTunes and map links now open properly in the mini browser.
    • Subscribed Twitter lists now appear in the sidebar.
    • Fixed a display problem when opening “full” TwitPic images.
    • Fixed several display bugs associated with device orientation.
    • Updated the scroll indicator to white for improved clarity.
    • Several graphical tweaks & improvements.
    • Security improvements.

    You can grab, or upgrade to, the new version now in the App Store.


    Tags:

    Twitterfific for iPad 1.0.1 released originally appeared on AppTapper on Wed, April 21, 2010 – 12:50:23


  • Skyfire For Android Beta Leaked! Have some screenshots.

    By the time I got wind that Skyfire was looking for Alpha testers, the sign-up sheet had already been filled to the brim. Bummer, right?

    Fear not! As luck may have (the “luck” here being for early adopters, if not necessarily Skyfire), a Beta copy just leaked out for all to enjoy.

    The bad news: it looks like Skyfire might be sending takedown requests to anyone distributing the Beta. We were able to get our hands on it before the first links started going down, but we’re not going to be able to host a download of it. Google the relevant keywords – you’ll find a download link in no time flat.

    I was hoping to do a full hands-on with the leaked Beta – but at this point, it wouldn’t really be fair. To sum up everything I would have said: Skyfire for Android needs work. There’s no multi-touch or double-tap-to-zoom support yet, so the only zooming mechanism is a little -/+ button in the bottom right (and boy, is it sloooow.) There also doesn’t seem to be any support for rich media like Flash and Silverlight yet, which, given that that’s Skyfire’s flagship feature, really lops the experience off at the knees.

    With that said, remember: this is early, early stuff. We’ll check back in with Skyfire for a proper hands on a bit further along in the development process. In the mean time, enjoy some screenshots of the current state of things: