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Archive for October, 2007

Crysis

27 Oct
Crysis: Destroyer of Motherboards and Obseletor of Video cards.
Crysis.

When I woke up and my video card was hiding under the desk, trembling and muttering something about Shader Model 4, I knew the Crysis demo had come out.

Of course, the automatic adjustment set everything on my computer to "low" and when I ignored that and tried "medium," the game vaguely resembled an NES in dire need of a new 72-pin connector.

When CryENGINE and I finally struck a compromise, I was impressed. It’s a good game, well conceived, and with, even on my out-of-date rig, expansive, highly interactive environments. See something? Pick it up. Run into a tree? It falls down. You push the leaves out of your way wandering through the jungle.

The sheer size of the arena required me to ditch my usual shooter strategy, based on dark, narrow hallways and the occasional snowy road. You always need to to be mindful of the gun boats patrolling the harbor: they’ve got good eyes and 50-caliber guns.

At the lower difficulty settings, you can listen to your enemies for clues about their movement, but when you crank it up to Delta, they start speaking Korean. It’s a subtle touch but a nice one. You also lose your cross hairs and your HUD stops picking up enemy grenades. Health depletes faster and recovers much slower. The AI becomes more aggressive.

And the AI is pretty good. If you get spotted, they’ll come after you and guys on the other side of the camp will be expecting you. I thought I’d have a moment’s repose on the mountainside but they climbed right up after me. They like to surround you.

Fortunately, you can always grab one by the throat to break free. Jump into Maximum Strength to throw him at his friends with deadly force.

Along with Maximum Strength, your suit has three other modes: Maximum Speed, Maximum Armor, and Cloak. Each depletes the suits energy, which, like your health, regenerates, according to different rules. Speed depletes while sprinting, Armor while taking damage, Strength while jumping, punching or throwing, and Cloak drains as long as you’re invisible. (Don’t expect cloak to save you, though, as the troops get scared and start firing towards where you were.)

It adds an interesting dimension of resource management. To sneak around with Cloak, you need to not get shot for a while, and you won’t be able to use Speed the instant it runs out.

There’s nothing fundamentally amazing in Crysis and it may well cause flaming brimstone to explode from your GPU, but it’s a positive step in the long evolution of shooters. And even at the lower end, it looks great and runs well.

I doubt it’s as "must-have" as Bioshock but I’m certainly looking forward to playing the rest of the game.

 
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Yahoo Pipes

21 Oct
Yahoo Pipes™ lets you do all sorts of fun things with data.

Yahoo Pipes is a tool that helps you build basic programs to parse data and do things with it.

A very simple application, and my first attempt, is to combine several RSS or Atom feeds and search through them. This is really very amateurish, compared with some people.

The best feature of Pipes is the way the visual editor tells you exactly what types of data are being passed around. Can you connect a "fetch site feed" object to a "filter" object? Yes, because fetch site feed output items, which is the input for filter.

This could make Pipes a great introduction to programming. It demonstrates, in a very visual and safe space, how data is passed from one part of a program to another. This is the same process real programmers use to map out complex software, meliorated for the non-technical.

So your first homework assignment is this: build and publish a Pipe. Post the URL in the comments; I want to see what people make.

 
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Amazon MP3s

10 Oct

On a whim, I just downloaded the Amazon MP3 Downloader. My first "purchase"—a free example— was an Apples in Stereo track that may be some default or perhaps Amazon got it from my recommendations (they’re a decent band, and this will prompt me to give their last album another listen).

Amazon MP3 Downloader Logo.

Then I bought a whole album, Aesop Rock’s None Shall Pass, on which I was old solely by the eponymous track—and the rest of which is, so far, just as good, definitely worth the purchase.

Because I was signed in to Amazon—flaunting real security for positional security, I’m always signed into everything—I was able to buy the album using Amazon’s One-Click. I hit a button, Amazon asked me to open a file with their downloader, and in under two minutes, I had the whole album, in beautiful 320kbps MP3, sans DRM.

Having traditionally preferred discs to digital, and shunning iTunes, the colossal flaw with the iPod, I was surprised how easy this was. My experiences with the old MSN Music store and it’s spiritual descendant Urge were nowhere near as easy or fast.

I think this album downloaded faster from Amazon than a single Dave Brubeck track from MSN, for example.

A very nice feature, with perhaps two flaws, is that the downloader will automatically add your purchases to either your iTunes or Windows Media library.

The only changes I would want are 1) the ability to add to both libraries simultaneously, and 2) the ability to customize the directory structure of the downloads. It would be nice if I could say "%artist%\%album%\%num%-%artist%-%title%.mp3" (and yes, I am aware I have a bizarre naming scheme, and yes, I assume everything uses WordPress style variables).

On the whole, this is a very pleasant entrant into the mêlée that is the music downloading business. You need to use Amazon’s oft-cluttered site to do your searching, but at least the familiar should be easy, and there’s no deep discount over other stores, Amazon’s well-known source of power. But the combination of speed, high quality tracks, Amazonian reputation and, most importantly, the utter lack of DRM, makes Amazon my immediate favorite.

 
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