• Authenticating

    Posted on March 15th, 2009 admin Comments

    I have two basic requirements for games. They must run right out of the box and be playable even if tbe support services are no longer available. I think these requirements are fair. When considering that most books, movie DVDs, and music CDs meet these requirements and cost $20 or less, I feel I am entitled to expect them from a $50 videogame. This is especially true when that videogame requires a computer that costs over $1,000. Imagine my displeasure when I found out about the activation requirements for BioShock.

    From my point of view, all activation does is promote and justify piracy. It’s all but guaranteed that when these activation servers are shut down for good, someone will pop up on a forum asking how to get by the activation so they can play again…and the only people with that answer will be hackers and pirates, I don t like the idea of having to do something illegal to get a game I bought legally to run.

  • Film, Folklore, and Urban Legends. Review

    Posted on March 7th, 2009 admin Comments

    Film, Folklore and Urban Legends Book reviewFilm, Folklore and Urban Legends consists of slightly reworked essays previously published by Mikel Koven between 1995 and 2007, collected with the hope, he says, of drawing “a line underneath these preliminary explorations,” and so that “future scholarship will develop” the ideas contained in the collection. The book is divided into five sections: part one is a partial survey of scholarship concerning film and folklore, part two consists of three methodological studies (of The Wicker Man and Frazer’s Golden Bough, and of the use or misuse of tale-type and motif indices in understanding some horror films and some film comedies), part three is concerned with exploring the feedback-loop of certain legendary beliefs created by their depiction on television and in the movies, part four discusses various aspects of urban legends and their depiction, and part five presents an essay on “ostension,” the enactment of legend in film and on “reality” television.

    As a whole, this group of essays provides a useful entry point to many important theories, practices and arguments about folklore and visual narrative, not least because it is in the form of essays aimed at specific questions rather than aiming to serve directly as a primer. The citations and bibliography alone are a valuable resource for anyone wishing to take up the subject. The down side of any such published collection, though, is that while ideas and methods may recur, there is no consistent argument sustained throughout. Everything has the defects of its virtues. Some consistent themes, do, however, hold many of these essays together conceptually: first, the position that mere “motif-spotting” is a pretty sterile enterprise; second, the question of the extent to which popular films participate in the production and dissemination of folklore; and third, an examination of the usefulness, or lack thereof, of applying the methods of folklore to the study of film.

    Chapter one is a quick review of many different ways of applying folklore to films and a justification of studying film from a folkloric perspective on the grounds that film is the dominant modern mode of dissemination and propagation of narrative. Chapter two takes on the much-discussed (and much reviled) film, The Wicker Man (1973, directed by Robin Hardy) pointing out the irony that, while entirely reworking its sources, the film itself became a source for modern neo-pagan ritual. Koven here also raises the issue of ostension, which becomes the major subject of his penultimate essay in this volume.

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  • Good and bad procrastination

    Posted on March 3rd, 2009 admin Comments

    Recently I was reading slashdot and came acrross an article called Good and bad procrastination, written by Paul Graham. It is an interesting article about procrastination and which types of procrastination is better for us. I decided that I would stop procrastinationg and if I do it would be good procrastination. Paul graham has written many good articles like How to generate wealth, How to start a startup which are worth reading.

    Slashdot is a nice site which has lot of interesting articles written by geeks and computing nerds.
    If you have any interest in science or techology, you will love it.