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November 17, 2007

Major League Soccer in Seattle starting in 2009

gaming — by TDavid @ 8:09 am PST

Since hearing the news a week ago, I’ve been rolling over the abbreviation in my mind: MLS. The official Major League Soccer website is located at mlsnet.com.

Soccer 1977 Terminix International Dragons

Like a lot of kids I played soccer as a kid. Wasn’t particularly good at it and remember getting kicked a lot in the shins. Yes, I had shin protectors but they always seemed to slide down. And oranges. Ate a lot of oranges during the middle of the matches. They weren’t soccer games, they were matches. I remember our team name had something to do with dragons. Dragonflys?

Leave it to my wife to find the photo above from 1977. Yowsa, has it been that long? 30 years since I played for the Terminix International Dragons! Looks like we had Wolfman Jack as the coach. I don’t remember anybody else on the team. Wouldn’t it be something if by posting this picture somebody comes forward that used to play on this team? In that vein, I’ll say one more time for Google’s posterity: Soccer 1977 Terminix International Dragons.

Moving on.

Naming the MLS team in Seattle
The MLS team in Seattle doesn’t have a name yet, will be playing in the same stadium as the Seahawks (QWEST Field) and the season of 30 games runs about the same time as baseball season: April - October. Kind of a bummer that it runs concurrent and seems strange that it takes six months to play 30 games.

MLSnet.com homepage

In other countries they call soccer football, so maybe the games are presented weekly like football only at the wrong time of year. From the standing shown there seems like a frequent number of ties. In sports, ties are lame. Don’t they have overtime?

As you can probably tell, between now and 2009 I need to get better educated on the world of Major League Soccer. You can help me on that journey in the comments or by trackback in from your blog. If you are from the Seattle area, are you looking forward to MLS in 2009? Here we’re about to lose the Sonics, and we’re going to replace them with MLS? I don’t know.

Seems more interesting to watch live than golf or bowling, but I think the Sonics might be more entertaining. Think I’d take hockey over MLS based on what I know at this point. Not bashing the sport, have to learn more.

Ranking live sports
The following are the order of games I enjoy watching in person.

1. NFL.
2. MLB.
3. NBA.
4. Other

What are your rankings like?

Any readers who are huge soccer fans? I asked my friends on Twitter if they had any soccer quotes and darkmoon responded with an enthusiastic (or was it sarcastic?) “GOALLLLL!!!” C’mon, no love for soccer?

How about casual soccer fans? Ever seen a MLS game live in your area? The tie thing aside which I don’t care for already, I’m somewhat interested in experiencing a soccer game live. Maybe I’ve been missing a really fun sport.

November 13, 2007

Looking forward to playing Super Mario Galaxy and other items on the to-do list

music, movies, gaming — by TDavid @ 8:36 pm PST

Just got back from the store and picked up Super Mario Galaxy for the Wii. $43.79 at Costco, not too bad.

Super Mario Galaxy awaits

I remember fondly how Nintendo used to come out with a new Mario game with each new system launch. That pattern went away, but who doesn’t love these Mario games? I’m looking forward to breaking open the package and getting lost in the gameplay. Some of my favorite gaming memories are with that red hat plumber. Super Mario 3 is my all time favorite Mario game and on my top five videogames ever list.

Also on tomorrow’s to-do list, work (it’s hump day!), reading a new book I also bought tonight on Flash CS3, more work, blogging somewhere between, and in the meantime filling up this shelf with CDs:

CD and DVD shelf

We were out of shelf space to keep our CD collection in order. I’ve spent the last few weeks going through our collection and re-ripping to MP3 at 320kbps. We’re up over 4,000 songs and there still is over a rack full of CDs to go through. Some of the CDs, I’m learning are scratched and need to be repaired if possible.

According to iTunes, which is the primary tool being used to archive the collection, we’re up over 30GB. I’m pretty sure we’ll be under the 80GB limit of my wife’s iPod fifth generation. After the CD ripping is done I have to go back and finish inventorying our DVD collection. We need another shelf for those too. I’m still using the handy program Delicious Library on the Mac (review) with the iSight camera to keep our CD, DVD, games and to a lesser extent books in order.

Have you been keeping up with your inventory duties? Remember, if you have a fire or loss, your homeowner’s (or renter’s) insurance policy requires an inventory of the items. Might as well be proactive instead of reactive.

Listened to music on the Zune most of today but never did figure out how to get my plays to register on my Zune profile on the official Zune website? Seems from the Zune forums like I’m not alone.

Dinner calls. See you on the other side rested and refueled.

November 11, 2007

Sexist men vs. women parking game

Humor, gaming — by TDavid @ 6:44 pm PST

Break time waster: try parking a car as a man and woman in this totally sexist Flash game. I don’t know if women will laugh, but men will.

How's my parking game

For the record, I think the whole stereotype about women being worst drivers is BS. There are plenty of lousy male drivers out there. Still, it was a woman who hit my son and wife in the middle of the crosswalk four years ago.

November 3, 2007

Mountain Dew Game Fuel aluminum bottle

Xbox 360, customer adventures, gaming — by TDavid @ 5:21 pm PST

While doing grocery shopping today we came across this bottle of Mountain Dew Game Fuel ($2.28 at Winco):

Mountain Dew Game Fuel

I looked around to see who else had already written about this and saw a fair amount of commentary and some pictures of the cans (Jake at 8bit Joystick has a nice review) and some on the plastic bottle which were part of a Halo 3 promotion and supposed to be produced for only 12 weeks from the middle of August. However, a cursory search didn’t reveal many folks talking about the aluminum bottled version (more rare?) — although a search on eBay revealed a few sellers ($4.99 a bottle + $6.99 shipping? Ouch.) — so I decided to create this post with pictures. Check your local Winco, they had a whole bin full of them at our local store in Puyallup. Still seem kind of pricey at $2.28 a bottle to me, but they feed into the whole collector’s thing.

Mountain Dew Game Fuel

There is an official website that goes along with this promotion at mountaindewgamefuel.com where you can learn more about the drink. 230 calories per bottle, and then there is this promo video which makes me a bit nervous tasting what’s inside.

As for the taste? Kind of like Cherry Pepsi, but sweeter. Did I get the sugar shakes like the gamers in the vid? No foaming at the mouth, no.

Keep in mind I’m a water guy, preferring an icy glass of water over other drinks. I tried the Game Fuel with an open mind but just too sugary for my tastes. If you can find it at your local Winco or have already tried it, what did you think of the taste?

And what about these promotions? Seems like a good branding opportunity.

Xbox 360 #1 in most games sold per console … until Super Mario Galaxy comes out

news, Xbox 360, gaming — by TDavid @ 7:41 am PST

According to research from NPD and hat tip to Tech.co.uk, the Xbox 360 console sells the most games per console. I’m sure this has been greatly helped along by Halo 3 which set the single day sales record of $170 million.

TDavid walking out of Best Buy holding the Xbox 360 Elite

Now if only they would make consoles which actually stand the test of time, we just had our fifth Xbox 360 go bad (”unreadable discs”), not covered under the new extended warranty. Your hardware sucks, Microsoft, but it still doesn’t matter (gamer crack, I tell you). Fortunately the Elite pictured above is still running ok, BTW, and my gamertag is XboxTDavid in case anybody reading wants to add me. I’m no challenge at most games any more but enjoy when there’s time to play.

One of the best games for the Wii already comes with the system, Wii Sports, which must be hurting the game to console ratio for Nintendo. Don’t feel too badly for them as they are quickly catching up with Microsoft and have a number of promising titles coming including Super Mario Galaxy (yes!!) and for the overweight and underexercised gamer population: Wii Fit.

Meanwhile, the PS3 library is showing some promise with online titles like Warhawk and the creative card game Eye of Judgment (drats, still haven’t beaten the computer on ‘Normal’ difficulty). The Playstation 3 still has the most games in full 1080p, but that hasn’t tipped the scales. Maybe the release of a cheaper PS3 will help.

The Blu-ray Spider-man package (all three movies) could be worth buying, although I’m not sure how many have or will buy a PS3 as a Blu-ray player. The Wii doesn’t have this as a selling point and it hasn’t mattered. Anecdotal: CNET users are looking more forward to Zune 2 than the Wii (#2) or PS3 (#3). The Xbox 360 didn’t make the top 20 but guess what did? Yup, Halo 3 at #14. On the handheld side, the PSP ranked #11.

I’m still holding to the real console war will take place in holiday season 2008. It’s impressive and at the same time a bit sad that Nintendo still can’t keep up with demand for the Wii console. As long as demand is there, it won’t be long before there are more Wiis in homes than Xbox 360 or PS3. Nintendo will be able to meet demand by next holiday season.

It’s encouraging to see the Wii sell so well without the emphasis on superior graphics. Maybe we’ll get back to simpler but more fun games to play. Games that don’t cost more than making some Hollywood movies. As a longtime gamer I could care less about beautiful cinematic video unless it’s somehow interactive.

Zork + Pac-man = Pac-txt

gaming — by TDavid @ 6:55 am PST

Smart Google ads placement, in the clouds of ghosts:

Pac-txt text-based Pac-man game

Being a huge Pac-man fan, I’m all over the text-based game Pac-txt which starts with the text:

You awaken in a large complex, slightly disoriented. Glowing dots hover mouth level near you in every direction. Off in the distance you hear the faint howling of what you can only imagine must be some sort of ghost or several ghosts.

Power pill? I type ‘eat’ and Pac-txt replies: “You have eaten the glowing dot!” You can type ‘help’ to get additional commands:

f [n] = forward n number of steps (e.g ‘f 5′ moves five spaces forward)
l = left
lo = look
e = eat
s = score

Now it’s just you and the text. Let me know how high you score. Watch out for the ghosts!

November 1, 2007

PS3 Folding@home project makes Guinness Book

news, customer adventures, gaming — by TDavid @ 11:14 am PST

Folding@home project makes Guiness book of world records for most powerful distributed computing network in the world

Congratulations to all the people around the world who have contributed to make the Sony PS3 Folding@home project the most powerful distributed computing network in the world! Back in March, I pointed out that the PS3 may have been selling poorly but was doing very well with distributed computing.

The Sony Press release has more details:

The record was initially set on September 16, 2007 as Folding@home surpassed one petaflop(*1), a computing milestone that has never been reached before by a distributed computing network. In addition to this, the collective efforts of our users have enabled PS3 alone to reach the petaflops mark on September 23, 2007.

The record is a testament to the widespread participation of PS3 users from around the world—currently more than 670,000 unique PS3 users have registered to the Folding@home network, bringing the overall computing power of the program to more than a petaflop.

Another exclamation mark for petaflop! So what is all this computing power being used for? This enables scientists to make greater progress studying diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and some forms of cancer. Great cause, I need to join one of these teams and let our PS3 do more folding@home work.

Any readers with PS3 not involved with the Folding@home project?

October 28, 2007

Setting up and playing PS3 Eye of Judgment

customer adventures, gaming — by TDavid @ 12:19 pm PST

Eye of Judgment contents

As games are a favorite hobby of mine, I’m always on the lookout for new and different games. From role playing games like Dungeons & Dragons to online MMORPG to puzzle games and thinking games like Chess. Card games are something I enjoy playing too and I’ve even coded a few card games in my time. Something I hadn’t tried playing before is a card game played on a mat with a webcam that acts out the results of different player/computer moves.

Until buying and playing the PS3 Eye of Judgment.

Quick thoughts? intriguing use of a camera. To date, eye camera type games have seemed more like gimmicks than fun games but Judgment is somewhat unique and I can see why people were having fun playing it at PAX (Penny Arcade Expo in Seattle recently). Here’s one where a game camera is used as an active participant in a card game that can’t be played without the PS3 (maybe it can, but it’s not meant to be played that way). I was able to beat the computer solo on the Beginner and Amateur settings but have not yet been victorious on Normal mode. Haven’t tried playing against others online yet. Not quite ready to take my skills to the masses. Soon.

The Eye of Judgment bundle comes packaged in finger slicing bubble wrap — be careful cutting the outside with a razor blade — and then you can pull the contents out which look like the picture shown at the top of this post. The package contains the following:

- starter deck of 30 cards
- booster pack containing 8 additional cards
- PSEye USB camera
- PSEye tower (assembly required)
- PS3 Eye of Judgment game
- player mat

PSEye video
While you are setting up PSEye camera tower, yes, some assembly is required, you might want to download from the Playstation store the free video camera software called EyeCreate.

Free PS3 PSEye camera software

You can use EyeCreate to make videos on your PS3. I’ll cover this functionality in a separate post.

Setting up the PSEye tower
As mentioned above, you do need to assemble the PSEye tower, but no tools are required. The instructions are inside the Eye of Judgment instruction manual, but you can probably assemble without them. Here are step-by-step instructions with pictures.

STEP 1. Open the box and bag inside containing the four plastic pylons.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 2. Attach two of the pylons into each side of the base.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 3. Attach the center black base support to the top of the two pylons. Note the notch in the back for the wires. It should be on the opposite side of the writing on the bottom base.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 4. Attach the two other pylons to the center black base support.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 5. Attach the camera black top support so it’s facing up at an angle.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 6. Now slide the PSEye camera into the support so it’s facing down. It should slide easily into place.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 7. Gently pust the wire from the back of the PSEye camera into the notches in the center of the plastic base. I found that not inserting in the bottom base made it more stable, but your mileage may vary.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 8. Lay out the mat on a flat surface and place the PSEye base in middle of the edge. There are spots along the edge to line up the PSEye base. I put the PS3 Eye of Judgment game box in the center of the playing mat to show scale in the next picture.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

Note the picture above shows placing the PSEye tower base on a bed, which isn’t advised because you will need to setup the camera settings new each time you play the game if it’s not in the same spot. If you don’t mind spending a couple minutes setting up the camera placement each time you want to play, it does work when placed on a soft surface like a bed, but a desk or table is better. That’s where we moved it to after the first night of playing.

STEP 9. You’re ready to turn on the game and do the initial camera setup. There is a (too) long cinematic introduction that you can bypass by clicking the start (>) button.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

STEP 10. The first time you load Eye of Judgment you’ll automatically be taken step-by-step through the camear configuration, but after that if you move the camera as we did then you can reach it from the ‘Options’ in the main menu. During this phase you need to choose where of the four spots you placed the camera. The configuration wizard is easy to follow and shows pictures of each setup.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

Once you’re done setting up the camera you need to place a card on the playing mat. If the PSEye camera recognizes the card, a white image will appear over the card. This part confused me a bit, I expected it to show something a little more obvious, so hopefully that helps others.

There are different lighting settings you can use depending on the brightness of the room. We used the ‘automatic’ setting with overhead lighting and it seemed to be fine.

Woohoo, now we can play!

Time to play solo match against computer
I’d recommend playing against the computer to get the hang of the game. So far that’s all we’ve done, taking turns since Eye of Judgment only comes with one starter deck and 8 booster cards. Additional decks aren’t available in any stores yet — at least in our area — and Amazon shows 1-2 months before any new decks will ship. Come on, Sony, why aren’t you selling additional starter decks so people can play against other people locally? I realize you can play it online against other players.

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

As for how to play the game, there is an option in the main menu to view some videos of how to play the game. The videos do a decent job explaining the basics of the game and taking you through a hypothetical game.

How to play Eye of Judgment
Here’s my brief and hopefully easy to understand explanation of how to play. Strategy is a whole different matter. We can cover strategy in the comments section.

Shuffle the starter deck of 30 cards. Start by drawing five cards. You can look over your cards and if they aren’t good replace them with five additional cards which is called a mulligan. Press the start (>) button when you are ready to start the game against the computer. The object of the game is to be the first player to have creatures occupy five of the nine spots on the player mat. You can only place one creature card on the map — this is called “summoning” — each turn and your opponent can attack and kill your creatures to thwart your progress, so a game could last 7, 10, 15 or more turns, although an average game seems to last around 10 minutes or less.

There are a few events that can prevent you from being able to lay down a creature card (summon a creature, remember) every turn:

1. You don’t have any creature cards. Each turn you start by drawing a new card with the exception being if you start the game out on the first turn first (a slight advantage). You can have the computer randomly assign who starts first to even out the advantage. The second number beneath your mana on the game screen shows the number of cards you should have in your hand at any given time. Also the computer will remind you to draw a new card at the start of each turn.
2. Not enough Mana to summon the creature. This is more common than #1. If you only have high mana creature cards in your hand, your only move might be to wait until next turn. Each turn you get +2 mana points and if any of your creatures are killed you will gain back some mana, but I found several times I didn’t have enough mana to place a creature on the map. Kind of frustrating, but common.
3. A summoning lock. Some of the more powerful creatures can only be placed if summoning is unlocked. You can tell by the big padlock at the top of the screen. If that’s on, even if you have enough mana, you can’t summon these creatures.
4. You run out of time. Although this one is a bit more unlikely, a timer can be set on the length of each player’s turn to choose what cards to play (default: 5 minutes). I found myself up against the five minute timer in my first game.

Spell cards
You can perform spells with some cards and will want to play these before summoning a creature. Important: the direction you place the creature card on the board determines how they interact with other creature cards on the player mat. Before setting down any card pay attention to which way the creature attacks, which is shown at the bottom of each card. It’s recommended to study what each card looks like and what it does. This will help. The Eye of Judgment instruction manual does a good job of showing what each attritube on the card means.

Tip: Creatures can gain or lose points by being placed in the wrong environment (known as element fields). Of the nine spots on the player map they are randomly placed by the computer earth (2), wood (2), water (2), fire (2) and Biolith (1). If you place a creature on the map in the opposite element — say water instead of fire — they will suffer a penalty and can be killed easier.

Hopefully these instructions reduce the number of times you see this:

Setting up Eye of Judgment the camera tower

Unstick the discard
Sekerah in the Playstation forums has the answer to a problem with the PSEye acknowledging your discards:

You need to “offer” it to the eye, meaning you hold above the mat in your hand.

Any good Eye of Judgment strategy tips to share?

October 26, 2007

Bought the last copy tonight and no, it wasn’t Leopard

customer adventures, gaming — by TDavid @ 9:03 pm PST

Hope I don’t lose my geek badge but instead of buying one of many available copies of Leopard floating around the area tonight at 6pm PST, I went with the last copy — the store actually held it for us — of Sony’s intriguing PS3 Eye of Judgment game.

Sony PS3 Eye of Judgment

It comes with the new Playstation Eye camera and there is a free download in the Playstation store. It’s the card + computer game that was a hit at the Penny Arcade Expo here in Seattle recently.

Why didn’t I buy Leopard too?
Two reasons:

1. I need to upgrade my eMac memory. Why didn’t I do that sooner? I know, I know, slacker! Leopard requires 512MB RAM minimum and I’m still running in the dark ages (but happily, I might add with the apps I use) with the 256MB RAM that came with the machine in 2004.

According to Crucial 512MB will only cost me $32.99. $66 to upgrade to 1GB? Think I might go all the way. Who knows, maybe I’ll emulate Marc Orchant and spring for the new iMac instead. I’ve had my eyes on the Intel Macs for awhile to replace or supplement my eMac. Honestly, the eMac has served me very well the last three years for how it’s been used and still works fine.

2. There will be plenty of time to buy Leopard over the next week and it will take me at least a few days after buying to review it in detail. I kind of like the idea of reviewing installing Leopard on an older machine as I’m guessing there won’t be as many of those reviews. This timing still puts me behind the cutting edge Mac fans, but I can live with that. We didn’t buy Vista the day it came out either (but a couple days later bought this machine with Vista on it). And it wasn’t until the last week that I regularly started using Vista.

The existing Leopard reviews like Walt Mossberg saying it’s “evolutionary, not revolutionary” and the 300+ features have solidified me as a buyer, but even if the two lame excuses above weren’t there, I didn’t feel the absolute, craving need to buy it when I was at the store tonight. Thought I would be sweaty palmed and reaching for my wallet at the store but it just didn’t happen. I did, however, get that feeling with Eye of Judgment (and yes my spelling is correct, there is no ‘e’ in the game title).

Was disappointed that I couldn’t play around with the Leopard demo in store for a bit tonight. About 50 minutes after the official launch the Tacoma Best Buy was still loading Leopard on their machines (huh?!). I wonder if we’ll see some customers moaning about long install/upgrade times?

Anyway, more details on Eye of Judgment and the Playstation Eye camera will be coming soon. If you have a copy of Judgment, holler in the comments and maybe we can play a game together over the PS3 network.

Create Halo 3D images for free

photoshop it, gaming — by TDavid @ 12:48 am PST

Being a huge fan of 3D and games, you can only imagine my glee when I stumbled upon this goodie. Kato created some Halo 3D screenshots on his Flickr page.

Halo 3D images, get your red and blue glasses

In the spirit of sharing, Ken created a step-by-step tutorial showing how to make your own 3D images:

The only piece of software needed for this project (other than Halo 3 on the Xbox 360, obviously) is the excellent StereoPhoto Maker. It is a free tool for Windows-based PC’s that will assist us in making and tweaking our final 3D image.

Time to put those red/blue glasses to some good use and make your own neat Halo 3D shots. Thanks Ken!


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