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  • Some Fun For The Afternoon

    No real point here, just some links I found interesting today.

    Now I’m off to try updating this blog to MT 3.2.

  • Blizzard and Coke

    Joystiq reports an ad by Blizzard and Coke for World of Warcraft and Coke. It’s pretty nifty. It would be cool if we got some ads like that.

  • Blizzard Bans Users Who Break Terms of Use

    Joystiq and Game Girl Advance both reported on Blizzard banning accounts that were used for “Gold Farming” over the weekend. For those of you not familiar with the world of MMORPGs, Gold Farming is big business. People go around, and just kill monsters for high priced items and sell it off to make in-game money. They then sell the in-game money on places like ebay for real money. This is also done with rare magic items. The practice has been going on for ages. I remember hearing about people doing the same with Ultima Online and Evercrack.

    The thing I’m finding baffling about both the posts on this is they seem to be coming down hard on Blizzard. Joystiq asks:

    So, you pay for the game, pay your monthly subscription, only for Blizzard to say “you did something we don’t want you to do, goodbye”, and they kill your account. That’s $50 wasted since, as was reported a while back, you can’t transfer the serial number. Once it’s used, it’s used. Where should the line be drawn on what you can and can’t do in a game you pay for initially, and continue to pay for every month? If people are stupid enough to buy a game’s currency for hard cash, why shouldn’t that be a legitimate activity? [Joystiq]

    The answer is simple. You are breaking the policies that Blizzard has set forth for how they will run their game. This was not some secret policy that nobody knew of. On the World of Warcraft Policy Page it’s right at the top of the announcements link. They even say what they will do to people they catch doing it (Of course, this gets to an even larger rant I have about how people don’t read any of the game policies when playing). If this had come out of the blue I’d be able to understand complaints, but it didn’t.

    What do people think? If you are providing a service, should you be able to set the rules for the use of it? Does it matter if it is a game or something like an ISP? Or should having paid money immediately mean you can do what you want with that service, regardless of any Terms of Use?

  • Chickenpox Parties

    Uh. I really have no response to this. I saw the story and had to go listen. It’s just mindboggling.

    ‘Chickenpox Parties’ for Parents Wary of Inoculations
    Oregon is experiencing a growing phenomenon of “chickenpox parties” — events where parents wary of getting their kids inoculated against chickenpox knowingly expose them to infected children to build immunity. [via NPR News: Health & Science]

  • Amazing Snow Sculptures

    Someone online mentioned a site with shots of the International Snow Sculpture Championships. The winning one is stunning. I’d love to see shots of it in the process of being sculpted.

  • The Guide

    Amazon.com currently has a new version of the trailer to Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy on their home page. I’m now not quite as nervous about the movie as I had been. It’s a decent trailer. Though I really hope a better video quality one gets released soon.

    And for some additional information on the movie, here’s an interview with the screenwriter who had the job of producing a final script. It’s a pretty interesting read.

  • World of Warcraft – Dealing with Success

    The New York Times had an interesting piece on Blizzard and their game World of Warcraft the other day. The game has blown away all sales projectections. As a result, Blizzard is having to scramble to do a level of expansion they’d plan to do over a year all at once.

    It was in the evening, right before the game was formally released on Nov. 23. Blizzard had arranged for producers and designers to sign copies of the game at midnight at a hangar-size Fry’s Electronics outlet in Fountain Valley, not far from Blizzard’s base in Irvine, 40 miles south of Los Angeles. The company had set up a similar signing for an earlier strategy game, Warcraft III, and about 700 people showed up. Planning optimistically, the company had about 2,500 copies of World of Warcraft on hand.

    “So I planned to roll over there around 11 p.m., and as I tried to get off the freeway I look over and I see this gigantic, dark, surging mass around Fry’s, and I’m like, ‘What in the world is that?’ ” said Paul Sams, 34, Blizzard’s senior vice president for business operations. It turned out that the pulsing was more than 5,000 people.

    “The cars were backed up on the off-ramp,” he said. “I parked like a mile away, and when I get there the line is looped around the building, and then looped around the parking lot. It was like a football tailgate, with the R.V.’s and barbecues in the lot and everything.”

    By the end of that first day, about 240,000 copies of the game had sold across North America, Australia and New Zealand, the product’s initial markets. The game has now sold almost 700,000 copies in those markets, and at peak hours about 250,000 people from those areas are playing the game simultaneously. [New York Times – Technology]

  • Would You?

    Marcus Ranum asks “Would you outsource your data center to Baghdad?

    As I am writing this, US Marines and Iraqi troops are engaged in pacification operations (the nice word for “blowing the snot out of any resistance”) in the Iraqi town of Falluja. Perhaps by the time you read this Iraq will be a peaceful, stable democracy that offers a great climate for business, so this editorial might go out of date fairly quickly. Somehow, unfortunately, I doubt it. I suspect the climate for business in Iraq is going to be poor for the next few years, at least. So, mister CTO – would you outsource your data center to Baghdad?

    It’s an interesting read and something to think about. What country do you think you’d want to outsource stuff to?

  • Eye-Yo-Yo-Scream

    Seen over on Gizmodo. A yo-yo ice cream maker.

    Ice Cream Yoyo

    I personally think that after 10 minutes of using that to mix your ice cream your arm would be pretty tired. I guess it might be good to keep kids busy for a bit.

  • How to Kill a Mockingbird

    In case you ever wondered what To Kill a Mockingbird was about.

    How to Kill a Mockingbird

    It’s the true story of To Kill a Mockingbird. Complete with pirates, robots, slaves, lasers, flaming sharks, ninjas, the moon, and a pickle, done in Flash. [via jenett.radio] [via waxy]