Archive for October 31st, 2007

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If you’re a human, you probably don’t like spending money unnecessarily. If you’re like us humans, you’d love to hear about deals that will save you some cash and still deliver some excitement — like gaming. Today we’ve got a deal on NBA 2K8 — a pretty new game whose price has been slashed from $60 to $45, so grab one while you can. If you’ve read our review, you’ll know that newbies should beware, but players of previous iterations will feel right at home with their b-ball (if the kids seriously are still calling it that) skills.

[Via CAG]

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Quickly scanning this week’s Blu-ray releases, it’s hard to notice anything but Spider-Man 3 or its trilogy, but if you’re a tree-hugging hippie, you’ll definitely be in for a treat.

Although there’s 15 releases this week, it definitely isn’t the strongest lineup we’ve seen. However, we’re pretty excited to finally see Digital Video Essentials heading our way.

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The Poll Police are cracking down on an interesting bit of crime this week — by crime we mean news and by interesting we mean surprising. Sony unleashed the PlayStation Eye this past week, bundled with the Eye of Judgment collectible card game. Much to our surprise, these cards face the music of mass duplication and loss of card-sales. Our poll this week has four parts so all witnesses can testify — do you have EoJ? Would you copy cards to build a “better” deck? If you don’t have the game, how would you play it? Don’t worry, you’re in no danger from answering this poll, so be honest.

How are you going to play Eye of Judgment?
I own it, but I’m going to buy my cards.
I own it, but I’ll copy my cards from now on.
I don’t own it, but I’d buy the cards if I did.
I don’t own it, but I’d print duplicates.
pollcode.com free polls

To us, the only downside to this copying conundrum is the idea that profits will decline for Sony and Wizards of the Coast, which will decrease support for expansions and other card games on the PS3 in the future. To CCG players, this is devastating. See, copying the cards means nothing if you’ve played the game. There are so many limitations on the more “powerful” cards that stacking a deck is pointless. All you could do is build a decent one, which most players who purchased the PS Eye bundle package already have. That’s just our two cents. Check out the results of last week’s poll to see how many people actually hate games!
Wow! Seems a lot of people went out to buy Ratchet and Clank: Tools of Destruction this past week, assuming your store shipped the title early. In fact, so many people bought that title that the next closest game to get mentioned was “None of these! I hate games!” which amused us a little bit. Striking that from the record, Eye of Judgment got the most votes, with our European audience (we assume) voicing their support for PES ‘08 in third place. No matter how you slice it, we all got something to enjoy last week! We’ll see you next week and as always, we thank you for your votes!

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The IPO of Alibaba, the large Chinese e-commerce site, may show that the China stock markets are topping. The company appears to have raised $1.5 billion for about 17% of the company. This is good news for Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO), which invested a billion dollars in the site, but it could also make the US portal look bad. If the China market moves down before Yahoo! can off-load some of those shares, its initial investment in the company may not look like a coup.

The astonishing thing about the Alibaba IPO is that, according to The New York Times, “the I.P.O. price translates to a multiple of 55 times its forecast 2008 earnings.” The number serves to point out the fact that, even with its economy growing at 10% a year, sustaining P/Es at this level will become impossible, as it did in the Japanese markets and US internet stocks in late 1990s. Both of those bubbles led to corrections of more than 50%.

The Shanghai Composite Index is now up well over 200% this year. The bull argument for an ongoing increase is that the emerging China middle class needs a place to invest its money and cannot move that capital into overseas equities. That makes the market overly dependent on one set of buyers.

Warren Buffett recently warned that he could not find any stock values in China. He is more often right than wrong. But the telling evidence of a market that cannot be sustained is when its leaders reach dizzying heights. Shares in Baidu.com (NASDAQ: BIDU) one of the most visible Chinese companies, trades at 76 times its annual sales. The closest comparable company in the US, Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) trades at 14 times.

Does anyone really think that the disparity can be sustained?

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

 

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sugar skulls

Have you ever sat on your sofa late at night, maybe watching Dancing with the Stars, and you think to yourself, “hmmm…I wonder if there’s a way to make skulls out of sugar?” Well, yes there is! And this can show you how.

Last year we told you about Day of the Dead chocolate skulls, but these are even more frightening, with their blank, white skull faces looking through you from a pile of molded sugar. The site has a real nice step by step tutorial, with pics.

[via Boing Boing]

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Courtesy pulsestl.com

Pulse is the place for accessory lovers, whether you are looking for high-end style like Hayden Harnett and Junior Drake or budget-friendly brands like Amici Accessories and Rampage. Don’t forget to check out their jewelry, hair accessory and belt selections. Save 20% off their entire site with the promo code PEP20. Offer expires November 12th, 2007.

What we love at pulsestl.com now:

Melie Bianco drawstring bag, $85. With discount, $68.

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While next-gen disc format Blu-ray languishes in the overpriced gadget ghetto, competing format HD-DVD and the players that play it are breaking free by dropping in price to a popular holiday gift level. ar. Hot on the heels of the release of the Toshiba HD-A3 HD-DVD player, retailers across the country are dropping the price of the previous-generation HD-A2 below the all important $200 mark.

At $198 in Wal-Mart and $197.99 in Circuit City, the HD-A2 is the first high-definition video player to approach commodity pricing. The only down side of the HD-A2 is that it falls short of “full HD” resolution or 1080p, topping out at 1080i, but it’s the kind of thing that no one notices when sitting more than a seven or eight feet away from a TV set, or on any screen 42-inches or smaller.

Your turn Sony/Blu-ray camp.

From Ars Technica

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What happens when you have way too much time on your hands and want to spook people out this Halloween? Why, the Motion activated silly string shooter steps in.

It’s Halloween again, instead of trick or treating, why not stay home and surprise the kids looking for treats with a shot of silly string at the back of their heads. Joey Rabier shows you this quick and easy mod to drive the neighborhood kids batty, just don’t blame us if your house gets TP’d.

 

Pretty neat solution, don’t you think?

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Word has it the Watchmen set visit over the weekend was ridiculously awesome. Glad to hear the film is coming along well. But since Watchmen isn’t coming out until 2009, we cannot include it here. 2008 will arrive along with a few interesting comic book-related films. The first to hit will be Iron Man (May 2, 2008), which will mark the character’s first live-action big screen appearance. The Incredible Hulk (June 13, 2008) follows, and this will be the second time in five years we’re seeing the Hulk, only this won’t be a straight sequel — it’ll be a “re-do.” Then you have The Dark Knight (July 18, 2008), which is a sequel, but from another set of Batman-related flicks directed by Christopher Nolan. On a slightly smaller scale, you have Angelina Jolie’s Wanted (March 28, 2008), Hellboy II: The Golden Army (July 11, 2008) and The Punisher: War Zone. I’m sure there are a few other smaller pics that are based on graphic novels, and there are some that were originally slated for 2008 but will most likely shift to 2009 — but these are your primary comic book/superhero flicks for 2008.

So far, The Dark Knight seems to be doing the best job at early marketing, setting up a viral website (www.whysoserious.com) that they’re using to unveil little nuggets about the film. Currently, a burning candle has rested inside a pumpkin, which seems to be counting down to a new reveal on Halloween. The pumpkin is now rotting on one side; could we be getting our first look at Two Face? Additionally, Iron Man has given us a sweet trailer and Favreau has been talking up the project to no end. Guillermo del Toro has let the fanboys go to town on Hellboy II: The Golden Army, as the website and the first few reports from set have already gone live. The only major film to not do a whole lot of promotion has been The Incredible Hulk. This doesn’t necessarily mean the film is going to suck, it just means folks are hanging back a tad, waiting for just the right time to unleash their green beast.

So here’s my question for you: Based on what you’ve seen, which comic book/superhero film do you see becoming the most successful (critically and box office-wise) in 2008?

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Anyone that has used Rails 1.2.3, 1.2.4 or 1.2.5 may have noticed a number of deprecation notices in their development logs. Whilst these deprecated methods still work as expected in 1.2.x versions, you will come-a-cropper when you try to upgrade to Rails 2.0. So what do you need to do and what tools are out there to help you with the move? Glad you asked.

The first thing you can do it run your code through a code checker — Geoffrey Grosenbach has released a great rake task which digs through your code looking for the old methods. It will give you hints of how to fix the issues, but lets look at them a little more closely.

@params, @session, @flash, @env

As of Rails 2.0, you won’t be able to directly access the above instance variables. They have been replaced with methods, which makes customising their actions much easier. It also allows the internals of Rails to change without breaking the API. This is very easy to fix - just remove the @ in front of those variables - they will work exactly the same.

find_all, find_first, render_partial

In earlier version of Rails there were a number of grouped methods, that do very similar things - find, find_all and find_first all fetch records from the database, the only difference is the number of records they return. It was decided to combine these methods in to one where they are differentiated by passed in options. So find_all becomes find(:all) and find_first becomes find(:first) and render_partial becomes render(:partial).

Forms

Out of all the HTML helpers, the form tag was an anomaly because it required a start AND end helper. To make it fit in with way the rest of Rails works and to facilitate dynamic form generation, a block method called form_tag was created. This particular update has a trap in it through - because blocks don’t return values, the ERB tag you use must not have an = sign, so


   <%= start_form_tag %>
       <!-- Form stuff -->
   <%= end_form_tag %>

becomes


    <% form_tag do %>
        <!-- Form stuff -->
    <% end %>

Notice the omission of the equals sign in the latter example?

Also note that passing :post => %gt; true is deprecated. With the push for RESTfulness, the form needs to know about the other HTTP verbs, put and delete, so a new option has been created:


    <% form_tag :method => :post do %>
        <!-- Form stuff -->
    <% end %>

Plugins

A number of what used to be core components of rails have been moved out into plug-ins so as not to clutter the core with stuff that you don’t use very often. It also means that the development of the plugins can be much quicker than that of the core. Probably the major extraction is the third-party database interfaces. Now, by default only MySQL, SQLite and PostgreSQL are supported out of the box. All other databases are supported via gems named activerecord-database-adapter. If you want to use an Oracle just run

gem activerecord-oracle-adapter

and you will be peachy again.

Other extractions of note are the acts_as plug-ins. If you use acts_as_tree or acts_as_list in your model, you will need to script/plugin install them and the built-in pagination has now become the classic_pagination plug-in. Note that by the developers own admission that plug-in is slow (and was slow when it was in core), so if you use it, you may want to think about migrating across to the new and improved will_paginate plug-in.

So hop to it and get your web apps upgraded now before the rush!

This article provided by sitepoint.com.

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