Archive for January 6th, 2008

Filed under:

The event known as CES is going on now. Sony updated their blog to let you know what the event’s like and what it would be like if you were going. The event is in Vegas with over 150,000 people attending — it’s a big deal. While not much info is in the post itself, it does give you the opportunity to follow Sony on their journey through CES and make a list, nay, a virtual tour, of what you’d like to see. The possibilities of Blu-ray 1.1 and beyond? The MGS4 demo? New peripherals or press conferences? They’ll try to help you out as much as possible. You also get to see pics of the Sony booth. It’s neat.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under:

While this week is better in terms of releases than last week, there’s nothing special here. Japan has a good month ahead of them with games such as Disgaea: Hour of Darkness 3 and Devil May Cry 4 both arriving before February hits. As for the rest of the world? It’s slim pickings until the 22nd, when Burnout Paradise is released. Here’s the full release list:

US Games

EU Games

No new releases

Asian Games

Don’t forget that your PS3 is region free, so if you’re an NFL fan trapped in Europe or if you’re an American who really fancies another copy of Armored Core 4, then you’re in luck. Feel free to buy the above games and play them on a console of any region to your heart’s content. Release dates are, however, subject to constant flux so be sure to confirm with whatever outlet you plan on using that the games are really being released.

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under: ,

The week keeps getting better and better for Blu-ray supporters. First Warner Bros. chose to go exclusive to Blu-ray and now we have a very nice line-up of movies to choose from.

If you somehow missed 3:10 to Yuma when it went through theaters, we highly suggest you check it out. It’s hard not to include it along some of the best Westerns of all time.

However, things aren’t all rainbows and gumdrops. Also released this week is Dragon Wars, one of the most horrible movies to ever grace the Silver Screen. We won’t ruin it for you, but the ending of the movie is so bad that you might want to at least rent it for a good laugh.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under:

PSN@Home is reporting that Epic have finally released the Unreal Tournament III mod cooker to an unknown number of mod developers on the Developer mailing list. This is probably the last step in the testing stages and those who have received the update for the Unreal Editor have been asked not to release the cooking code. Mods for the PS3 version of UTIII will now, as a result, start to be released but not at the torrential rate that they will once the cooker is released publically.

PSN@Home have also checked out the notes for what is and isn’t supported in PS3 mods. Restrictions, thankfully, seem few. Mutators can only utilise UnrealScript, due to the the restrictions in the PS3’s RAM capacity. Also, due to Unreal Tournament III using a proprietary audio encoder, sound effects cannot be added to the game. This is a shame but could be rectified in the future.

If you are one of the lucky mod developers who received the cooking code and you have a mod to release for the PS3, let us know at Jem @ Joystiq dot com.

[Via N4G]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under:

Is Facebook too friendly?

It seems the social behavior of the networking site’s users is itself to blame for the proliferation of a spyware application on users’ computers.

Users are invited to find out who their “secret crush” may be by adding a new Facebook widget to their Facebook accounts. (Widgets are the names of third-party developed applications for Facebook that allow users to share information, play games, or send specific kinds of messages to each other. They are not supposed to capture and store users’ information.)

Once the application is installed, it attempts to download a well-known spyware program called Zango. Internet and computer security provider FortiGuard actually calls it “the infamous Zango adware/spyware.” That means treat it like the color red in nature — stay away.

The whole purpose of Facebook is to add and use these widgets freely to better enhance the social networking experience, which many users do without considering what information they may be sharing and with whom. In this, users are giving away not only their own information but providing more potential victims by inviting their own friends to add the widget (because the widget makes you invite at least five friends in order to see your supposed secret crush).

And, in the end, there is no “secret crush,” so you’ll just have to keep searching for love in all the wrong places.

For a good rundown of just what this spyware looks like on Facebook, check out the detailed walk-through on Fortiguard’s site.

The Secret Crush/Zango adware invasion on popular social networking sigtes is a wake-up call to all of us who have been adding new widgets, willy-nilly, to our Facebook profiles. Let’s all be a little more discerning.

From FortiGuard.

Related links:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under: , , , ,

New High-End iPod Dock/Radio from Cue

These days one has no shortage of things in which to set his iPod. There’s a keyboard dock, an old guitar, a faux-turntable, even a toilet paper roll (we wish we were kidding about that last one). At this year’s Consumer Electronics Show, which opens next week, new entrant to the electronics market Cue Accoustics will debut yet another thing to set your iPods into — a much more stylish and practical choice than the above options.

It’s called the Cue Radio and is a simple yet sophisticated looking device. On top is the ubiquitous iPod universal dock for cradling your favorite gadget. Inside is an AM/FM tuner, so the thing will still pump out some tunes even when said dock is empty. With only three dials the thing is a cinch, and though it appears to only have one speaker, it’s intended to be the “best table radio in its class.”

That potentially puts it up against some stiff competition from the likes of B&W, Bose, and Cambridge Soundworks, but just which class it falls within depends on the price, something we’ll have to wait until next week to find out.

%Gallery-12607%

Related Links:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under: , ,

Don’t look now, but it appears that even the AARP digs the Nintendo Wii gaming console. Want proof? TG Daily reports that a Washington, D.C.-area retirement community recently held a Wii bowling tournament that culminated in a matchup between 79-year-old real bowling champion and an 84-year-old Wii-prodigy challenger. Nancy Davies beat Hal Winters 202 to 182 at the Riderwood Retirement Community in one of many Wii tournaments held at the geriatric complex. While Winters is an actual bowling expert, Davies only began bowling only a year ago, exclusively on the Wii, which makes the upset so shocking.

Since several Wii units were received last March, the plaid-loving residents have flocked to play and challenge each other in shooting and hockey games in addition to bowling free-for-alls. This item of news marks the unique marketability of the Wii toward demographics heretofore unresponsive to the gaming world, groups including the elderly, female and middle-aged populations. Now if we can just get Grandma to talk trash we’ll be getting somewhere…

From Engadget Via TG Daily and Examiner.com

Related Links:

 

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

Filed under: ,

Garmin Launching Loads of New GPS Devices at CES

The International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), held every January in Las Vegas, is just around the corner (and Switched.com will be there), which means it is time for companies to assault us with an absurd number of product launches. Garmin took this idea to heart, apparently, and is prepping the launch of no less than 11 new GPS products for the world’s biggest geek-fest.

At the top of the heap is the new Nuvi 880, a 4.3 inch car navigation unit with more features than you could possibly imagine using. The usual suspects are there: text to speech, Bluetooth, digital audio playback, and picture viewing. But there is also plenty new packed in to the dash mountable device, including — terrifyingly enough — games. (If we ever see someone playing Tetris on their GPS while trying to drive we’re pulling over to the side of the road.) The 880 also comes with MSN Direct service which provides traffic updates, weather, news, movie times, local events, and even gas prices.

The most innovative feature packed into the new 880, and its stripped down sibling the Nuvi 850, is speech recognition technology. If you’re driving on a particularly icy, or winding stretch of road and taking a hand off the wheel feels like it’s inviting disaster, now you can talk to your GPS device to perform all but the most advanced functions, including searching for points of interest or setting an entirely new route. The 880 will be hitting the market with a suggest retail price in the $1,000 range, while the 850 gets its price down to about $800 by ditching the Bluetooth and MSN.

Also of interest is Garmin’s new Colorado series of hand-held units that feature three-inch screens and the trademarked Rock ‘n Roller[TM] wheel, which is essentially a ruggedized version of a click wheel. The Colorado will come in four different flavors: the base level 300, which retails for $499; the 400t, which is aimed at hikers and comes loaded with 3D topographical maps for getting your bearing; the 400i tackles the fishing market with maps of the shoreline, and locations for boat ramps on inland lakes and rivers; and finally the 400c goes after the boating enthusiast with shorelines, depth contours, harbors, marinas, and coastal roads for the United States and Bahamas. The 400t, i, and c all retail for $599.

Every member of the Colorado series comes packed with an electronic compass, temperature sensor, altimeter and the new Wherigo (where i go) platform. Wherigo allows Colorado users to create “location-based multimedia experiences in the real world.” Which is of course a fancy way of saying creating guided tours, adventure “games,” and scavenger hunts. All of this info can be shared wirelessly with other Colorado users.

We’ll be sure to check out the new Wherigo features at CES and let you know whether the folks at Garmin have truly stumbled across something innovative.

Related links: