The Richter Scale®


Thursday, May 19, 2005

E3 - Day 1 Recap

Posted on May 19, 2005 at 12:41am AST (GMT-04:00)

The industry sure has gotten bigger in the nine years since my last E3 conference, or at least the show floor has gotten bigger - now in three halls, with many thousands of attendees.

While this is supposed to be a show for the “trade”, a whole lot of pure fans with no obvious trade affiliation managed to get in. And some looked a lot younger than the required 18 year minimum age posted at the entrance.

In any event, after getting through the ESA presentation in the morning, and discovering the power outage, I hit the West Hall exhibits area. The lighting was subdued due to the power outage, which did not affect power to the booths, but did affect ceiling lights. The power finally returned at 1:21pm PDT, and there was much rejoicing, as the power outage had prevented the concessions from opening, many of the upstairs meeting rooms from being usable, and impacted the press room and press registration pretty badly.

The West Hall’s star attractions were Nintendo and Sony, each featuring huge tracts of booth space, many dozens (if not hundreds) of game demo stations showing the latest titles in development. Folks got to hold the new Nintendo Gameboy Micro, as well as scope out a variety of single and multi-player game titles.

I will skip over the various Nth generation franchise game titles, the “new” war gaming titles, and all the other standard genres, as you’ll undoubtedly be able to read about them elsewhere.

The most interesting non-standard things I found were a VoIP program on the Nintendo DS, the Video Chat on the Sony PS2 using EyeToy, and a preview of EyeToy Kinetics. The latter was something I think I could finally get my wife to use as an entry to possibly finding game consoles useful for more than playing DVDs or distracting her three children (my two kids and myself). EyeToy Kinetics let’s one use the PS2 with an attached EyeToy camera as an interactive exercise device, with exercises ranging from a sedate but rewarding Tai-Chi-like session, to a heart pounding aerobic kick boxing work out. Can’t wait until it ships.

There was no sign of the PS3 or the Revolution in action anywhere, however.

In the South Hall were Microsoft, Ubisoft, THQ, EA, and another half dozen major game publishers, also with huge booth space. Microsoft even had a bridge/walkway one could use to by pass the crowds checking out upcoming Xbox titles. And, tucked away in the back of the booth were a handful of Xbox 360 demos, running on development systems. Shown were Activision’s Call of Duty 2, 2K Sport’s Top Spin 2, and Full Auto and Condemned from Sega of America. The visual quality was definitely closer to that of a higher end PC, and better than that of a current model Xbox, but it was tough to tell more than that.

I had my own chance at using the Xbox 360 development platform at the Electronic Arts booth, where I played a short segment of Need for Speed: Most Wanted (and inadvertently hung the system when I press the Xbox 360 button on the controller (if you’ve seen pictures, it’s the silver button in the middle). This button will be used for pulling up the Xbox Live! and related menus, but apparently that wasn’t implemented on the demo system I played with.

I know I saw many more interesting and cool things, but my brain and body are a bit toasty from walking around all day with far too little food and water for sustenance. Once I revisit my notes I will post more.

Until Day 2....

Posted by Jake Richter in • Tech ToysVideo Gaming
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Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Great Web Publishing / Blogging Tool

Posted on May 11, 2005 at 11:53pm AST (GMT-04:00)

I’ve been struggling for months with trying to get a blog set up on my own server, using Movable Type. The stuggle was not that the software was difficult to use, but that configuring it was not exactly fun, the user interface was archaic, and I really want to be able to compose blog entries in e-mail and send those in. While I know Movable Type can do all that, it was uphill all the way for me.

Enter ExpressionEngine…

I asked a fellow patent practioner about his use of Movable Type for his blog when he mentioned that he was getting his new site designed and set up using ExpressionEngine from pMachine.

I went and checked out the software, downloaded a trial, installed it on one of my servers, installed the required Zend Optimizer as well, and was ready to go. Six hours later I committed and plunked down my $199.95 for a commerical license.

ExpressionEngine “out of the box” may work for some people, but I wanted a number of non-default settings, including implementing the software on multiple sites - this one, and as a complete face lift for my aging and ugly Richter Scale Article web site - the new version, still a work in process, looks a lot like my blog site, but with many subtle differences.

ExpressionEngine is meant to be highly configurable, and even for a software jockey like myself, it was a challenge, but as I overcame one issue after another (learning lots of useful information along the way) I finally ended up with sites that I am really happy with. And I see enormous potential for this software. It provides excellent blogging support as well as good general site publishing capabilities.

Now I just have to keep writing entries for this blog and finishes porting my articles to the new interface over on the Article site…

ExpressionEngine gets a 7.0 out of 10.0 on The Richter Scale

Posted by Jake Richter in • Tech ToysPotpourri
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Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Microsoft’s Cool Notebook Mouse

Posted on May 10, 2005 at 5:58pm AST (GMT-04:00)

Wireless notebook mice abound, but Microsoft’s got the best one I have ever used.

I was at a meeting a few weeks ago, struggling with attaching my wireless mouse dongle to my notebook computer (I had to use an extender cable because the dongle is too thick where the lip of my notebook case is over the USB ports on my Sony VGN-S170P) when the person across the table from me whips out a new Microsoft notebook mouse.

This baby is officially dubbed by the rather drab name of “Microsoft Wireless Notebook Optical Mouse”, but what a cool device!

The USB wireless transceiver is a small “L” shaped plastic bit, which when not in use, snaps into the bottom of the mouse. Better yet, when you snap it in, it pushes in a switch which turns off power to the mouse. Snap and go.

To use, unsnap, plug it in, and it’s ready to use - no pushing little hard to find buttons on both devices to get them to sync up.

I had to have one, so Amazon.com delivered one to me the very next day, and I’ve not regretted it at all.

This mouse is almost like a meme - someone else saw me using the mouse a couple of days later and went and bought his own too.

See here for more information on this mouse.

A photo of the mouse can be found here.

The Microsoft Wireless Notebook Optical Mouse gets a whopping 9.0 out of 10.0 on The Richter Scale!

Posted by Jake Richter in • Tech Toys
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