.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

Random Encounters

Commentary and observations on subjects of interest to gamers...or not

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Gave up on Dead Rising

I picked up Dead Rising about a week and a half ago - how could I not? It's basically Dawn of the Dead on the Xbox360!

Very cool game in many respects - graphics, gore, zombies, etc. But, very frustrating, mainly due to the "save point" system. It takes the game from very cool to not fun. There's a few other issues as well, but that was the deal-breaker for me. I don't have time for hours of something that's not fun.

Hopefully, Dead Rising 2 will fix the problems.

Labels: ,

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Zombies Don't Belong in a Mall?

I found this in a review I ran across for Dead Rising:

"But the mall itself is a strange place for a zombie game."

A mall is a strange place for zombies? (I know he said "zombie game" - close enough).

Obviously not a connoiseur of the genre. Damn hippy.

Labels: ,

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Escher in Lego

Cool pictures (warning: these pictures are safe, but the site may be considered NSFW):

That one with the waterfall.

The stair one.

Labels:

Monday, August 07, 2006

And Thus Begins Our Journey into . . . Ubuntu

I may have mentioned in the past that I played around a little with Ubuntu, one of the more popular Linux distributions. I used version 5 ("Breezy Badger") for a bit but switched back to Windows, with a minor dalliance with the Vista beta (which has gone untouched on my other computer pretty much since the initial installation). I downloaded version 6.06 ("Dapper Drake"; gotta love them cutesy names I guess), but I'd been holding off on installing it until now. This time, I didn't mess around with using VMWare under Windows, but did a full-blown install into it's own partition (after repartioning my drive with GParted, which was very intuitive and easy to use; of course, I had to defrag the drive first to have a large enough contiguous space to install Ubuntu; unfortunately, neither its installation utility nor GParted informed me of that first).

Despite that initial obstacle and another problem (which I'll cover below), I'd have to say I'm rather impressed. Ubuntu installed much easier than Windows, more quickly, and recognized most of my hardware. I particularly liked the fact that v5 would only give me a 1024x768 resolution, but v6 has no problem seeing that I've got a 1200x800 screen. Though that may have been an issue with the VMWare player rather than v5. In any case, it recognized my video, my Microsoft wireless mouse, my printer (after I set it up - about a 30 second task), and my onboard sound (AC97). I did have a problem with the sound - it recognized the device and installed the proper drivers, but I couldn't hear anything. I tried a bunch of things people mentioned on-line but that didn't help. Finally I found the solution (I double-clicked the speaker icon at the top of the screen to get "Volume Control" (Alsa mixer), selected "Switched", and unchecked "External Amplifier"). Network connectivity worked like a charm. I haven't tried my wireless networking (I'm connected via cable at my desk), so I'm not sure if that works yet, nor have I tried my scanner. I'm sure I can get both to work with Ubuntu somehow - the question is, will they work without a bunch of extra effort on my part?

All is not roses, however. A few issues remain:
  • Microsoft seems to have a better handle on readable fonts in the OS, and Firefox's choiced are a bit hit-and-miss. This is something I'll have to play around with for awhile. I've actually turned off the "subpixel smoothing" since I see too much of the color "fuzziness" with it on. Though the "TSCu_Comic" font actually works quite nicely as my system font.
  • The extra buttons on my mouse don't work. I generally only use them in Firefox for "back" and "forward", but it's a pain to be without them. Still, I'm sure someone's created a plug-in for Firefox and/or Linux to use them. Just have to find it...
  • Hmm...guess that's it at the moment.
There are other things I haven't tried yet - burning a CD or DVD, for instance. One thing that is nice is that the volume buttons built into my laptop not only register with Ubuntu, they show me a visible bar of what my volume is when I use them, unlike Windows XP. Score one for the hippies! All the hardware buttons work, actually, except for the musical note, which is probably because I don't have a default music player set up yet.

For anyone interested, this installation is on a Gateway 7330GZ.

Now, time to see if the scanner works...

Labels: ,