Upcoming.org: Metros: Dublin
“Upcoming.org is a collaborative event calendar, completely driven by people like you”
Monthly Archives: April 2005
Dogs in cars: does exactly what it says on the tin
Dogs in cars: does exactly what it says on the tin
A load of pictures of dogs.. in cars. I really don’t know how else to put it
Eurogamer.net – Release Dates (All)
Eurogamer.net – Release Dates (All)
Eurogamer finally get their shit together and start offering reliable game release dates
Gamestop to buy Electronics Boutique
According to Yahoo!, GameStop are buying Electronics Boutique, for “only” $1.44 billion (compared to Adobe’s purchase of Macromedia for $3 billion, this doesn’t seem like a lot).
I can’t say I’m thrilled at this. The level of competition in Dublin’s retail video game market is already virtually nil. GameStop’s arrival last year through the purchaseof Gamezone killed one of the few independent retailers left in the country. Now, since Electronics Boutique own Game, and now GameStop owns Electronics Boutique, it means that GameStop has control of 95% of retail video game outlets in Dublin.
The few places left to buy games (with some value – meaning Dixons and Argos are out) are:
* Smyths
* Xtravision
* GameXchange on Talbot Street (mainly second hand stuff – snes/megadrive)
* ??
I generally don’t like buying games over the internet. I’d like to say it’s because of the hassle of sorting out returns if the game is damaged in any way, but the truth is that it’s just because I’m an impatient little shit who can’t wait a week for delivery when he could pay just a couple of euro more to get it *today*.
But with GameStop’s mark-up fast reaching epic proportions, it’s looking like there’ll be no choice soon.
**UPDATE**
After a bit of hunting around, I found [this on Yahoo](http://biz.yahoo.com/e/050407/elbo10-k.html):
So it looks like there is still a little bit of competition left after all.
ni9e blog: Explicit Content Only….
ni9e blog: Explicit Content Only….
NWA’s Straight Outta Compton edited to only contain the swear words
ReadyMade: Feature – How did you get your f*&%ing awesome job? – Brad Bird
ReadyMade: Feature – How did you get your f*&%ing awesome job? – Brad Bird
The amazing ‘ReadyMade’ interviews the director of the Incredibles
Movie making manual – Wikibooks
Movie making manual – Wikibooks
An open-source, user-contributed book about movie-making
Buy A Car For Ron Gilbert
Buy A Car For Ron Gilbert
Some grateful gamers want to buy the Monkey Island creator a car, as a thank-you
Ubuntu
Every couple of days, the hard drive of the G4 I use in work starts ‘clicking’. Well, more like ‘ke-CHUNK’ing. If I’m lucky, my computer freezes for a few minutes and comes back to life. If I’m not, I spend the next half hour or so rebooting until it goes away.
Finally, I’m facing up to the fact that my hard disk is dying and until I can get a replacement, I’m without a Mac to work on. So I’m giving [Ubuntu](http://www.ubuntu.com/) a whirl.
One of the biggest complains thrown around about ‘free’ software is that it’s only free if your time is worthless. The hours wasted getting things configured *just* the way you like them **do** add up. It’s very easy to spend an entire day tweaking your desktop instead of just acccepting what you have and getting on with your job.
The guys in Ubuntu seem to understand this – they’ve packed Debian (the smart choice of a Linux distribution) in such a way that they take all the pain out of the installation and day-to-day administration.
My personal experience is that Ubuntu has detected almost everything I’ve thrown at it – sound and video were auto-configured (and in a nice way too, any previous attempt at auto-configuring my video in the past has left me with a headache-inducing 60hz refresh rate and no obvious way to change it). Bluetooth setup was relatively painless (gnome-bluetooth and gnome-phone-manager took care of this). Today, it even auto-detected my USB keyring and auto-mounted it, putting a link to it on my desktop.
But there are also some things I dislike about Ubuntu. For example, the default behaviour for nautilus (the file manager) is a variation on the new ‘spatial’ nautilus. When you go into a child directory, nautilus closes the parent window automatically. I love spatial nautilus, but hate this behaviour. After a little bit of playing around, I found that it could be changed with the following:
`gconftool-2 –type bool –set /apps/nautilus/preferences/no_ubuntu-spatial true`
Matthew Thomas recently provided a fantastic round-up of [other outstanding issues with Ubuntu](http://mpt.net.nz/archive/2005/04/11/ubuntu).
Other nice things:
* **[evolution](http://www.novell.com/products/desktop/features/evolution.html)** has some really nice new features aimed at increasing productivity, including an ability to create a task from a message with one click
* **[liferea](http://liferea.sourceforge.net/)** has a ‘condensed view’ option for feeds, a feature I’d [previously praised](http://www.fuckcuntandbollocks.com/dorkus/2005/03/11/five-applications-i-couldnt-live-without/) in [Pheeder](http://www.pheed.com/pheeder/). Even better, this is feed-configurable, so you can set only certain feeds to use the ‘condensed view’. Liferea is still my favourite RSS reader on any platform.
* **[beagle](http://www.gnome.org/projects/beagle/)** is amazing – I know that something similar is going to be available in Tiger, but… wow.
But I still miss Quicksilver. [Gnome Launch Box](http://micke.hallendal.net/gnome-launch-box/) just doesn’t cut it.