NBA 2K12 Legends Showcase DLC Confirmed

/* Posted October 23rd, 2011 at 9:53pm [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Video Games    */

The DLC will be available for the holiday season for $9.99 via the Playstation Network while Xbox Live users will be up for 800 points if they wish to get a hold of the new content.

 

NBA 2K12 has been a bit of a revival for the franchise which was in decline even up to NBA Live 2011.

 

Take-two is aiming “to give fans an all new way to end the debate over who is the greatest basketball player of all time”, according to their press release.

 

nba-2k12-jordan

 

The Legends showcase will give games the chance to select from 150 of the NBA’s all-time greatest players, including the likes of:

  • Michael Jordan
  • Larry Bird
  • Magic Johnson
  • Dr.J

 

Pick-up games will be available in 1-on-1 formats as well as 5-on-5 team games. You can also participate in games of:

  • 21
  • H-O-R-S-E
  • 2-on-2Teammate challenges
  • 3-on-3 Challenges

 

You will also be able to unlock current NBA Players to mix-and-match your team between current legends and NBA greats. Yes, you will also be able to bring in your own created player to match him (or her) up against Michael Jordan.

 

The Legends Showcase will also include a ‘Classic Quick Match’ feature, giving players a quick way to play online with the greatest teams the NBA has seen.

 

Via [Take-Two Press Release]

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Game|Life Podcast: Waiting For Vita, Missing Blizzcon

/* Posted October 23rd, 2011 at 3:53pm [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Video Games    */

Sound Shapes is one of the most innovative upcoming games for Sony’s PlayStation Vita handheld, to be released in the U.S. on Feb. 22.
Image courtesy Sony

Cooperative carnage, the next generation of user-generated content and what’s holding back the spread of downloadable content. It’s all on this week’s Game|Life podcast.

Wired magazine senior editors Chris Baker and Peter Rubin join Wired.com managing editor Marty Cortinas and Game|Life’s me on Episode 3 of our rebooted, revamped and reignited discussion of all things gaming. Herein, we shall cover topics such as:

Game|Life’s podcast is embedded below, and will be available on iTunes later today. Or download the MP3 directly.

Storyboard Audio Podcast

GameLife Reboot:
Episode 003

Match your browser to your bandwidth on Android

/* Posted October 23rd, 2011 at 9:53am [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Web    */

Some
Android browsers deliver all the content, while others cut back for faster browsing. Choosing the correct browser for your connection type each time can become tedious–but there’s a quick fix.

With Smart Browser Chooser, a free app on the Android Market, you can decide which browser is used based on your connection speed. All it takes is a couple minutes of setup and whether you’re on Wi-Fi, 3G, or 2G, your Android device will know which browser to load for the best user experience.

Note: In order to use this app, you need to have different browsers to choose from. A few suggestions to try (like the ones used in this how to) are Dolphin HD, Skyfire, and Opera Mobile

(Credit:
Nicole Cozma)

Step 1: Install Smart Browser Chooser from the Android Market.

This is the list of browsers you can choose from.

(Credit:
Nicole Cozma)

You should see all of your choices under their respective connection speeds.

(Credit:
Nicole Cozma)

Step 2: Open the app and pick browsers from the drop-down menus under each connection type.

Click the check box, and then pick Smarter Browser Chooser.

(Credit:
Nicole Cozma)

Step 3: Click on the Set as default browser button near the bottom.

As the app suggests, you may need to clear the default settings you’ve assigned to other browsers. If that’s the case, check out how to clear a default app setting for assistance.

(Optional) Step 4: Adding a shortcut icon to your Home screen will let you adjust these settings on the fly. Maybe one browser is performing better on slower or faster connections after an update, and having a shortcut can help remind you to choose that browser over another.

Now when you’re connected to Wi-Fi, 3G, or 2G, you can use the browser best suited for the job. Since these changes aren’t permanent, you can change your mind at any time and go back to using one browser you find dependable for all connection types.

PoV: Is Mists of Pandaria the End of WoW?

/* Posted October 23rd, 2011 at 3:53am [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Video Games    */

Before I start this, I should note that I’m a huge World of Warcraft fan. It was actually the first computer game I played, since I grew up with consoles and never got around to PC gaming. I jumped on board about a month after the launch of vanilla WoW, and I played all the way through Wrath. I even worked at Blizzard for a couple of years, in a position my NDA explicitly forbids me from disclosing. What I’m saying is, you can trust me when I say I know WoW and its players pretty well.

 

mfpanda1

I’ve been loosely following the progress of WoW since I walked away from it late last year. Cataclysm certainly looked like a step in the right direction, but the gradual dumbing down of WoW with simplified talent trees, charity epics and gold flowing from the hills like a waterfall turned me off to the whole thing. I enjoyed Wrath of the Lich King, but the challenge I had seen in dungeons like Upper Blackrock Spire and Blackwing Lair, and to a lesser degree the Black Temple, never really resurfaced. When a group of ten random people could clear a raid in one night, I knew that the game couldn’t offer me much of a challenge.

Mist of Pandaria, announced at Blizzcon yesterday,  looks like it’s designed to do one thing – make the fans happy. While this is certainly a good plan for generating sales, it doesn’t do much for the hardcore player looking for a challenge. All of the announced features seem to be making WoW even easier, and while casuals should absolutely have a place in any game, it just doesn’t seem like the same game that drew our passion and love in 2005. If you remember, Pandaren were added to Warcraft 3 as a joke – fans just happened to like them so they got retconned into the story.

Hell, even Blizzard was amazed that people liked them. Here’s a quote from the guy that designed the Pandaren Monk art for the original joke, Samwise Didier:

“But so we put that up in there and everyone was like “Oh my God! A PANDA RACE? That’s kind of cool!” And I’m like “Are you kidding me, really? You want to see pandas in Warcraft III or whatever?”

And now they’re taking that joke and shoving it into WoW. It’s been sad to watch the Warcraft lore die over the last few years and it’s pretty evident that Blizzard may be running out of ideas. They’ve basically pillaged everything they can from their history instead of coming up with new stories to tell, and an entire expansion based on the Pandaren makes it clear that they don’t have much left for World of Warcraft.

What’s really telling is the addition of a Pokémon-like mini-game, in which players will force their non-combat pets to fight. You’ll also be able to find and capture pets in the wild and then train them to be better fighters. It’s an interesting concept for killing time between raids or groups, but it also says a lot about how the WoW player base has changed in the last six years. Essentially, WoW has gone from MMO to casual Facebook game; it just has a nicer interface.

We’ll  have to see how the expansion goes – maybe I’m just an idiot. Maybe people want to play as Pandaren, and maybe they’ll have a great time. But it certainly looks like the WoW I loved is dead, and there won’t be any reason to come back. I just don’t think Blizzard knows how to update the franchise for hardcore players anymore. That, or they don’t care.

Guess we’ll just have to wait for that other top-secret Blizzard project, huh? Are you still going to play World of Warcraft after the new expansion?

 

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How to Perform a Semi Tethered Jailbreak of iOS 5

/* Posted October 23rd, 2011 at 3:53am [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under iPhone    */

These are instructions on how to perform a semi tethered jailbreak of your iOS 5 iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch.

A semi-tethered jailbreak is an interim solution which solves the problem of being unable to reboot with a tethered jailbreak. The semi tethered jailbreak by BigBoss will allow you to reboot on the road, but with limited functionality. It is enough that you are no longer stranded, and you can use your phone, text, and many other features. This is just until you get home and can use redsn0w again to ?just boot tethered?. Once you do that, you?re back to fully functional state.

Step One
Jailbreak and boot your device tethered using the instructions below:

? iPhone 4 (Mac, Windows)
? iPhone 3GS (Mac, Windows)
? iPhone – No Baseband Update (Mac)
? iPod Touch 4G (Mac, Windows)
? iPod Touch 3G (Mac, Windows)
? iPad 1 (Mac, Windows)

Step Two
Press to launch Cydia from your Springboard.

Step Three
Press to select Manage from the tabs at the bottom of the screen.

Step Four
Press the large Sources button.

Step Five
Press the Edit button at the top right of the screen.

Step Six
Press the Add button at the top left of the screen.

Step Seven
Input http://thebigboss.org/semitether into the text field and press the Add Source button.

Step Eight
Press the large Return to Cydia button.

Step Nine
Select thebigboss.org from the list of Sources

Step Ten
Select SemiTether from the list of Packages

Step Eleven
Press the Install button at the top right of the screen.

Step Twelve
Press the Confirm button to begin installation.

Step Thirteen
Press the large Reboot Device button.

You’re device will now reboot without stalling at the Apple logo!

To get full functionality back you will need to boot tethered. Launch RedSn0w as you did in Step One then select Extras then Just boot from the menu.

**A big thanks to BigBoss and all those who made this tutorial possible.

C4E’s iXtreme Burner MAX v1.0 and iXtreme LTplus v2.01 Samsung

/* Posted October 23rd, 2011 at 3:53am [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Xbox    */


Official release of the iXtreme Burner MAX firmware V1.0 for Liteon iHAS drives
Liteon iHAS124B = baseline model
Liteon iHAS224B = 124 + LightScribe
Liteon iHAS324B = 124 + SmartErase
Liteon iHAS424B = 124 + LightScribe + SmartErase (or = 224 + SmartErase)
Liteon iHAS524B = 124 + LabelTag + SmartErase
Liteon iHAS624B = 124 + LabelTag + LightScribe + SmartErase (or = 524 + LightScribe)

Features:
* World first Full 8.7GB 100% Backups on standard Dual Layer DVD+R DL
* No CIV errors
* Passes all current checks

XGD3 – Another fail, all those false positive CIV checks on original media, imagine the disappointment.
Inevitable when you push discs and drives to their limit, must be getting desperate, well done Xbox Division

Thanks go to Team Jungle for their hard work and efforts in the development process.
Thanks also go to Team Xecuter for their support to this project.

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Amazon’s Silk browser: Now EFF approved. Really!

/* Posted October 22nd, 2011 at 9:53pm [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Web    */

The Kindle Fire incorporates Amazon’s new Silk browser, which apparently will learn your reading/surfing habits and cache pages you return to frequently.

(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)

The Silk browser was only one of many revelations at Amazon’s Kindle event last month, but it was a doozy. Expected to ship initially only on the Kindle Fire in November, Silk promises to learn how you browse and to predict where you’re going to surf to next.

That kind of stickiness with your personal data left many security experts and some lawmakers uncomfortable. But the Electronic Frontier Foundation now says it believes Amazon will provide users with the tools to disentangle themselves.

The digital privacy rights group released a report yesterday analyzing several areas of concern it had with Silk, and how Amazon allayed them. The biggest problem for the organization was whether or not the “cloud acceleration” feature could be turned off, which Amazon confirmed to the group that it can. Cloud acceleration is active by default.

There were other problem areas, including secured traffic. Jon Jenkins, Amazon’s director of Silk development, told the EFF that secure web page requests via SSL and HTTPS are not routed through Amazon’s servers even when cloud acceleration is running. And as the report points out, an enormous number of Web sites force secure connections, so Amazon ought to have a vested interest in Silk resolving sites quickly even without cloud acceleration.

Amazon also told the EFF that Silk logs only three pieces of information regularly when using Google’s SPDY protocol for faster connections to Web servers: the URL being requested, the time at which the request occurs, and a personal identification-free token used for identifying a session. Those logs are kept for 30 days.

Jenkins told the EFF that IP and MAC addresses are collected for technical troubleshooting, but are not associated with browsing history. He added that there is no way to connect logged information to a user’s Amazon account, and that outgoing Amazon server (AWS) information isn’t logged, either. Amazon said that it follows caching headers to prevent sensitive information from being sent over an unsecured connection.

The 7-inch Kindle Fire, set for release on November 15, will offer access to books, games, movies, TV shows, music, Amazon’s App Store. It will offer Wi-Fi, free Amazon Cloud storage, and Amazon’s new Silk browser. Amazon Prime members can access unlimited, instant streaming of over 10,000 movies and TV shows.

(Credit:
Amazon.com)

The EFF noted that it still had some concerns about Silk. One of these is storing URLs visited, including search queries, which can sometimes contain identifying information. Another is Amazon’s EC2 server cache, which could also contain information that could lead to uncovering a person’s identity. A third is the potential for law enforcement to become interested in the collective browsing data of Amazon’s users.

Even though the EFF concluded that the browser overall has enough privacy points to ensure that you won’t be tracked all the time, people who are concerned about any of those last three issues–or about trusting Amazon in general to keep data safe–ought to turn off cloud acceleration when using Silk.

Two and a half minutes of awesome

/* Posted October 22nd, 2011 at 9:53pm [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under SharePoint    */

These guys at SQL PASS presented on using Kinect to interact with SQL. Create databases by raising your arms. Delete databases by kicking them away. Back up databases by bringing your arms back.

Awesome!

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Four Tips for Optimizing Your Twitter Profile for Better Search Engine Performance

/* Posted October 22nd, 2011 at 9:52pm [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under SEO    */

As the search engine giant Google releases new technologies ever so often, the talk about real-time search is now a thing of the past. Google launched real-time search sometime ago, allowing users to search and view updates on major social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter. At that time you were able to search for a particular topic or keyword and find out what the buzz was on that topic.

Even though Google has stopped using real-time search for some time now, you will still find them indexing Twitter profiles and tweets as if they were regular pages.  Some people may think there’s a secret to this, but only a few companies and persons have started optimizing their twitter profiles for great search engine performance.

By optimizing your profile page you will find that using Twitter will be a great and very effective way for you to build links naturally and increase traffic to your website and best of all, this works for almost all the major search engines.

So just in case you might want to start optimizing your twitter page for a better search engine performance, I have put together a few tips that will help you and your company, build quality links to your website and increase brand awareness.

Creating your Twitter handle

This is just about the most critical of all. Selecting a handle/username is not just about choosing a random name, but it should be something relevant to your brand name or a keyword in your niche.

Your choice of username must be done carefully as this cannot be changed and it will be used in your url when your profile is indexed by the search engines.

Optimize your profile bio

Another thing you should look at is the information contained in your bio. Twitter allows you to use only 160 characters in your profile bio, so you have to make it not only relevant, but interesting so that you could attract users.

This will be very helpful if done right as the search engines will use your profile bio as the description, and we all know how important it is to have a proper description.

Retweetable  Tweets that are keyword rich

When thinking about something tweet, always remember to try and make sense with you tweets, while on the other hand staying on topic.

Twitter only allows you a certain amount of characters per tweet so try and make good use of each update by including your keywords in each update. While you would like your updates to be keyword-dense, you should not stuff it with keywords, as this will seem to be a bit spammy and will be a major turn off to your followers.

Links to your twitter profile

Just as links to your website are important, the same thing goes to your profile. Increasing the links to your twitter profile will make it stronger in the search engines. You could start by linking to profile via your website hereby passing on some of your domain authority to it.

Another thing you could do is try an increase your followers, as they too give a link to your profile from theirs, under the list of people they are following.

Twitter should not be used as your main strategy when it comes to your seo link building, but it sure is a start of things to come. Social media is all about the conversation, and the conversation can turn a visitor into a customer, and keep them coming back.

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Ice Cream Sandwich makes tough security taste better

/* Posted October 22nd, 2011 at 9:53am [Comments: none]    */
/* Filed under Web    */

Facial unlocking

Want to unlock that phone? Smile.

(Credit:
Google)

There’s more to Ice Cream Sandwich than just better camera controls, near-field communication support, and the redesigned interface. Google has also been working on making the latest version of
Android the safest yet, and several of the features are mighty sharp for a melty brick of ice cream.

The biggest of them all is that you’ll be able to fully encrypt your ICS device. This means that all your data will be on lockdown, inaccessible even to you until you enter in the passcode or personal identification number.

The benefit of this obvious: if lose your phone, you won’t have to worry about remotely wiping it. The downside, of course, is that if you forget your password, you’re locked out and the only way to get your phone back is to factory restore it. Expect to see renewed interest in cloud-based backup services for Android.

How apps manage authentication and secure sessions will get easier in ICS, thanks to a new keychain API that works in conjunction with the underlying encrypted storage. Any app will be able to use the keychain API to install and store user certificates and certificate authorities securely. It’s a very technical change that will nevertheless allow apps to be written more safely from the get-go.

The lockscreen itself has received some effective enhancements, too. The first, and the most widely-talked about, is that you’ll be able to unlock your phone using native facial-recognition technology. Called Face Unlock, this tech has been around for a while for other systems, such as Windows, so it’s good to see it being ported to a high-profile mobile platform natively.

The most common concern with facial recognition technology is that it can be fooled by a photograph. Android developer Tim Bray says that it can’t; and my own tests in 2010 with the Windows facial recognition software Blink failed to fool it then. Obviously, a Windows program and an Android feature are not the same, but given that I wasn’t able to log in with a photo two years ago, it’d be a massive failure for the feature if it could happen now.

Other potential facial recognition problems include alterations to your appearance, such as facial hair or make-up, or poor lighting conditions. If the feature can’t tell that you’re you, it’ll open the passcode box for manual unlocking.

Android 4.0 will also let you customize a lockscreen message. This isn’t world-shaking, to be sure, but it will allow you to set a “please return to” message for anybody who finds your phone, potentially improving your chances of getting a lost device returned to you.

Lastly, big improvements have been made to app control. You’ll be able to disable bloatware, those apps that come pre-installed on your device, and you’ll have the ability to disable background data on a per-app basis.

The disable option promises to let you render an app fully inactive. It won’t be able to send or receive data, it won’t be able to launch, and it won’t display an icon in your app tray. However, because those apps are part of the system partition, you won’t be able to fully remove them. That will still require rooting your phone. Nevertheless, this is a massive improvement for people wondering what the heck a Citrix is.

Being able to disable data transfers for apps running in the background provides a stopgap measure for controlling apps without taking the harsher measure of disabling the app outright. While some apps such as JuiceDefender already give users that kind of control, it’s enormously helpful to have that as a default Android feature.

These are solid improvements to Android security, although I’d like to see more in the way of exposing permissions and either simplifying them, or helping users understand them, or both. For instance, you might notice that your violent bird-throwing game has permission to send out your location. On the face of it, that sounds bad. But what if the game has a new social networking component that allows you to compete against nearby friends? Making clear how a particular permission is used by an app would be a big boon.

If there are security improvements you’d like to see made to Android, tell me in the comments below.

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