Categories
Life

Instapaper 4.1

Marco Arment has announced the releases of Instapaper 4.1 for iOS.

It looks gorgeous.

Instapaper 4.1

Right now I’m trying out Proxima Nova as my font. All of the new choices are excellent and just make a great app that much better.

If you are not using Instapaper: shame on you.

This American Life Retracts Apple Story

Ira Glass has announced on the This American Life blog that they are retracting the story from January about the Apple supply chain title “Mr. Daisey and the Apple Factory”.

This was bound to happen when you take a theater performance as wholly true.

This does not mean that there is no improvement to be made in China (duh), but sometimes shortcuts are not the best way to go about things. Apple seems to be the main go-to buzz word for getting more hits and more money for your site.

I sigh.

Categories
Technology

Complaining About Progress

Peter-Paul Koch has posted about the problems now being brought to light with the new iPad for both native apps and the mobile web.

I’ve gone over this before.

It makes me very sad to see people bemoaning consumer-facing improvements in a device just so that we don’t have to deal with problems we have been ignoring for a LONG time. The web has pretty much been content serving terribly compressed and downsized images as a hack around poor bandwidth.

Guess what, those days are now coming to a close.

You can sit by and say:

I’m very afraid that exactly because of its excellence the Retina display will be a severe set-back for the mobile web, and maybe also for native iOS apps. Apple shouldn’t have ignored the fact that Moore’s Law doesn’t go for data connections.

Or you can take it as a challenge to figure out the best way to push things forward. High resolution displays on smaller devices MAKES THE DEVICE BETTER.

That’s really the only things that matters.

Categories
Review

Review | Mass Effect 3

Back in late 2007 Bioware released the original Mass Effect as the first of a three-game trilogy set in a fictional universe not all that different from our own.

Well, besides the fact that we were a minority race amongst many in the Milky Way galaxy and used Mass Relays to travel the huge distances.

Mass Effect 3 is the third (obivously) and final (by their estimation) game in this trilogy about a soldier named Shepherd and the galaxy’s battle against the mechanical menaces known as the Reapers.

However, you probably already know that. Let’s get into one of my Patent-Pending Short Reviews.

Mass Effect 3

Keep in mind, I played through under Role Playing and with a new game (as I did on the previous two games). Also, THERE ARE SPOILERS BELOW.

  • graphics look amazing — definitely the best-looking game of the three
  • controls seems a little bit better than the previous two games
  • weapons loadout is a good compromise between the endless boredom of Mass Effect and the seemingly inconsequential Mass Effect 2 way of handling your weapons
  • music is effective if sometimes a little bit too hidden — you are not going to be getting any catchy tunes out of this game, but that isn’t the point.
  • more than once I would sit quietly for five minutes or more and weigh a decision that had to be made — you’ll know them when you see them, and depending on how you playd the prior games you might be able to make different ones, but I’ve never just sat there and weighed a decision in a game like that
  • there are a TON of cameos from the earlier games, have fun trying to see them all
  • there are times when it really feels like this might be the end, where people are panicking and things are just falling apart, and then there are times when you forget that all civilized life is getting destroyed — a little jarring
  • the story is fairly linear with plenty of side quests to try and take care of
  • the main areas are VERY varied, which is great — aliens worlds seem to feel more alien this time
  • I never liked Udina
  • it is amazing how entire cultures can ignore your warnings and then when it finally happens, they ask you for favors — I mean, really
  • resources are minimized and are not as important as in the past, the focus is solely on the decisions that need to be made and the story
  • while not my favorite game of the three (that would now be Mass Effect 2 … much like Empire Strikes Back), it is a very good and fitting end to the trilogy

If you liked the first two games you are going to like Mass Effect 3, and even if you didn’t you would probably still like the game a lot if you enjoy good storytelling with good gameplay tacked on.

I did not play the multiplayer because … well … Mass Effect is a single player game.

The Ending — HERE BE SPOILERS

Honestly, I liked it. I’m purposefully not going to read much of what other people are saying about the ending because, to me, the ultimate choice at the very end is perfectly fitting for what Bioware had been doing from the very beginning. The focus was on the choice to be made and what kind of “Shepherd” you wanted to be.

I chose to destroy the Reapers because that is what I was there to do. I might go back and replay all three of the games in order to try and fix a lot of the poor decisions that needed to be made, but even then, I am satisfied with the ending.

When given all three of the choices (control, destroy, or merge) it reflects on the universe that Bioware created as a whole. It started as a cut-and-dry organics vs synthetics romp through the first game and then began to blur a little bit with the second while Mass Effect 3 has you able to bring the Geth to your side to fight with you.

I’ll just stop while I’m behind.

Verdict

I would recommend it to almost anyone, but it is a MUST PLAY for any fans of the first two. Ideally, you would play the first two games and then come into the last installment with all of the baggage.

Some Things Never Change

Fo who knows how many months in a row, the AMD Radeon 5770 takes the crown at the ~$110 level in Tom’s Hardware’s Best Graphics Cards For The Money.

I’ve been watching that list for months hoping that some other card from either major player would take the spot, but to no avail. The same card that I picked up a year ago for less than $100 still takes the crown.

To say I’ve been happy with my 5770 would be a gross understatement. Still, I’m disappointed that neither AMD nor Nvidia has seen it appropriate to produce a card that can beat it (the 6770 is just a rehashed 5770).