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a blog … in the strict sense of the term …

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arkham city rant

xirdalium Posted on Saturday, 17th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalSunday, 18th March 2012

Batman pencilled by Jim Aparo and inked by Tom Mandrake
This was intended to become a longer rant from me—after the installation of ‘↑Batman: Arkham City‘ (Rocksteady Studios 2011) crashed my brand new system so badly that I had to jump back several recovery points to get it up and running again. But then, on ↑the official forums, I found the posts and threads by KIO. His forum post signature already sums it up: ‘DRM limitations are a punishment for the paying customer and an encouragement to seek better service elsewhere … And then they complain about piracy.’ No reason any more for me to write myself, because KIO already did a job that can’t be done better. Here is his ↑draft of a public statement from unhappy gamers which I full-heartedly signed and gladly repost here:

Dear Sir/Madam,

I am one of the numerous dissatisfied customers who have purchased Batman Arkham City from WB Ent. and Rocksteady Studios.
    Recent developments have urged us to attempt to reach public media yet again, full details will follow below.
    This letter is the result of a ↑communal effort on the official forums, so do not be alarmed if you receive a similar message from another address.
    We have set out to contact popular media and gaming sites in an attempt to highlight some aspects of customer experience we have had with these particular companies and make it known to the wider public. The intention is in no way to provoke or badmouth the corporation/studio and we do not put down an ultimatum. We merely want to lay the facts out in front of you, as we imagine they are worth being told.
    As you might know, in December-January WB has officially acknowledged a particular and most game breaking bug – the disappearance of the save games. This specific error (amongst many others) has been present in all versions of the game across all platforms since the release date in October 2011. The acknowledgement was belated, but nonetheless welcome by the community.
    The companies have also acknowledged a bug causing poor DX11 performance on a significant number of machines. Once again, the players were disappointed by not being able to enjoy their game as advertised by the marketing campaign, but accepted the acknowledgment as a sign of progress.
    However, as to this day these issues (and the others, affecting not just the gameplay, but the ability to play as such) have not been resolved. We appreciate the fact that some coding issues need a significant amount of time to resolve and that it may ultimately be to our own benefit. We are, however, at liberty to have our concerns and our doubts, given that we have been patient for over 5 months since the console release of the game, not to mention the delayed PC release, which came as an unjustified disappointment due to these persistent problems.
    This is where the “customer experience” mentioned above comes in. It is very hard to comprehend the reasoning behind the lack of open communication from the companies. The companies make close to no effort to communicate with the existing paying customers and the potential customers.
    At the moment of speaking, the “acknowledgement” of the serious issues with the game is present neither on the official batman website, nor even a singular forum announcement, nor any of the digital distributors, such as STEAM. It is logical to assume that a set of issues that has been stopping a significant fraction of the paying customers from using the product since release/purchase date MUST be made known for the potential customers to avoid a mis-sale of the product.
    The companies have made no such precautions and are happily accepting more purchases from more customers. These customers then quickly arrive at the official “technical issues” forum to seek help from the community and the customer support team.
    The responses they are met with have been somewhat repetitive and unchanging for the last three months – “We are working on the fix for this issue, should update soon”. While this may well be true and we should be happy to hear this, it is easy to see how this same unaltered message can lose its credibility over prolonged lengths of time, such as 3 months since the official “acknowledgement” of the issues, which itself was a further 2 months old.
    (It is worth noting that the particular save game bug has been broken down by an individual forum user, who traced the problem to its roots, only leaving the implementation of the fix to the game developers.)
    Attempts have been made by the users to inquire into further details with the patch. In general, these attempts have been met with an identical message mentioned above. Not only do the companies (WB and Rocksteady) not engage in forward communications, numerous users have reported that very small percentage of their emails to the support team have been answered, none of them in any significant detail. The “official” presence on the “official” forums is pretty much nonexistent as well.
    It is now worth describing the “customer support team” that exists on the forums. The forums are controlled by a single community representative, who does attempt their best at responding to specific questions throughout the forums, when they are not on holiday.
    This only community representative is known to go missing for weeks with increasingly inconvenient timings, and with no prior warning, unless you count the rep’s personal twitter feed as an official announcement. While the staff holidays as such are not an issue to be debated, the fact the representative is presumably irreplaceable and unique during those periods raises an eyebrow and leaves the unhappy customers in complete silence, rotting on the forums and composing letters such as this one.
    The understandable lowtoned comments of disgruntled customers on the forum are met with a “we apologize IF you FEEL that the customer service is poor” statement, followed by a further lengthy absence of the community rep. It is evident that WB and Rocksteady themselves seem to be unaware that they are providing poor customer service, despite all of our (mostly sensible and reasonable) statements on the official forums and in emails. We have made a lot of fruitless efforts to encourage forward communication from the companies, or even just to obtain a response. It now seems we have to make an effort to make sure the public and the companies themselves know that we are not happy with this situation and the lack of service that we are receiving.

Now towards the most recent developments. The patch has been announced to be in the final stages of testing in the beginning of March. Most of the community was sceptical, but nonetheless the mood on the forums has improved. On the 12th of March, we have been informed that the companies were “working out timings” with their partners in terms of the digital release of the patch.
    The statement was followed by announcing that “the patch is currently being uploaded to the servers” two days later on the 14th of March. The next statement specified that the patch is on Steam servers ready to go live, and Games for Windows Live might take a little bit longer. Throughout this week the representative has assured us that the patch is due before the end of the week.
    The most striking development happened on Friday the 17th, when the patch still was not out and we received an announcement informing us that, in fact, the patch has failed a test and will not be released. Apart from the fact that it is very disappointing to hear, this statement renders the previous assurances that the patch is uploaded and waiting to go live untrue, to put it nicely.
    A long weekend now follows, which ensures that there are absolutely no means to obtain any more information about the reasons for yet another delay.
    All of the contradictions in the announcement and outright refusal to provide incoming patch details, such as the approximate size, a rough fix list and compatibility with old save games very strongly imply an intended deception throughout this time.
    A chronological list of all official announcements on the forums can be found ↑in this thread in the first post. Bear in mind, the thread is kept by a forum user, as the community team made no attempt to organize their announcements for ease of access.
    The message we get from this is that WB and Rocksteady do not care about their customers after they have obtained the payment for an allegedly faulty product. They are now dragging time and providing false information to the community for unknown purposes.
    Logic dictates that a corporation, such as WB Ent. is interested in its corporate image. Same logic states that the said corporation must put in an effort to preserve that image. We can witness that almost none of this effort has been made and we do not feel it is fair that the company manages to hide from the responsibility to its customers in this way. The customers have even been outright deceived.
    We are contacting news sites in an attempt to tell about our customer experience with these companies to WB/Rocksteady and the public.

Faithfully yours,

Alexander Knorr aka zephyrin_xirdal

ROCKSTEADY STUDIOS. 2011. Batman: Arkham city. Burbank: Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.
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Posted in games | Tagged batman, computing, economics, gameplay, interaction, superheroes, technology | Leave a reply

hardware rant

xirdalium Posted on Friday, 16th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalFriday, 16th March 2012

It really was high time. It was a bit more than five years ago that I ↵built my system. So a serious hardware upgrade was overdue. The necessary research done, I ↵ordered the needed parts. Until now I didn’t get around to insert those parts—last Saturday I did. I hoped to do, that is, because last Saturday the journey only began.
    Unpacking the mainboard (Asus Sabertooth P67), then installing the CPU (Intel Core i5-2400) and RAM (Corsair Vengeance 16GB) on it. All that went in a breeze.
    Next I ripped out the old mainboard and replaced it with the new one. Everything did fit snuggly so far. So I put in the first graphics card (Asus EAH6950 DCII 2DI4S 2GD5). I’ve got two of those, because before I had made positive experiences with the Crossfire thingie. The first one of these beasts went in all right. The second one … well: the case offers plenty of space for two of those bricks, but the mainboard not really. The second card on the second PCIe x16 slot didn’t want to fit tightly. The problem is that the card is so fat that it uses up three slots at the case’s rear plate. Enough space there, but the card also covers the row of connectors at the mainboard’s lower edge. There you plug in front-panel USB, audio and so on. I could live without those, but at said edge the powerswitch is also connected. Not even I can do without that one.
    All right, I thought, let’s try the new system with only one graphics card for the time being. Later I’ll find a solution for those connectors.
    When I had nicely connected everything I realized that I had plugged in a 6-pin connection at the graphics card, leading to the PSU, all right, but … besides the 6-pin connection there’s an 8-pin one. Unfortunately my old PSU (Thermaltake Toughpower 700 Watt) doesn’t supply a connection like that. The so-called ‘manual’ coming with the card doesn’t give any information at all.
    The result of trying to power up the system of course was black screens—the graphics card doesn’t get enough power. A red LED on it confirms that.
    Meanwhile it was late evening, the shops had closed. No chance for getting a new PSU before Monday. But I desperately wanted the new system up and running. Putting in one of my old graphics cards (Sapphire Radeon X1950 PRO) was the solution. Everything wired—except my old DVD drive (Asus DVD-E616A3T), no SATA—and ignition.
    Two red LEDs on the mainboard. The one says that it doesn’t recognize the RAM, the other means that no boot device can be found. My RAM! Heavens to Betsy!
    Multiple tries of RAM configuration, following the manual (I shouldn’t have followed it). Well, I ended up with only one of the units (4GB) installed, but the red LED went away. RAM there, but still no boot device was found. After having played around with putting which SATA-cable into which port on the mainboard (the drawings in the manual are not only ambiguous, but downright faulty, as I now do know), finally the system comes up. Obviously I had connected my old primary HDD (Western Digital RaptorX) to the correct port. The new mainboard, quadcore, sandy bridge and all, recognize and accept the old XP-installation and the system runs!
    The next projected step was to do a clean installation of Windows 7, 64bit. The DVD drive I couldn’t connect to the mainboard, but my trusted multi-roaster (Plextor PX-760SA) is SATA. For a bit of comfort I first installed the drivers for the graphics card from the old CD. The Plextor does its job. Now for the mainboard drivers … but for reasons unknown the drive now only reads CDs, DVDs aren’t recognized at all.
    Workaround: Download newest mainboard drivers on the laptop, bring it on an USB-stick, insert into big machine and install. Works like a charm, mainboard has all its drivers, Internet connection established. Download latest firmware and all for the multi-roaster. Alas, even after they’re installed the roaster refuses to recognize DVDs. So, no Win7 today.
    But there still was the issue of the RAM. Remember: I’ve got 16GB, but only 4GB are running. The BIOS, naturally. Download newest BIOS, replace BIOS, clear CMOS, reboot. Everything fine, except the system still accepts no more than 4GB of RAM. Above it simply won’t boot, not even loads the BIOS, instead red RAM LED on the mainboard. The memOK function does its blinking merrily away, but won’t accept the RAM. Meanwhile it was Sunday and I gave up for the time being.
    Monday, let’s hit the stores. What I bought at the nerd store: A new PSU (850W) with plenty connectors, a new DVD read-only drive, a tiny cable for connecting the third chassis-fan (because with the new mainboard layout I was lacking two centimeters), and, for good measure a 120GB SSD. What I bought at the uber-nerd store (electronics tinkerage): tiny circuit board connectors which go around the corner 90 degrees.
    Back at home I ripped out everything except the mainboard, the HDDs and the multi-roaster. Installing the new PSU posed no problems at all, same with the new DVD drive and the SSD. For the front-panel connectors on the mainboard I constrcuted something out of the parts from the uber-nerd store, then I tried to place the graphics card on the second PCIe 16x slot. Still the card didn’t really fit. An ugly suspicion arose. After having removed all the connectors the card still didn’t really fit! It’s the cursed PCIe 1x slot, which is protruding 2mm above the mainboard’s ‘surface!’ This is scandalous! The specialists in the forums I then consulted indeed grind down the slot—but honestly, I do not have the nerve to do that right now. Anybody in need of a spare HD 6950?
    Finally I decided to build the system with one graphics card and did so.
    Ignition, BIOS and POST run flawlessly, the system recognizes the SSD and wants something bootable. Win 7 DVD into the new optical drive and hey presto, the whole thing installs in no time and then runs fine.
    Back to the RAM issue. After having placed a second unit again the system refuses to boot. And now for the stroke of genius: I ignored the recommended RAM configurations in the mainboard’s manual, but instead placed two units as I thought it to be sensible.
    The system boots, the operating system comes up, and Win 7 tells me that there are 8GB of RAM. Next I place all four units. Same result, except Win 7 now recognizes 16GB of RAM.
    Net result: The ‘documentation’ which comes with some hardware components is not only beyond inadequate, but downright faulty at some times. The physical properties of the x1 slot on the mainboard are a scandal—they make it completely impossible to place a card of the very same manufacturer.
    In the end I nevertheless managed to build a fine running system. So much for my hardware rant … but stay tuned.
    The software rant will follow.

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Posted in hardware | Tagged computing, technology | 5 Replies

mœbius

xirdalium Posted on Thursday, 15th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 15th March 2012

Jean Giraud aka Moebius
Strange days these are—Saturday before last, 03 March 2012, ↵Ralph McQuarrie died in Berkeley, last Saturday, 10 March 2012, ↑Jean Giraud and Mœbius died in Paris.
 

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Posted in fieldnotes | 1 Reply

corkscrew

xirdalium Posted on Wednesday, 14th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 15th March 2012

via ↑entry at ↑boingboing
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Posted in hardware | Tagged aesthetics, craft, design, gadgets, steampunk, technology | 3 Replies

bang bang

xirdalium Posted on Tuesday, 13th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalWednesday, 14th March 2012

via ↑entry at ↑mosaikum
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Posted in off_topic | Tagged aesthetics | Leave a reply

what is he?

xirdalium Posted on Monday, 12th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalWednesday, 14th March 2012

zeph’s pop culture quiz #19
What is he?
What is the man in the picture?
    Just leave a comment with your educated guess—you can ask for additional hints, too. [Leaving a comment is easy; just click the ‘Leave a comment’ at the end of the post and fill in the form. If it’s the first time you post a comment, it will be held for moderation. But I am constantly checking, and once I’ve approved a comment, your next ones won’t be held, but published immediately by the system.]

UPDATE and solution (14 March 2012):
Again Alexander Rabitsch ↵did it way faster than I am able to update: ‘He’s a miner … not a ’49-er, but a sci-fi miner, played by Sam Rockwell … the movie’s called Moon …’ That is so, and the answer is not only correct but a wise one, too: What I had in mind as an answer would’ve been a complete spoiler! So, go and watch ‘↑Moon,’ directed by ↑Duncan Jones (2009). And if you’re already at it, watch Mr Jones’ [who is David Bowie’s offspring, btw] excellent ‘↑Source Code‘ (2011) as well.

JONES, DUNCAN. 2009. Moon [motion picture]. Hollywood: Sony Pictures Classics.
JONES, DUNCAN. 2011. Source code [motion picture]. Universal City: Summit Entertainment.
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Posted in cinema, motion_pictures, quiz | Tagged biotech, body, cyberpunk, dystopia, economics, sci-fi, space, technology | 2 Replies

pkd 30 years disconnected

xirdalium Posted on Sunday, 11th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalSunday, 11th March 2012

Philip K. Dick
Commemorating the 30th anniversary of his death, ↑to the best of our knowledge has put online a ↑selection of audio interviews on ↑Philip K. Dick:

Nobody blurred the line between his life and his literature more than the legendary science-fiction author, Philip K. Dick. And that’s only fitting since one of the major themes of his fiction is, “What is reality?” This week we take a look at the life and work of the man who’s been described as “one of the most valiant psychological explorers of the twentieth century,” as we commemorate the 30th anniversary of his death.

via ↑entry at ↑boingboing
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kara

xirdalium Posted on Saturday, 10th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalSaturday, 10th March 2012

via ↑entry at ↑boingboing
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Posted in artwork, games, motion_pictures, short_films | Tagged aesthetics, ai, androids, cgi, computing, cyberpunk, design, robots, sci-fi, technology | Leave a reply

huxley to orwell

xirdalium Posted on Friday, 9th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalSaturday, 10th March 2012

George Orwell and Aldous Huxley
↑Letters of note has put online the following letter (Huxley 1970: 604-605) from ↑Aldous Huxley [on the right] to ↑George Orwell [on the left]:

Wrightwood. Cal.
21 October, 1949

Dear Mr. Orwell,

It was very kind of you to tell your publishers to send me a copy of your book. It arrived as I was in the midst of a piece of work that required much reading and consulting of references; and since poor sight makes it necessary for me to ration my reading, I had to wait a long time before being able to embark on Nineteen Eighty-Four [Orwell 1949].

Agreeing with all that the critics have written of it, I need not tell you, yet once more, how fine and how profoundly important the book is. May I speak instead of the thing with which the book deals — the ultimate revolution? The first hints of a philosophy of the ultimate revolution — the revolution which lies beyond politics and economics, and which aims at total subversion of the individual’s psychology and physiology — are to be found in the Marquis de Sade, who regarded himself as the continuator, the consummator, of Robespierre and Babeuf. The philosophy of the ruling minority in Nineteen Eighty-Four is a sadism which has been carried to its logical conclusion by going beyond sex and denying it. Whether in actual fact the policy of the boot-on-the-face can go on indefinitely seems doubtful. My own belief is that the ruling oligarchy will find less arduous and wasteful ways of governing and of satisfying its lust for power, and these ways will resemble those which I described in Brave New World. I have had occasion recently to look into the history of animal magnetism and hypnotism, and have been greatly struck by the way in which, for a hundred and fifty years, the world has refused to take serious cognizance of the discoveries of Mesmer, Braid, Esdaile, and the rest.

Partly because of the prevailing materialism and partly because of prevailing respectability, nineteenth-century philosophers and men of science were not willing to investigate the odder facts of psychology for practical men, such as politicians, soldiers and policemen, to apply in the field of government. Thanks to the voluntary ignorance of our fathers, the advent of the ultimate revolution was delayed for five or six generations. Another lucky accident was Freud’s inability to hypnotize successfully and his consequent disparagement of hypnotism. This delayed the general application of hypnotism to psychiatry for at least forty years. But now psycho-analysis is being combined with hypnosis; and hypnosis has been made easy and indefinitely extensible through the use of barbiturates, which induce a hypnoid and suggestible state in even the most recalcitrant subjects.

Within the next generation I believe that the world’s rulers will discover that infant conditioning and narco-hypnosis are more efficient, as instruments of government, than clubs and prisons, and that the lust for power can be just as completely satisfied by suggesting people into loving their servitude as by flogging and kicking them into obedience. In other words, I feel that the nightmare of Nineteen Eighty-Four is destined to modulate into the nightmare of a world having more resemblance to that which I imagined in Brave New World [Huxley 1932]. The change will be brought about as a result of a felt need for increased efficiency. Meanwhile, of course, there may be a large scale biological and atomic war — in which case we shall have nightmares of other and scarcely imaginable kinds.

Thank you once again for the book.

Yours sincerely,

Aldous Huxley

HUXLEY, ALDOUS LEONARD. 1932. Brave new world. London: Chatto and Windus.
HUXLEY, ALDOUS LEONARD. 1970. Letters of Aldous Huxley. New York: Harper & Row.
ORWELL, GEORGE (aka BLAIR, ERIC ARTHUR). 1949. Nineteen eighty-four. London: Secker and Warburg.
via ↑entry at ↑boingboing
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mari0 gone gold

xirdalium Posted on Thursday, 8th March 2012 by zephyrin_xirdalThursday, 8th March 2012

Mari0
Back ↵in October I hailed it, now it’s out—go and grab the ingenious ↓Mari0! It’s been released five days ago, today we’re already at 1.4 :)

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Cover of 'Cyberanthropology' (Knorr 2011)

You still can find copies of my 2011 book [in German] ↑at amazon. And here are some ↵reviews.


«Ceci, Messieurs, disait-il, c’est du Xirdalium, corps cent mille fois plus radioactif que le radium.»
—Jules & Michel Verne 1908

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