Saturday, October 4, 2008

Why Videogamers cheat so much?

Something just made my neuro synaptics fire off a malestrom brain storm of lightning today with a mind bending dilema. Why is it that videogamers like to cheat to finish a video game than challenge their own true skill and talent with honestly finishing a game on their own merit? Why is that. Am I going to sit back and not say anything about it. Nah funk that..

I see an ever increasing amount of videogame magazines coming out now solely dedicated to providing cheat codes, and television shows like Cheat! on G4 that focus only on game cheating ... nah funk that.

whats goin on... you punk ass gamers don't think you got true skills left to fight honestly anymore. Is that game kicking your little weak puny behind where you gotta throw your wii controller at the TV screen or mouse at the monitor. Haha, sucka, the computer AI outfoxed you again. Weak-minded human, go get some cybernetic implants then come try again. or no better yet- just find a cheat code, turn yourself into God- then bend all the rules of the game, become invincible where you no longer have to dodge bullets like Neo in the matrix.

But be warned, you gain no strength, no grit, no satisfaction from cheating so stop it. Beat the game honestly, fair and square first, then go back and cheat until your hearts content to get a different level of satisfaction from the game. But don't opt to just cheat first -

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Windows and MAC Users eat your heart out.

I have been in love with the Mac OS X beautiful interface for some time now, with the dock-bar - which Windows had to steal, the beautiful way it manages it spaces. Even the VMWare fusion package brilliantly integrates windows applications right into the MAC OS X desktop.

But then the Linux community had to come out with the utlimate desktop theme killer, Compiz-fusion. Now the PC Desktop GUI world will never be the same. Take a look at this video of what Compiz can do on a Linux machine. I'm ready to jump ship and goto linux forever now.



Check out more about this amazing desktop feature at the compiz homepage:
http://www.compiz-fusion.org/

Remember - you must be running a linux box in order to use this X-windows theme.

Friday, September 12, 2008

The Neuromancer - Matrix Watch Page

This page will serve as a living recording to document all of the signs that we are getting closer to the world that William Gibson prophesized in his 1983 cyber classic "The Neuromancer".

Sign 1: The Internet

Sign 2: Second Life

Sign 3: Neural Networks

Sign 4: