It doesn’t matter if you’ve descended from Irish or not, Borderlands 2 will make your St. Patty’s day all the more meaningful. From now until Sunday night, players can use the “Luck of the Zafords” event to increase chances of rare loot being dropped and grab some free green gear.
Richard Garriott’s Avatar gets a little less shrouded in mystery with the announcement of the game’s lead story designer. If Lord British’s fantasy credentials weren’t enough, it’s been revealed that Tracy Hickman – of Dragonlance fame – is overseeing Shroud of the Avatar’s story. If you’re a fan of ’80s/’90s RPGs and fantasy novels, you probably just spilled something on your keyboard. Sorry about that.
In the accompanying video, below, Hickman describes himself as “a pioneer in the telling of story through games”, so he’s certainly confident in his own abilities. He goes on to state that he thinks ‘gameplay’ hasn’t changed all that much in 30 years, and that Garriott and co. might be the team to finally make a difference in that area.
Shroud of the Avatar has nearly reached its $1 million goal, with 22 days left on the clock. Barring a cataclysmic meteor strike, it seems likely that it will reach its funding target. (Via Massively)
Google has finally shut down a service I actually care about - Google Reader
will die a graceless, undignified death on July 1,
2013.
The only way Google could inconvenience me more would be to shut down search
itself, and yet - I'm not angry that Google is shutting Reader down. I'm
furious that they ever entered the RSS game at all. Consider this quote from a
TechCrunch article in January
2006. Here, Michael
Arrington ends an article about the shutdown of a feed reader service with a
statement that seems truly bizarre today:
The RSS reader space is becoming hyper competitive, with dozens of different
choices for readers.
A hyper competitive space with dozens of choices? Reader made its first public
appearance a couple of months before this, in October 2005. I remember this
period well - it was a time of immense excitement, when RSS seemed to be the
future, the news ecosystem was vibrant, and this thing called the blogosphere,
fueled by peer subscription, was doubling in size every six months. It was into
this magic garden that Google wandered, like a giant toddler leaving
destruction in its wake. Reader was undeniably a good product, but it's best
quality was also its worst: it was free. Subsidized by Google's immense search
profits, it never had to earn its keep, and its competitors started to die.
Over time, the "hyper competitive" RSS reader market turned into a monoculture.
Today, on the eve of its shutdown, RSS more or less means "Google Reader" to a
large fraction of readers, to the extent where even the best feed readers on
IOS are just Google Reader clients.
The sudden shock of Reader's closure will harm a news ecosystem that I already
believe to be deeply ill. Google
Reader is not just a core part of my information diet - it's also the most
direct channel I have to readers of this blog. As of today, the Reader
subscriber count for corte.si stands at about 3 times the
total number of other subscribers combined. Some of these readers will migrate
to other services and stay in touch, but many will inevitably abandon the idea
of direct subscription to blogs entirely. In the next few months, tens of
thousands of small blogs will lose direct contact with a large fraction of
their readers.
The truth is this: Google destroyed the RSS feed reader ecosystem with a
subsidized product, stifling its competitors and killing innovation. It then
neglected Google Reader itself for years, after it had effectively become the
only player. Today it does further damage by buggering up the already
beleaguered links between publishers and readers. It would have been better for
the Internet if Reader had never been at all.
Google Reader is garbage compared to NewsBlur. Reader's demise is my gain as it forced me to find a much better alternative. I'll think twice about adopting free Google services in the future as well.
...and yet it has an air of familiarity about it... oh yeah, that's right. A certain Seattle firm who "destroyed" the web browser ecosystem for half a decade.