Monday, March 8th, 2010 at
3:27 pm
Curt Schilling said today he’s retiring from Major League Baseball with four World Series and three World Championships under his belt. Baseball’s loss is gaming’s gain. Schilling is the founder and chairman of 38 Studios , a startup creating a massively multiplayer online role-playing game code-named Copernicus.
He last pitched a game in 2007. Over his lifetime, the 42-year-old Schilling had a win-loss record of 216-146. He scored 3,116 strikeouts. He helped the Boston Red Sox score a World Series victory. Now we’ll measure his victories in terms of registered users and whether or not his next-generation fantasy game can outdo World of Warcraft, which has about 12 million monthly paying subscribers.
Schilling will be speaking at VentureBeat’s GamesBeat 09 tomorrow in a fireside chat with Adam Sessler, co-host of G4TV’s X-Play video game cable TV show.


Originally posted 2009-03-23 12:57:44.
Popularity: unranked [?]
Monday, March 8th, 2010 at
2:12 am
There’s been a lot of speculation about whether Netflix has been intentionally slowing its movie streaming service. As a subscriber who has experienced the recent slowdown, I also explored the notion in a post a couple weeks back. But, after weeks of claims, the DVD-by-mail company is finally setting the record straight — it’s not slowing down access to its online movie catalog for anyone.
Neil Hunt, Chief Product Officer for Netflix, attempted to clarify the matter in a recent company blog post. Hunt says that the relatively new service, which allows Netflix subscribers to freely stream a catalog of over 12,000 titles online, is prone to the same infrastructure issues plaguing every other content provider on the web.
He goes on to explain that since Netflix is commited to providing the service on a patchwork of devices (Xbox360, set top boxes, blu-ray players, and through the browser), there will always be bottlenecks and hiccups due to the various ways these devices pull video from the servers. Hunt also mentions the possible roles of ISPs and region specific congestion, but it all drills down to this: though it’s slow at times, Netflix isn’t intentionally trying to keep subscribers off its streaming service.
A brief email exchange with Steve Swasey, Netflix’s VP of Corporate Communications, only supports this notion. Swasey remarked that with the system’s current caps, customers would have to stream content eight hours a day, seven days a week before Netflix would consider changing its access speeds and limits. But, in the meantime, Netflix’s team of engineers will continue to devise infrastructural workarounds for any major issues customers might be experiencing.


Originally posted 2009-03-23 17:15:07.
Popularity: 1% [?]
Sunday, March 7th, 2010 at
12:14 pm
If it looks like a duck and flies like a duck, it must take off like a duck. Paleontologists long speculated that this was the case for pterosaurs, but new research shows that the prehistoric winged lizards employed a smarter launch strategy, using all four limbs to hop, skip, and jump their way into flight, instead of pushing off with two legs and flapping their wings as most birds do.
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Originally posted 2009-03-23 00:22:17.
Popularity: 1% [?]