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Japan

How Apple Is Beating Nintendo At Its Own Game 425

Zothecula writes "In an industry obsessed with polygon counts and frame rates, Nintendo's Wii console and DS handheld were the proverbial knives at a gunfight. They were grossly underpowered compared to the competition, meaning Nintendo could sell them at a profit from day one. Their innovative control methods ensured they still sold like hotcakes. An animated GIF of Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto and Satoru Iwata holding a DS that printed money became the go to picture to run alongside quarterly announcements of Nintendo's gargantuan profits. If a disheveled man emerged from a time-traveling DeLorean with tales of a near-future Nintendo struggling to sell its latest handheld, I'd have been more surprised about the Nintendo thing. So what on earth happened?"

Comment Re:health insurance is like auto insurance now (Score 1) 2424

Find me someone who’s happily living high on the hog in a housing project in NOLA, who isn’t drug-addicted or crazy, who wouldn’t rather be working, who doesn’t struggle to scrape by every day, and I’ll give you $1. I’m not saying there aren’t people on welfare, but I’ve never heard of anyone, who was relatively sane, who thought it was preferable to working.

Comment Re:Incorrect premise (Score 1) 945

Agreed. I had a photography teacher in high school who used to say that photography was 50% science and 50% art — that you needed to master the technical stuff (chemical temperatures, film speeds, aperture size / shutter speed etc.) in order to be able to forget it and concentrate on the art. Apple has worked hard to shorten the initial learning curve on most of their products — osx the iphone, the ipod all tend to be easier to learn initially than comparative products. That’s pretty much why most artists I know (and I’m one of them) like to use them. It has nothing to do with their technical power. In fact, I think most artists wouldn’t disagree that Windows machines, for instance, are probably more powerful and ultimately able to do more than Mac. But apple computers are very easy to use, and allow you (with some major exceptions) to do what you want on them — whether it’s edit photos, or record music, or make movies. So you can get through the technical stuff a little faster, and get to the art — the stuff that most artists are more interested in. I personally like mac machines and I recommend them to friends. I don’t think much about what it “says” about me. If there were a cheaper PC that was as easy to figure out, as free from hassles, viruses, spyware, adware, and crap, and had all the software I wanted, I’d use it.

Comment Re:Political reform? (Score 1) 94

OTOH, if the "shock" of the affair happens often enough, it will finally get to the point where no one actually cares (this is starting to happen, I think) and then hopefully, people will remember that being faithful to your spouse isn't actually a necessary job qualification for being a politician. At least, we can hope.

Comment Re:So something which we can't define... (Score 1) 267

In other words, any non-contrived definition of life that includes the mule must also include fire. Here is a very basic explanation: http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life

Right. Except that fire can be spontaneously created and mules can't. So the trouble is not that mules aren't alive and fire is, the trouble is the simple wikipedia definition is wrong.

Transportation

Terrafugia CEO Responds To "Flying Car" Criticism 233

waderoush writes "The majority of the comments on last week's Slashdot post It's Not a Flying Car — It's A Drivable Airplane were critical, even dismissive, of Terrafugia's work to build a two-passenger airplane with folding wings that's also certified for highway driving. We boiled down these criticisms to the dozen most commonly expressed points, and today we've published responses from Terrafugia CEO Carl Dietrich. While hybrid airplane-automobiles are an old (some would say laughable) idea, Dietrich argues that current materials and avionics technologies finally make the concept feasible."
The Courts

ACLU of Ohio Sues To Block Paper Ballots 243

Apu writes in to inform us that the ACLU is trying to block an Ohio county from moving from touchscreen voting machines back to paper ballots. While it may seem like Cuyahoga County — which includes Cleveland — is moving in a good direction from the perspective of ballot security, the system chosen tabulates all votes at a central location. This means that voters don't get notified if their ballot contains errors, and thus they have no chance to correct it. The ACLU of Ohio is asking a federal judge for an injunction against any election in Cuyahoga County it they move to the new system.

Wii Hacked To Control Sword-Wielding Robot 136

ianchaos writes "WiiBot is the pet project of two engineers who apparently have way too much cool hardware and time on their hands. These two guys figure that as long as you have a Kuka KR16 industrial robot to work with, why not see if you can control it with the Wii Remote? The result is a tennis-playing, sword-wielding mechanical arm that simultaneously captures 'weekend of nerdy fun' and 'accident waiting to happen' in a fun two minute video. The website even details the technical aspects of teaching a robot to parry."

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