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20071218 Tuesday December 18, 2007

Crysis

Apparently, it's not selling very well. Some people blame the Christmas season. Others wag their fingers at the general sense of ennui many shooter fans are feeling in the wake of Bioshock, The Orange Box, Call of Duty 4, and all the other great shooters released of late. Me, I blame the slogan.

Dividers separating the Internet

Anyone who has been a geek for long enough will remember the pioneering hippy spirit during the Internet explosion in the 1990s. Sorry, I mean The Information Superhighway. It was going to change world politics. War would become a thing of the past. The boundary between the real and virtual would become blurred. Borders between nations and ideologies would crumble in the 21st century. But while the 'net has definitely changed the world, the predictions have turned out to be naive.

The web was once unconstrained by national laws, with content that did not discruminate on users depending on their location. But the modern web, after a userbase increase of more than 100-fold is no longer controlled by technical people but by those motivated by cash, profit and a return on their investment.

I am writing this because it became all too obvious this last weekend. I was doing my Sunday morning thing of reading the news online. I saw an interesting looking story on Yahoo.com (an American site). It was a video report about some genetically modified cats that glow in the dark. I clicked the link. First, it forces me to watch a tediously long advert, about some toothpaste. I hate this style of web advertising, it simply isn't a good way to sell things online. But once the advert had finished, all I see is a box saying:

"This content cannot be viewed in your region."

What is the reason for this exactly? Is it because bandwidth costs will be higher if they open it up to the whole world? Are they legally covering their ass to prevent any content that is illegal in some countries being shown there?

There is an easy way around this. Proxy servers. The same way some Chinese users get around their government's draconian web censorship. If I use a proxy server located in the USA to feed me the video, it should play fine.

But this is what the entire Internet could look like in ten years. Or there may not be one. Instead, we will have the UK-net, the USA-net, the Japan-net, and they may not even be on speaking terms.

Dracula, Free To Wreak Revenge

Courtesy of our colleagues over at SFX, you can get the full, unabridged recording, just by signing up to online audiobook store Audible before the 23rd. Click here to collect your copy. That's eighteen hours of unabridged vampire story, which means that - amongst other things - you can be one of the proud people who actually know the story, and can rightfully recoil at garbage like Van Helsing, Dracula 3000, and Jesus Christ, Vampire Hunter.

I like Audible, and I'm not just saying that. I've had one of the PremiumListener accounts for a couple of years now - paid for, not some kind of journalistic freebie - which gets you any two audiobooks a month for £15. I walk a lot, and having a constant stream of new content certainly gets rid of the boredom. Currently working my way through Spider Robinson's Callahan books, although I'm saving the last couple for the Christmas break. Which of course, can't come soon enough. Brr. Last week of the year...

That said, I do wish they'd get rid of the stern voice at the start of each book, the one intoning "THIS IS AUDIBLE". Wouldn't be much of good if it wasn't, would it, folks? But hey, just for clarification purposes: THIS IS READABLE.

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