January 2008
Monthly Archive
Monthly Archive
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 17 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Hardware, Software, Stupidity, Tech
OK, regardless of what Engadget says, Lotus Notes IS NOT bragging rights. In fact, I will laugh at you. A lot.
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 17 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Hardware, Internet, Politics, Rants, Software, Stupidity, Tech
Yeah, I think he sunk his chances with the following statment:
“Americans will have to trust the government not to abuse the authority it must have in order to protect our networks, and yet, historically the government has not proved worthy of that trust.”
So, remind me, why am I supposed to give you this power again?
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 16 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Hardware, Stupidity
Meet the Disintegrator. 24 small barrels of rubber-flinging fun.
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 09 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Entertainment, Games
I’d love to have one of these for Ghost Squad. Whaddaya think, John?
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 09 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Humor
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 04 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Software, Stupidity, Tech
That was fast. Much faster than I anticipated…by five years, actually.
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 04 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Hardware, Software, Tech
a 9 year-old boy. I was surprised by it.
Posted by J.A.S.O.N. on 02 Jan 2008 | Tagged as: Babble, Politics
Yes, I know it’s WAYYY too early to be talking about the elections, but I can’t help it; much as I dislike politicians, I’m mesmerized by politics. It’s like chess, but with the future of the country at stake.
Having said that, feel free to ignore anything tagged “politics” for the next few months. You won’t miss anything but my inane rambling anyway.
According to this, Hillary is doing terrible amongst the 18-35 crowd and I can hazard a guess as to why. Video games.
Hillary has a history of coming down in favor of regulating the gaming industry with rules that are not applied to other industries with violent and sexual content (from senate.gov):
“The disturbing material in Grand Theft Auto and other games like it is stealing the innocence of our children and it’s making the difficult job of being a parent even harder,” said Senator Clinton. “I am announcing these measures today because I believe that the ability of our children to access pornographic and outrageously violent material on video games rated for adults is spiraling out of control.”
Senator Clinton announced that the legislation she will introduce will put some teeth into video game ratings by instituting a financial penalty for retailers who fail to enforce the rules. It will prohibit the sale of violent and sexually explicit video games to minors and put in place a $5000 penalty for those who violate the law.
While I can agree that defending children from inappropriate material is a worthy cause, you have to take into account that the majority of today’s voters are an overlap of both the young voters that have grown up being told nonsense like “video games are murder simulators” and are sick of the rhetoric and the aging gamers of yester-year that have survived the launching of the gaming industry along with the witch hunts that followed games like Mortal Kombat and Primal Instinct. Indeed, the ESA reports that 47.6% of gamers fall within the 18-46 age range, which is exactly the age group Hillary is (if you believe polls) out of touch with.
Let’s also couple this with the fact that, in the month of September alone, Nintendo pushed 501,000 units of the Wii for a 4.5 million total units sold since November 2006 and 495,800 units of the DS for a 13.2 million lifetime total (I’m not sure when the DC started shipping).
This is even more impressive when you look at the age-range of people buying (and actually playing) these units. The ESA reports the following interesting facts:
These statistics tend to deflate any politician’s cries of video games “stealing the innocence of our children” (remember, ESA reports 92% of game buyers are above 18 and 86% of those under 18 report having their parent’s permission or having a parent present when buying games) and just show them as pandering to an older, more reserved demographic that’s fading fast (ESA reports that 24% of Americans over 50 play video games).
I suppose it could all be coincidence, but what all of this should tells me is that Hillary is unpopular with the gaming crowd, which happens to be a larger percentage of voters than politicians are considering.