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Is this how Facebook is handling app updates?

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So, I got this notification today from my Facebook app. I rather like it as it seems like they are trying to take charge of their app development and updating. I wonder, though, is it pulling the app from the Google Play Store as my phone updated from their and not from within the app.

Update:

It seems that you end up sideloading the app from Facebook and not coming from the Google Play Store…

Update 2:

It seems that Google has now put a rule in place that will stop this from happening.

TechCrunch points out the following line form the Dangerous Products section of Google Play Store’s terms and conditions:

An app downloaded from Google Play may not modify, replace or update its own APK binary code using any method other than Google Play’s update mechanism.

Many are speculating that this move wasn’t directly related to the way Facebook applied the update, but to try and keep others from using it to upload malicious code.

My Gaming Tastes as of Late

Courtesy of pplware.sapo.pt

So, just before typing this, I just put Hitman: Absolution back in the GameFly envelop just 9 hours after having it in my hand for the first time.

Now from what I heard about the game, it was fairly decent and I’m not here to say otherwise.  From what I’ve played, it seemed okay. The reason why its going back to GameFly so soon is because I just couldn’t get into it.

I have what I feel like a lot of people might consider a dream job.  I work from home and given my hour change, I don’t ever have to come into the building unless I want to.  What may be unappealing about it is that I work 3rd shift and either nobody is awoke when I am locally (except for other 3rd shift coworkers) or I’m not awoke when everyone else is.

I state that to say that I have what seems like the most ideal opportunity to play video games with minimal distraction (occasionally, I have to do work, but there are pretty defined moments where there isn’t anything happening and my lunch break). This allows me to focus on the game a little more. It even helps for me to understand what kind of gamer I am and what games that I enjoy. Due to this, I am starting to understand that games like Hitman: Absolution and Max Payne 3 aren’t really my speed.  I’m not sure why.

I know this may sound very weak, but with Hitman, while I can solve problems given enough time, I’m not one to solve them with a gun pointed at me, let alone a dozen.  I understand that the game allows you to start over at various checkpoints and try again and is built to have the user try multiple approaches to the same problem, but I feel as if I don’t really have much time for that.  I feel its more about the openness of the game.  Its great that I can attack the problem from more than one angle, but its like a Rubik’s Cube. One turn one way may screw you in another way. Its a little too limiting for me with what you are able to use even though, from what I’ve seen of past Hitman games, it seems to add more things to it like “Instinct” to help make the game a little more accessible.

I’m starting to think that the only games that I like to play, besides various sports games (as they do not have much of and end game and I can pick up and play whenever), are strictly linear games that tell me where I’m supposed to go and have one specific problem to solve or completely open world games that allow me to chose what I want to do and once you do become somewhat linear after you made the choice.  This must be why I liked games such as Sleeping Dogs, Far Cry 3, the GTA series and Spec Ops: The Line (even though most of those games were open-world/linear mission).

I will continue to use GameFly to help out with any other gaming discoveries to see if there are more games that I may enjoy that I haven’t discovered.

Still not sure about Max Payne 3, though…

Nintendo 3DS XL: Making My Console Manufacture Life Complete

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Friday was a hell of a day!

After working 11:30pm the night before to 8:30am (normal hours for my job), instead of going to sleep, I had a few errands to run. My lovely fiance left her work badge at home so I had to go take it to her and this started the snowball that was the 3DS journey.

After dropping off her badge, instead of going home, I decided to take a detour to what I had determined was the closest GameStop.  I was headed there with the intention of only buying Tom Clancy’s H.A.W.X. as I had not to long ago played the hour-long demo on provided by PlayStation Plus.  As I’m a fan of aerial combat games, I had to buy it (but more on that later).  Once I was in the store, I started looking around at all the consoles, used and new, they had in the store.  I know the one thing that I wanted that I didn’t have was a 3DS and seeing how more people have that than a Vita, I figured that I should probably get one as well sooner or later.

After I purchased my game and was heading home, thoughts were racing through my head.  I was thinking that due to some extra money I had earned from my job, I could possibly swing the purchase of one but quickly decided against paying for it outright.  I am paying for a wedding, you know.  So I began cooking up schemes that could get me a 3DS.  Maybe it was because of the lack of sleep (remember, I was working since 11:30pm the night before and really had been up for a few hours before then), but I came up with what I thought was the ultimate solution…

I WAS GOING TO SELL MY XBOX 360 to pay for it.  I figured because I wasn’t going to be paying for Xbox Live anytime soon, the system was just collecting dust downstairs.  I could sell it now, get the 3DS and when I wanted to play it again, I would just buy another one and call it a day. I figured that would work because by the time I would want to play my 360, the new system would be out, the price would have dropped on it and I wouldn’t be paying for a wedding anymore.

There was one thing stopping me from acting on such an impulse…time.  I didn’t really have much time to move on the plan as I had other things on my plate like getting a haircut and actually going into the office for a meeting.

By the time all that was over, the dream kind of died down a little bit as I was thinking about other things and kind of forgotten about it.  It wasn’t until I got home that I remembered that I had such a crazy plan and with no other plans stopping me, I began to act.  I called the GameStop closest to my house to get a quote if I were to sell it to them. I then observed on their website that they sold broken systems as well and asked them about the PS3 that died the day before the PSN came back online from the hack. They provided a quote that was so favorable that I didn’t really have to sell my 360.

After consulting with my fiance, I decided not to sell the 360 but sell the broken PS3 along with several games that I have beaten or have no interest in playing anymore.  I through them all in a bag and drove over to the mall and let them have at it.  After everything was said and done (I had to drive back to my house and grab cables for the broken PS3 including the HDMI cable that was connected to the 360), I was able to walk out of the store with a brand new Nintendo 3DS XL (thanks @Ind1fference for the suggestion) and a used copy of Super Mario 3D Land (my thoughts about it here) for about $45 which I feel really happy about.  I don’t ever think I’ve bought a system (portable or not) for full retail, which in my opinion, is truly dope!

Hopefully, I’ll have a review up soon as this was supposed to be the review but ended up being my harrowing tail to obtain the 3DS!

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Super Mario 3D Land: Write it Down and Make it Plain

Courtesy of VideoGamesBlogger.com

Now here me out.  I’m not saying that I’m a lazy bum and want things handed to me (however, I could be viewed as the former).  What I want to know, though, is it still okay that we have to have a certain amount of something extra in order to progress in video games.

Out of my gaming spending spree I went on over the weekend, I picked up a 3DS XL (review coming soon) and a copy of Super Mario 3D Land.  I went with this title thinking that Mario games tend to be a low barrier to entry when it comes to gaming, especially on a Nintendo platform.  I figured that it would occupy me enough until I refilled my bank account with more paycheck.

I took it home, and after I finished taking all my gadget pron shots, I popped the game in and started playing.  The game is pretty good and the 3D was impressive (but not enough for me to want keep it off more than I kept it on).  As it is the only game that I have, in the past couple of days, I made some decent progress. Then it happened…

I hit a wall!  Not so much the wall where I couldn’t stand playing anymore.  I just couldn’t progress any further regardless of how many levels I completed.  Apparently, the goal of the game is to find 3 star coins per map in order to progress smoothly through the game and I had only been playing it to unlock the levels as I went along, not to accumulate the star coins as this wasn’t really made apparent.  The only thing that told me I might need these star coins were the special levels sprinkled through the worlds.

As I write this post, I come to the realization that maybe the main point of the game wasn’t just to advance like it was for every other Mario I played growing up (mind you, I stopped at Mario 64).  Maybe they felt like Mario games just had it too easy and needed more of a challenge.  Passing the level isn’t enough. They want you to go on a scavenger hunt. As I stated earlier, there wasn’t an indication that I would need the star coins to progress further in the game as the only places they tend to show up were on levels that were optional to play.

Now, I’ve played games where I would need a certain amount of an item to continue on to the next level, but, normally, you are given enough just by completing other levels so this doesn’t become much of an issue and doesn’t keep you from enjoying the game. Also, these games let you know that those items are required to progress in the game and doesn’t assume that you were actively seeking out the items in the hopes that you won’t need to worry about them later.

Nintendo, I’m just asking, let me know before you want to throw that curve ball.  If it wasn’t for the fact that I don’t own another 3DS game (or DS for that matter), I would have just tossed SMB3DL off to the side and started playing something else…

Guacamelee’s Cross Control Leaves Something to be Desired

Courtesy of TheParanoidGamer.com

So, this weekend, I came across some extra money (mainly my overtime money for being on-call from the last weekend) and I decided I’d treat myself to a few video games.  The others I’ll go into later on (maybe today, maybe tomorrow, maybe never as I might forget), but the one I do want to talk about now is Guacamelee.

Guacamelee is a downloadable PSN title developed by Drinkbox Studios and is available for both the PS3 and PSVita. Aside from its gameplay (which is awesome but can be frustrating if you aren’t fast enough), the game is pretty awesome because it can be purchased once and playable and both platforms (cross-buy) and you can use the Vita as a second controller to allow for a second player or to have it as a map at all times so you don’t have to hit Select to access it.

However, that is where I have my problem with the game.  The steps to access the cross-control functionality weren’t easily spelled out leaving many people in many forums (including myself) trying to figure out how you could do it.  It took the following YouTube video for me to figure out what was going on and what exactly I could do with the feature.

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As you can see in the demo, you don’t go to the app clearly marked “Cross Controller”, you have to start the Remote Play app proper.  For those who have used Remote Play before, this may be kind of confusing as that feature is normally used to control the PS3 itself and not to really play the game.

But it doesn’t stop there.  Once you are connected,  you can’t really control the game with it if you were player one.  This kind of sucks seeing as once its connected it provides you with a map.  What am I going to do with that? Hang it beside my monitor and use it like a rear view mirror of sorts? And while that may work for me, what about those who actually play their PS3s on TVs and not HD monitors.  It does, however, work if you needed a second controller.

Its not a big gamebreaker, but when you have the WiiU provided the functionality (even though that’s about all its good for), it would have been nice to get similar functionality with the PS3/Vita combo.

Still like the game, though…

Android is an OS, Not a Phone

Courtesy of bytelib.com

Lately, I’ve been hearing a lot of people griping and complaining about how there are so many “Android phones” in the market.  They say that not a day goes by before there is another Android product being announced in some form or fashion.

I, for one, do not believe this is true.  At the moment, there are only a handful of handset manufacturers that exist out there today release Android based smartphones.  They are Samsung, HTC, LG, Motorola and Sony.  There are some smaller ones and, quite frankly, I don’t even think Sony even belongs in the list and LG only just made it because it was involved with the Nexus 4.  So, with only 4 big players in the Android smartphone market, how is it that there are people saying that the frequency in which phones are announced is so high?

I think the misconceptions comes from when the devices are being hyped in the market.  Many different outlets will essentially talk about the same device in different ways.  It also doesn’t help when the device is going to different carriers and is augmented in some form or fashion.  Examples of this is the Samsung Galaxy SII brand of devices.  These devices saw multiple iterations between countries and carriers to where it would seem like a phone was being released maybe once a week, but in actuality, it was basically the same phone coming out in different countries in carriers with slight modifications to make them different.

Another thing I think that people fail to realize is that Android is actually an operating system and not a phone. Its as simple as this: Android is to smartphone what Windows is to computer.  Android was an mobile operating system that was developed by Android before it was acquired by Google.  Google then allowed device manufactures use the OS to power their own devices, much like what Windows and Linux is for computers.

Nobody would walk into a Best Buy and go to the computer section and say: “Man! They keep coming out with new Windows computers everyday!”  Yes, its a true statement, but nobody bats an eye when a new laptop comes out because of its operating system.  People should look at Android devices the same way.  Samsung is not only competing with Apple. It is competing with LG, HTC and Motorola, too.  They are essentially trying to sell a cellphone, not an operating system.

These companies aren’t even always backing Android anyway.  HTC and Samsung also push out Windows Phone devices and Samsung even is working on developing their own mobile OS, Tizen after their stopped development on another one, Bada.

In conclusion, please consider Android as the OS instead of the device itself.  As Google has stated before, there is no Google phone and should also be extended to mean there is no Android phone either.  There are only Android powered device.

The Official Majors’ House Show Episode 1: Twerkin’ at Cold Stones

We’re back and hopefully better than ever! Check us out!

http://majortrain.podomatic.com/entry/2013-03-26T19_04_58-07_00

Thoughts on Spec Ops: The Line

Courtesy of GameVerse.com

I’m glad the game still thinks I am….

So, during my long hiatus, I’ve been doing very little gaming.  Just haven’t had much a want to do so with so many things going down.

I did find time to play one, though.  Thanks to the PlayStation Plus Instant Game Collection, I was able to get my hands on the third person shooter Spec Ops: The Line.  This game has been hyped up for some time before, during and after its release on June 26, 2012.  It was developed by Yager Development (single player) and Darkside Game Studios (multiplayer) and published by 2K Games.

The game is about 3 soldiers sent into Dubai that has been ravaged (and continues to be ravaged) by violent sandstorms.  They are seeking a lost military battalion and the survivors they were supposed to rescuing six months before the start of the game.  What they find is a twisted city with no one seeming to trust anyone else and a lot of death. Not to mention bouts of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

The game, however, is really popular on what it has the player experience while playing the game.  In the game, you are given seemingly impossible choices to deal with, some of which have you literally backed into a corner.  I won’t go into any specifics so as not to spoil it, but I’m sure by now you have probably read the Wikipedia article (which I’m not going to link…gotcha).

I will say, that some of the events in the game have caused me to put the controller down and just walk away.  I don’t mean, literally sit it down with the game still on.  I actually turned off my PS3 and left to do something else in my house.  I left my office to go to another room and watch something else on TV.

There are so many different schools of thought on what story the developers were trying to tell in the game.  I side with the one’s that use this as a critique of modern military shooters which are mainly all first person shooters.  In these games, even though you may be observing the action from the eyes of your character, it still removes you from the overall sense of what is going on around you.  The screen that you use to view the environment causes a kind of tunnel vision.  Of course, you could turn around, but it still restricts from what you can see.  It lets you see the immediate situation and not the overall grand situation. I feel that Spec Ops did the right thing in choosing third person as it let you see the character and what he has to go through during the situation and also lets you see more of environment, giving you more awareness of situation.

I also feel that the story was well told.  It gives you the ability to see what happens when someone who doesn’t belong shows up and starts wrecking up the place and what ramifications that may have.  Even outside of any military conflict, you can go somewhere not having all the facts, start causing a riot, and realize there was no need for you to be in the area.  This shows that and even makes you believe to a certain point that what you are doing is right because the game limits the amount of information told to you and shows you want they want to show you as opposed to what’s really happening.

If you haven’t played this game, I really do recommend you play it.  I think its good enough to buy, but others have their opinions in the matter.  At least play it. To me, its a game for the more educated…

The Land of the Entitled

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I want it all…I want it NOW!

It seems to be that’s how the world is starting to move.  In a time where everything can be granted to us in nearly an instant, we tend to get upset when something isn’t given to us right away.  I’m know I’m definitely not immune to this as I am probably a huge fan of instant gratification. I like the fact that I can shop in a store from the comfort of my own home and only drive to the store so that way I can have the product I purchased easily without having to hunt it down in the store and wait in line to purchase it.

However, this practice can be very damaging.  Not only to ourselves but to others around us.

I understand the need for instant gratification.  Its almost like being a kid who sees the cookie jar.  You know there are cookies in there and you want the cookie because its there and it will taste so good once you get it.  Your not really hungry for it, you just want it.  Because its out of reach, however, you have to ask someone for it, which happens to be a hindrance to you because now you have to wait and depend on someone else to get it for you.  Then comes the biggest obstacle: “Not right now!”

Now, I’m pretty sure a good number of readers of this post have children and know that phrase.  When I have a little MinorLinux running around, I intend to use it. But I wonder if this is, along with our current conveniences, have turned us into monsters who crave to have it all.

But let’s take a look at the scenario from the side of the parent. Again, I understand that some of you are parents and may have a different take on this, but just hear (…er…read) me out.  When you tell the child “no” or “not right now”, what is the main reaction of the child.  I figure it would depend on various factors. The one factor that comes to mind is how many times has the child been denied.  If we look at how society is now, we are like children who hardly get no said to us. We can go where we want, do what we want to do (within reason), buy what we want to buy.

Now, imagine if you were to go to your favorite store and someone told you that you couldn’t buy the product, not because you don’t have money, but because they don’t want you to have it right now, even when its in plain site and others are enjoying it. What if someone stated that you couldn’t drive to that store even though the parking lot is half full and the store wants to take your money. You’d be furious, right? You’d want to lash out, right?

These situations are similar to the child who’s never been told no.  They would lose their shit if you did. And what do you think the consequences would be for such a thing? Depending on age, there would be temper tantrums, things being thrown, insults, and hateful statements among other things.  Now, as a parent, you may just be able to shrug it off.  But some don’t.  Some take that really hard.  From a child, that’s one thing, but this still happens between grown adults.

So, what happened here?  I’m pretty sure a few decades ago, this wasn’t the case.  How did we get to this point?

I believe the answer lies with restrictions.  Over the years and decades, more and more freedoms have been given to use regardless of what people are saying nowadays.  We have been given so much choice and so much information that anybody at any given moment in time can be extremely dangerous without really having to leave their homes.

Now, I’m not about taking back freedoms and placing restrictions.  I’m more about having people become more reserved. People should hold back their levels of entitlement.  If anything, they should think about how their actions would be perceived if they were doing it to their parents. Boundaries exist for a reason and if people can understand that and learn to live with certain limitations, then the world would just fall into chaos.

So, please, don’t be like that kid that always gets his way.  If anything, you just look like a grown person throwing a temper tantrum, and then who will take you seriously?

Ask this guy…

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I Probably Should Stop Doing This…

Not Here...

So, yeah, I think I should…

I always tend to take huge absences from blogging and many other things because I feel I need a break or there’s nothing to write about.  This time, it hasn’t really been any of that.  This time, I left because of some personal things that I had to take care of that I’m not particularly proud of.

As you may or may not know, I am a Type II diabetic. My version, because I am a very big guy, is that I have too much sugar in my blood stream and not enough insulin to maintain it.  It got to a point where just diet and exercise wasn’t cutting it (mainly because I just wasn’t doing it).  When prescribed with the meds, I shrugged it off, took it whenever I felt like it, and barely changed anything.

Due to my carefree attitude towards my “condition”, the doctors continued increasing my medication. Each time they did, I got a little more serious, but not enough for them to stop increasing it.  It had gotten to a point where I maxed out on one medication and they began talking about putting me on more. I still didn’t heed their warnings.

So, then, the fateful day came when sitting with a doctor and he decided to test my blood sugar history (known as an A1C).  He comes back and states that they would be foregoing more pills for a more direct approach to combating diabetes.

If you are familiar with diabetes (whether you have it or know someone who does), the best way to get more insulin into the body is to directly inject it into the body. This just became my life.

Now, when I found this out, I tried to take a it like a champ. I joked about it. I tried to shrug it off.  It didn’t work.  I became depressed by it because I became the one of the things I didn’t want to be.  Growing up, I remember seeing my grandmother inject herself with insulin everyday knowing that I didn’t want to get to that. Of course, at that time, I had no idea what she had, but I know I didn’t want it.  Once I learned, I was determined not to get to a point where I would need to get shots for it. Apparently, I wasn’t determined enough.

Many people, including the doctors, stated that this is due to my eating habits and lack of physical activity, but I feel they try to make me feel better buy saying that it also could be genetic and that I probably couldn’t help it. I appreciate that they wanted to make me feel better, but I feel that it is completely my fault for where I am in my life. Its no one’s fault but my own that I am here.

I feel that there is just a lack of accountability nowadays.  Everyone is always looking for something or someone to blame for the misfortune in their lives when they have no one to blame but themselves. Its really time for that madness to stop. The quicker everyone starts taking accountability and responsibility for their actions the better off they will be.

Of course, honesty isn’t always the best policy for most people.  All I know is, it makes me feel better when I open…