I stumbled across this video yesterday. I made the mistake of watching it during class, and even on mute it was absolutely hilarious.
Random musings of Jeromey Balderrama
I stumbled across this video yesterday. I made the mistake of watching it during class, and even on mute it was absolutely hilarious.
I’m a Madden junkie, so naturally I went out the day the game came out bought it right away. Unfortunately with as busy as I am, I didn’t even take the shrink wrap off the game until 10 days later, then really haven’t played it consistently or extensively since I opened it. After about a month in and playing it over a half-dozen times, I have a pretty good sense of the game.
The realism of the game is pretty impressive, and overall the performance on the X-box 360 is pretty good. Before last Christmas, I played Madden primarily on the Wii, PS2 and PC, so the controls took a little bit of adjustment. They really don’t seem to have changed that much, but still the game took quite a bit of adjustment. At the same time, the game has become a lot more difficult to play.
One of the touted features is that the game adjusts to your play: if you’re good at running, the game’s AI gives you a tougher run defense; if you suck at passing, easier pass defense, etc. While theoretically this is a great idea, the implementation results in you just getting your butt kicked up and down the field. There doesn’t seem to be a great deal of consistency between the game play. Personally I’ve had too many instances where I have 1-2 moments of greatness, followed by a half-dozen moments of mediocrity.
While some of these new features are exciting, there are still many things that EA Sports has yet to improve, and even degrade in some instances. Some I’ve noticed:
I still have a lot of game play to go, and more thoughts may develop on the game, but at this point I’m pretty disappointed with the ’09 differences from ’08. I know when next August comes around I’ll probably be a tool and drop the $60 on the game yet again, but I would welcome major innovations (or even fixing these minor issues) with the next edition of the Madden franchise.
I love the Windows Live Suite of software, especially when it comes to using Live Writer for blogging, and Live Photo Gallery for managing my photos. I was using the first technical preview of Live Writer, so when it was announced that the Windows Live team released the “Wave 3” beta, I jumped on it and upgraded all of my machines. However, I’m not regretting upgrading my home desktop and am especially unhappy with how the installation packages of these suites work.
On my home machine I easily have 20,000 pictures and the previous version has been great at managing it. Though after upgrading, the beta of Live Photo Gallery started to freak out on me and kept shutting down on Vista. When I tried to remove the Gallery beta the installer kept failing, and I was forced to uninstall the entire suite. I figured that Photo Gallery may not be ready for large photo collections and I can simply install the previous version and still use the betas of Live Writer and MovieMaker. Unfortunately I’ve come to find out that you can’t upgrade or downgrade individual applications – it’s all or nothing. Furthermore, you can’t run both the previous and beta versions at the same time. This has prevented in me using the Live Writer beta (which as been fantastic) on my home computer.
I realize this is a personal gripe, and of course this is part of using beta software and sure enough will be fixed soon. I just wanted to throw my issue out there to see if anyone else trying out Live Wave was experiencing this issue? Has anyone else had trouble with Live Photo Gallery, especially if you have a large photo collection?
Stephen Chapman of the UX Evangelist blog managed to get screen shots of the next version of Windows: Windows 7. In the screen shot, it shows the new version of Windows Paint, using the “Ribbon” interface.
Ok, the fact that they’re rolling out the Ribbon interface across the OS applications is pretty significant. However, what’s more significant to me is that they’re STILL spending time on paint?!? How many free imaging applications are out there for Windows? Do people even use Paint anymore? Maybe they could just bit the bullet and roll a great free tool like Paint.net, or better yet bring people to a web site that has a listing of free alternatives that they could install and use instead of Paint. It just seems to me that there are lots of other things Windows could improve in Windows 7 than MS Paint?!?
Although I’ve posted since I’ve returned, I wanted to share pictures from a weekend trip to Roswell, NM. My family and I went down there for my cousin Andrea’s wedding. While the trip there and back were long ones, it was great to go down there. I hadn’t been to southern New Mexico since 2003. Before then, we made trips down to my grandparents home every summer. While we didn’t go all the way down to Carlsbad (where my grandparents lived before they passed away), Roswell still brought back some memories.
My cousin’s wedding was great as well, congrats to both Andrea and Paul! I took a ton of pictures while down there and have posted them to Flickr.