Archive for November, 2007

Microsoft is Still the Whore of Babylon, but . . .

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Now the prices have been lowered! One of Microsoft’s most reprehensible actions (among many) against its users has been its policy against backwards compatibility on the XBox 360. But it looks like somebody making decisions for them isn’t a completely heartless, greedy schmuck. In a surprising but pleasing move, Microsoft just announced a new patch that will add 84 older titles to the platform’s list of playable games.

Can it be they actually have taken gamers’ needs into consideration and realized that although most people only purchased the 360 to play HALO 3, even that mammoth can’t haul the platform along indefinitely? Can it be– is it possible– that they’ve just decided to show some gratitude to loyal users?

Ha, ha. Okay, just kidding.

I’m glad this happened, and I really don’t care what the motive was. In a perfect world, this decision would have been made to show gratitude and respect to loyal XBox players who want to continue to enjoy solid older titles. Heck, I miss playing Goldeneye and if that’s one of the games added, I’ll be very happy. But deep down I know it’s just another crass commercial tactic by Microsoft to further leverage their competitiveness against the PS3, which has always offered backwards compatibility and never experienced the bugginess that the XBox had. (The result of Sony, a company that knows how to make quality hardware, outpacing Microsoft, a company that can’t even put out bug-free software.)

As much as I love the HALO franchise, I don’t want to see Microsoft achieve the sort of dominance in the gaming industry the way it has in software and operating systems. It will only lead to the same sort of laziness that encourages them to continue to put out buggy, unsecure PC products with no incentive of healthy competition to encourage them to improve. That’s why I’m relieved that Bungie has gone independent again. Luckily their Babylonian Captivity didn’t last too long to destroy their soul and quash all talent, innovation, and creativity.

Word of the Day

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

Narcissism

We live in a society where people can document themselves to death. Anyone can now set up a shrine to themselves online, posting dozens, if not hundreds of photos of themselves. There’s a deep seated neurosis in our culture that drives us to do this– the need to be special, the need to be remembered, the need to be exposed to a world that gets bigger and bigger. A friend forwarded me some girl’s MySpace page for a laugh. You know the kind I mean. Splashed with 9,000 images of . . . herself.

I don’t know that girl at all, but I know exactly what she’s like because I see it online all the time. This is a girl who can barely spell– one of the more humorous mistakes on her site is the misspelling of the word “retarded.” She devotes every second of her day to obsessing over herself rather than improving herself and the world around her, which is the textbook definition of what makes someone shallow.

I use that girl’s site not as a personal attack, but just as a very typical example of what’s out there. All people have a need to be loved and recognized, but one of the prices of the evolution of online culture is the increased expectation of fame, recognition, and self-publicizing. People were less nuts about this when the world was a smaller place, and being a local celebrity actually meant something. When the world was composed of many little ponds, there was a lot of room for many big fish. Now we’re lost in a vast ocean, where fame means making more than six billion people aware of your presence, whether or not they ever meet you. It’s a lot to compete with, so people slap up neurotically self-absorbed websites on MySpace and Facebook in a desperate attempt to be looked at and noticed by . . . complete strangers.

It’s hard for me to understand what drives people to be loved, adored, and admired by complete strangers who they will never meet face to face. I’d rather be famous with my friends and family than recognized by a sea of unfamiliar faces. It puzzles me and makes me a little sad that so many haven’t figured out that obsessing over gaining recognition will not merit them nearly as much attention as dropping their narcissism and devoting their energy to doing good things worthy of notice and praise. It also won’t ever bring them any happiness, as it never really pays out the way that a true circle of friends and loved ones can.