Apr 28 2009

Konami Cuts and Runs From Iraq War Game

Less than a month after the announcement of Six Days in Fallujah , a video game based upon a real-life battle between US Marines and Iraqi insurgents in 2004, Konami has decided that it is too controversial, and abandoned plans to publish the game. The developer, Atomic Games, has not commented on Konami’s decision other than to say an announcement will be made soon. Konami told a Japanese newspaper, “After seeing the reaction to the video game in the United States and hearing opinions sent through phone calls and e-mail, we decided several days ago not to sell it.” While the game did receive a great deal of criticism, others were optimistic, including several outspoken veterans of the Iraq war. One of the major complaints was that in researching the battle, Atomic Games reportedly interviewed several insurgents. This prompted speculation that the insurgents were compensated for their help, though Atomic later denied that was the case. Konami’s decision also may have been influenced by the fact that they seemed to represent it as entertainment, whereas Atomic’s president, Peter Tamte, was more hesitant to describe it as “fun.” He said, “The words I would use to describe the game — first of all, it’s compelling. And another word I use — insight.”

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Apr 27 2009

Game Developer Flirts With Pirates on BitTorrent Sites

The developer of a new Windows-based first person shooter game is leaving comments on torrent sites via the actual torrent uploader in attempt to reach out to those thinking of downloading the game. ACE Team, the developer of Zeno Clash, acknowledges that people might like to ‘try before they buy’ and says they will not try to stop piracy.

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Apr 27 2009

Military Enlists Open Source Community

jmwci1 writes “The US Defense Department is enlisting an open source approach to software development — an about-face for such a historically top-down organization. In recent weeks, the military has launched a collaborative platform called Forge.mil for its developers to share software, systems components and network services. The agency also signed an agreement with the Open Source Software Institute to allow 50 internally developed workforce management applications to be licensed to other government agencies, universities and companies.”

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Apr 27 2009

Universal Design for Web Applications

Michael J. Ross writes “Two decades ago, Web usage was limited to a single individual (Sir Tim Berners-Lee) using the only browser in existence (WorldWideWeb) running on a single platform (a NeXT Computer). Nowadays, billions of people access the Web daily, with the ability to choose from over a dozen browsers running on desktop computers, laptops, and a variety of mobile devices, such as cell phones. The number of possible combinations is growing rapidly, and makes it increasingly difficult for Web designers and developers to craft their sites so as to be universally accessible. This is particularly true when accounting for Web users with physical and cognitive disabilities — especially if they do not have access to assistive technologies. The challenges and solutions for anyone creating an accessible website are addressed in Universal Design for Web Applications, authored by Wendy Chisholm and Matt May.” Keep reading for the rest of Michael and Laura’s review.

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Apr 27 2009

Will Oracle Keep Funding Sun’s Pet Java Projects?

gkunene writes “Oracle expects Sun to contribute to its operating profit right away. To make that happen, Oracle may pull funding and staff from projects such as JavaFX, Project Looking Glass, and Project GlassFish.”

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Apr 27 2009

Facebook Drops Other Shoe Tomorrow?

The Wall Street Journal is reporting Facebook will open up most if not all of their user-contributed data to developers at a developer event tomorrow.Could this take us one step closer to the ultimate live stream of real-time events?

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Apr 26 2009

The Comprehensive Guide for a Powerful CMS using WordPress

WordPress is incredibly versatile, in that although it is primarily known as a blogging platform, it can be used to run a more traditional non-blog sites as well. As a web developer, you can broaden your potential client base and add value for existing clients by listing ‘Wordpress’ as an area of expertise.

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Apr 24 2009

Oracle Top Execs Answer Sun Employee Questions

The Register writes “Sun invited Oracle president Charles Phillips and chief corporate architect Edward Screven to an employee-only town hall this Wednesday, where they took questions on what’s coming. They said they’d be ‘crazy’ to close Java, that Oracle ‘needs’ MySQL, and all Sun’s processors look appealing. They hedged on OpenOffice — Phillips said he couldn’t comment on any product line — and on Sun’s work in high-performance computing. Screven made it pretty clear the Sun vision of cloud computing does not fit with Oracle’s; Oracle sees itself as a provider of infrastructure like virtualization to make clouds, not a provider of hosted services. As for who’s staying and who’s getting cut at Sun: Phillips said Oracle needs Sun, but warned ‘tough decisions’ will be coming. Don’t forget, this is the company that couriered pink slips to the PeopleSoft staff it cut following that acquisition.”

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Apr 24 2009

Google Analytics API Goes Public

stoolpigeon writes “Google has announced the now public beta for the Google Analytics API (described here). The API lets developers create client applications that can pull analytics data, to mash it up with other data or to present it in new ways. The API has been available through a private beta program for about a year, and some applications are already out there: examples include Polaris on Adobe Air and Analytics for Android.”

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Apr 23 2009

Mac OS X 10.5.7 to improve Bluetooth compatibility,stability

Although it appeared that Apple was close to wrapping up development of Mac OS X 10.5.7 late last week, a new pre-release distribution of the software was dropped on developers Wednesday afternoon with a handful of additional tweaks added to mix.

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