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Lazy Weekend

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I had an incredibly lazy weekend. It had been was 8 weeks since I upped the ante and started doing daily workouts with a strict food regiment. So, of course, the answer to that was a long weekend full of no workouts and some unhealthy food. I also managed to watch a few movies (for the first time in a while) and play some games.

I watched Avatar on Saturday night. It was a fun movie. I can see why people enjoyed it so much. It had a lot of the elements that made Star Wars and Lord of the Rings great. It was a fairly traditional story of Good vs Evil and overcoming odds, the hero's journey and fighting for what you believe in. It was actually quite refreshing not to have to be thinking about the plot too much (in that it wasn't difficult to follow). It wasn't trying to be clever, it was just trying to tell a story. It reminded me of some of the old Disney classics too. The visual effects were astounding.

Sunday night I watched two movies. The first was Terminator Salvation, It was definitely a movie. If it wasn't a Terminator movie it might have been pretty good. It was technically well executed, but the script was absolutely awful. The worst part was they kept doing little homages to the earlier Terminator movies like "see, we watched them and did our homework". But then turned around and left major plot holes like they didn't understand them at all. This shit isn't salvaging anything.

Spoilers Follow: Skynet should not have known who Kyle Reese was, let alone what he looked like. Unless you're telling me that Skynet checked John Connors Facebook page and saw that he listed Kyle Reese as his father. If Skynet knew who Kyle Reese actually was, why didn't Skynet terminate him the instant they found him (thus negating John Connor's existence as they were complaining would happen the whole movie). If it was so Marcus would still see him and get John to enter the facility, why didn't Skynet just falsify the information (or, you know, contact John directly itself). Skynet said Marcus was under its influence the whole time anyway. But regardless, only two people knew that Kyle Reese was Johns father (his mother and him - maybe three if you count him probably telling his wife). If Skynet didn't know who he was, why was he #1 on the kill list. That drives the whole plot and it makes no sense. The only reason I could think of that would explain some of it is the N-jump theory of time travel, but that might be giving them too much credit. There were other issues, but that was the most egregious issue I had with the plot. Spoilers End.

xXx was the other movie I watched. It's an older one, but one I hadn't seen. It was exactly what I expected. Light on plot, heavy on action and drowning in cheese. Coming straight after Terminator Salvation only made it seem better :) It was enjoyable, but I went in with low expectations.

On the gaming front I finished up Battlefield: Bad Company 2. Fun game, but it would have been nice to have referenced the story from the first one (even in passing). I was curious about what happened after the end of the first game. I also missed the openness of the first one. This one felt much more linear and constrained (almost on rails except for a couple of missions), a lot like Modern Warfare 2.

I then started up Mass Effect 2 (I'd been originally planning on Dragon Age, but it wasn't meant to be). I need to finish a run on Insanity difficulty to get the remaining two achievements. It's tough work at times, but I'm getting there. Playing as a Sentinel with a bonus ability of Armour Piercing Ammo. The Tech Armour is literally a life-saver.

I keep trying to get something constructive done whenever I have time off, but I guess I'm working myself too hard the rest of the time. By the time I get any time off all I want to do is goof off and do something that allows me to switch off my brain. It is looking like this next week is going to be pretty rough too, I'm actually wishing I hadn't taken Monday off (but I didn't have any idea of the schedule before then). Oh well. I'm sure it'll work itself out :)

Why DRM Sucks

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I've seen this said many times about DRM and Copy Protection. I generally agree with the sentiment but I also understand why we think it's needed (I just don't necessarily agree with all the reasons). This post was prompted by my experiences over the weekend.

On Saturday night I sat down to watch Avatar on Blu-ray. I had missed it in the theatres so I was looking forward to the weekend so I could I watch it. The Blu-ray came with a DVD version of the movie as well, which I thought was a nice touch. Plugging the movie into my HTPC setup, I was greeted with a lovely error from AnyDVD (which I use because my DVD collection is split between R2 and R4 with the occasional R1 DVD). The error explained that AnyDVD had failed to read the disc and I should check the status window for more information. It seemed that the BD+ check had failed.

Not a problem, I thought. It's a Region B Blu-ray, so I'll just turn off AnyDVD and start watching it. I don't need AnyDVD to remove the region coding in this case. My pizza is beginning to get cold at this point, so I just want to get on with the movie. I obviously need to update AnyDVD to support the latest Blu-ray DRM. So I disable AnyDVD and the disc starts playing. After I get through all the copyright and warning notices (and most of a slice of pizza), I finally get to the disc menu, which I see for about 3 seconds before I am booted back to the Total Media Theatre 3 Platinum startup screen with a message stating that my hardware is not HDCP compatible.

It's right too. My HTPC is connected to my Projector via HDMI. It turns out that the projector does support HDCP over DVI-I apparently, but that's not how I have it configured - and I wasn't aware of that at the time in any case. AnyDVD would have removed that requirement, so I decided to see if there was an update. After a bit of searching it turns out they did have an update, it just wasn't rolled out to their website yet (so I had to grab it from the forums). A couple of reboots later and the movie was finally playing. I could finally enjoy my (now cold) pizza. I'd considered plugging the DVD in, but why the hell should I have to pay more for something I can't use? I bought the Blu-ray, so I wanted to watch the Blu-ray. In retrospect, I wonder whether that is exactly why the DVD was bundled.

People that pirated the Blu-ray of Avatar didn't have to deal with any of that. After a (presumably 50Gb) download, they'd be away laughing. So why exactly would I want to continue to be a legal consumer of movies? I pay them my money and then I get punished for it. I must be masochistic. You could argue that I have a non-standard setup, but I'd have had the same problem using a standard Blu-ray player and my projector (although I admittedly haven't verified).

Fast forward to Sunday. I decide I'm going to continue my second Dragon Age play through on the 360. I connect to Xbox Live and start the game up. I am greeted with a message telling me that the game couldn't connect to the Dragon Age Servers. Fine, I don't need to be connected anyway (my Xbox is definitely online, as I connected to Live just fine). I hit Resume Game and it starts loading. A few seconds later I am booted back to the main menu because some of my DLC apparently could not be found. Strange, as I'm certain I haven't deleted any of it. This DLC came free with the Collectors Edition.

A quick google search tells me that sometimes this can happen and the solution is to re-download the DLC. So I delete the offending file and try to start up the game again in order to re-download. Oh wait, that's right, the Dragon Age servers are down at the moment. Crap. Now I don't have any way to download that DLC again. So. my Dragon Age save game is currently unplayable (unless I started a new game so it wasn't associated with that DLC).

After being deprived of Dragon Age, I figure I'll start up Mass Effect 2. I decide to start up a new character on Insanity difficulty to get the remaining two achievements I need. After starting that up I am greeted with a message welcoming me to the Cerberus Network and asking me to enter my code that came with a new copy of Mass Effect 2. You see, they have this plan to incentivise buying new copies of the game rather than renting or buying a used copy.

That's all well and good, but I have already used the code that came with my new copy of Mass Effect 2 when I went through this process the first time I played the game. So apparently it's forgotten that I already have a Cerberus Network activation on my account. I'm hoping that this is somehow related to the same reason the Dragon Age servers were down (both games are published by EA) but I'll need to verify that later. Just wanting to do some gaming and not jump through hoops right then, I hit Cancel as I'm pretty sure I've played Mass Effect 2 without connecting in the past, and sure enough, I can start a new character.

A close call. I was lucky in that case and it all worked out in the end. Wait a minute. I was lucky? I was lucky to be able to play the game (that I paid full price for) in spite of the DRM. Screw that. This would have been lessened somewhat if EA wasn't so intent on controlling the whole process. If they just used Microsoft's DLC strategy, I might have still been able to play (I at least pay Microsoft a yearly subscription fee to keep Live running). But regardless, it illustrates the point fairly well. Pirates don't care if EA's (or Microsoft's) servers are offline or glitching. 

The pirates have it pretty good. They don't have to pay for their content. They don't have to deal with DRM. They don't get told over and over again that they shouldn't pirate the movie they already paid for. They don't have to sit through trailers for movies they might already own but don't have a choice to skip. They aren't at the mercy of an infrastructure that might go offline at any point for any reason (and eventually - indefinitely). They get to experience the content when they want to. It's on their schedule, at their convenience. I'd like to hope that I'm an edge case with my experiences, but it does feel more like "when" DRM goes wrong, not "if".

Until we make purchasing content as easy and convenient as pirating it. What kind of argument can we really make against those that pirate that content. When we make piracy look like a better experience, we can't be doing ourselves any favours with our paying customers. I've heard the argument that "Well, it prevents casual copying". Bullshit. And even if that were true, we shouldn't be indirectly educating the casual consumer on how to remove the DRM so they themselves can use the content. We make piracy more attractive with this kind of crap.

When I say "easy and convenient", I don't mean simply during the purchasing phase. It has to be end-to-end and it should include similar freedoms (that they'd get otherwise). Things like the Gamers Bill of Rights are on the right track (and even Steam and iTunes DRM to a degree - they do a pretty good job of getting the DRM out of your way). The pirates don't deal with DRM, so why are we punishing our customers?

I AM Smiling

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I watched Black Dynamite again last night. It's still very awesome. I wasn't anywhere near as tired this time so I picked up more references and jokes than the first time I watched it. I also watched most of the behind the scenes material included on the Bluray. A very enjoyable movie indeed.

Earlier in the week I watched Stickmen. It's a New Zealand movie and was released in 2001. I somehow completely missed it until now. It was a pretty cool movie. I did spend a bit of time laughing at the NZ accent. It's been a while since I've really heard it (I don't get many chances to be exposed to it over here and neither Paul or myself have a pronounced accent any more).

I also watched Conan the Barbarian. I honestly can't remember the last time I watched it but it  must be over 15 years ago easily. It's still a fun movie and very quotable. It seems the UK DVD is cut (in one obvious place at least), but it's not as bad as Commando - so I don't feel the need to import a copy from the US.

Slow and Steady

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I have been super-busy with work recently. I'm running behind schedule on a few things and it has been a challenge to keep normal hours and stay calm. I could simply increase the number of hours I do to try and get back on schedule but my productivity levels don't really seem high enough to make that worthwhile right now. Besides, I'd like to save that for nearer our deadlines. No point pushing myself hard now only to be completely useless when it really matters.

I'm playing Mass Effect 2 currently. It's really impressive. I have some complaints about some of the story choices and new gameplay mechanics, but nothing really major. I'm having a blast saving the galaxy again. The import feature is probably my favourite thing they've done, as being able to continue my story that reflects my choices is pretty amazing. It feels like I'm nearing the end though.

Recently I've watched Moon.  A very nice movie - even after I had most of the major plot points spoiled. Sam Rockwell does a really good job in it (especially considering the bulk of the movie is just him and Kevin Spacey's disembodied voice). I also watched Blue Harvest and Something, Something, Something, Dark Side. I haven't really watched any Family Guy in the past, it came on after I stopped watching TV, but I really enjoyed those. I might have to pick up some of the episode box sets.

Prawn Cocktail

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I ended up having a very lazy weekend. Last week I was constantly struggling to stay focused on anything, so I decided resting was a good idea. It was only partially successful it seems, but I do at least feel a bit more motivated now. 

I spent the bulk of the weekend preparing my Mass Effect character for import into Mass Effect 2 next weekend. I now have a level 58 Shepard who has finished all the assignments and made all the decisions I want to carry across. Unfortunately I didn't make it to level 60, but I'm not going to run through the entire game to that degree again just to do 2 more levels. After that I started a new game in order to get a few more achievements (including the level 60 achievement). I don't intend to be as rigorous with this play-through though and odds are I wont finish it before ME2 arrives. The level 58 play-through is my canonical Shepard for ME2 anyway.

My mother bought me an Amazon gift certificate for Christmas which I used to purchase a book and a couple of Blu-rays. All of which arrived last week. The book was Game Engine Architecture, which seems well written (although I've only managed to get a few pages into it). I'm not sure what it's going to teach me that I didn't already know, but at the least it should refresh my memory as to how things might go together. Hopefully I'll pick up a few new tricks along the way too.

The films were District 9 and the District 13 / District 13 - Ultimatum double pack. Yeah, apparently I had a thing for districts :). I had heard good things about District 13 and was about to buy it when I remembered the District 9 was now available, so I ended up getting both. I watched District 13 last week. It's an entertaining French film with lots of parkour and crazy stunts. It reminded me of the Taxi series, possibly because both were written by Luc Besson and filmed in French (it definitely has that Luc Besson feel though, along with The Fifth Element and The Transporter). 

I watched District 9 last night. It wasn't at all what I expected. It was a good movie but about mid way through I was starting to get a bit bored. I could see it was trying to get somewhere, but I felt it was taking its time. Thankfully it picked up near the end. Definitely a well made film though. I just could have done with it being a touch shorter. D13 - Ultimatum is the sequel to D13 but I haven't watched it yet. I'm pretty happy with the purchases so far. Thanks Mum!

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