@Witzbold:
@Witzbold:
@Witzbold:
Think I might have done this wrong.
After reading Twyst3d's comment the first time I had to rummage like crazy to find out how to nominate it - eventually remembered I had bookmarked Dean's Haynes Manual (hey, why's there no link to that on the front page?).
I'll play.Also, I hope this cookie/IP stuff can be used to correlate answers to the different polls, so we get out stats like '30% of FPS players harbour a secret desire to stroke kittens/roll down hills/cheat on their GF.'
@Afrit: That's certainly true of your specific examples - though I do wish you hadn't used the dentist one :(.
@Trutting: That's a good article. Pretty well confirms what I thought about how it does the pointing. Missing some bits though.
@Dub: Thanks for that. Interesting - and I think it shows exactly what my concern is.
@amazingmao: Makes sense to me - seems to be the same thing I am saying.
@Grannd: Granted they use the same (ish) technology in reverse of each other, but this makes a big difference potentially.
I have nagging doubts about the first one. The key question is how (or even whether) the Move implements pointing, something that has been niggling me since the technology was announced, and niggles more after Sony's throwaway line (or lie) that 'previous motion controllers have concentrated on pointing'.
@Twyst3d: Awesome story.
@gonzilla: To clarify - I did mean 'offensive'.
@Spike: Apparently you are doing it wrong Spike. Me too.
@KaneRobot: Thank you for putting it so plainly Kane.
Err, Luke.
It's a bit sly to dismiss Axelrod's groundbreaking 'Evolution of Co-operation' as "some researchers with lots of time on their hands " when it has had so much influence on psychology, evolutionary biology and even social policy.
@Manly_McBeeferton: Same here. I am a bit if an oldie for this place, and the phrase (I think it is a phrase) "twitter-style hashtag" might as well be in Korean for all I understand it.