willmannr
floobie
willmannr

I'd still like to have a definitive answer on the credit card thing. But, otherwise, I think they've handled this very well.

Really, all I want to hear is this: "The hackers didn't get your credit card numbers. Sorry about the rest." Anything beyond that is icing on the cake, as far as I'm concerned.

I'm definitely not a part of those "one". The Xbox 360 still has no exclusive titles I'm interested in, whereas the PS3 has loads. My PC covers the rest quite nicely. PS3 + PC = winning combination!

As with a lot of things, I think it's best to go either ultra-cheap, or as high-end as possible. I did the former with my current phone, a Nokia E71. It was free on a three year contract (and honestly, at the time, it was the most desirable phone Telus had to offer anyway). The mid-range sorta sucks, I think. You're

Valid points... but I'm guessing the meager lineup of games currently available for it is the main culprit.

I think I'm being pretty "progressive" about the software I use, and how I use it. I've finally switched from using Apple Mail, a local e-mail client, to just pinning Gmail to my browser. Ditto with my contacts (though I still have that sync with my computer), and my calendars. But, the one thing that really concerns

Well said. Paying customers deserve to be compensated for their time lost, and giving them a few days extra on their subscription is a great way to do that, I think. However, as a non-paying PSN subscriber, I don't think Sony owes me anything. It's like if Gmail went down. It would be annoying, but I wouldn't exactly

Agreed. I think most styles of glasses can work on anyone... it's the details that matters. I have a pair of plastic, brown, Ray-ban "hipster glasses". I spent literally 2 hours until I decided on them, trying to choose between pairs that all have the same overall style (brown, plastic, way-fairer-ish) from loads of

That's a really cool idea. I hope they go with that.

In singleplayer, sure. I avoid it during the first play through... usually quite successfully. Subsequently, though, it can be fun. More for "instant action" style games... nothing story driven.

How would they enforce this, besides at internet cafes? Probably not a bad idea though. Whenever you hear about some guy playing WOW/Starcraft for 150 hours straight and dying, it's usually in Korea...

Being in Canada and not being able to benefit from most of those TV streaming services anyway (most of the content being exclusive to the US), I tend to just default to the last panel...

As tired as I am of the "graphics over gameplay" posterchild developer bitching about hardware... they're right. And, by the time the next console generation pops up, 8gb of RAM will probably be completely reasonable.

Eh, works for me :) My gaming PC doesn't need to be upgraded to accommodate any new games, and my PS3 is accumulating more awesome games than I have time for. All at the expense of slightly better graphics? Awesome!

I got a Kindle 3 a few months ago. It's superior to physical books in every way I can possibly think of. I read noticeably faster with it, it takes up way less space, I can read while eating, or in other situations where I'd normally have a hard time keeping the book open, and the ebooks I've bought have been quite a

That's awesome! It looks like someone actually lives and does stuff there. I like the look too. I might have to consider something like that in the future.

For the moment, yes. My E71 is pretty good, but my current generation iPod Nano is a much better music player, and my Olympus point and shoot is still a much better camera. I'm pretty sure both will change once I get a new phone. Though, the Nano is still the best way to listen to music at the gym ever, so it won't

The current generation is just fine, if you ask me.

Mine was probably in the mid 90's... 1996, if I had to guess. I had no idea what the internet was. It was just something my dad had on his computer, and I didn't have on mine. And it wasn't a game, so I didn't really care anyway. He let me play around with it for the first time, and I wasn't particularly impressed.

I don't really mind fictional interfaces, even if they're a tad cheesy. It's all the unnecessary bleepy bloopy buzzy whirring computer noises that are added in that bother me. No computer makes that much random noise, unless you specifically tell it to do that.