Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Tech In The News: Pac-Man Eats Time, Microsoft's Team Lineup Change, PS3 Only?

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This week in the news we have several notable stories.  The did you know that Pac-Man is the eater of time.  A couple big guys leave Microsoft, Insomniac Games brings games to Xbox 360 as well as PS3, and Facebook to Modify it's Privacy Settings Again?!

First up is Pac-Man.  Pac-Man has been around for a long time.  But thanks to his resurgence in Google's logo last week, he has proven that he is going to be around for quite a while.  For those not in the know, Google created a Pac-Man logo for Pac-Man's anniversary last week.  During that time period, countless millions played the interactive doodle.  Google had such a great response they have brought the doodle back permanently.  You too can give Pac-Man a spin by visiting: http://www.google.com/pacman/ and clicking the 'Insert A Coin' button to play.  And according to an article posted on PCMag.com the short duration in which the doodle was on Google's homepage killed a little less than 5 million hours of time.  Think about that, that's roughly 200,000 days worth of time.  Gone, never to be seen again.  This tells me Pac-Man still has it!  Rock on!

Secondly in the news, Microsoft has had some change in it's internal batting order as of late.  First was the 'sabbatical' of J Allard and now Robbie Bach.  J Allard had a huge hand in the workings of the Xbox division at Microsoft.  Meanwhile, Robbie Bach was president of Entertainment & Devices Division (which handles Zune and Windows Phone projects to name a few).  J Allard was onboard at Microsoft for about 19 years; while Bach was onboard for 22 years.  It will be interesting to see what direction Microsoft takes and the further development of these respective product areas take.  Best of luck to J Allard and Robbie Bach.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/26/technology/26soft.html

Thirdly, Insomniac Games has inked a deal with Microsoft which will allow them to bring a new unnamed game project to the Xbox 360; as well as, the PS3.  Insomniac Games are the guys who bought the world the 'Resistance' games for the PS3; and who were formerly a PS3 exclusive developer.  This will be interesting to keep an eye on as well.  http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2010/05/insomniac-signs-multi-platform-deal-with-ea-partners.ars

Last up in the news this week: Facebook changes Privacy Settings Again?!  Go ahead and cringe.  I know I did.  Anyone who has ever used Facebook knows about their privacy settings fiasco.  Their privacy settings have been pretty confusing for most people for a while now.  For example, I post a picture.  I can edit the privacy settings for that picture to determine who can see it.  This is great at it's most basic form.  However, the settings go on to allow you to control how friends of friends see it, and how people viewing friends pages see your content, etc.  Whatever happened to: 'Keep This Picture Private' (Only Friends See it) or 'Make the Public' (for anybody to see it).  This is pure crap from a development stand point.  It's obvious that Facebook has trumped MySpace, there are other Social Sites out there.  But none that are so widely used as Facebook.  The population of Facebook isn't college kids anymore.  Now people of all ages use it.  From children to grandparents.  For this reason, Facebook is going to have to keep it simple in regards to permissions and privacy settings.  The current system is something that a webmaster using a Content Management System might see (individual privacy/security settings for individual components).  Security is very important, especially with the sheer amount of everyday user's who access Facebook.  So yes, it needs to be safe to protect everybody.  But at the same time, Facebook is taking our information and selling it to other sites.  Which in my opinion is wrong.  I understand they are in business to make money.  But they already do that by ad placement on their site pages; which are viewed billions of times a day.

Facebook better straighten up, because I can certainly live without Farmville.
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9177321/Facebook_to_simplify_privacy_settings_Wednesday

Video Game Review: 'New Super Mario Bro. Wii'

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Today is apparently Mario Day here at TechieSmarts because we have another review for another outstanding Mario game.  'New Super Mario Bros. Wii' is a title not to be missed.  Why?  Easy, it simply takes the best from previous Mario games, put a spin on it and makes them better.  Then hand delivers them to the player in a package that is a blast for one player and equally as fun for up to 4 players.  That's right, 4 players on the same screen simultaneously.  It's crazy to say the least.

I love playing multiplayer games, the experience they give is second to none (most of the time).  And sometimes playing by yourself just gets boring.  But with 'New Super Mario Bros. Wii' the boring doesn't ever really surface.  Remember back in the old days, when two siblings could play a game of 'Super Mario Bros.' but they had to take turns playing.  Not anymore, the developers even threw in concepts from the classic level designs into the newer ones.  Secondary players are allowed to pick between 3 characters (other than Mario).  They can play as either Luigi or one of two different colored Toads.  The dev's included attacks and moves from the newer games as well.  You can go the Ground Pound, Super Jumps, Somersaults, and Twirls just like in 'Super Mario Galaxy'.

We also have an assortment of power ups as well.  We have my favorite, the propeller helmet which lets you twirl across the level.  We have the fire flower, giant mushroom, mini mushroom, and Penguin Suits to name a few.  The game also doesn't skimp out on game modes either.  They offer a co-op mode, a competitive mode, Free For All, and Coin Battle Modes.  Mix this with up to 4 players on screen at the same time.  And good times are sure to follow.  The games level selection is reminiscent of old school 'Super Mario Bros. 3' where you move Mario via a map screen to each level.  Even the Toad Huts with Power-Up games have returned.

Any Mario fan needs to pick this title up.  It's a blast even if you prefer to play through by yourself. 

I give it 10 Stars out of 10 Stars.

Video Game Review: 'Super Mario Galaxy 2'

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I think it goes without saying that Mario is probably one of the most recognizable and defining characters in all of video game history.  And it shouldn't surprise anyone when we see another Mario game roll out on the market.  And out of all of the Mario titles, the only ones that I personally didn't care for were 'Mario's Time Machine' and the Paper Mario titles (I never played 'Super Mario Sunshine' though).  After falling in love with Mario's first 3D romp way back on the Nintendo 64 (the highly original titled 'Super Mario 64'); I knew at that time that Mario in 3D was the way to.

Fast forward to the release of Nintendo's Wii.  The first game I ever owned for the Wii was 'Super Mario Galaxy'.  I immediately fell in love with the franchise all over again.  Nintendo took risks and did things with that wonderful title that no other game had really tried yet.  It was wonderful.

Now fast forward a couple years to May of 2010.  Nintendo has released 'Super Mario Galaxy 2'.  Is it worth the hype? Is it as good as it's precursor?  My answers: Yes and Certainly Yes!  Initally when starting up 'Super Mario Galaxy 2' there isn't that much difference in the menu layouts and the save game system.  The player simply picks a planetoid to represent their save game file.  The off we go.

The opening level was a clever side scrolling type romp through part of the Mushroom Kingdom.  Bowser is back and he is bigger than ever.  No really, he is huge.  He has started trashing the Mushroom Kingdom and had kidnapped the Princess once again.  Meanwhile, stars and star pieces are falling from the sky.  The player is treated to a nice cut scene, and is then rocketed off to space once again for another adventure.

The level design is more of the same from the previous 'Super Mario Galaxy'.  Which is great, the use of a 'multidimensional' camera is wonderful.  You even meet up with old school favorite: Yoshi, pretty early on in the game.  Using Yoshi is as great as it was when he debuted back on 'Super Mario World' for the SNES.  Yoshi can swallow baddies and turn them into much needed star bits.

New power-ups have been gifted to us by the game's developers including the Cloud Flower and Rock Mushroom.  We also see the return of the Bee Mushroom and Boo Mushroom.  Old school baddies return in forms of the Goombas and Flying Goombas, Turtles and Spineys to name a few.  And my personal favorite the 'Cosmic Clones' which look like an evil persona of Mario who will spawn behind him and chase him through certain levels.  Very cool.

The soundtrack is pretty much the same from Mario's previous intergalactic romp.  Once again we are catching star bits, collecting coins and getting the star at the end of each stage to help power a spaceship which will eventually lead us to rescue the Princess.

Thank you Nintendo for giving players another Mario treat!  

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Top 50 Twitter Feeds You Should Be Following

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Hey all, check out this great resource of the Top 50 Twitter Feeds  you should be following if you are even remotely a fan of technology and all things computers.  From TechCrunch to PC Mag, from Kevin Rose to the Frag Dolls; do yourself a favor and check it out:

http://becomingacomputertechnician.com/?page_id=101

And don't forget to follow me on Twitter at: @Techiesmarts.  Enjoy!

This Week In The News: Steam for Mac, Google Tablet, Retirement for Space Shuttle

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Sorry for the absence of news here over the last few weeks. The personal/work life has been crazy.  Anyways, on with this weeks news.  Mac Gamers Unite! Google Tablet? And farewell Atlantis!

First up, Mac gamer's rejoice!  Steam has been released for the Mac.  Go ahead, hurry and download it.  There are currently 57 titles available (see link for list: http://store.steampowered.com/browse/mac ).  Also until May 24th, Portal is free for everybody!  Also check this out, if you have downloaded a title for Windows, than the Mac version is available for free.  Pretty sweet deal!  Buy one title and play cross platform.  Nice job Steam!

Next up, looks like Google (in the never ending quest for world domination) are in talks with Verizon over a tablet.  Despite the fact that the iPad has been a pretty good success for Apple.  Can Google do the same, or trump Apple's accomplishment.  Time will tell.

Space Shuttle Atlantis is set to launch for it's final mission on Friday.  This mission is to drop off supplies and replace some parts on the International Space Station.  This sets the stage for the last three shuttle missions by NASA; which will also mark the completion of the International Space Station.  Kudos!  http://news.cnet.com/8301-19514_3-20004796-239.html

Until next week!  Happy surfing!

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Managing Virtual Operating Systems Using Virtual Box

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Sun's VirtualBox is a powerful virtualization software that allows you to run a number of operating systems from within your main, host operating system.  You can install them, and pretty much abuse the 'guest OS', break it, tear it up from the inside out, and never hurt your main operating system.  This is a great tool for people who want to learn about Operating Systems like Linux and BSD.  Linux user's can even install it to run Windows inside their Linux environment if needed. VirtualBox is cross platform (Windows, Mac, and Linux).

I was tinkering with my Linux Mint 8 install (running as a guest on my Windows XP box), and I got an error about the partition running low on space.  So I immediately thought of a project.  Could I take the installed operating system, copy it and move it to a larger virtual drive?  I found several sites with instructions on how to do it, and I was unable to get the Linux Mint booting again after the move.  It was hang at a black screen with a cursor in the upper right corner.  So I did things my way.  And I was successful.

Some background info: my Linux Mint install was fresh.  I only allocated a small virtual drive of about 4 GB's for Linux Mint when setting it up in Virtual Box.  Since I primarily tinker with it, I don't need a huge amount of space.  Just enough I can use for installing some apps and playing Compiz.  But keeping my original goal of trying to relocate the system on a bigger 'virtual hard drive' without having to fully reinstall Linux Mint.

First, I downloaded two ISO files: GParted and CloneZilla.  Using Sun's Virtual Box I setup another 'virtual disk drive' of around 8 GB's and set it as 'IDE Secondary Slave' and leaving my original virtual Linux Mint hard drive as 'IDE Primary Master'.  See pictures below:
Above: Steps 1 and 2

Secondly, set the 'Host Drive D:' to boot the CloneZilla ISO file.  This will allow us to clone the installed Linux Mint Operating System to a new virtual hard drive.  When booting CloneZilla I took all of the defaults to boot and took the option to do a 'Device to Device Transfer' in the 'Beginner' menu.  This simply cloned the small 4GB partition to the new 8GB partition.  After about 10 minutes CloneZilla was finished and I tried booting the new partition to see what happened.  And it did boot.  (To do this simply shutdown CloneZilla and click on the use the Storage Manager we used a few moments ago (in the pictures above).  Click the original virtual drive (4GB) and then click the 'Remove Attachment Device' Button below the 'Storage Tree' window.  See picture:

After removing the original virtual drive, we need to set the new virtual drive to be the Primary Drive and remove the CloneZilla ISO from our virtual CD-ROM drive.  You're Storage Tree Window should look like this:

After doing this, I attempted booting my new virtual hard drive.  And behold, it booted!  But I was once again greeted with the warning about running out of space.  Then it hit me, I forgot to resize the partition after it was cloned to the new virtual drive.  So yes, I am using an 8GB virtual drive, but the operating system can only see the original 4GB's of allocated space.  So, I shut down Linux Mint, and loaded the GParted ISO file in my virtual CD-ROM drive (just like we loaded the CloneZilla ISO in the second step.

Once again taking all defaults and booting GParted, I simply deleted the Linux Swap Partition and moved it to end of the unallocated space (remaining 4GB's that was not formatted).  Then I chose 'Resize/Move' to resize the partition from 4GB's to almost 8GB's (I saved some room for the Linux Swap Partition).  Set the remaining unallocated space as Linux Swap and apply all changes.  The I crossed my fingers.  The resulting setup under GParted looked like:

 Next, shutdown GParted, make sure to remove the GParted ISO from our virtual CD-ROM in the Storage Tree in VirtualBox and boot the new virtual drive again.  Once Linux Mint booted again, I wasn't greeted with the error message so I wanted to checkout the partition in a drive/storage manager from within the virtual OS.  So I ran the 'Disk Usage Analyzer' under Linux Mint, and surprise!  The OS now see's the full partition.
Here's a screenshot of the Disk Usage Analyzer:



Now, please note: the install of Linux Mint I'm using takes up the entire partition.  I did not create a seperate Home partition when performing the install.  Mostly because I will not be creating anything worthy of keeping with this install.  Mostly just tinkering, and doing crap like this.

Have I tried this with a real life, living, breathing install on a physical hard drive...No, I have not.  However, I am in the process of piecing together a small computer setup with some older hardware that I would love to try it on.  Maybe the next rainy day, I'll be bored and give it a shot.  Overall, this whole process took up about 30 minutes to 45 minutes.  So far the OS works as normal, and I haven't received any other crazy errors as a result.  But remember, as always: TRY AT YOUR OWN RISK.

Have fun!

Windows Fix of The Day: Outlook Distress!

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I have learned something very valuable of the last several weeks.  I recently bumped into a situation where I needed to support a couple of people's Outlook 2007 email clients.  I have seen a couple pretty crazy problems as of late.  And I will cover a little guidance for those this afternoon. 

The first Outlook oddity: Outlook was extremely slow to open, then the program would stop responding while it was partially open.  This would result in the user seeing the GUI (graphical user interface) for Outlook, but the areas where emails and the email previews were would be blank white boxes.  After attempting to reinstall the program, the problem never changed.  I then found out that by going to 'Start->Run->'and typing 'outlook.exe /safe' the program will launch Outlook's Safe Mode.  There are several 'Safe' switches that you can use when troubleshooting.

  • '/safe'     Simply starts Outlook without any extensions, the reading pane, or toolbar customization.
  • '/safe:1'  Starts Outlook with the Reading pane turned off (Outlook 2003/2007).
  • '/safe:2'  Allows you to start Outlook without checking for mail after startup.
  • '/safe:3'  Disables all extensions.
  • '/safe:4'   Disables customized toolbars (Outcmd.dat and *.fav files)
By using process of elimination I was able to step through these switches (finally stopping on '/safe:3') I was able to find that an extension was halting Outlook from opening properly.  Then by using Outlook's Extension Manager, I was able to narrow down which extension was the problem and disable it.


The second Outlook oddity: on another computer (running Windows Vista), whenever the user would try to run Outlook an error message would pop up reading 'Cannot start Microsoft Office Outlook. Cannot open the Outlook window.'  This was a new one on me.  After speaking with the user they mentioned it worked fine last night, then after downloading an Update from Windows Update today (not sure exactly which update it was) Outlook quite working properly.  She tried a fix she found on a Microsoft Support forum which stepped her through a registry edit (which she tried without success).


I did a little research and found several posts about it on several different forums.  The general consensus was that most people had success with a rather simple fix.  I tried it, and it worked for me.  So I thought I would pass it on.


  • Click 'Start'
  • Click 'Run' (or use the search box in Vista).
  • Type: Outlook.exe /resetnavpane    *Note: Make sure there is a space after Outlook.exe
  • Hit 'Enter' or click 'OK'.  Now try to open Outlook again.
Hopefully, these tips will save someone some trouble and research.  If you have any other fixes, drop a comment below!