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Friday, November 24

Have you seen this alleged attacker?

Jackie Danicki was attacked on the Tube today but she was brave enough to blog about it and has posted a photo of one of her alleged attackers and asks for anyone who recognises the person to contact the police.

Chinese Peacekeepers patrol the world

According to The Washington Post:

"China is now the 13th-largest contributor of U.N. peacekeepers, providing 1,648 troops, police and military observers to 10 nations...."

It has even "offered to send 1,000 peacekeepers to southern Lebanon to help enforce a cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah. The United Nations accepted less than half."

I wonder the UN didn't take want to take them all.

Saturday, November 18

Video games caused violence....

....to a gamer in Connecticut.

According to the The Washington Post:

"Armed thugs yesterday robbed a line of people waiting to buy the PlayStation 3 and a man who refused to hand over his money was shot in the chest."

Only in America.

Friday, November 17

Video gaming hits the mainstream

In recent years, the mainstream media has used the word "Playstation" as a generic word for describing any hardware capable of playing video games. Now, the Guardian has used the verb "Playstationing" to describe the activity of playing a video game elevating it to the same status as genealogy: "it's just special-interest fun for people who don't do friends, then you look round and everybody's at it".

Tonight, Nintendo's new console, the Wii (to be launched on 8 December) was reviewed on BBC2's Newsnight Review and video games have gained a new artistic respectability on a par with film (Casino Royale), musical (Sound of Music) & TV drama documentary (Tsunami, The Aftermath).

The arts reviewers even enjoyed it, particularly Mark Kermode, who hated and feared video games as he thought they were too addictive. They enjoyed the non-gamers' control stick which enabled it to be flung around as if it was a bowling bowl or a tennis racket.

They discussed it's bizarre name but concluded that it emphasised the family-friendly nature of the console as it's a homophone of "We" and has 2 "i" 's so it's to be played with 2 individuals.

Alas, the lack of knowledge of video games afflicts the BBC website, where the Wii is described as a new game rather than new hardware.

Monday, November 13

Free WiFi

Join Channel 5's "The Gadget Show" campaign to lobby government for free WiFi Net access in towns and cities, like the Norwich experiment. I have.

You know it makes sense.