Scotiasoft Systems Releases PPFMaster 1.0
VersionTracker now lists an entry for PPFMaster 1.0, a Mac application created by Scotiasoft Systems for applying PlayStation Patch Files. From their site:
Title | Date |
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Destiny 2: The Final Shape Part 1 | 06.08.24 |
Little Kitty, Big City | 06.01.24 |
Fallout Vault Tour Part 3 | 05.25.24 |
Fallout Vault Tour Part 2 | 05.04.24 |
Fallout 3 Prep | 04.29.24 |
Fallout Vault Tour | 04.28.24 |
Fallout TV Part 2 (spoilers!) | 04.21.24 |
Title | Transcriber | Date |
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Halo 5: Advent (String... | cwhiterun | 06.07.16 |
Halo 5: Blue Team (Str... | cwhiterun | 10.22.15 |
Halo 5: Light is Green... | cwhiterun | 10.20.15 |
Halo 5: The Trials (St... | cwhiterun | 10.12.15 |
Roll Call - Price Paid | pimpnmonk | 06.02.14 |
Behold A Pale Horse Fo... | pimpnmonk | 01.24.14 |
Farthest Outpost/Mercy... | pimpnmonk | 12.30.13 |
Episode | Date |
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Sony Acquires Bungie (mp3) | 02.02.22 |
Let's Play Mass Effect 3 #27 Final... | 06.02.17 |
Anger, Sadness and Envy Ep. 27: Craig Ha... | 05.08.13 |
Anger, Sadness and Envy Ep. 25: Destiny... | 03.05.13 |
Anger, Sadness and Envy Ep. 24: Halo Ann... | 04.21.12 |
Anger, Sadness and Envy Ep. 23: Halo Ann... | 06.26.11 |
Anger, Sadness and Envy Ep. 21: The Wint... | 04.18.11 |
VersionTracker now lists an entry for PPFMaster 1.0, a Mac application created by Scotiasoft Systems for applying PlayStation Patch Files. From their site:
XboxOttawa sent word that episode ten of Fire Team Charlie, FTC10, has been released, and clocks in at more than 11 minutes and 56 Mb. Today you can snag the BitTorrent, or watch it full screen if you're a member; direct server downloads are coming tomorrow.
The Mac version of Halo has now reached 1.03, bringing it compatible with the large number of PC-based servers out there that have already been running 1.03 for some weeks now. HBO is running a list of mirrors for the patch. We've also put up our own mirror of the Mac Halo 1.03 Updater. This also means that the HBO-Subnova Halo PC server has also been upgraded to 1.03 once more, bringing back some of the stranger custom gametypes that were hosted on it earlier. Thanks to Frankie for the heads-up over on Bungie.net.
UPDATE: VersionTracker, a site that... well, tracks versions, if you're into that sort of thing, also has a page on the Halo 1.03 Update, and some users have put some quite negative comments on it about the update. This mainly has to do with requiring the CD in the drive to play the game, which is especially aggravating to laptop users (like myself) who don't like to carry a lot of CDs (or use up precious battery life) while on the move. Here's hoping that at least, once MacSoft is satisfied they've sold all the copies of Mac Halo that they're going to, they'll change their minds and remove this requirement in a later patch; currently the Read Me file states:
Previous versions of Halo did not require you to have a CD inserted to play the game. Unfortunately, due to heavy illegal online downloading of the software, this and all future versions of Halo will require a CD to play.
Sympathizing as I do with the all-too-logical desire to get paid for work you've done, I can understand how someone stealing your stuff can piss you off.
Banshee Ace over at Battleground: Halo has put up the first part of their Halo 2 Round Up, dealing with what they think may or may not end up being included in Halo 2; this one focuses mostly on vehicles and weapons. Thanks Rams.
[image:6662 left hspace=5 vspace=5 border=0]Everybody's new best friend, Frankie, has put up the first Halo 2 Weekly Update, and the first fansite to get the nod is (not surprisingly) HBO.
Okay, the results from the last poll are crystal clear: most of you either don't know or don't give a damn about kill-in-order slayer games. Which means it's time for a new poll.
[image:6655 left hspace=5 vspace=5 border=0]The 'net has been all abuzz of late about the so-called "release" of Half-Life 2 in parts of the former Soviet Union; it has been spotted for sale in Ukraine and Siberia. Most of these reports have drawn attention because Half-Life 2 is hotly anticipated, and because this game is not yet near an official release, and the source of these copies for sale is a leaked beta.
However, the average gamer may or may not be aware that piracy of computer software, music and movies isn't limited to Internet-based peer-to-peer schemes and shady chat rooms in CIS countries; it's right out there on apparently legitimate store shelves for everyone to see.
Case in point: Halo for the PC. Shortly after the release of PC Halo in the US (and long before we got our copies here at Rampancy, which arrived in a package with Mac Halo and First Strike) there were CDs on store shelves in former Soviet countries that purported to be Halo for the PC-- version 1.5, no less. (Perhaps that's where the rumors came from.) This applies not just to games, but operating systems, application suites like Microsoft Office, even enterprise level software like Oracle 8i.
The jewel case art itself is an interesting study; while the cover art appears to be based on screenshots from the shipping game, the back of the box features screens as old as E3 2000 and older.
Of course, trends are in place to reverse this state of affairs. Microsoft has opened representative offices in some (not all) former Soviet countries, and has been lobbying their governments to enact (and enforce) protection for intellectual property rights, as well as urging local computer resellers to cease practices like selling cracked copies of Microsoft operating systems and applications with new computers, or selling OEM copies over the counter that are clearly marked "for sale only with a new PC".
However, the real "gotcha" for anyone who plonked down hard currency (or its nearest equivalent) for "Halo 1.5" in any of the CIS countries-- and the going price is about two U.S. dollars-- is the system requirements. The only words in English on the back of the CD case are for the system requirements, and they read:
Pentium-2 233 Mhz, 64 MB RAM, 4 MB 3D Card
If anyone actually tried to play Halo on that system, that's almost punishment enough for warezing the game... almost.
In summary, piracy is something that affects not only Half-Life 2, or even just Halo-- but just about every piece of software you can imagine. And before anybody asks, no, I am not going to tell you exactly where you can get this. Buy Halo.
XboxAddict is going with a rumor that an Xbox 2 tech demo will be done at this year's E3 by Artoon, the developer of Blinx: The Timesweeper.
CNN Money has a post-resignation interview with Ed Fries that looks a bit more deeply than most about why Fries is leaving Microsoft just as details for the Xbox 2 and (hopefully) the release of Halo 2 are right around the corner:
Got a question about Halo 2? Yeah, yeah... who doesn't? Well, this is your chance to Ask Frankie through TeamXbox in advance of the Halo 2 Weekly Updates starting up.
And yes, we know this item is late, we're including it here for extra credit. It's either that, or head out back to clap more erasers.
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