demo – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 22 Feb 2016 02:46:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png demo – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Let’s Get RAID | BSD Now 36 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/57037/lets-get-raid-bsd-now-36/ Fri, 09 May 2014 09:25:39 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=57037 This week on the show we\’ll be showing you how to set up RAID arrays in FreeBSD. There\’s also an interview with David Chisnall – of the FreeBSD core team – about the switch to Clang and a lot more. Sit back and enjoy some BSD Now – the place to B.. SD. Thanks to: […]

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This week on the show we\’ll be showing you how to set up RAID arrays in FreeBSD. There\’s also an interview with David Chisnall – of the FreeBSD core team – about the switch to Clang and a lot more.

Sit back and enjoy some BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Thanks to:


\"iXsystems\"


\"Tarsnap\"

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– Show Notes: –

Headlines

OpenBSD 5.5 released

  • If you ordered a CD set then you\’ve probably had it for a little while already, but OpenBSD has formally announced the public release of 5.5
  • This is one of the biggest releases to date, with a very long list of changes and improvements
  • Some of the highlights include: time_t being 64 bit on all platforms, release sets and binary packages being signed with the new signify tool, a new autoinstall feature of the installer, SMP support on Alpha, a new AViiON port, lots of new hardware drivers including newer NICs, the new vxlan driver, relayd improvements, a new pf queue system for bandwidth shaping, dhcpd and dhclient fixes, OpenSMTPD 5.4.2 and all its new features, position-independent executables being default for i386, the RNG has been replaced with ChaCha20 as well as some other security improvements, FUSE support, tmpfs, softraid partitions larger than 2TB and a RAID 5 implementation, OpenSSH 6.6 with all its new features and fixes… and a lot more
  • The full list of changes is HUGE, be sure to read through it all if you\’re interested in the details
  • If you\’re doing an upgrade from 5.4 instead of a fresh install, pay careful attention to the upgrade guide as there are some very specific steps for this version
  • Also be sure to apply the errata patches on your new installations… especially those OpenSSL ones (some of which still aren\’t fixed in the other BSDs yet)
  • On the topic of errata patches, the project is now going to also send them out (signed) via the announce mailing list, a very welcome change
  • Congrats to the whole team on this great release – 5.6 is going to be even more awesome with \”Libre\”SSL and lots of other stuff that\’s currently in development

FreeBSD foundation funding highlights

  • The FreeBSD foundation posts a new update on how they\’re spending the money that everyone donates
  • \”As we embark on our 15th year of serving the FreeBSD Project and community, we are proud of what we\’ve done to help FreeBSD become the most innovative, reliable, and high-performance operation system\”
  • During this spring, they want to highlight the new UEFI boot support and newcons
  • There\’s a lot of details about what exactly UEFI is and why we need it going forward
  • FreeBSD has also needed some updates to its console to support UTF8 and wide characters
  • Hopefully this series will continue and we\’ll get to see what other work is being sponsored

OpenSSH without OpenSSL

  • The OpenSSH team has been hard at work, making it even better, and now OpenSSL is completely optional
  • Since it won\’t have access to the primitives OpenSSL uses, there will be a trade-off of features vs. security
  • This version will drop support for legacy SSH v1, and the only two cryptographic algorithms supported are an in-house implementation of AES (in counter mode) and the new combination of the Chacha20 stream cipher with Poly1305 for packet integrity
  • Key exchange is limited to elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman and the newer Curve25519 KEXs
  • No support for RSA, DSA or ECDSA public keys – only Ed25519
  • It also includes a new buffer API and a set of wrappers to make it compatible with the existing API
  • Believe it or not, this was planned before all the heartbleed craziness
  • Maybe someday soon we\’ll have a mini-openssh-portable in FreeBSD ports and NetBSD pkgsrc… would be really cool

BSDMag\’s April 2014 issue is out

  • The free monthly BSD magazine has got a new issue available for download
  • This time the articles include: pascal on BSD, an introduction to revision control systems and configuration management, deploying NetBSD on AWS EC2, more GIMP tutorials, an AsiaBSDCon 2014 report and a piece about how easily credit cards are stolen online
  • Anyone can contribute to the magazine, just send the editors an email about what you want to write
  • No Linux articles this time around

Interview – David Chisnall – theraven@freebsd.org

The LLVM/Clang switch, FreeBSD\’s core team, various topics


Tutorial

RAID in FreeBSD and OpenBSD


News Roundup

BSDTalk episode 240

  • The original BSD podcaster Will Backman has uploaded a new episode of BSDTalk, this time with our other buddy GNN as the guest – mainly to talk about NTP and keeping reliable time
  • Topics include the specific details of crystals used in watches and computers to keep time, how temperature affects the quality, different sources of inaccuracy, some general NTP information, why you might want extremely precise time, different time sources (GPS, satellite, etc), differences in stratum levels, the problem of packet delay and estimating the round trip time, some of the recent NTP amplification attacks, the downsides to using UDP instead of TCP and… much more
  • GNN also talks a little about the Precision Time Protocol and how it\’s different than NTP
  • Two people we\’ve interviewed talking to each other, awesome
  • If you\’re interested in NTP, be sure to see our tutorial too

m2k14 trip reports

  • We\’ve got a few more reports from the recent OpenBSD hackathon in Morocco
  • The first one is from Antoine Jacoutot (who is a key GNOME porter, and gave us the screenshots for the OpenBSD desktop tutorial)
  • \”Since I always fail at actually doing whatever I have planned for a hackathon, this time I decided to come to m2k14 unprepared about what I was going to do\”
  • He got lots of work done with ports and pushing GNOME-related patches back up to the main project, then worked on fixing ports\’ compatibility with LibreSSL
  • Speaking of LibreSSL, there\’s an article all would-be portable version writers should probably read and take into consideration
  • Jasper Adriaanse also writes about what he got done over there
  • He cleaned up and fixed the puppet port to work better with OpenBSD

Why you should use FreeBSD on your cloud VPS

  • Here we have a blog post from Atlantic, a VPS and hosting provider, about 10 reasons for using FreeBSD
  • Starts off with a little bit of BSD history for those who are unfamiliar with it and only know Linux and Windows
  • (Spoiler) the 10 reasons are: community, stability, collaboration, ease of use, ports, security, ZFS, GEOM, sound and having lots of options
  • The post goes into detail about each of them and why FreeBSD makes a great choice for a VPS OS

PCBSD weekly digest

  • Big changes coming in the way PCBSD manages software
  • The PBI system, AppCafe and related tools are all going to use pkgng now
  • The AppCafe will no longer be limited to PBIs, so much more software will be easily available from the ports tree
  • New rating system coming soon and much more

Feedback/Questions


  • All the tutorials are posted in their entirety at bsdnow.tv
  • The Tor and mailing list tutorials have gotten some fixes and updates
  • The OpenBSD router tutorial has also gotten a bit of a makeover, and now includes new scripts for 5.5 and signify
  • Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
  • If you\’ve got something cool to talk about and want to come on for an interview, shoot us an email
  • If any listeners have a collection of old FreeBSD or OpenBSD CDs, we\’d love for you to send in a picture of the whole set together so we can show it off
  • Watch live Wednesdays at 2:00PM Eastern (18:00 UTC)
  • We will be at BSDCan next week – be sure to say hi if you run into us!

The post Let's Get RAID | BSD Now 36 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Steam Streaming Showcased | LAS s30e07 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/50352/steam-streaming-showcased-las-s30e07/ Sun, 26 Jan 2014 14:38:21 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=50352 In-Home Streaming hit beta this week and it’s a breakthrough technology that changes the game for desktop Linux forever. And its not just limited to games.

The post Steam Streaming Showcased | LAS s30e07 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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In-Home Streaming hit beta this week and it’s a breakthrough technology that changes the game for desktop Linux forever. Not just limited to games, Steam’s In-Home streaming can deliver entire applications. We’ll demo the power and possibilities of this new tech.

Plus: The new big feature in the Linux kernel everyones talking about, a roundup of upcoming Linux community events…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

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GoDaddy


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— Show Notes: —

Steam Streaming Revealed:


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How do you get it?

Requirements

  • A machine powerful enough on the “server” side to play the game, and encode it.
  • A machine on the client side powerful enough to decode whatever the resolution of video is it will be receiving (resolution is set to the servers screen size).
  • About 3MB/s sustained transfer. That might be trickier than you think over Wifi.

Game Streaming

  • Games installed on Windows box show up in my Library

  • Game install status is displayed on the Linux steam client while the Windows box is installing.

  • I was able to stream Dust from Linux to my Windows box.

  • When the game you are streaming is running for the first time on the host Windows box, and the DirectX reds is getting installed, Steam will inform you that the remote system is running first time setups on the remote box.

  • UAC will break this process at this time.

  • Steam In-Home Streaming Beta Demonstration

Non-Steam Application Streaming

In this latest instance, they’ve updated the Steam client beta’s in-home streaming functionality to support “streaming non-Steam games in the Steam library”. That means, whether they’re part of Steam or not, you’ll be able to beam your most powerful games between local area network PCs. Even Minesweeper.

  • You might lose title bars.
  • If you’re tricky enough you can get to the full Windows desktop.
  • Everything is full screen. Loading boxes, new windows, etc.

Notes

Resources


– Picks –

Runs Linux:

Desktop App Pick

bro pages are a highly readable supplement to man pages
bro pages show concise, common-case examples for Unix commands

Weekly Spotlight


— NEWS —

Linux 3.13 is out bringing among other thing the first official release of nftables. nftables is the project that aims to replace the existing {ip,ip6,arp,eb}tables framework aka iptables. nftables version in Linux 3.13 is not yet complete. Some important features are missing and will be introduced in the following Linux versions. It is already usable in most cases but a complete support (read nftables at a better level than iptables) should be available in Linux 3.15.

The SteamOS non-UEFI / legacy BIOS support is derived from the community’s “Ye Olde SteamOSe” distribution fork. With this SteamOS Beta update, dual-boot and custom partitioning are also possible via the SteamOS installer’s “expert install” mode.

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The post Steam Streaming Showcased | LAS s30e07 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> DiskStation vs FreeNAS | LAS s29e03 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/44992/diskstation-vs-freenas-las-s29e03/ Sun, 20 Oct 2013 14:43:03 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=44992 Synology’s Linux powered DS412+ is a powerful server, wrapped in a compact near silent enclosure. How does this compare to a FreeNAS server you could build?

The post DiskStation vs FreeNAS | LAS s29e03 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Synology’s Linux powered DS412+ is a powerful server, wrapped in a ultra compact near silent enclosure. How does this unit stack up to a FreeNAS server you could build? Is the lack of ZFS support a hindrance? Our answers might surprise you.

Plus: Did Mark Shuttleworth shift the tone of the community dialog by labeling his opposition the open source Tea Party? It’s our blow-by-blow guide to the big stink over the weekend, that we will be smelling for weeks….

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:


GoDaddy


Ting

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Synology DS412+ Review


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Check out System76 on G+

  • Linux 3.2.40

  • 1GB DDR 3

  • Intel(R) Atom(TM) CPU D2701 @ 2.13GHz

  • 205.68 MB/sec Reading, 182.66 MB/sec Writing (with link aggregation enabled)

  • 2 LAN with Failover and Link Aggregation Support

  • USB 3.0

  • eSATA

  • CPU Passive Cooling

  • Windows® ADS and ACL Support

  • iSCSI support provides a seamless storage solution for virtualization servers

  • 44 watts power consumption in operation

  • CIFS, AFP, FTP, iSCSI, Telnet, SSH, NFS, SNMP, WebDAV, CalDAV

  • File Systems:

  • EXT4
    • EXT3 (External Disk Only)
    • FAT (External Disk Only)
  • NTFS (External Disk Read Only)

The Synology Hybrid RAID (SHR) automatically builds an optimal RAID
volume with data protection based on the hard drives installed, eliminating
the need to have hard drives of identical

[asa]B008U68UHG[/asa]
[asa]B007JLE84C[/asa]


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Git yours hands all over our STUFF:


— NEWS —

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The post DiskStation vs FreeNAS | LAS s29e03 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> ZoneMinder Review | LAS s28e10 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/43787/zoneminder-review-las-s28e10/ Sun, 29 Sep 2013 14:00:30 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=43787 Matt demos his ZoneMinder setup, powered by consumer IP cams running on his Ubuntu home server.

The post ZoneMinder Review | LAS s28e10 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Matt demos his ZoneMinder setup, powered by consumer IP cams running on his Ubuntu home server. We’ll cover the exciting news for ZoneMinder, and how to get up and running quickly.

Plus: We dig into the Steam news of the week, then a fresh look at the interesting future of Gnome…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:


GoDaddy


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— Show Notes: —

ZoneMinder: Linux Powered Video Surveillance


System76

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Check out System76 on G+

A puppet module to completely install ZoneMinder 1.26.0-beta.1 from source.
The ZoneMinder source is patched with mastertheknife’s performance patch.
After running this module, you will have a working ZoneMinder 1.26.0-beta.1 install.

Zoneminder install for Raspberry Pi running Raspbian


The budget IP camera with some great features:
[asa]B006ZP8UOW[/asa]

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— NEWS —

SteamOS combines the rock-solid architecture of Linux with a gaming experience built for the big screen.
It will be available soon as a free stand-alone operating system for living room machines.

We’re conducting a beta of the overall Steam living-room experience, so we needed to build prototype hardware on which to run tests. At Valve we always rely on real-world testing as part of our design process. The specific machine we’re testing is designed for users who want the most control possible over their hardware. Other boxes will optimize for size, price, quietness, or other factors.

We realized early on that our goals required a new kind of input technology — one that could bridge the gap from the desk to the living room without compromises. So we spent a year experimenting with new approaches to input and we now believe we’ve arrived at something worth sharing and testing with you.

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  • Matt’s Birthday – a huge thank you
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The post ZoneMinder Review | LAS s28e10 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> MIR Problems | LAS s27e08 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/39982/mir-problems-las-s27e08/ Sun, 07 Jul 2013 15:23:50 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=39982 Wayland and Mir are now under heavy development, but the community seems more divided than ever. We’ll explain why the developers want to replace X11 so badly.

The post MIR Problems | LAS s27e08 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Wayland and Mir are now under heavy development, but the community seems more divided than ever. We’ll explain why the developers want to replace X11 so badly, the big challenges facing Mir, and the long term division that desktop Linux is facing.

Plus our quick review of Fedora 19, the solar powered Linux laptop generating so much buzz…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

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Use our code linux249 to score .COM for just $2.49!

Free Private Registration with your .COM just use our code free3 until the end of the month!

 

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— Show Notes: —

Mir: First Hands On


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Hands on experiences:

  • Intel driver works best. Nouveau will work, but it failed on me fast.
  • ATI oss driver was a no go. Gave me crazy results.
  • Installing a proprietary driver automatically reverts you to standard X via Xmir’s pre-flight checks.
  • Double mouse cursor – A result of the fact that all Mir is doing is providing a single full screen texture within which an x11 session is doing all the work. Which means Mir is doing nothing beyond the frame, for all intents and purposes.

More on Mir:


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This tumblr contains the Linux app picks from the Linux Action Show. Both the Linux apps and the Android apps

Git yours hands all over our STUFF:


— NEWS —

GAAAAAMMES:

— /etc: Fedora 19 Review —


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The post MIR Problems | LAS s27e08 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> Docker: Containers Made Easy | LAS s27e01 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/37396/docker-containers-made-easy-las-s27e01/ Sun, 19 May 2013 13:27:09 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=37396 Linux Containers offer functionally similar to FreeBSD’s Jails and OpenVZ, but have remained mostly outside the reach for casual users. Today we’ll show you how Docker can get you up and running with some of the most powerful technology available for Linux today, in minutes. Then – We run down the big distro releases, debate […]

The post Docker: Containers Made Easy | LAS s27e01 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Linux Containers offer functionally similar to FreeBSD’s Jails and OpenVZ, but have remained mostly outside the reach for casual users. Today we’ll show you how Docker can get you up and running with some of the most powerful technology available for Linux today, in minutes.

Then – We run down the big distro releases, debate of Ubuntu is the OS X of Linux, answer some of your great question…

AND SO MUCH MORE!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

Thanks to:

Use our code linux249 to score .COM for just $2.49!

32% off your ENTIRE order just use our code go32off2 until the end of the month!

 

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— Show Notes: —

Docker:


System76

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Docker is an open-source engine which automates the deployment of applications as highly portable, self-sufficient containers which are independent of hardware, language, framework, packaging system and hosting provider.

Docker is an open-source implementation of the deployment engine which powers dotCloud, a popular Platform-as-a-Service.

At PyCon Solomon Hykes shows docker to the public for the first time.

You can simply install a vncserver along with firefox 🙂

Share your experiences, thoughts, questions, etc about Linux Containers and we’ll work some of it into tomorrow’s BIG show!

LXC is the userspace control package for Linux Containers, a lightweight virtual system mechanism sometimes described as “chroot on steroids”.

LXC builds up from chroot to implement complete virtual systems, adding resource management and isolation mechanisms to Linux’s existing process management infrastructure.

The LXC package combines these Linux kernel mechanisms to provide a userspace container object, a lightweight virtual system with full resource isolation and resource control for an application or a system.


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Freeciv-web can be played online using a desktop computer, mobile phone or tablet. Freeciv-web has been optimized for the iPhone 5 on mobile and modern HTML5 browsers such as Chrome and Firefox.

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— NEWS —

— /etc: Howto Install Docker —


Untangle

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Ubuntu Raring already comes with the 3.8 kernel, so we don’t need to install it. However, not all systems have AUFS filesystem support enabled, so we need to install it.

Docker is available as a Ubuntu PPA (Personal Package Archive), hosted on launchpad which makes installing Docker on Ubuntu very easy.

Please note this is a community contributed installation path.

Installing on Arch Linux is not officially supported but can be handled via
either of the following AUR packages

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The post Docker: Containers Made Easy | LAS s27e01 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> GamesCom 2011 | MMOrgue 14 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/11522/gamescom-2011-mmorgue-14/ Fri, 26 Aug 2011 20:52:02 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=11522 This week focuses on the biggest MMO stories that filtered out of GamesCom 2011. We start with the most impressive showing, which came from Guild Wars 2!

The post GamesCom 2011 | MMOrgue 14 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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This week’s episode focuses on the biggest MMO stories that filtered out of GamesCom 2011.

The most impressive showing came from Guild Wars 2, which featured new playable demos showing off their dynamic event system, character customization, new playable races and classes, crafting, and PvP battlegrounds.

Besides GW2 however, also came Star Wars: The Old Republic, showing off a brand new twist on PvP battlegrounds, in the form of a bloodsport called Huttball.

Before we review either of those exciting new features however, we pull the lid off NCSoft and Carbine Studios’ newly announced MMORPG – Wildstar. We’ll tell you why this one is worth keeping an eye on, and why Carbine has a big job ahead of them to compete in the modern MMO market.

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Show Notes:

Welcome back to the MMOrgue!

Where we take gaming to the next… LEVEL… see what I did there?

/T-Shirt:/ “Pwn Depot”
Available at
Glitch Gaming Apparel

Last week’s Best of MMO Music episode has been receiving some great responses so far. If you haven’t had a chance to check it out, I like to think it’s worth a watch. Also be sure to check that episode’s show notes for so much more music!

GamesCom hit the industry like a massive tidal wave of awesome this past week. The convention itself saw record attendance of more than 275,000 gamers, and even exceeded the location’s maximum safety capacity at least once, causing the main entrances to be temporarily closed off. Rest assured that next year’s will be even bigger, but GamesCom organizers are already talking about finding a bigger/better location to hold it.

Now, let’s talk a little bit about the games that were shown off at the convention…

The Old Republic was, obviously, present at GamesCom, although their presence was underwhelming compared to their showing at ComicCon. Their big announcement came in the form of a new PvP gameplay experience known as Huttball, which I’ll spend some time discussing later in today’s episode.

As far as the MMO world is concerned, Guild Wars 2 has walked away as the big “winner” of the floor at this year’s GamesCom. The sheer volume of awesome videos, gameplay, feature walkthrus and other newsy bits that’ve come out of ArenaNet over the past week has been astounding, and I’ll be dedicating an entire segment of today’s show to some of those juicy tidbits.

Today’s topics are by no means going to make up the entirety of all of the incredible MMO news that filtered out of GamesCom over the past several days, but I simply don’t have enough time in this episode to cover everything that was shared with us, or announced. Check our show notes for a extra round-up of other newsworthy links and coverage, including:

The reveal that has garnered the most attention from MMO gamers over the past week seems to be WildStar – the new MMORPG from Carbine Studios that was recently teased in the “announcement of an announcement” by NCSoft that I spoke of a few episodes back. Although the game is still very much in its infancy, Carbine already had a complete gameplay experience ready to put into the hands of gamers, and we’ll be digging into some of those details a bit later on.

Wildstar

Carbine Studio’s new MMO offering landed on the scene in a big way, offering not just an announcement and trailer, but actual hands-on demo time for con-goers at GamesCom.
In light of the hype currently built around other upcoming titles like TOR and GW2, this was an absolute necessity in order to get any sort of coverage or attention right out of the gate.

As you may recall, Carbine’s original announcement of this game included the fact that this game is designed to “learn” from players’ choices, and adapt to how they want to play the game. In the demo offered at GamesCom, we began to see the first of what we’re told will be many layers, of just how this works. And it comes down to story.

The game is a blend of sci-fi and fantasy elements, showing off technology and magic living in harmony with one another, while the art style and animations are vaguely reminiscient of Titan AE and classic-era Disney, with touches of modern anime and stylistic flourishes everywhere. Despite being visually appealing, I have to admit that compared to other modern offerings like GW2 and Secret World, it looks dated. Not much better than the graphics offered by World of Warcraft or Forsaken World. That said, graphics aren’t everything, and this game’s devils are in the details.

When first introduced to Wildstar, you have crash-landed on a strange alien world. When creating your character, you get to not only choose your race and class from a selection that includes humans, rock monsters and bunny-people, but you are also asked why it is that you are on the planet to begin with. Were you exploring? Conquering? Studying? Colonizing? These choices will lead the game to offer a different advancement path and plotline, compared to the choices that another player may make, and successive choices are said to further specialize the game content as you continue to progress.

Already, folks are throwing around comparisons to Tabula Rasa, for a few obvious reasons. The most obvious comparison is the blend of tech and magic in the world, but perhaps more telling is that Carbine Studios’ developers are what many in the business would term a “dream team.” As some of you may recall, the same claim was made of the Tabula Rasa team back in the day, and turned out to be one of the major downfalls of that title’s development cycle. Too many “chefs” and not enough “cooks.” Carbine’s staff includes the former lead developer of WoW, the co-founder of Troika Games, and the co-founder of Turbine, as well as several other experienced and respected names in MMO gaming. This SOUNDS like it’s a very good thing for a game, but remember that Tabula Rasa (which was also under the direction of NCSoft, same as this title) ended up having to be redesigned from the ground-up several years into the development cycle because of creative disagreements among high-profile “rockstar” developers. Let’s hope that Wildstar doesn’t suffer from the same speed bumps.

I’ll be getting my own hands-on demo of Wildstar at PAX, so look for more to come on this potentially innovative gameplay experience.

Links:

Old Republic: HUTTBALL

I get the impression that The Old Republic has reached critical mass. Over the past month or so, we’ve seen very little announced in the way of new features, and most of the gameplay now available around the web is starting to feel a bit same-ey in terms of visuals. That’s not say I don’t wanna get my grubby little hands all OVER this hot mess, just that there seems to be very little else that Bioware can release that’s going to get me even MORE excited.

At least, that’s how I felt until I saw Huttball.
Introducing… HUTTBALL

So, at it’s core, it’s really just a variant on Capture the Flag, with a little football thrown in the mix for good measure. As well as some acid pits and flaming death traps. All good fun until somebody loses a limb, and then it’s HILARIOUS.

They’ve told us already that the teams will not follow the strict Republic vs. Empire party lines, and if the announcer from the trailer makes it into the game, you can bet there will be as many laughs as frags on the Huttball courts.

The concept of a steady stream of repeatable sports games is much more palatable to me personally, than an endless stream of “battleground” PvP matches, in terms of overall game lore. I mean, how did running a flag back and forth across Warsong Gultch really help the Horde’s war efforts against the Night Elves? At least in Huttball, we’re seeing something that can actually fit into the environment of the game, and make sense to a larger narrative. Even if the sense it makes is that it can be completely ignored and discarded by anyone not wishing to participate.

As with any feature announcement, there’s been a small amount of hubbub raised on TOR’s internal forums about whether or not it suits the game world, and a not-tiny contingent of pro-Jedi gamers have voiced their concern about having their favorite neon-swinging zen masters participate in what amounts to a bloodsport.

To them, I’d like to say first – Maybe the Jedi are simply out to prevent the Sith from gaining a positive public image as sports celebrities? I mean, think of the impact such celebrity status could’ve had for Darth Maul. Commercials, Wheaties boxes, merchandising contracts. These could lead to impressionable minds being swayed to the Dark Side!

Secondly, and more importantly – lighten up a little, guys. It’s a game, and Huttball looks like a ridiculous amount of fun that is likely to get even stalwart non-fans of PvP like myself, involved in the bloody game of bashing in my fellow players’ heads in a whole new way.

Guild Wars 2

Character Customization:

What is currently in the game, I find underwhelming. Compared to other “next-gen” character customization, as seen in APB and Eve, the customization in GW2 is fairly lacking. For the most part, it consists of choosing from presets of existing choices, plus a few tweaks available for individual pieces.

Given the amount of focus that ArenaNet places on art assets and visual impressiveness, what we’ve seen so far of customization is sorely lacking. It doesn’t live up to their established reputation as makers of beautiful games, or makers of innovative games.

We’re quite a ways from launch, though. This could easily improve dramatically between now and then.

Crafting System:

It’s rare in the MMO industry for a crafting system to get me excited, but GW2 has a few unique things going for it that have me looking forward to staring at a crafting UI for hours on end…

2 at a time, but can max them all
Must be a cost for swapping, or no point in limiting to 2
When you swap, you are back at the level you left off at, with all your discoveries intact

Discovery system allows you to learn new recipes through experimentation (or reading them from a wiki online, you lazy gamer you.)
It looks as though discovering a recipe rewards you with more xp than crafting it alone, leading to crafters using this system on a regular basis (even after all recipes are discovered and catalogued on wiki sites).

The look of crafted items will generally be more distinct than the loot that drops in the world.

Skill gains are steady and xp-based, happen regardless of what you’re crafting. No guesswork in leveling up.

Guild Wars Battle of Kyhlo
  • https://www.arena.net/blog/making-the-battle-of-kyhlo
  • https://www.arena.net/blog/the-battle-of-khylo-jonathan-sharp-on-pvp

The post GamesCom 2011 | MMOrgue 14 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> EA Plans to Charge for Demos? | LOTSO4 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/1764/ea-plans-to-charge-for-demos-legend-of-the-stoned-owl-4/ Sun, 28 Mar 2010 07:51:24 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=1764 We discuss the future direction of the Xbox 360 in light of the 360 Slim and external storage feature rumors, & cover EA's possible plans to charge for demos. Plus a full look at God of War III and why it just might be one of the best games of all time!

The post EA Plans to Charge for Demos? | LOTSO4 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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We discuss the future direction of the Xbox 360 in light of the 360 Slim and external storage feature rumors, & cover EA’s possible plans to charge for demos. Plus a full look at God of War III and why it just might be one of the best games of all time!

THEN – We take on the current state of Nintendo, what we once saw as a leader of the pack bringing some of the most innovative a fun games to the market – but have they just become a gimmick? A non-gamers system? Or maybe they’ve always been like that and we out grew their target market? We discuss that and much much more on this week’s Legend of the Stoned Owl!

Grab one of LOTSO’s feeds to get the show when its released:

This week’s show links:

XBox Slim Rumor
XBox Getting USB Storage?
2k being accused of dlc already being on the disc.

The post EA Plans to Charge for Demos? | LOTSO4 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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