Kamis, 20 Januari 2011

Met to release new NoW hacking files

• Police to release previously undisclosed records
• Details may put pressure on Andy Coulson
The scandal threatening to engulf the News of the World will intensify this week when the Metropolitan police hands over previously undisclosed documents relating to the hacking of celebrities' mobile phones while the paper was edited by Andy Coulson, David Cameron's communications director.
The documents are expected to trigger fresh allegations that phone hacking at the paper was extensive and not the work of 'one rogue reporter' as it has maintained. The fear for News International, the parent company of the News of the World, owned by Rupert Murdoch, is that the documents may contain the names of commissioning journalists.
Scotland Yard has until Wednesday to comply with a court order obliging it to provide lawyers representing the sports agent Skylet Andrew with material relating to the hacking of his phone which was recovered by police from the offices of Glenn Mulcaire, a private investigator in the pay of the newspaper.
Andrew, who represents Ashes hero James Anderson, the former England footballer Sol Campbell and the Stoke City player Jermaine Pennant, is one of the leading sports agents in the UK.
The imminent disclosure comes as the News of the World defends itself against a legal action brought by the actor Sienna Miller. Ian Edmondson, the News of the World assistant editor, has been suspended amid allegations he sanctioned the hacking of Miller's phones. His suspension triggered a request from Scotland Yard for the newspaper to share any new information it had on the scandal.
Disclosure of Andrew's files is viewed by lawyers as of equal significance to the Miller revelations. The documents relate to the original 2006 hacking case involving the interception of royal aides' phones that resulted in the jailing of Mulcaire and the paper's former royal editor and gossip columnist Clive Goodman. During the trial, Mulcaire also pleaded guilty to intercepting the phones of Andrew and four other high-profile figures.
At the time the News of the World denied knowing anything about this additional hacking which, along with Andrew, involved the supermodel Elle Macpherson, the MP Simon Hughes, the publicist Max Clifford, and the former head of the Professional Footballers' Association, Gordon Taylor.
Clifford, however, sued the newspaper, dropping his case only after accepting a reported £1m to settle out of court, a move that meant all the files taken from Mulcaire's office by the Met and disclosed to the publicist's legal team never made it into court. Taylor also settled for a substantial sum, a decision that again meant potentially damaging files never entered the public domain.
But Andrew has pursued a low-profile legal action, and the release of the Met's files relating to his case, which must also be shared with lawyers representing the News of the World, means the newspaper could yet be forced to defend itself in court.
Andrew's legal team will be keen to discover to what extent, if any, the files refer to Goodman, Edmondson, Greg Miskiw, the paper's former assistant editor, and its chief reporter, Neville Thurlbeck, who all face allegations they knew phone hacking was taking place. Rupert Murdoch, when questioned about the affair last year, said: 'There was one incident more than five years ago ... the person who bought the bugged conversation was immediately fired. If anything was to come to light, and we have challenged those people who have made allegations to provide evidence ... we would take immediate action.'
Coulson, who resigned as editor of the News of the World after Goodman and Mulcaire were sentenced, has denied knowing hacking was taking place on his watch. David Cameron has staunchly defended his director of communications. But investigations by the Guardian suggested phone hacking was widespread on the newspaper under Coulson.
News International faces questions about whether it will offer Edmondson a pay-off to leave the paper or whether it will itself take legal action against its senior employee. Further pressure on News International will come this week when a cross-party parliamentary committee again discusses the scandal. The Observer understands that in the past few days several more celebrities whose phones were also allegedly hacked, have signed up with law firms to bring actions against the newspaper.
Today a spokesman for News International said it had no comment. A spokeswoman for the News of the World also declined to speak.

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Nintendo’s 3DS handheld launch plans: 4M units to ship

Nintendo revealed this weekend that its 3DS handheld game player launch is on schedule, and it announced more details about its release plans.
The 3DS will go on sale first in Japan on Feb. 26. It debuts in the U.S. and Europe in March. For the Japanese market, Nintendo is targeting a $300 price and plans to ship around 1.5 million units there by the end of March. Worldwide, the company aims to ship 4 million units. The Kyoto, Japan-based company made the announcement at its Nintendo World conference in Japan.
The 3DS is Nintendo’s attempt to revive the handheld game industry, which has been pummeled by sales of Apple’s iPod Touch and iPhone devices, which feature good-quality games that are either free or sell for as little as 99 cents. Against this good-enough competition from smartphones and other general-purpose mobile entertainment devices, games-focused handheld makers like Nintendo have struggled.
The 3DS features stereoscopic 3D viewing without the need to wear special glasses and so represents one of the great hopes that consumers will embrace 3D viewing of both movies and games.
Ten games will be available at the launch in Japan. They include Nintendogs + Cats (three versions), Konami’s Winning Eleven 3DSoccer, Capcom’s Super Street Fighter IV, Tecmo Koei’s Samurai Warriors: Chronicle, Square Enix’s Tobidasu! Puzzle Bobble, Namco Bandai’s Ridge Racer 3D, Ubisoft’s Combat of Giants, and Level-5’s Professor Layton and the Mask of Miracle.
Nintendo said the portable device will have a battery life of 3.5 – 5 hours when playing games, depending on factors such as screen brightness and use of wireless. While playing DS or DSi games, the handheld will have a battery life of 5 to 8 hours. That’s pretty similar to the battery life for a DSi handheld. It will launch in Japan in two colors: Aqua Blue and Cosmo Black.

The device will come with a charging dock, an AC adapter, an extendable stylus, augmented-reality cards, and a 2 gigabyte SD memory card. Nintendo said it would launch its own first-party games. Steel Diver, Pilotwings Resort, and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D are set for the spring. Starfox 64 3D and Kid Icarus are coming in the summer; and Mario Kart 3DS, Animal Crossing 3DS, and Paper Mario 3DS will come after that. Nintendo is expected to announce its launch date for the 3DS on Jan. 19.
Nintendo recently warned that children six years and younger shouldn’t play the handheld in 3D mode because of potential health risks.
[pictured: Satoru Iwata, chief executive of Nintendo, announcing the 3DS last June]
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Bloody Hell

It feels lovely, getting to say stuff like “Recettear has sold 100,000 copies” and “Amnesia has sold 200,000 copies.” Those figures mean that small groups of people’s lives have changed, improved, had nice sofas and bigger TVs added to them. Truly, it warms the cockles of EARTH_MAMMAL_HUMAN_ORGAN_HEART.
Then Blizzard announce that they’ve sold 4.7 million copies of World of Warcraft: Cataclysm and you just think “God, that’s a lot of goblins.”

WoL Footage: Harris, Steenberg, Betts

So we already posted the Subversion wobblecam footage from last year’s big indie event, World Of Love, but now there’s much more from a bunch of other speakers. Almost certainly the most interesting of these is the talk by Cliff Harris, who speaks in plain terms about the practicalities of making a living from producing indie games. If you don’t have a cash-button formula like Minecraft then there’s still a lot of hard work to be done, and Cliffski lays that out with illegible Powerpoint slides and straight-talking. Really, this one is worth a watch.
There’s also some of Eskil Steenberg’s wizardry, and some thoughts about how to avoid retro visuals and look good in the 21st century from Tom “Nullpointer” Betts. Go take a look. Also, don’t forget the second World Of Love is up this month. More on that soon!

Exorcising Elder Scrolls’ Voice Issues?

24 years on and they still haven't resolved Flash Gordon's cliffhanger
I hadn’t heard that Max Von Sydow (him from the Exorcist, The Seventh Seal, er-ah-um Judge Dredd and the voice of Vigo in Ghostbusters 2) was voicing a major character in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Mixed feelings: I had this cynical concern that half the reason there were so many repeated, annoying and repeatedly annoying voices in Oblivion and Fallout 3 was because Bethesda blew all their actor budget on hiring Patrick Stewart and Liam Neeson respectively. I really don’t understand that kind of stunt-casting in games – you don’t see the guy, so the same promotional clout just doesn’t exist. Why not spend that money and complication on hiring a dozen great-but-cheap unknowns to better bring your world to multi-voiced life?
The honourable Mr Von Sydow, however, is much more of a character actor than a limelight-hogging celebrity type, and I suspect he’s a damn sight cheaper too.

3D PC Gaming Without Glasses

Of course it's a gag, numbnuts
Oh boy, this is such a relief: the technological revolution we’ve all been waiting for is here. All you need to see and play steroscopic 3D games on any PC is a 120 Mhz monitor and a tiny pair of non-obtrusive gizmos created by French inventor Francois Vogel. No more stupid plastic spectacles, no more colour-dimming polarised lenses. This is going to change gaming forever. This is going to change the world forever.
Sheer genius. You’ll see.

Never Forget: Infogrames’ Greatest Hit

This is very, very, very old. That doesn’t make it any less beautiful, or any less worth posting now. Infogrames: that’s our world.
Well, was our world. Consider this official promotional song from way back when a perfect eulogy for the artist later known as Atari.
Altogether now: “Unreal Tournament / Test Drive / Survivor / Civilization / Superman saaaaaaaaves the nation…” And that’s not all.

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