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August 29, 2008 3:16 PM PDT

Poll: Gamer's bill of rights--is it necessary?

by Erica Ogg
  • 5 comments

News.com Poll

Life, liberty, and pwnage
Do gamers really need a bill of rights?

Definitely! I'm sick of being screwed by the game industry.
Sounds reasonable in theory, but it needs some tweaks.
Absolutely not. Can you say "ridiculous"?



View results

I don't know. Something about framing the purchase and playing of video games in the same light as the practice of religion, defending one's property, and attaining redress from one's government strikes me as a tad overly dramatic.

On the other hand, I get it: gaming is serious business. Like, to the tune of almost $10 billion a year, according to the Entertainment Software Association.

And like any industry, consumers have come to expect a certain level of service. That's why two game developers compiled a list of 10 "rights" PC gamers have. The intention is to have the industry adopt it as a set of principals.

The list from Stardock and Gas Powered Games says things like PC gamers shall have the right "to return games that don't work with their computers for a full refund," "to demand that games be released in a finished state," and "to expect meaningful updates after a game's release."

So, what do you think? Let us know in our poll.

May 22, 2007 5:36 AM PDT

Dell updates its highest-end XPS system

by Rich Brown
  • 3 comments

Dell's XPS gets an impressive spec update.

(Credit: Dell)

We've given Dell a hard time in the past for not keeping its alleged gaming rigs up to date, but the new XPS 720 H2C looks once again like the real deal. We say "once again" because the original 710 model won an Editors' Choice award back in January. With this new version, Dell addressed many of the complaints we had about the first model, and even expanded on some features. We don't want to crown anything before getting our hands on it, but on paper the 720 looks tough to beat. It costs $6,000 (with a 24-inch wide-screen LCD), so if there's a downside, it's that you can't afford it.

The specs get most of the updates we'd expect. Dell moves to the Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6800 quad-core CPU, offering a factory overclock to an ambitious 3.73GHz. Dell has also moved to Nvidia's NForce 680i SLI motherboard. Whether that's the "(D)", with a few altered features, we don't yet know, but it appears to have finally embraced Corsair's Dominator EPP RAM, which gives you an auto-overclock boost to 1,066MHz, up from its standard 800MHz. You only get 2GB with this model, though, whereas the 710 gave you 4GB. Perhaps Dell skimped on the memory because it has also added two of Nvidia's ridiculously expensive GeForce 8800 Ultra cards. Because it's so entrenched with Nvidia's board tech, we're not exactly sure that Dell would have made the move to those new ATI Radeon HD 2900 cards, even if they had proven faster, but in this case it doesn't seem to have hurt anything for staying with GeForce.

Finally, it appears that Dell has borrowed some tech from its Alienware subsidiary (aka "Dell South Beach," from what we've heard) by expanding the case-lighting software to the extent that you can "create unique lighting scenarios that match specific game activities such as breathing or heartbeat," according to the Dell press release. We might rather the new LightFX software give you more practical capabilities, like the Alienware systems that can use the lights to alert you of new e-mail and such. And who knows, it might let you do that. We're actually meeting with Dell representatives today, so we'll be sure to ask them.

October 24, 2006 9:39 AM PDT

Help save your kids from technology

by Mike Yamamoto
  • Post a comment

If you don't have kids, this might seem like a waste of money. But many of us at Crave are the bearers of rug rats who, like most others of their ilk, would like nothing better than to watch TV or play video games until their eyeballs melt.

The new Bob

So we'll be giving serious consideration to purchasing the Bob, a time management device designed to help keep your offspring from contributing to the swelling ranks of childhood obesity. Many TV sets already have a sleep timer that will shut it off at a designated hour, but it's usually buried deep behind some remote button we're afraid to touch. The Bob seems a lot easier to work (and find), and Shiny Shiny says it can be used on computers and game consoles too.

The only drawback we can see is its name, which may forever have a negative connotation for any digital product, thanks to Microsoft.

(Photo: Hopscotch Technology)

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