Skyward Fire

Tag: technology

Wrong Crowd?

by skywardfire on Jan.17, 2010, under Entertainment, Industry, games

Until a year ago, I never understood the success of Nintendo Wii. I always thought it was the best selling console with the worst line up of the videogames history, and so did many others across the world. I refused to agree with NPD numbers, and so did many PS360 owners everywhere. But then again, I’m not a kid, I’m no mother with a child, I’m no grandparent with grandkids, I’m no aunt or uncle with nieces or nephews, and neither am I a casual gamer. And quite a marginal number of gamers who might be reading this article won’t consider themselves casual gamers either, so it’s safe for me to make that statement.


For the gift giving crowd, the Wii is by far the best console amongst the basic three to choose from. Especially with it’s line-up of fitness games, it’s also by far the best console for the holiday season with many women looking to work off all that food they eat during the holiday season. January’s NPD very much reflects what the sales figures were like for the Nintendo Wii and the games lined up for the same over the stretch of the holiday season in 2009. We’re talking about games that are family and party friendly, unlike what we usually have for the PC, the PS3, and the Xbox 360.

The lack of games that more gamer oriented (‘hardcore’, as some might put it as) people would find attractive is also a reason for the kind of stereotype that the Wii has become. Wii is no longer a fad, and is going to continue to sell more units inline with X360 and PS3 going forward. One month out of the year doesn’t diminish in anyway the trend that was established over the course of the whole year.

That said, this isn’t to say it won’t continue to outsell the HD consoles month to month, but it probably won’t dominate sales month to month as it did in past years. And it will also continue to dominate December sales figures until we move onto the next generation of videogame consoles.

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Project Natal

by skywardfire on Jun.02, 2009, under Industry, games

xbox 360 goodness by somberguy

xbox 360 goodness by somberguy

For masses, E3 2009 started off with a bang set forth by the Microsoft keynote, the two biggest announcements of the same were Project Natal, and Metal Gear Solid coming to the Xbox 360. Project Natal is Microsoft’s very own Full Body 3D Motion Detection technology, that uses a 3D camera, and the SDK currently seems to support face recognition, voice recognition and fully body motion scanning in real-time. Project Natal is something straight out of what you might have seen in Minority Report, and the possibilities with this are endless. Check out the Keynote preview below.

The demo at the Keynote showed immense accuracy, specially while reading the limbs. But I have some major doubts regarding the same in my mind, which I’m sure the folks behind this are madly working to fix, most important of which is bringing down the manufacturing costs. Considering the fact that this is supposed to work with finger movement detection & detection of facial expressions of many people at the same time, the resolution and the processing capability needs to be massive. Come to think of it, finger detection is needs intense precision, and is very highly unlikely, at least for the time being.

Although, it’s just too early for this to hit the streets. With proper software backing, more hardware improvement & add-ons, and as mentioned before, bringing down the costs have a long way to go. For now, one can only say that demoing Project Natal was more of a marketing move. Being given the chance of opening up gaming’s most celebrated public events, Microsoft just had to overshadow competition, and build excitement & expectations that will be carried forward to E3 2010. And they’ve successfully done that. Gizmodo has a great gallery of the entire demonstration and a detailed report available here.

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The Haunted Train Disco

by skywardfire on May.07, 2009, under Politics

In my previous post, I discussed why the procedure for elections in India needs a major overhaul. Now, I’m going to share my views on how that can be done. A few days ago, in a conversation with @abhishekkant, we were shedding light on the same exact agenda. We came to a conclusion that there has to separate ways of looking at the voter crowd – urban & rural. Implementation of technology and live information sharing on a larger scale is a necessity of the recent times amongst the urban voter crowd. Obviously, the techniques we’ll want to work out for the urban and sub-urban voter crowd would be completely different. But just working out a proper layout for the procedure specifically for the urban crowd would boost the outcome percentage from disgusting figures like 18%, 40% and 53% to something marginally larger.

The process for registration of voters and then consequently, voting, has to be made easier. Not just the reason being for the same as it would make things easier for everyone, but also the fact that it can be done and it’ll work in everyone’s favor in more ways than we can think off. That is exactly why you have more people voting in to stupid reality shows than in the Government’s elections. You don’t have to stand in the sun, you don’t have to bother about getting shot, you don’t have to do all the senseless thinking about where you’re supposed to go vote, or you don’t have to physically travel somewhere to find out whether you have your name on the voter’s list, and registering as a fresh voter would be a breeze too. The thing about using online services in India, even in the 21st century, is that, be it banking or paying your taxes, or booking train tickets, or something related to Government operations, is that no matter how much you think your work will be done online with ease – at some point of time, you’ll have to involve yourself physically and directly. The reason for the same is cited as security issues. There is the fact that to get things done without a security hitch, you’ll have to get involved personally. Is there a way out of it? Of course. If you’re using the optimum methodology, and gold-standard tools, it’s not so difficult after all.

The following steps can be taken to make the process of voting easier and convenient for those in cities and towns.

  • Digital profiling of everyone over the age of 18 providing them with some kind of an identification. PAN cards can be expanded, and made more detailed. There’s no need of any other format. The PAN card, like any ordinary debit card, can contain all required information of the particular person, and it can be used at multiple channels as a source of identification including but not limited to just the elections. When it comes to costs for making sophisticated PAN cards on a massive scale, I’m sure many of our undeserving politicos can live without carcades with a dozen vehicles and personal security that they get from the tax payers’ money. It’s high time our taxes were put to better use.
  • The PAN card part deserves another mention in the process of it’s initial registration process. In various cases, PAN cards can be made by forged support documents and voter count can be faked. The one and only way of tackling that is shelling out corruption, and making the whole process of registration more automatic, thus lowering the possibility of human interference where it’s not needed.
  • Conducting the elections on the same day everywhere.
  • Using specially designed computers instead of electronic voting machines that are connected to a single national server which will store the votes once casted instantly no matter where it is being done, and then keeping count and providing live feed of the preliminary results consistently, keeping the whole thing as transparent as possible. Such computers can also provide real time video help to those who need it, and with a camera on the computer, the voters can be kept under scrutiny and also, a voter support channel will remain open to help anyone who needs it.
  • Those based abroad with dual citizenships can be asked to register themselves at the embassies in the countries they are currently residing at a month before elections, so that they will be allotted a username and a password, that they can use on an NRI voting portal on their own computers at home or at work and cast their votes without having to come back to their constituencies in India. The same can work for those who’re in India and aren’t sure they will be able to go to the kiosk to vote on the day of the election.
  • The election commission should maintain a proper and very detailed & transparent database of everyone who’s contesting the elections, and make it a high priority deal to ensure that it’s publically available to everyone who needs to know about their would-be leaders. Even though the same is done to some extent right now by NGOs, it is not enough. For example, everyone knows the reality behind the facts and figures on the personal financial profile that these contestants give out to the election commission. Rigorous reviews of the same needs to be done with a constant vigilance.

I’m sure that the aforementioned points, if thought upon by the authorities and the details worked out well enough, would smoothen up the process and motivate more and more people to vote and give them a chance to sincerely involve themselves in the enrichment of the country’s democracy.

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