The source is actually
Siliconera, I simply trimmed the PSP part since we were talking about the DS. The numbers come straight from C
omputer Entertainment Supplier’s Association, they're a rough estimate for the year 2010.
Okay so most of the artifacting was from your trim of it. XD Still can't believe they left "Axis Title" though...
Gray area. And by that I mean that people such as myself and others see it as it is. But it also depends on the situation and whether or not the person played it fully and kept it or what. Too many variables.
The concept of a "lost sale" being equal to losing the money is wrong in the first place, that's what I meant.
Let's say I go over to my friend's house and watch one of their DVDs with them. Suddenly I've seen the movie without paying (only the original copy for them was paid for) and am not required to pay for it to see it (as I just saw it for free by watching somebody else's copy they shared). Do I need to go to court for that, am I damaging the economy?
Piracy is not a criminal act in general because
the act of pirating something doesn't cause any sort of property or monetary damage.
That's why cases for pure piracy are in civil court, not a criminal court.
Of course, when you get into bootlegging or piracy on a large scale for monetary gain obviously things change (and it gets criminal then), but in this forum we're generally concerned with small-scale piracy for personal use anyways.
And I disagree with you, same with courts and laws and businesses.
Actually...
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...llegal-downloads-dont-equal-17000-lost-sales/
Don't confuse the propaganda with the actual court statements. The RIAA and such will say all sorts of shit
publicly (like stating that piracy is theft) that they'd never say in court because they're smart enough to not risk getting slammed for lying in court.
If piracy didn't equal to loss sales, there wouldn't be a big fuss over it at all.
What's that, you say that companies are
grounded in reality and won't do stupid shit and try to grasp at straws and try to make crazy claims just to keep people locked into buying from them?
- Yeah, it's not like Apple and other big companies will sue over vague patent designs just to keep competition off the market so people have to buy them...
- Hey, isn't it cool how companies never develop any sort of Digital Rights Management to lock your content if they can't confirm on each boot that it's bought from them?
- And yeah, it's not like companies like Sony will make specific memory formats to make sure that you have to buy the memory from them or a company that licenses from them...
- So you know all those cases of companies trying to place a court embargo on other competing products to stop them from getting sold in the US/UK... don't exist?
Companies are entirely reasonable in their demands of how the world works! =D
The problem is
the wants of many companies are not in line with reality. They want to make sure that the only way to get a hold of something is to pay them for it, still in the mindset that it's all physical goods. That doesn't work with digital content though. Digital goods are not made of physically-limited materials that need to be specially-worked. I can use Firefox to download a single text file with the word "cat" in it just as easily as I can download a copy of The Hobbit (if it's even out yet, I don't care), and that puts a kink into how they
want the world to work.
They want to still act like everything's physically-limited, like cars (sure can't download a car!), but that's not how the world actually functions.
As for the IM apps, I think they're going to be quite popular on the WiiU since the tablet appears to be perfect for a virtual keyboard and... well, can be taken anywhere, which is close enough to a laptop.
Oh hell yeah. A homebrew IM application (or even fancy IRC stuff since it's more stable and bitlbee will update instead of the application needing to) would be great. As far as I'm aware the IRC protocol hasn't updated in ages (officially, the RFC is a rough base) and most of the updates to IRC programs are client-side bug fixes and feature additions, so assuming somebody doesn't mind the odd process of using bitlbee (rooms and PMs instead of a single buddylist) it'd be preferable to getting fancier programs that die.
'Cause we've all seen how homebrew IM programs work out for other systems... they stop being able to connect eventually.
This is significant because vWii doesn't have access to the Gamepad at all - it's disabled during vWii initialization. This gives us two possibilities:
- fail0verflow hacked the Gamepad firmware
- fail0verflow hacked the WiiU, at least to the extent of using the graphics engine
Both options are pretty cool, but they're quite secretive about the hack. That said, they did say it's "Running on the WiiU", so the latter option is more likely.
They stated it's from the Wii U, so they have some sort of access to it. They're loading a fullscreen image which means either embedding things in a binary, or redirecting some sort of resource call.