Sunday, November 18, 2012

Sherman Hemsley's Military Funeral

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November 16, 2012

Sherman Hemsley's Military Funeral

Unknown-3Sherman Hemsley was on ice in an El Paso funeral home for months while a man claiming to be his half-brother came forward to challenge the validity of his will. Now that a judge has ruled on the Sherman Hemsley case, he can finally be buried in a proper funeral. ?Lawyers for Flora Enchinton have confirmed that a military funeral is now being planned for Hemsley, who served in the United States Air Force for four years before he began acting. The funeral should be held at Fort Bliss National Cemetary in El Paso.

See Hollie McKay,?Military Funeral Planned for Sherman Hemsley, Months After Death, FoxNews.com, Nov. 14, 2012.?

Special thanks to Jim?Hillhouse?(Professional Legal Marketing (PLM, Inc.)) for bringing this article to my attention.

November 16, 2012 in Current Events, Death Event Planning | Permalink

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The future of the Western role-playing game | Joystiq

This is a weekly column from freelancer Rowan Kaiser, which focuses on "Western" role-playing games: their stories, their histories, their mechanics, their insanity, and their inanity.
Here in November, we're nearing the end of the current console generation, as the Wii U kicks off the next gen by replacing the Wii. That particular change may not affect western RPG fans ? then again, with Mass Effect heading to the Wii U, it may ? but it does mean that it may be worth thinking about what the future holds for role-playing games. Even for those of us who are PC gamers, console generations still work well as historical markers. The era of Diablo and Baldur's Gate evolved into The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind and Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, for example.

I am not anticipating immense changes, for two reasons. First, RPGs are more resistant to change than most other genres. Second, as a general historical rule, I tend to bet on "things staying roughly the same" over "things changing dramatically" unless there's reason to believe otherwise. And right now, I don't think there is. Video game tech seems to be getting shinier, faster, and smaller, but I don't see anything potentially disruptive in the way that CD storage was on the horizon. Moreover, I'd say that in general, the pace of change has slowed. Today's games are closer in looks and play than to KOTOR and Morrowind than those were to Ultima VII and Arena roughly a decade before.

This doesn't mean that there won't be changes ? I'm much happier with RPGs today than I was during the early 2000s ? but rather, that they won't necessarily be technological changes. Still, there are some trends that I expect to see continue, or falter.

Free-to-play, Microtransaction-based, and Social RPGs
The slow, apparent collapse of Zynga isn't the only indication that social games aren't the wave of the future. The actually quite-playable Dragon Age: Legends was canceled after little more than a year. Loot Drop, one of the most aggressive companies at attempting to get traditional game developers and players onto Facebook, cancelled its highest-profile project.

Single-player role-playing games are, I think, uniquely resistant to most free-to-play models, thanks to their long-term planning and strong narrative. It's possible I'm wrong on this, and Ultima Forever may change my mind, but I'm thinking that we'll see RPGs purchased and played the same way they've usually been.

Single-Player RPGs
The last few years should have finally put to the rest the idea that RPGs are an old, dying genre. The success of Bethesda and BioWare at the top, as well as a surprising amount of attention to games like The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings, Torchlight 2 and Kingdoms Of Amalur: Reckoning indicate that the genre is, if anything, on the upswing.

The wildly successful Kickstarters of Project Eternity and Wasteland 2, as well as the re-releases of Baldur's Gate with potential for a sequel, also indicate that even some of the styles of RPG which have gone out of fashion, primarily party-based, may be making a comeback, in addition to adding more games at a lower price point. In a business sense, this looks to me like the healthiest the genre has been in nearly two decades.

Massively Multi-Player RPGs
This may be the year when the idea of beating World of Warcraft by becoming the new World of Warcraft ended. Star Wars: The Old Republic had every possible advantage to knock over the wobbling WoW: famous developer, beloved universe, massive resources, and initial player excitement. Less than a year later it's adopting a partial free-to-play strategy like several other contenders before it. This was followed by the collapse of 38 Studios after it chased WoW money, and a relative lack of success for The Secret World. (Meanwhile, the subscription-free Guild Wars 2 seems to be a hit).

I'm less convinced that F2P is the wave of the future, though, for many of the same reasons that I'm unsure it'll work for single-player or limited multiplayer games. While it's been a success for keeping some other games like Lord of the Rings Online afloat, it hasn't powered a dominant market force like World of Warcraft. I'm hesitant to make any kind of prediction here ? it seems as plausible to me that the sub-genre will simply fade from prominence or that the subscription model isn't the problem, or that Guild Wars 2 is the model going forward.

Hybridization
Although the popularity of Mass Effect and a few other games has led some to speculate that we're entering a new age of genre hybridization, I'm less convinced. RPGs through history have been used for hybrids, from Panzer General to Deus Ex to The Binding Of Isaac. So it's not a difficult prediction to suggest that we will continue seeing RPG hybrids with other genres, and that some of them will be some of the best games of their era.

Technology
As I mentioned above, I don't expect anything disruptive to the nature of RPGs, and it's a genre that's resistant to change anyway, thanks to its focus on transparent, comprehensible mechanics. The changes that are coming will likely make graphics shinier and faces more expressive, but those won't change the nature of the genre. What might encourage further exploration, however, is the ability to make more and more detailed worlds. The "immersive sim" or a game that seems to exists within a larger, living world, is a close relation of the RPG, and more, faster calculations can help with different movement, physics, etc., patterns. So when Deus Ex designer Warren Spector says he wants to build a "One City Block RPG," that concept can theoretically work better with more processing power. But overall at the highest levels, I think we'll see more of a smoothing of current game models than anything overall.

At the indie and non-blockbuster level, my hope is that a general slowing of technological rate of change combined with steady improvement of middleware game engines will make games of all sorts easy to create. RPG Maker may be great, but how excellent would it be to have it or something like it able to make games that look like Torchlight or Knights Of The Old Republic?

Characterization & Relationships
Technology hasn't been the issue with making character relations better or worse. The issue is one of creativity, time, and ability, not technology. Game designer Chris Crawford has been attempting to create models of human interaction for almost 30 years.

The CD's immense improvement in amount of storage space in the mid-1990s removed that as a primary consideration, and the games that flourished after that ? Fallout, Planescape: Torment, Baldur's Gate II, and even The Sims ? haven't really been surpassed in terms of character interaction at a technological level, although Fallout: New Vegas and Dragon Age/Mass Effect change the models conceptually. I would also look to recent non-RPGs like Prom Week and Crusader Kings II and notice how they, with low technology, do extraordinarily interesting things with character relationships. So I'm hopeful that the people building RPGs will do more and better character and relationship development, but I can't think of a single technology I'd expect to change that.

In the end, that applies to most of my expectations: RPGs are about the ideas of the people involved, and their ability to execute those ideas. Because of that, I'm not expecting big changes for the genre, but I'll be happily unsurprised if there are notable improvements over the next several years.


Rowan Kaiser is a freelance writer currently living the Bay Area, who also writes for The A.V. Club, and has been published at Salon, Gamasutra, Kotaku, and more. He still occasionally finds Ultima VI Moongate maps and mantra notes when he visits his parents' house. Follow him on Twitter @rowankaiser.

Source: http://www.joystiq.com/2012/11/16/the-future-of-the-western-role-playing-game/

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Flintoff has no plans of returning to T20 cricket ? Cricket News - Bettor

Flintoff has no plans of returning to T20 cricket ? Cricket News Update

Former England skipper Andrew Flintoff has insisted that he has no intentions of returning to T20 cricket, saying that he was happy mentoring the raw talent in his cricket academies.

While speaking to the?Sun on Saturday, Flintoff admitted that he misses the game, but made it clear that he has given no thought to a return to T20 action.

"I finished at 31, that was my last game," the 34-year-old former England skipper said. "I've not made it a secret that I miss playing cricket ... You can dream and you can daydream but it's not happening really," he added further.

Flintoff called an early end to his cricketing in 2010 due to a longstanding knee injury. The veteran English all-rounder retired from Test cricket at the end of the Ashes series victory in August 2009. He underwent a knee surgery soon after the Ashes win and aimed to make a comeback to the limited overs cricket the next year.

However, the surgeon, who had performed his knee surgery, made it clear that the troublesome knee not allow him to play again even after a complete recovery, prompting the veteran to call it a day to the gentleman?s sport in September 2010.

The 6 feet 4 inch tall Lancashire seamer also revealed that he wanted to play for the Red Rose county for a couple of years to give back to the club that gave him so much, but his injury prone body did not allow him to do so.

Two years after his retirement from international cricket, the lanky England all-rounder shot into the limelight after he decided to embark on a career as a professional boxer.

Dismissing Flintoff?s move into boxing, some cricket pundits have suggested the all-rounder to return to limited-overs cricket. But the veteran said that there are a lot of young cricketers who deserve a place in the national side more than him, adding that he was enjoying playing cricket with his sons.

"There are a lot of good players out there without delving into people like myself. I've got cricket academies up and down the country. I enjoy playing cricket with my two boys and taking them. I've had my time."

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Flintoff-has-no-plans-of-returning-to-T20-cricket-Cricket-News-Update-a202069

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Saturday, November 17, 2012

North London derby: Tottenham's rival match veteran Brad Friedel can remind Andre Villas-Boas of the importance of Arsenal clash

Brad Friedel has played in two Arsenal-Spurs matches but has also competed in tribal clashes in Istanbul, Birmingham and east Lancashire and witnessed the Merseyside derby at close quarters.

Villas-Boas revealed earlier in the week he had been reminded several times by chairman Daniel Levy of the importance of tomorrow?s fixture, yet such troubles are minor compared with what Friedel has experienced. During his season at Galatasaray, the American returned from a cup final win over Istanbul rivals Fenerbahce to discover his home had been vandalised.

Friedel also played for Aston Villa against Birmingham when there was violence in the stands during the

2010-11 season. The rivalry between Arsenal and Tottenham is fierce and the fixture is among the most important in the calendar but, after what he has seen, Friedel is able to take the intensity of these battles in his stride.

?Galatasaray-Fenerbahce is the most energetic, hate-filled, violent derby I?ve been involved in,? Friedel said.

?The fans hate each other with a passion and the atmosphere is tremendous, although nicer when you play at home.

?When we won the Turkish Cup at their ground in 1996 after a two-legged final, I got back home and the windows were smashed in my flat.

?Fenerbahce fans had also tried to turn my car over.

?For two or three hours after the match we couldn?t get out of the changing room. They smashed the windows on our coach and tried to tip it over when we left the ground. We couldn?t even lift the cup on the day.

?Graeme Souness was the manager and Dean Saunders was playing there and both had their families with them. Fortunately, I was single, otherwise it wouldn?t have felt brilliant on derby days, with people knowing exactly where you live. But I did love my time in Istanbul.

?Those things happen very rarely in England but the Villa-Birmingham derby was a bit tasty at times.

?When we played there once there were fireworks being thrown between the fans and we got stuck on the pitch. That was a bit nasty and there was true hatred there.

?As for this derby, a few of the songs aren?t in the best taste but, by and large, it?s done in the correct manner. People will their team on and are loud and energetic.?

Memories of the most recent derby are painful for Tottenham. In February, a 2-0 lead at Emirates Stadium became a 5-2 defeat and signalled the start of Spurs? nervous end to the season, during which Arsenal overcame a 10-point deficit to take a Champions League place at their rivals? expense.

Friedel denies, however, that the result undermined Tottenham?s campaign and he believes that the departure of Robin van Persie has weakened the Arsenal squad more than those of Luka Modric and Rafael van der Vaart have damaged Spurs.

While neither side have convinced this season, Friedel insists Spurs are better-placed to push for a top-four spot, especially as Van Persie scored 37 times in his final term at Arsenal before joining Manchester United.

?When you lose a lot of goals, it?s the most difficult thing to replace,? Friedel said. ?When Luka left we got Mousa Dembele, so one outstanding player left, another arrived and their goal tallies are similar.

?When you talk about someone who can bang in 30 goals per season, it?s different. If you manage to replace it successfully, there?s a lot of luck involved when you do. A goalscorer is the hardest player to buy ? when do you buy, who do you buy, how much do you pay?

?When both are fully fit, then I like our squad more than Arsenal?s. As for the Champions League, we?ve got to get into it. That?s what the club, all the players and the staff want to achieve as a minimum.?

Friedel will strive as hard as ever to reach that target but he insists the outcome will not influence the decision about his future. The 41-year-old is in the final year of his contract at White Hart Lane and is keeping France captain Hugo Lloris out of the team, yet he? knows the former Lyon man is Spurs? long-term solution.

?If I want to play on, it will be a purely mental and physical decision,? he added. ?Even if we qualified for the Champions League, I wouldn?t sign on again if I was completely knackered by April.

?When the club have invested in someone as good as Hugo, I?d have to think about what my role would be but I?m not an egomaniac and I feel lucky, at the age of 41, to be contracted to? this club.?

It is a calm and rational assessment which, a matter of hours before a derby, seems like the perfect approach.

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/north-london-derby-tottenhams-rival-match-veteran-brad-friedel-can-remind-andre-villasboas-of-the-importance-of-arsenal-clash-8323394.html

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GoPro, Pixlr Express, and More

Whether it's a new game from an old favorite film or a photo editing tool with tons of effects, there's plenty for you to enjoy in this week's best Android apps. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/S0fbopuTTEw/gopro-pixlr-express-and-more

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Apple's Clever Method to Silence a Vibrating iPhone

Ironically, leaving a silenced phone set to vibrate on a hard surface like a table can actually create more of a disturbance when it rings and bounces around. So Apple has patented a system that uses the iPhone's mic and accelerometer to listen for vibrations and scale back its intensity when it gets too loud. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/4VliRddJPCI/apples-clever-method-to-silence-a-vibrating-iphone

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Friday, November 16, 2012

Procrastination- The Fear of Failure ? German-American Abroad

I consider myself the perfect little procrastinator. Ever since I had the chance to push things off, I have probably done so. Perhaps I have inherited this bad habit from both of my parents. Maybe I have just come to engrain it in my daily life because of how good it feels to simply chillax while better and more important things should/could/must be done. But the truth is, this entire procrastination deal ? it?s starting to bother me. A bit. Actually a lot.

I remember back in the days, maybe 3 years ago, most likely even longer, when our college assignments were given to us at the very beginning of each semester. Petty university assignments ? how I long for those days now. And despite the fact that I knew 8 weeks ahead of time what our papers were to be on and how much time we had to do some research, write it up, and form a great piece of work out of it, it wasn?t until that very last week I started to become slightly nervous. Usually it even took a day and night before the due date in order for me to finally push through, do an all-nighter and write those 3,000 to 5,000 words of academic meaningfulness in less than 24 hours. I guess I?ve always been afraid of my own capabilities and what might happen if I were to fail my own expectations. So whenever I still managed to pull an A- or B+ from that cheesy assignment, I was good to go. Heck, I even thought I was one of those lucky ones who write or perform well under pressure.

I?ve always hated public speaking most likely for the aforementioned reason. Procrastination! No sense to come up with a great speech and rehearse it in less than 24 hours. Once I started preparing for a speech for 3 days straight, I knew I was really blossoming when I had the time to prepare and proofread. Of course speaking in front of a class freaked me out at first. But only by overcoming my fear of failure, I started enjoying the adrenaline rush and was able to successfully graduate the course. In a way, public speaking has taught me several things. One of the most important ones I take with is: You cannot be afraid of what you have never tried. And another: Procrastination is just getting in your way when you could do so much better by preparing.

It?s one thing to write a 20-page-paper in college within one day and night and feel you?ve really accomplished something when you get your A- the week after. But procrastinating for your own sake or rather misfortune ? who needs this? Lately I?ve found myself caught in a cycle of not feeling too motivated to change things in my life and not wanting to find the time to change these named things in my life. Blogging has been one. Seeking out new opportunities another. And then of course the tedious tasks of editing my own works, be it writing or photography. Perhaps even forming a plan on how to cheaply travel the world. All of these are dreams but in order to pursue a dream, work has to be done.

Sometimes I just wonder what I am afraid of and why I cannot seem to take responsibility for my own happiness. Then I find myself caught in front of a TV show or surfing the web on a bunch of irrelevant stuff (think social networking). Procrastination can come in several forms. While two years ago I used to get out there and explore the city, I have found myself now more at home and focused but also easily distracted by petty things. Back then I was focused on social life and having fun, no matter what. Now I am focused on being focused, but not being able to stay focused once I am trying.

It?s weird, the mindsets we can be in sometimes. We want to change but we cannot change. We want to plan but we don?t have the strength to look ahead.

Perhaps my own thoughts are blocking out my ability to simply act. Whatever it is, I would like to get back on track. Especially now, with the cold air blowing in my face and reminding me that summer is another 6 months away. No lazy beach days and tanning sessions as an excuse to procrastinate. Time to write that book. Time to re-apply myself. Time to form life-changing plans in order to feel resurrected.

How do you guys deal with this moment in time when nothing feels quite right and you know it?s your fault?

Source: http://germanamericanabroad.wordpress.com/2012/11/14/procrastination-the-fear-of-failure/

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