Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Stylesheets

Another week and I still can't get my stylesheet to work. I'm really close to just giving up. It publishes, but it doesn't DO anything! No one else seems to be having this problem, either, and I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. I left a note on the page I was supposed to format saying I followed the directions to a T and nothing will make it work. If I can't get it figured out after the chat, then I give up.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Sam & Max season 2

To continue my nonstop plugging of Telltale Games, they just announced the second season of their Sam & Max game! According to the article, they've taken a lot of player feedback into consideration for the new season, so they can fix any flaws that were in the first season.

Now, if only they would get working on part three of BONE...

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Argh

I've been trying to do this "inline styling" or "stylesheet" or whatever stuff for a while and none of it is working!

I've also come to the conclusion that all I've really learned in this class is that I hate all of the programs we've had to use and I never want to use them again. :(

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Forgot to mention

I never was able to connect to Pitt's Internet, because it kept trying to uninstall my virus scanner. That... is weird. I guess it wouldn't be a problem if I already had Symantic, but I have Avast, and it works better (in my opinion).

Fun Stuff in Pittsburgh

Yesterday I checked out the Carnegie Museum for my "exploratorium" time. It was my first trip there, and it was really cool. I saw the hall of architecture, the gemstone exhibit, the Egyptian exhibit, the Native American exhibit, and a small part of the art museum. I'll have to check out the rest when I come back in October.

And speaking of things I need to see the rest of, I saw some of the Nationality Rooms today, too. I'm extremely jealous of the students who get to take classes in some of them. I'd love to have a class in the Indian room!

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Here we are in Pittsburgh

I'm in Pittsburgh! I used to have tons of family in Bethel (they all moved to Missouri a year ago), so we came to visit all the time, but I've rarely been to the city itself.

That's all for now.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

EB Siege: Attack of the Internet!

Starmen.net is a huge EarthBound fansite with an even bigger community. They're actually pretty well known even by big name video game websites and journalists because they have done some spectacular things to raise awareness about the game and the series it comes from. EarthBound is actually the second game in a trilogy known as MOTHER in Japan. The first game was going to be released in the United States, but was canned at the last minute. MOTHER 2, EarthBound, was released here, but it sold rather poorly. Despite this, it garnered a pretty large fanbase, mostly thanks to Starmen.net. They had organized several petitions to help garner awareness for the series, each one gathering more signatures than the last. Their last petition was simply a "hey, we're fans of the series, and there's a lot of us" kind of thing, and racked up an amazing 30,000+ individual signatures. It was around this time that a compilation of the first two games was released in Japan on the Game Boy Advance, called MOTHER 1+2. Unfortunately, despite the gigantic petition that caught the attention of some of Nintendo's big names, the compilation has yet to be released outside of Japan.

A year and a half ago, the final game in the series was released in Japan. And after about six months of waiting anxiously for an announcement of a US release, fans and members of Starmen.net recieved news straight from Nintendo that they had no plans to release it here.

Insert uproar here.

A few months ago, the webmaster and staff of the site started putting together a project called EB Siege: an organized attempt to let Nintendo of America know that there is a fanbase for the series out there, and they didn't want to be ignored. The idea behind it was that it would be more active than an online petition. There are several components to the siege:

Do-It-Yourself Devotion: Not actually part of the Siege, this was started almost immediately after receiving the news that Nintendo had no plans to localize MOTHER 3. It's a fan translation patch of the game that will allow people to play the game with English text. It's still in progress, and the team working on it has said that they will immediately stop if they hear ANYTHING from Nintendo regarding an official release.

Propoganda: The first part, started months in advance, was pretty much fanartists producing art that would get everyone else pumped for the rest of the project.

Envelope Art: Nintendo Power, the official magazine of Nintendo of America, regularly features envelopes decorated with fan art in every issue. Starmen.net has done "NP Sieges" before in the past, where people would mail in envelopes decorated with EarthBound-related art, but this one was going to be just one part of a bigger project.

PK* Call'n: People call up Nintendo's customer service line and ask the representatives about the MOTHER series. This was also tried in the past, but only for one week. This one is planned to be non-stop until Nintendo of America makes an official statement.

(*"PK" is a term from the Japanese version of the games that are the names of the psychic power attacks characters can use, aka "PK Fire" and "PK Beam")

PK Mail'n: Kind of like the Call-in. People can print out cards with fan art printed on them, write a letter, and mail them to Nintendo Power and Nintendo of America.

Wii Are Starmen: Community members with Wii consoles recently formed this group, and immediately realized it could be used for the Siege. They use the "Everybody Votes" Wii Channel and submit questions about the MOTHER series (such as "Do you want MOTHER 3, the sequel to SNES classic EarthBound, released in America?"), and trade EarthBound-themed Miis (kind of like Sims, only funnier-looking) with other users.

Donations: In order to raise money for the most crucial part of the siege, the webmaster asked for donations from anyone interested. A certain amount would net you a keychain of the starmen.net logo. Originally, the goal was $2,500, but it was surpassed in less than a day. By the end of the fundraiser, they had raised almost $7,500 in donations.

The EarthBound Anthology: The most crucial part of the siege. A 250+ page book chock full of fan art, fan music CDs, fan movie DVDs, and a detailed history of the MOTHER series and its future in the United States. This was sent to several video game news sites and journalists just in time for Electronic Entertainment Expo, the biggest video game news event of the year. The purpose? To get reporters to ask Nintendo about the MOTHER series. Copies of the book were also sent to Nintendo of America, and there are plans to translate it into Japanese and send it to Nintendo's headquarters in Japan and the creator of the series.

The biggest reason they organized all of this was because they have news from a journalist that EarthBound is scheduled to be released on the Wii's Virtual Console very soon, and its sales may very well be the determining factor in whether or not MOTHER, MOTHER 1+2, and MOTHER 3 will ever be released outside of Japan. The best way to ensure that was to spread the word- let Nintendo know there is a large fanbase, and let other people know about the series.

Despite how militant it may all seem, the staff of Starmen.net actively discourages rabid militarism and other things that may reflect negatively on the site and their efforts, for example:
-They actively discourage trolling and spamming on Nintendo.com's message boards, as well as spamming any Nintendo-related e-mails
-They encourage people to use the Call'n not to represent Starmen.net, but to voice their own opinions regarding the series. As well as to ask any other Nintendo-related questions they wanted to ask. :)
-...At the same time, they discourage being anything but super-polite to the representatives taking calls.
-Everything is 100% voluntary. For example, the Anthology book was kept a secret during the donation drive, and several people expressed concern about where the money was going. The webmaster immediately responded by saying that they shouldn't feel pressured to donate if they had any doubts. They want the whole thing to be really from the hearts of the fans, and not just them pushing people to do it.

Are the folks at Starmen.net crazy? Well, probably. But this is really an extension of how consumers are using new technology to make their voices heard by the big corporations. Petitions and other grassroots efforts helped get television shows (such as Family Guy) back on the air, and the prevalence of peer-to-peer networks ushered in new ways of selling and distributing media. If EB Siege works, it might change the way big video game companies listen to their fans, and get some really cool games released here in the process. :)