Civilization is the game that made me a PC gamer for life. When I first starting playing it in 1991, I didn’t know what to make of the blocky graphics and turn-based gameplay. But I kept playing and playing. Just one more turn, and I’ll go to bed. I kept telling myself, even though I had a test coming up the next day,
The fifth version of Civ to bear Sid Meier’s name is no different in its addictiveness. Since I’ve been able to play it, I’ve got less sleep than an adult male should. The core game of Civ is intact; you still found cities, build units to explore your surroundings, attack barbarians, research technology, and interact with other civilizations through diplomacy or war. But with this latest incarnation, it all feels more polished and more fun.
It’s also probably the most accessible Civ to date, and that has to do with the excellently presented user interface. Clearly inspired by Revolutions, the UI alerts the player to the most relevant information, but in a very non-intrusive way. There are no annoying popups, events are instead placed in a list on the right of the screen above the "Next Turn" button. The list can get little cluttered when large events happen late in the game, like when a Civ declares war and everyone follows suit, and the time between turns is a bit longer than I’d like, but it’s easy to overlook these small complaints now that I no longer leave my capital building nothing for a few turns.
Like previous Civs, there is a lot of information to grasp, but it’s all safely tucked away behind intuitive buttons. I especially dug the info bar at the top of the screen (Titan panel anyone?) with the most relevant data. Hovering over the happiness display lets me know exactly why my people were so pissed at me. The user interface of Civ V gives me the tools to play the game without pulling too much focus from the game itself. What more could you ask for?
Other familiar game systems have been revamped. Culture still pushes the borders of your cities, but you can buy individual tiles with gold to become part of your civ. Accumulating culture points unlocks social policies, which are like your civilization’s talent trees. The benefits from social policies are big, like Honor’s combat bonus against barbarians or a boost to Happiness from Piety. I found myself carefully deciding what kind of civilization I wanted to play; the system is robust and a lot of fun.
While the diplomacy system is largely unchanged, you meet leaders and can trade with them or enter agreements like Pacts of Secrecy or Cooperation, the city-states are a great addition. These small states are not out to win the game or take anything over, but they add complexity to the world diplomacy. If you are nice to them, and do the tasks they ask or give them gold, they will give you culture, food or military units. If you attack them, they may gang up on you and declare permanent war against your civilization. It was really engaging choosing between attacking the English because they assaulted my ally, the city of Brussels that was giving me an important luxury resource, or if I should hold back and try to liberate the city when I was more prepared. The city-states are a welcome addition.
Some niggling problems were fixed outright. It always bugged me in previous Civs that you were rewarded for building roads in every single tile. In Civ V, roads and some other improvements have a maintenance cost so you need to pick and choose what your workers build wisely. Thankfully, you don’t have to connect each resource with a road anymore, merely building the corresponding improvement within your borders does the trick. Finding strategic resources Iron and Horses is doubly important now because each resource only lets you build a finite number of units. For example, building a mine on an Iron tile might only net you two Irons, from which you can only build two Swordsmen. It’s a brilliant system, because it forces the kind of strategic decisions that Civ is all about.
I love Civilization V and will likely spend hundreds of hours over the next few years taking over the world. I suggest you do the same
Friday, March 18, 2011
iPhone App Review - iBlueSky MindMapping Application
iBlueSky is a mindmapping tool for the iPhone and iPod Touch. A “mindmap” is basically what you would get if your brain could throw up an lightbulb everytime you have an idea.
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If you suddenly have this great idea but you’re not sure of how to translate it to paper or some other visual medium, you mindmap it! Start with a word or a concept, branch off from that concept with lines and circles that hold related ideas, draw more lines, more circles etc and eventually your original idea starts to take shape in a big mess of words and bubbles.
iBlueSky is very similar in operation to Mind Maker, another popular Mind Mapping application for the iPhone. You are able to use landscape mode and the addition of branches is very straightforward and anybody who has used a Mind Mapping application would be able to pick ip up in no time at all.
There is a default map already installed for you to play around with. The map I created got quite big, quite fast and I found it easy to add new branches, sub branches and also to navigate around the map.
Everything you put into your mindmap is editable, and you can even copy, cut, and paste in case you realize that things need to be rearranged. It’s really a pretty sweet app for brainstorming, and when your mindmap is complete you can send it off in an email that will include the map in several different formats including PNG, PDF, and a couple of weird formats (OPML and MM) that are specific to other desktop mindmapping software programs like Freemind.
There are only two areas that I’d like to see improved, the first being the project list. Projects titles are the same as the text in the starting bubble, but I’d like to be able to edit the title in case I want it to be more descriptive. The other improvement would be in the formatting of the bubbles themselves… a return button would be good so that text could be arranged on more than one line, and it would also be nice if I could highlight certain bubbles with a fill color.
Overall, iBlueSky is a great way to map out your brilliant ideas. Inspiration can hit you at some weird times, so having an app like this on the iPhone seems like a perfect fit and a worthy use of $7.99.
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If you suddenly have this great idea but you’re not sure of how to translate it to paper or some other visual medium, you mindmap it! Start with a word or a concept, branch off from that concept with lines and circles that hold related ideas, draw more lines, more circles etc and eventually your original idea starts to take shape in a big mess of words and bubbles.
iBlueSky is very similar in operation to Mind Maker, another popular Mind Mapping application for the iPhone. You are able to use landscape mode and the addition of branches is very straightforward and anybody who has used a Mind Mapping application would be able to pick ip up in no time at all.
There is a default map already installed for you to play around with. The map I created got quite big, quite fast and I found it easy to add new branches, sub branches and also to navigate around the map.
Everything you put into your mindmap is editable, and you can even copy, cut, and paste in case you realize that things need to be rearranged. It’s really a pretty sweet app for brainstorming, and when your mindmap is complete you can send it off in an email that will include the map in several different formats including PNG, PDF, and a couple of weird formats (OPML and MM) that are specific to other desktop mindmapping software programs like Freemind.
There are only two areas that I’d like to see improved, the first being the project list. Projects titles are the same as the text in the starting bubble, but I’d like to be able to edit the title in case I want it to be more descriptive. The other improvement would be in the formatting of the bubbles themselves… a return button would be good so that text could be arranged on more than one line, and it would also be nice if I could highlight certain bubbles with a fill color.
Overall, iBlueSky is a great way to map out your brilliant ideas. Inspiration can hit you at some weird times, so having an app like this on the iPhone seems like a perfect fit and a worthy use of $7.99.
Blackberry App Review - Viigo News Reader
There’s a lot of new apps, updates, and news coming out every day for the Blackbery platform. Today, I would like to highlight one of my favourite apps. Viigo. Why Viigo? Because Viigo provides for everything you want to know at your fingertips.
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Viigo (pronounced vee-go) is a fun and useful application for the Blackberry platform. Offering a thorough menu of RSS feeds related to news, entertainment, local interests, sports, weather, politics and finance, this application is often cited at the top of the list of many Blackberry users.
Viigo requires a log-in; creating one takes just moments and can be done right from the handheld (although you’ll need to confirm the account via an e-mail message from your desktop PC). When you launch the app, the home page shows a list of your active channels. Essentially, channels are any dynamic Web content you subscribe to, such as blog posts, stock prices, weather information, or general news feeds. Viigo gives you a default list of starter channels. You can also browse the Channel Library to grab whatever suits your fancy from hundreds of popular channels, and then add each one to your home page with the Add Channel command. The app also imports custom feeds lists from Google Reader, Bloglines, and My Yahoo accounts. I imported my own Google Reader account without a hitch; all of the feeds appeared below the default ones in a separate section, giving me instant access to new CNN, The New York Times, BusinessWeek, Slashdot, and other items right away.
In general, reading news in Viigo is a pleasure. Simply put, the app displays everything that interests you in the same UI. That means you don’t have to navigate multiple mobile sites to read all your content, waiting for each one to load along the way. In fact, I didn’t wait much at all during the review period. With a few exceptions that hung up the Curve 8330 for a moment with a spinning hourglass, navigation was virtually instantaneous. I was prepared to do speed tests, but there’s nothing to measure: Content loads in the background and then stays put on the handheld. Note that the same content is also available in Viigo even when there is no cell-phone signal; you can read articles in the subway or on a plane (with your phone set to flight mode, of course).
At the bottom of each article or post, there are six colorful icons that let you send the article via e-mail, send it to yourself, post it to Twitter or del.icio.us, display the full article, or display the actual Web page in your handset’s Web browser. A pop-up menu offers much the same options, plus the ability to save or delete items as well as navigate to the next or previous item. Reading lots of stories in a row is a simple matter of clicking on each one, clicking twice more to pop up the full article, and then moving on to the next. In turn, the app grays out the stories you’ve already read, and you can also mark all stories in a particular category as read if you want. Viigo is ad-supported, but I thought the display ads at the top of each page weren’t particularly intrusive.
For pure news and blog posts reads via RSS, you simply can’t beat Viigo for BlackBerry. Some users are partial to surfing individual Web sites, rather than drinking new content through a fire hose stripped of site context. But that’s an issue with RSS readers in general and has nothing to do with Viigo. Besides, this app is good enough to make me a convert, especially on mobile devices—and that’s saying something.
Terrence Tan:
Did you learn something new from this Factoid?
Let Terrence Tan know what you learned
Viigo (pronounced vee-go) is a fun and useful application for the Blackberry platform. Offering a thorough menu of RSS feeds related to news, entertainment, local interests, sports, weather, politics and finance, this application is often cited at the top of the list of many Blackberry users.
Viigo requires a log-in; creating one takes just moments and can be done right from the handheld (although you’ll need to confirm the account via an e-mail message from your desktop PC). When you launch the app, the home page shows a list of your active channels. Essentially, channels are any dynamic Web content you subscribe to, such as blog posts, stock prices, weather information, or general news feeds. Viigo gives you a default list of starter channels. You can also browse the Channel Library to grab whatever suits your fancy from hundreds of popular channels, and then add each one to your home page with the Add Channel command. The app also imports custom feeds lists from Google Reader, Bloglines, and My Yahoo accounts. I imported my own Google Reader account without a hitch; all of the feeds appeared below the default ones in a separate section, giving me instant access to new CNN, The New York Times, BusinessWeek, Slashdot, and other items right away.
In general, reading news in Viigo is a pleasure. Simply put, the app displays everything that interests you in the same UI. That means you don’t have to navigate multiple mobile sites to read all your content, waiting for each one to load along the way. In fact, I didn’t wait much at all during the review period. With a few exceptions that hung up the Curve 8330 for a moment with a spinning hourglass, navigation was virtually instantaneous. I was prepared to do speed tests, but there’s nothing to measure: Content loads in the background and then stays put on the handheld. Note that the same content is also available in Viigo even when there is no cell-phone signal; you can read articles in the subway or on a plane (with your phone set to flight mode, of course).
At the bottom of each article or post, there are six colorful icons that let you send the article via e-mail, send it to yourself, post it to Twitter or del.icio.us, display the full article, or display the actual Web page in your handset’s Web browser. A pop-up menu offers much the same options, plus the ability to save or delete items as well as navigate to the next or previous item. Reading lots of stories in a row is a simple matter of clicking on each one, clicking twice more to pop up the full article, and then moving on to the next. In turn, the app grays out the stories you’ve already read, and you can also mark all stories in a particular category as read if you want. Viigo is ad-supported, but I thought the display ads at the top of each page weren’t particularly intrusive.
For pure news and blog posts reads via RSS, you simply can’t beat Viigo for BlackBerry. Some users are partial to surfing individual Web sites, rather than drinking new content through a fire hose stripped of site context. But that’s an issue with RSS readers in general and has nothing to do with Viigo. Besides, this app is good enough to make me a convert, especially on mobile devices—and that’s saying something.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Movie Review - Skyline
If this movie were to leak out to outer space, we’d practically be inviting alien lifeforms to take over – seeing how easy it is to destroy planet Earth.
The story is hardly original, and the plot was barely there. What made previous alien invasion blockbuster Independence Day, a blockbuster, was that the storyline followed a group of intelligent and influential human beings – the President of United States, genius scientists and a Marine captain. In Skyline instead, the story line follows a bunch of witless idiots hiding out in an apartment as the aliens attack.
The movie starts off with a group of friends, passed out after a late night of partying, awakening to a bright blue light outside their windows. Finding that they cannot drag their eyes away from the beautiful blue lights, one of them gets sucked straight out into the skies, where the source of lights are from. A heroic attempt to find out what is happening outside, friends Jarrod and Terry go up to the roof to see countless alien lifeforms attacking the city.
I’d have to say Skyline is a boy’s movie. Which boy wouldn’t be exhilarated by the fact that you get a first-hand view of a cool alien invasion from your penthouse window? The effects are in fact very impressive. The spaceships were frightfully cool, and the vein popping effects looked disgustingly real. The aliens were so terrifying and realistic – the majestic alien invasion effects can almost give War Of The Worlds a run for their money.
However, the disappointment was in the ridiculous cast. For goodness sakes, I wouldn’t expect more than a B-grade slasher film from comedic actor Donald Faison of Scrubs and Brittany Daniel, a frequent face from the Wayans Brothers movies.
To make matters worse, the main characters were played by newbies Eric Balfour and Scottie Thompson, who must have skipped a whole lot of acting classes. The exaggerated expressions and the over dramatized acting (Yes, too dramatic even for an alien invasion!) actually brought out hysterical giggles from cinema audiences. I don’t think the directors, brothers Colin and Greg Strause intended for Skyline to be comedic, but believe me, you’ll find yourself laughing more than you find yourself worrying about the safety of humankind.
The only savior of the show was seasoned actor David Zayas, known from the TV series Dexter. Ever the action hero, Zayas brought the most charisma on screen. It was a pity they did not choose to cast him as the main lead. If it weren’t for him, I’d be rooting for the aliens to finish them humans off - faster!
Movie Review - I Am Number Four
I Am Number Four is very much the movie equivalent of Smallville: a handsome teenage alien living in middle America while coming terms with his newfound powers. All this while battling other alien life forms and falling for the local sweetie pie. It is not surprising to see that the screenwriters for the movie are the same duo of Alfred Hough and Miles Millar from Smallville.
That overall TV show feel is further perpetuated no small thanks to its casting of familiar TV favorites like Olyphant and Agron. I Am Number Four is also an obvious attempt at cashing in on the Twilight craze, with its teen sci-fi romance instead of pseudo horror-romance of the latter. Unfortunately, the main characters, with the possible exception of McAuliffe and Olyphant are almost as bland as those from Twilight.
Pettyfer who is trying to be a star via adult fantasy films like Stormbreaker and the soon to be released Beastly is the kind of handsome but bland and wooden leading man normally associated with 50’s sword and sandal flicks. His performance here is disappointing as the lead. Although he certainly will attract many teenage female fans to the movie, he needs to show more than being a glorified male model if he wants to strike it big in the movie world.
Glee’s Agron portrays more sweetness here than she is allowed on the TV show but her age is beginning to tell. It seems like she is getting on a little to be cast as a high school girl. Still she does what she can to carry her character with a bit of enthusiasm. In the movie, her Sarah is akin to Mary Jane Watson or Lois Lane, always supporting the main man but never in the thick of the action.
I Am Number Four essentially does what it is meant to be : a middle of the road sci-fi movie aimed at teens. Personally I would just keep the money watch rerun of Smallville on TV for free.
Movie Review - King's Speech
The period drama The Kings Speech is set in the years 1925 to 1939. It chronicles how Albert, the Duke of York, or famously known as Bertie found himself crowned the King of England after the abdication of his brother King Edward VIII to marry an American divorcee. The plot of the story revolves around the King’s inability to speak public because he stammered and how he overcame it with the help of a speech therapist Lionel Legue.
It is a superbly crafted movie with excellent acting by Colin Firth as the King and Geoffrey Rush as the speech therapist. The chemistry between Firth as the stiff leader of the country and Rush as the plainspoken commoner and their friendship is what makes this whole movie more than a watchable one.
Firth who is the favorite for this year’s Best Actor Oscar was also nominated in the same category last year for A Single Man. His portrayal of Bertie is tremendously moving in his frustration, humiliation and fury, choking on his words then gasping for air like a man who is drowning. Rush on the other hand, is his comic foil. His character Logue insists on calling everyone by the first name which drives Bertie mad. He has His Highness sing “Swanee River”, roll on the floor of his apartment and scream profanities as part of the treatment.
The movie is directed by Tom Hopper, who is no stranger to period dramas having directed the TV miniseries John Adams and Elizabeth I. His movie shows much sympathy for the monarch even though he jibes at the monarchy. His experience dealing with period drama adds a different element to the movie. He notes in particular the arrival of mass media and its impact on public personalities well before Princess Diana democratized princess into pop icon. In one scene, he shows His Highness watching Hitler on television rousing the crowd in Nuremberg with his oratory fire. The significance of the scene is reflected in the last part of the movie when Bertie himself would rally his own people by delivering a crucial and inspirational live radio broadcast from Buckingham Palace, declaring war against Germany.
The other cast members in the movie includes Helena Bonham Carter as the King’s wife Elizabeth and Timothy Spall as Winston Churchill. However, this movie is all about the performances of Firth and Rush who manages to turn a slow meandering plot into a watchable movie worthy of its Best Picture nomination.
It is a superbly crafted movie with excellent acting by Colin Firth as the King and Geoffrey Rush as the speech therapist. The chemistry between Firth as the stiff leader of the country and Rush as the plainspoken commoner and their friendship is what makes this whole movie more than a watchable one.
Firth who is the favorite for this year’s Best Actor Oscar was also nominated in the same category last year for A Single Man. His portrayal of Bertie is tremendously moving in his frustration, humiliation and fury, choking on his words then gasping for air like a man who is drowning. Rush on the other hand, is his comic foil. His character Logue insists on calling everyone by the first name which drives Bertie mad. He has His Highness sing “Swanee River”, roll on the floor of his apartment and scream profanities as part of the treatment.
The movie is directed by Tom Hopper, who is no stranger to period dramas having directed the TV miniseries John Adams and Elizabeth I. His movie shows much sympathy for the monarch even though he jibes at the monarchy. His experience dealing with period drama adds a different element to the movie. He notes in particular the arrival of mass media and its impact on public personalities well before Princess Diana democratized princess into pop icon. In one scene, he shows His Highness watching Hitler on television rousing the crowd in Nuremberg with his oratory fire. The significance of the scene is reflected in the last part of the movie when Bertie himself would rally his own people by delivering a crucial and inspirational live radio broadcast from Buckingham Palace, declaring war against Germany.
The other cast members in the movie includes Helena Bonham Carter as the King’s wife Elizabeth and Timothy Spall as Winston Churchill. However, this movie is all about the performances of Firth and Rush who manages to turn a slow meandering plot into a watchable movie worthy of its Best Picture nomination.
TV Series Review - Fairly Legal
Fairly Legal is a new tv drama series that premiered on the USA network this past January 20th. It is scheduled to be part of the network’s Thursday line-up and comes on at 10pm. The show stars Sarah Shahi (last seen in Life and The L Word) as Kate Reed, a former attorney who made a career switch to become a mediator because she wanted to help both sides in a lawsuit. She does not believe that in any lawsuit, one side has to lose before the other can win. She also does not believe that justice can only be found in the courtroom.
In the series pilot, we are told that Kate is still a lawyer in her father’s firm located in San Francisco. At the start of the show, her father passes away suddenly and she has to deal with her step-mother who happens to run the law firm now. Kate has a complicated relationship with Justin, her ex-husband, who incidentally is also a lawyer with the San Francisco District Attorney’s office. Other characters in the show include Leonard, Kate’s assistant who often comes to her rescue just in the nick of time.
Since the premiere, Fairly Legal has gotten rave reviews with many praising its effort for showing the other part of the legal system which is often ignored by mainstream media. As in any lawsuit, there are two sides to the story. This is the foundation of every episode where Kate tries to do her job as mediator and get the best outcome for both parties.
As a mediator, Kate is pretty unconventional and has her ways to handling stuff. It may not be orthodox but her understanding of the law and human nature together with a dry sense of humour often gets the job done. The sub-plot to the storyline is her complicated relationships with the step-mother and ex-husband. Although she often disagrees with her father, we are shown that she misses him a lot and often calls his phone just to hear his voice.
Fairly Legal is a typical USA network show and fans of the network’s other series like White Collar and Psych should fall in love with it instantly. I am very impressed with Sarah Shahi’s performance as Kate because she really makes the audience endear themselves to the character. All in all the series has the potential of to be a clever, fun and character driven series and become a stable in the USA network of interesting programs.
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