Tuesday 30 November 2010

Hackers go online to wage war

WITH much of the focus on the ongoing battles in Afghanistan and recent skirmishes between North and South Korea, a smaller - but possibly just as explosive - war has been largely overlooked.
Those troublesome types behind the WikiLeaks website have been under attack - and not just by just about every government across the world.
'Unknown' hackers tried to prevent the release of hundreds of thousands of classified US State Department documents by attacking the WikiLeaks website.
Earlier this week on Twitter the online whistleblower said its website was "under a mass distributed denial of service attack".
However to ensure the impact of its sensational disclosures it released some of the documents to leading national newspapers in Spain, France, Germany, England and New York.
The website later returned to normal service and published the documents leading to mass political denials and speeches.
The documents included 'harsh' criticism by US embassy staff of their host governments, including Russia and China, and unflattering pen portraits of world leaders.
They also disclose how last year Arab rulers urged the Americans to take military action to halt Iran’s nuclear programme.
In a typical denial-of-service attack, remote computers commandeered by rogue programmes bombard a website with so many data packets that it becomes overwhelmed and unavailable to visitors.
Pinpointing the culprits was impossible because the internet’s structure does not allow for the tracing back of the data packets used in such attacks, computer security expert Bruce Schneier said.
Hackers have used denial-of-service attacks over the years to target corporate and government websites.
Last month political bloggers in Vietnam said they were victimised by cyberattacks designed to block their websites to stifle government dissent. Other targets have included US and South Korean government websites in 2009 and computer networks in Estonia, which were crippled for nearly three weeks in 2007 by what were believed to be Russian hackers.
In the weeks leading up to the 2008 war between Russia and Georgia, Georgian government and corporate websites were hit with denial-of-service attacks. The Kremlin denied involvement.
James Lewis, a cybersecurity expert and a senior fellow at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said it was unlikely the US or some other government would use denial-of-service attacks against WikiLeaks.
His best guess was "a bunch of geeks who’ve decided they’re annoyed with WikiLeaks".
For many it's a difficult subject to be drawn on. Do you choose to side with the free-speech promoting WikiLeaks chaps? Or do you side with the guys who'd rather not see these documents released for fear of a 'reaction' from upset states?
Surely if a minister, leader or state is prepared to propose something with a means to an end, why should it be secret? If something is discussed in private then it's easy to understand, but if it is freely discussed by an open democratic state why hide?
Anyway, winding my neck in here are the latest games reviews and games charts:


Title: Red Dead Redemption: Undead Nightmare
Platform: PS3
Genre: Action
Price: £24.99
Hit count: 92%
Red Dead Redemption was another smash hit for Rockstar in its own right and, mirroring its successful strategy in releasing additional content for Grand Theft Auto 4, the developer brings us Undead Nightmare.
The new offering gives the wild-west title a much needed shot in the arm for gamers who may have already completed the original single-player story.
This time around, Marston’s out to combat a fever plaguing the town – which essentially is zombifying everyone (and everything).
And so begins a brilliant series of missions, played out in much the same way as the main game, but with a few interesting twists.
Not only are the people not what they seem anymore, but zombie horses with unlimited stamina, mad bad bears and a whole lot more bring a creepy vibe to the game.
Once the eight-hour, single-player quest has been completed, a couple of new multiplayer modes should also be explored – Undead Overrun proving to be particularly enjoyable – as you and online pals team up against wave after wave of spooky enemies.
As always, this is top quality free-roaming fun.


Title: Football Manager 2011
Platform: PSP
Genre: Football Management
Price: £29.99
Hit count: 88%
Let’s do the time-warp: And no, I’m not talking about dressing up a bit weird and putting your hands on your hips.
Much less energetic, but significantly more engrossing, is slipping the Football Manager 2011 disc into your PSP and losing yourself in the time-warp that is the virtual world of football management.
It’s the epitome of long-term, on-the-go gaming, as you turn the club of your choice into Champions League challengers.
And the options are endless: A staggeringly huge database of players to pick from with all the transfers included from the summer transfer window, improved positions tactics screen and much better graphics in the 2D game engine all take the already polished experience to another level.
Plus, the game ’skin’ has also been updated for a fresh new feel.
It’ll give you a headache trying to think about how so much data has been packed onto one little disc, but save your grey matter – you’ll need it to secure world football domination...


Title: Need For Speed Hot Pursuit
Platform: PS3
Genre: Racing
Price: £49.99
Hit count: 91%
Console racer fans have had plenty to get their teeth into in 2010 and Need For Speed Hot Pursuit has made a late winter burst to grab the top spot on the podium going into the lucrative Christmas period: And it blows the competition away.
Not only does it benefit from the same super-tight controls and jaw-dropping visuals that developers Criterion constantly delivered in the Burnout series, but it also offers up a cops and robbers-style career mode that sets it apart from the host of similar titles on the shelves right now.
Blasting through this mode from both sides of the law will show you just how differently the same stretch of road can play out, depending on your driver objectives.
Also, it's surprising just how much strategy you'll need to deploy to reach the later stages, where the cream of the souped-up motors come out to play.
Add to that an incredibly satisfying online experience, and you have a game that's sure to hit the spot in stockings around the UK this Christmas.

 
Title: Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood
Platform: Xbox 360
Genre: Action Adventure
Price: £49.99
Hit count: 90%

The critically acclaimed Assassin's Creed experience is back and better than ever, as Ezio returns in an epic struggle against the powerful Templar Order.
Now a legendary Master Assassin, Ezio must journey into Rome to strike at the heart of the enemy.
And this time, defeating the corrupt tyrants entrenched there requires not only strength, but leadership, as you (Ezio) must command an entire Brotherhood that will rally to your side.
This team-attacking capability is one of the major new developments for the stunning series – which is also enhanced by a host of new Renaissance-era gadgets and gizmos to help you in your epic quest.
Yet again, the graphics are stunning and the story is as engaging as ever.
When also considering the full-blown multiplayer mode added to the Brotherhood offering, gamers will find an embarrassment of action riches at their disposal here: All of which should see Ezio-mania live on for some time yet.

 
Title: EA Sports Active 2 - Kinect Compatible
Platform: Xbox 360
Genre: Fitness
Price: £79.99
Hit count: 85%

Clear a space in the lounge and transfer all fragile valuables into another room, as EA Sports Active 2 – the home-based workout in a box – comes to Xbox 360.
Making full use of the Kinect hardware’s motion sensing capabilities, this title comes complete with new leg and arm straps as well as a heart monitor, which can track every press up and sparring session you complete.
And it’s the community element of the title that really adds a new dimension to the experience – with users able to track their fitness data through automatic uploads and then compare with the progress of friends.
And the sheer scale of exercises to tackle is enough to make you exhausted, with more than 70 different tasks available to mould into your perfect personal fitness program.
Alternatively, you can try out the ones designed by professional personal trailers.
All in all, Sports Active 2 is a fab way of showing what motion sensing gaming can bring to the party, so get your shorts and sweatbands sharpish.

 
GAME CHART: ALL FORMATS FULL PRICE


1. Call Of Duty: Black Ops
2. Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood
3. Need For Speed: Hot Pursuit
4. FIFA 11
5. Just Dance 2
6. Wii Party
7. Wii Sports Resort
8. Professor Layton And The Lost Future
9. Kinect Sports
10. New Super Mario Bros. Wii
Leisure software charts compiled by Chart Track, (c) 2010 UKIE Ltd

Monday 15 November 2010

The comedy value of the internet

THERE have been a number of things which have kept me smiling in recent weeks.


And they’ve all appeared online.

Firstly did you hear about the planned search engine ‘Groggle?’


Before you click off this page thinking I’m referring to some Google rip-off just a read a little more.

Groggle was due to be launched by an Australian to allow the nation to find the best-priced ‘grog’ in nearby stores.

Ingenious idea right?

Well, it was until search giant Google complained at his effort to trademark the name, prompting a six-month legal wrangle.

Now the name Groggle has been changed to a more conventional title, Drinkle, ahead of its launch in 2011.

Secondly, and don’t ask me how the hell I got onto this but... has anyone ever looked at pet dating websites?

I’m not sure exactly HOW I found this the other day but hey, it made me giggle.

Basically www.datemypet.com is apparently the leading online dating website created exclusively for pet lovers.

The website claims “whether you are looking for a life partner, a buddy for your pet or just someone to hang out with, here you’ll be able to find exactly who you are looking for – pet lovers like yourself”.

Let’s just hope most of the owners on the website don’t look like they’re pets! Eek.

And finally, remember the campaign last year to rock Simon Cowell’s world and send Rage Against The Machine’s classic rock anthem ‘Killing In The Name’ to the top of the charts?

Well, campaigners have come up with an even whackier idea to truly funk up the system.

A couple of weeks ago more than 20,000 people had backed a campaign to get a recording of four-and-a-half minutes of silence to top the charts this Christmas.

Supporters have signed up on Facebook to back Cage Against The Machine which aims to put avant-garde composer John Cage’s silent work 4’33" in the top spot.

A similar internet campaign last year saw Rage’s anthem beat 2009 X Factor winner Joe McElderry’s song The Climb to the Christmas number one.

The winner of this year’s X Factor is expected to be a strong contender to top the charts this Christmas.

So who’s up for making December 25 a ‘silent night’?

Ho ho ho...



Here are the latest releases and games charts:
Title: Call of Duty: Black Ops
Platform: PS3
Genre: Shooter
Price: £54.99
Hit count: 9/10
As the bar is raised ever higher with each passing year, so the pressure intensifies on the Call Of Duty franchise to remain at the pinnacle of the first person shooter genre.

And Treyarch has done it again, posting a shooter that would be a standalone success if it were only the multiplayer mode that came on the disc, let alone the incredible single player story.

Set in the 1960s, and following the fortunes of Black Ops’ Alex Mason for the most part, the game produces as refined (and brutal) a shooter as you’ll have ever experienced.

You won’t miss the departed campaign co-op, and you will absolutely love the vehicle missions, atmospheric music and incredible explosions aplenty.

All action lovers shouldn’t even bother putting this on their Christmas lists – they need to go and get this now.

Title: Pro Evolution Soccer 2011
Platform: PSP
Genre: Football
Price: £29.99
Hit count: 7/10
The battle for footballing supremacy always looms large on the next-gen consoles each year, and the PSP also hosts its own soccer showdown between FIFA and Pro Evolution every 12 months – the Carling Cup to the Champions League, if you will.

Here, much like its big brother, PES 2011 relies heavily on its ‘total freedom’ gameplay system where players have full control over every pass and shot through the addition of a permanent power bar.

On the small screen, a few hours with PES 2011 makes you realise that not too much else has changed though, in terms of presentation, licensing and overall reinvigoration of the series.

The game engine has certainly freshened up the experience, and there’s no doubt that you’ll score the kind of goals that FIFA could only look at and long for.

So what’s the final score this year? Probably a well fought draw.

Title: Blacklight: Tango Down
Platform: PS3
Genre: Action
Price: Check PSN store
Hit count: 8/10
Like many shooters launched in the last couple of years Modern Warfare 2 seems to have stolen the march.

So much so in fact that many, including the actually quite good ones, get overlooked.

And Blacklight: Tango Down is one of them.

The multiplayer-focused first-person shooter isn’t the most original, but it’s cheap, fun – oh, and violent as hell.

It boasts 12 maps and a Black Ops mode which enables you to play with four others.

You progress quickly through the game earning rewards quickly as you go.

These lead to all manner of upgrades – including some pretty gnarly weaponry.

Title: Goldeneye
Platform: Wii
Genre: Shooter
Price: £34.99
Hit count: 9/10
It’s a brave developer that takes on the legendary Goldeneye game for a remake.

It’s still the stuff of legend for those old enough to remember marathon multiplayer sessions with four of you huddled around one TV in split screen mode. But things move on, and with Pierce Brosnan controversially ousted from what really was his Bond film, Daniel Craig brings a more brutal flavour to the 2010 versions, which thankfully turns out to be a fantastic first person shooter in its own right, with just enough nods to its glory days.

And it all boils down to gameplay.

Goldeneye has one of the best executions of FPS shooter mechanics using the motion-sensing controller, plus there’s the option to play in analogue-style classic controller mode – something for gamers of all generations.

And yes, the old split screen is back, alongside today’s customary online gaming options, which will once again bring a kind of multiplayer mayhem to your TV that will warm the cockles on a winter’s evening. Bond is well and truly back, whoever’s playing him!

Title: Star Wars: The Force Unleashed II
Platform: PS3
Genre: Action
Price: £49.99
Hit count: 7/10

So, the epic story continues, as players once again assume the role of the devastatingly powerful Starkiller – Darth Vader’s secret apprentice – set during the largely unexplored era between Star Wars: Episode III Revenge Of The Sith and Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope.

What ensues is a truly beautiful recreation of this intergalactic world, which Star Wars fans really shouldn’t miss out on.

However, beyond the beauty and scale of the level environments, The Force Unleashed II comes up short in several departments.

The over-the-top powers at your disposal somehow lessen the experience, while the well-considered combat mechanics feel like they weren’t developed to their full potential.

This is all a crying shame, because this should be a rip-snorting action title, but ultimately the core gameplay failings and brevity of the main story make this an opportunity missed by Starkiller, Vader and co.

GAME CHART ALL FORMATS FULL PRICE
1. Football Manager 2011
2. FIFA 11
3. Fable III
4. Just Dance 2
5. Professor Layton And The Lost Future
6. New Super Mario Bros. Wii
7. Fallout: New Vegas
8. Medal Of Honor
9. Star Wars: The Force Unleashed 2
10. The Sims 3
Leisure software charts compiled by Chart Track, (c) 2010 UKIE Ltd