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Anime, For Free? OMFG! I Just Had a Heart Attack.

April 30th, 2009

I am a pretty big fan of anime. I take it how I can get it. Growing up, not having access to a great deal of funds, the main way I consumed anime was through the bad dubs which were aired as Saturday morning cartoons. This was further supplemented when the Toonami block first aired on Cartoon Network. With that, a whole new world of poorly dubbed anime was opened up to me. Granted, my eleven year old mind wasn’t capable of judging voice acting or plot too accurately at that point, but I was still entranced by the magic that these larger than life stories presented to me.

With the advent of broadband Internet and file sharing, my thirst for anime spread to locating whatever meager fan subs I could of my favorite shows, by whatever means necessary. This meant scouring IRC, WinMX, and even Limewire for these little efforts. I rarely was able to watch a complete series of anything, but what I did watch was better than the quality of programming to be found on television. Of course, in the midst of my struggles, Cartoon Network came through again, offering more adult theme animes, and I was again able to enjoy higher quality content, albeit at the cost of crappier voice acting. But it worked, and I was fine with it.

But, again, the problem of getting the newest and greatest content cropped up again. Shows such as Bleach would premiere, and the Internet would a buzz with the latest developments in the storyline, while those of us in the United States were forced to sit through origin stories and filler. So, I once again made my way to the Internet, where things had changed. YouTube had popularized the concept of streaming flash video, and with it, a host of knock off websites offering streaming anime popped up across the map. Actually finding content was a chore, but, to get the best content at the quickest speeds, it was an acceptable solution. And thus, until today, that was how I got my anime fix.

Full Metal Alchemist is a series I am a huge fan of. The storytelling, setting, characters and atmosphere are majestic and timeless. I watched the original series dubbed on Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim, and watched a streamed copy of the film by ways I described earlier. I learned a month ago that a new series based on the manga series, which diverged from the original anime series, would be premiering. I once again began pondering how I would access the new series content, and did a quick search on Google to learn what the series had in store. Which is when I came across something shocking.

When putting in “Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood” into Google, one of the first results to pop up was the official Funimation page for the series. Nothing unusual, since Funimation is the company which has the licensed rights to distribute the series in North America. But the most shocking part came when I clicked on the link. I was taken to a page which offered FULL, STREAMING episodes of Full Metal Alchemist: Brotherhood, available four days after the premiere in Japan. This is insanity. Distribution companies in North America have been notorious for cracking down on streaming copies of content which they hold license to, past, present or future. So, for Funimation to be offering this content, free, streaming, and available within days of initial release…well, it’s pretty damn shocking.

Even more stunning is that Bandai Entertainment has also taken the same path of Funimation, and posted up the ENTIRE first season of Gundam 00 and Code Geass up on their own YouTube channel. Both series are available either dubbed or subbed, which is a huge advance. Considering how tight fisted these distributors have been over their content in the past, these are huge steps forward. More anime content is available free and streaming than ever before, especially with Hulu offering anime content as well. All in all, it’s an excellent time to be an anime fan. One can only hope what nifty stuff have coming in the future.

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No Podcast, But More New Stuff

April 28th, 2009

Mailbag

Hey there, Troikies! No new podcast this week, but we’re going to try something a little different - our first ever open to the public mailbag! If you have any burning questions, deep inside, that you must get out, relating to anything (and we do mean, ANYTHING), feel free to shoot us a line! Comment below, or shoot an email to either fans@geektroika.com or mike@geektroika.com, since this week it’ll be Mike answering your questions.

Even better, Mike will be answering your questions via video! What to expect? Funny hats, props, other forms of Carrot Top humor? Or will we get the same expressionless recitation as we did for Three Minutes Flat? Send in your questions and tune in to find out!

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Facebook Opens Their Doors to Stuff

April 27th, 2009
Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook

Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook

Facebook announced the opening up of their news stream to developers today, allowing for all sorts of new, fancy whizbang desktop clients to be developed using the Facebook API. The immediate impact of this annoucement is that existing applications such as Seesmic Desktop and Tweetdeck, Adobe Air apps which already have rudimentary access to the Facebook firehose, will now gain even greater functionality, and possibly have some very cool applications and advancements in the very near future. Mobile apps will also likely see a huge boost. Imagine a full fledged iPhone/Palm Pre/Blackberry application, integrating the Facebook news feed into a stream with other services, such as Twitter and FriendFeed.

Of course, this comes with a caveat. The stream of data which developers can access can be mixed around, messed with, and generally tossed around, but in the end, this information can only be displayed BACK to the original user. So, really, in the end you’re getting the same old Facebook news stream you had before, simply displayed back to you in an altered form. While this is still pretty cool, it doesn’t offer the same type of openness and coolness that Twitter and similar platforms offers.

Another aspect of the newly opened up Facebook is how applications and their access will be treated in the future. Will Facebook applications move into the desktop, and run as web apps within the applications developed? Will current games and applications integrate the Facebook news stream more tightly to the processes? Potentially, Facebook could become a unified social profile and identity, when combined with Facebook connect, that other services such as Disqus (which we use as our commenting engine here at Geek Troika!) are attempting to do.

The annoucement by Facebook represents a pretty big step forward, since the service has always been pretty dramatically closed and shut off. What the future holds for Facebook beyond a social service will be part of what defines it as a larger aspect of our social and Internet lives.

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One Billion iPhone/iPod touch App Downloads

April 23rd, 2009

App Store One Billion Sold

Today, the Apple App Store surpassed 1,000,000,000 app downloads. It reached this milestone after a little more than nine months in existence. It is significant, auspicious, and whatever other hyperbolic adjectives you’d care to stick into this sentence. It bears reflection, discussion, and outlook onto what this means for the mobile device space.

The iPhone app store came into being following the clamor for applications by the iPhone/iPod touch community. Weeks after the iPhone was released, developers found ways to crack into the firmware of the device, access APIs and create hardware driven apps for the device. Demand for a sanctioned SDK supported by Apple built up to near impossible levels. Finally, Apple relented and released an SDK, and announced the opening of the App Store with the release of the iPhone 3G and the iPhone 2.0 software update.

The App Store was met with a skeptical eye by many, including yours truly. After all, with no background applications allowed, and many Jailbroken apps doing at least what the Apple sanctioned apps could do, why would people go to the App Store? And, how could Apple’s method succeed where others (Palm, Nokia, the app distribution methods created by the carriers) had failed? Well, people went to the App Store, and they went in droves.

The App Store took something which is patently not an original concept - applications built for a mobile device - and made them easy to access and purchase. Rather than going to a developers site, downloading a package, hooking your device up to your computer, transferring the files, setting up the package on your phone, configuring the settings and finally using the app, the App Store stripped out all of the processes and made it dead simple to use an app. Open the App Store, find the app you want, hit install, confirm your password, and the app installs and configures itself right there on your phone. Seamless, fast and easy. Better yet, in many cases the applications were reasonably cheap, making it trivial to pile up pages and pages (and pages and pages…) of apps. Apple succeeded by doing what they do best: taking an idea floating around there, refining it down to the simplest and most effective form.

Now that Apple has sold the billionth application from the App Store, what is in store for the future of the platform? Well, using the past nine months as an indicator, plenty of smooth times ahead. Apple has managed to capture the majority of the developer share for the mobile market, despite the sizable headstarts which Windows Mobile and Blackberry held over the App Store. With the release of iPhone OS 3.0, there are more API and tools available for developers to tool around with, and with the install base of the iPhone and iPod touch growing every day, there doesn’t seem to be an end to the massive success of the App Store.

Kudos, Apple, for taking my money. I look forward to paying you for an app to monitor my liver while racing 3D go karts against my friends.

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Music Pick - Parry Gripp

April 22nd, 2009

If you follow me on Twitter, or FriendFeed, you know I have a penchant for posting up stupid Internet videos. Memes, animals, it’s all there. Over the last few months, I’ve discovered a true love in Parry Gripp. The frontman of the group Nerf Herder (named from an insult by Princess Leia in The Empire Strikes Back) and the man who composed the theme song for Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Gripp puts out songs weekly for download and use as ringtones on his website.

Gripp came to my attention for the fantastic song “Do You Like Waffles?”, which is my current ringtone.

Hilarious.

The short songs Parry Gripp writes around memes which fly around the Internet are especially hilarious. One of my favorites is “Cat Flushing a Toilet”. Because the Internet LOVES cats.

I highly suggest you check out more of Parry Gripp’s work at his site, download some songs and ringtones, and revel in the comedy. I sure as heck am!

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Is the iPod Suffle Tiny Enough to Swallow?

April 22nd, 2009


Can the iPod shuffle be swallowed? from Gizmodo on Vimeo.

I suppose this is an obvious question, with a clear answer. But, I’m really more amazed someone was able to convince another person to actually go through with this.

Are there any susceptible people out there willing to listen to the crazy ideas I have?

[via Gizmodo]

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Episode 22: Boom Tish

April 22nd, 2009

Hey they, Geek Troika denizens! It’s been a little while, but we’re back for your listening pleasure! A bunch of crazy news has happened, and your loyal traversers of the geek realm have come and brought back the slabs of goodness. We’ve also brought along a guest. Well, more like dragged him into the mix. But he came willingly! (that’s what she said) Anypoo..

Today’s intro music is RumbaTech by Syntharmony. You can find more of their music at http://www.myspace.com/syntharmony.

Picks for the week:

Be sure and follow us on twitter!

Jon’s Twitter | Mattie’s Twitter | Mike’s Twitter | Geek Troika’s Twitter

Josh Haley’s Twitter | Ffundercats!

Without further delay, Geek Troika episode 22!

Download

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It’s Coming Back…

April 21st, 2009
Shadowy figure

The Geek Troika podcast returns this week. What can you expect to see? Explosions? Car chases? Fight scenes? Discussions on relevant tech, video game and movie news? Who knows! Either way, it’s going to be a hoot! To build the anticipation, enjoy one of my favorite YouTube clips of all time:

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The Ways Hollywood Can Screw Something Up

April 20th, 2009

Optimus FAIL

This summer, there’s a veritable cavalcade of films coming out which take preestablished properties, and takes them to places seldom imagined by the original creators or fans. Two of these films, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen and Star Trek, look to take their respective franchises to heights yet unimagined. In the case of Star Trek, the series is being rebooted and reimagined for a new generation of audiences, with the hope of reigniting interest in the franchise beyond the hardcore fans. But, in the end, it’s still ultimately Trek: Kirk and Spock and Bones, transporters and phasers and warp engines. In the case of Transformers, the franchise bears nearly no resemblance to the cartoons and toys which inspired it. And that is a major problem.

Lately, there’s been serious discussion of a Robotech film, headed by Tobey MacGuire, who somehow obtained the rights to the film. You might recall this being discussed during a previous episode of the podcast. There’s been some traction to these rumors of the past few months, though nothing solid has formed. But the mere concept of a Hollywood version of a Robotech (Macross) adapation makes me shudder based on what Hollywood has done to franchises of the past.

Case 1? Transformers, as I alluded to earlier. A franchise beloved by twenty to thirty somethings, the ultimate result of Transformers on the big screen is something of a betrayal to the legacy of the cartoon. No longer were the Autobots simple vehicles, but crazy, over the top, overcomplicated transforming devices which transformed not for the sake of going in disguise, but for blowing out a CG budget. Optimus Prime went from being a noble leader to an overgrown, clumsy giant who used outdated slang.

Case 2? Speed Racer. While Speed Racer was never exactly realistic, it at least kept to an idea of racing that was somewhat familiar. The Wachowski Brothers took the kernal of the television series and turned it into…something else. No one was quite able to decipher what was going on, much less me.

Hollywood seems to be incapable of comprehending what made the franchises they adapt so endearing and engaging in the first place. The reimaginings seem to be more for the purpose of presenting a package to an (assumed to be) idiotic consumer with no idea of what the source franchise is or what made it great in the first place.

An example of a reimagined property done right, which several point to as one of the best franchises of all time, is Battlestar Galactica. While the creators of the new television series didn’t necessarily adhere closely to the source material, much in the same way Michael Bay didn’t, this was overlooked for the fact that the new franchise was excellent. It didn’t dumb down the roots of the franchise, but rather smartened it up, made it mature and gritty and worthwhile in its departures from its roots.

If Hollywood has anymore childhood franchises it looks to acquire, it must be painstakingly clear to everyone involved: make it clear you understand the audience of the franchise you’re pulling from, and if you make dramatic changes to the franchise in question, don’t dumb things down, but play up the intelligence factor. We’re not dumb.

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Three Minutes Flat - The Pirate Bay Verdict

April 17th, 2009

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