Uploading favorite CD’s, movies and books to Facebook & finishing Call of Duty 4 in 5 hours
Posted by testcrunch on 2nd January 2008
I’ve started to make sense of Facebook at last, well kinda. There are some apps you can install that allow you to create lists of favorite films, books, owned CD’s and games. You can also write reviews if you wanna get lippy.
What is quite good is that once you have started listing items then these apps suggest additional items for you to add to your lists, based on information you have already supplied i.e. what you have already uploaded. Manually selecting one Foo Fighters CD means that eventually the app will suggest all of the other Foo Fighters CD’s, which saves you from having to search for them. Having cottoned on to that I started searching for as many different artist cd’s as I could so that other cd’s by those artists will be suggested sooner or later by the app. Just to throw a spanner in the works I added as broad a spectrum of artists as I could. So we have the already mentioned Foo Fighters, Miles Davis and Neil Young. Confusing enough.
Saw a couple of friends of mine yesterday and do they play computer games. They have 2 PC’s, 1 laptop, an Xbox 360, a PS2 and 2 old Xbox’s and they have 2 wide screen TV’s in their room side by side. They should be reviewing games and getting paid for it.
They are pretty quick at playing the games as well. They have signed up with Blockbuster which allows them to borrow 3 games at a time. They will play a game for up to 10 hours and have completed Call Of Duty 4 in 5 hours. These guys are not kids either. I think they are both in their forties and don’t even work in IT. Shame on me as I got stuck in a situation CoD4 a month ago and haven’t looked at it since. But then I am buried in WoW.
We have access to our Consultant companies email through Outlook via the web, which is a bit flaky as opposed to our client companies email system which is via Lotus Notes and works OK. When I have needed to access my Consultant companies email from home then obviously that is done over the web. I have just been sent a document that hopefully will allow me to access that email system directly from Outlook. The documents called ‘Configuring the Outlook 2003 Client to use RPC over HTTP’ and I’ll give that a go from home tonight. What chance is there of that working? Either it’ll fail at the first fence or it’ll work OK I reckon.
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