Flour Power

a blog by António Farinha


Archive for September, 2009

Black Eyed Peas on Oprah’s 24th Season Party – The Biggest Flash Mob Ever

This is just so cool! If you know what a "flash mob" is, this is supposed to be the biggest ever done in a single place. If not, watch the video before reading about it on Wikipedia.

Now tell me you wouldn't like to be part of something like this.

I know I would.

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Monopoly on Google Maps – This Should Be Fun!

Monopoly City Streets

I've always been a big fan of Monopoly. It was probably the board game I played the most as a kid, before the video games arrived in force. A couple of years ago I even tried a computer version of it, but it was just boring playing versus the computer (I don't think the multiplayer capabilities were very good). It was like the board version, minus the pleasure of holding all that fake money and laughing on my friends' face when I won.

So you can imagine my excitement when, earlier today, I found out that Hasbro would release a version of the game using Google Maps as the playing board and therefore create a worldwide Monopoly game - Monopoly City Streets. WOW!

The details were very sketchy, but Hasbro has since posted on the official blog some information on how the game was created, to answer some of the speculation around it:

So, did Google build it? From the reports you would think so but the application was built by Hasbro's UK digital agency Tribal DDB.

Have Google helped us? Of course, they've been great and have really gotten behind the project with all the support we needed.

Who else has helped us? The project was made possible by using the street data from OpenStreetMap, combined with Google Maps, API tastic!

So, did Google build it? From the reports you would think so but the application was built by Hasbro's UK digital agency Tribal DDB.
Have Google helped us? Of course, they've been great and have really gotten behind the project with all the support we needed.
Who else has helped us? The project was made possible by using the street data from OpenStreetMap, combined with Google Maps, API tastic!

They have also released a FAQ, to satisfy the more impatient while the game doesn't start.

Other sites report some more details:

Players start the free game with three million Monopoly dollars and can buy Downing Street for $231,000, while Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, where the White House stands, costs $2 million.

Rent is paid automatically each day, from $50,000 for a house to $100 million for a skyscraper.

Monopoly City Streets screenshot

The game will start on the 9th of September 2009 and will go on until the 31st of January 2010.

This sounds like a brilliant idea, and I can't wait to rush in and buy the streets from the Portuguese boardgame version.

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18 Movie Spoilers on a T-shirt – Spoiler Alert!

Spoilt Tshirt - SPOILER ALERT

How many of the 18 references did you identify?

You can buy the Spoilt T-shirt on Threadless.

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Eircom Now Blocks The Pirate Bay

Not happy with implementing the "3 strikes" method of getting rid of customers alleged pirates announced earlier this year, Eircom has decided to bend over a bit more and go along with the music industry's demands to block access to The Pirate Bay.

Starting today, September 1st 2009, Eircom customers can no longer access The Pirate Bay and instead, are presented with this message (body in plain text for clarity):

Eircom blocks The Pirate Bay

On the 24 July 2009, an Order was made by the High Court requiring eircom to block or otherwise disable access by its subscribers to the website ThePirateBay.org, its related domain names, IP addresses and URLs. The Court was satisfied that on the basis of the evidence presented by the record companies that the PirateBay website is a website that facilitates the exchange of copyrighted sound recordings without the consent of the copyright owners.

eircom recognises the legitimate rights of the owners of copyrighted material and believes that individuals who share or download copyrighted material without the authorisation or the permission of the copyright owner are acting illegally.

The Order further provides that should the PirateBay website content be legitimatised in the future then eircom has liberty to apply to the Court to have the Order vacated and access to the PirateBay website enabled.

eircom in compliance with the Order has agreed that access to the website the PirateBay.org, its related domain names, IP addresses and URLs from the eircom network will be blocked indefinitely from the 1st September 2009.

eircom would like to reassure customers that:

* eircom will not monitor customer’s activities at any stage, nor will it place any monitoring equipment or software on its network in order to facilitate this block.
* eircom will not provide personal details or any information relating to customers to any third party, including the record companies.

So if you're in Ireland and your ISP is Eircom, you won't be getting in The Pirate Bay easily (you can always use a proxy). And because I don't like to see people being denied their share of downloadable stuff, check out this nice post with 25 Great Pirate Bay Alternatives. Although I really doubt that anyone that is tech-savvy enough to know about and use The Pirate Bay will have a hard time finding alternatives...

The rest of you need not worry, at least for now, because the other Irish ISPs ignored the threats.

(via TorrentFreak)

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