Chinese Man Dies After 40-Hour Gaming Marathon

Actually, I’m kind of surprised that there aren’t more deaths caused by compulsive gaming. Just like anything else, you can become completely addicted to games if you’re not careful. That’s something that potentially led to the death of a Chinese man, who dropped dead during a marathon gaming session.

video game death china

A 21-year-old man in Guangxi, China, died after playing an unnamed online game (probably an MMORPG) for 40 hours. Mr. Jun began his gaming session after his shift at a karaoke center at 2AM on Christmas. Other than taking short breaks to eat and to go to the bathroom, he spent the rest of the time on the game itself. Unexpectedly, the man collapsed and died, having seemingly gamed himself to death.

Like anything in life, games are best played in moderation. I have played plenty of offline RPG games – which can last a long time – but you can always switch those off, and nothing happens when you aren’t playing them – unlike MMORPGs where leaving the game could end up causing your character major setbacks.

Last year, a boy in Taiwan died after playing a 40-hour session of Diablo III, so it would be wise to stop your gaming after 39 hours and 59 minutes.

[via Ubergizmo]

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PSA: Nintendo Wii U day-one patch now live, includes entire online infrastructure

PSA Nintendo Wii U day one patch now live, includes TKTK

It’s well past midnight, you’re home with your brand new Nintendo Wii U — now what? Well, you’ve got yourself a hefty firmware update to download should you wish to do anything other than play disc-based Wii U games. Say, for instance, you wanna check out Nintendo’s Mii-based social network, Miiverse? You’re gonna need that update. Or you want to check out the digital storefront, the eShop? Update. Browse the internet? Up … you get the picture. The file download clocks in at just over an hour (at least on our retail units ahead of launch), and the install takes another five minutes, so we’d suggest you grab it ASAP before the rest of the world is trying to hungrily snap it up as well. Remember: your brand new Wii U can do literally nothing outside of build Miis and play disc-based games before the update, so don’t go freaking out when your console seems to be missing a few key functions out of the box.

And no, this doesn’t include Nintendo TVii, which Nintendo says won’t arrive until some time in December. We’ll update this post with more specifics as we explore the update further, so keep an eye out!

Update: The update includes, from what we’ve seen thus far, the entire eShop, Miiverse, an internet browser, and access to Netflix. Hulu Plus, Amazon Instant Video, and YouTube remain conspicuously absent, but should be available “in the coming weeks” (per Nintendo’s update earlier this week). Backwards compatibility is also packed in the update, in form of the entire original Wii menu (which makes us feel like we just downloaded the entire Wii console to our Wii U — the future!). The Wii U actually fully resets to launch the Wii menu, and can only be navigated using a classic Wii remote control. Kinda bogus, but it sure is nice having a full Wii built in to the Wii U.

Update 2: Netflix is a separate download required (an update) for use.

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PSA: Nintendo Wii U day-one patch now live, includes entire online infrastructure originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Nov 2012 21:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Best Wines on Amazon

So, you like drinking wine, but hate heading outside to get more of it? Good news: You can now buy wine from Amazon. It’s a perfect mix of internet and alcohol. But is any of it any good? More »

Wii U’s Miiverse, Chat, TVii, and eShop features will arrive in a day-one software update

Wii U's Miiverse, Chat, TVii, and eShop features will arrive in a dayone software update

Are you ready for Nintendo’s Wii U console to arrive in a couple of weeks, packing not only a GamePad but also extensive online-enabled features like the Miiverse, Wii U Chat, TVii and eShop? Good, because as IGN mentions, the Wii U isn’t. Not unlike many games shipping lately, the console will see a software update available at debut that downloads all of those features for the first time. That shouldn’t be a problem for early adopting gamers as long as everything goes smoothly, but so far early-arriving review / preview units don’t have the functionality, although it should be delivered in an update before the launch. It’s been a few years since we had a new console launch (relive the PS3 fat, pre-RROD Xbox 360 and Wii here) and quickly-changing software is certainly the name of the game, we’ll let you know as soon as we can how the Nintendo Network delivers.

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Wii U’s Miiverse, Chat, TVii, and eShop features will arrive in a day-one software update originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Nov 2012 04:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD, Intel and RSA team up, form the Cyber Security Research Alliance

Tech giants, including AMD, Intel and RSA teamup to form the Cyber Security Research Alliance

Sure, it’s not the first elite cybercrime-fighting team we’ve heard of, it’s also not everyday you hear the likes of Intel, Lockheed Martin and AMD buddying up on research. The companies are looking to address the “complex problems” in cyber security, with the private, non-profit group (which also includes Honeywell and RSA/EMC) aiming to work somewhere between government-funded security research and commercial products already out there. The Cyber Security Research Alliance is already in talks with NIST, and plans to launch a security research symposium early next year. The CSRA will also start tracking cyber security R&D, “prioritize” those aforementioned challenges, and hopefully come together for the greater good.

Continue reading AMD, Intel and RSA team up, form the Cyber Security Research Alliance

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AMD, Intel and RSA team up, form the Cyber Security Research Alliance originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Oct 2012 10:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Get a Liberal Arts Education for Free on the Internet

Just getting a job in this economy is difficult enough. Getting one with a liberal arts degree is simply masochistic. Don’t spend half a decade and thousands of dollars only to join the rest of the English majors busking in a subway. Instead, educate yourself with these valuable, respectable, and totally free online resources.* More »

Trekkie Dating Site Helps Geeks Boldly Go Where Non-Trekkies Go All the Time

We all need love, and finding someone with common interests is pretty key to making that happen. Why risk ridicule from wearing a Worf mask in your Match.com profile picture? You want site where your geekiness isn’t judged, but celebrated. More »

Forrester survey finds first ever decline in people ‘using the internet,’ but a changing notion of ‘being online’

Forrester survey finds changing notion of 'being online,' less of the old more of the new

A survey measuring people’s internet use used to be a fairly simple thing. If you dialed up and logged onto CompuServe or AOL, you were “online” until you disconnected. Even in more recent years, you were “online” for as long as you were looking at a web browser or a chat window. But things have gotten more complicated as we’ve grown more mobile and connected than ever, and that’s now resulted in the first ever decline of people “using the internet” in Forrester’s annual survey since it began asking the question in 1997. As AllThingsD reports, this year’s survey found that people spent an average of 19.6 hours per week using the internet, compared to 21.9 hours in 2011. According to Forrester’s Gina Sverdlov, however, that’s not due to a shift back towards TV or other activities, but to a changing notion of what “being online” means to individuals. As she puts it, “given the various types of connected devices that US consumers own, many people are connected and logged on (automatically) at all times,” and that “the internet has become such a normal part of their lives that consumers don’t register that they are using the internet when they’re on Facebook, for example.” The full report isn’t available to the public, but you can find a few more details from it at the links below.

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Forrester survey finds first ever decline in people ‘using the internet,’ but a changing notion of ‘being online’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Oct 2012 18:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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