• Evan Lahti has this article on how much he loves Splash Damage’s Dirty Bomb:

    At its peak, when some popular streamers and YouTubers were being paid to play it, Dirty Bomb was drawing as many as 13,000 concurrent players. I didn’t get swept up by that initial wave of attention, but I wish I had: Dirty Bomb, still in beta, is one of the best multiplayer FPSes you can play today.

    I like its rhythm. I like its map flow. I like that one of the characters has an ever-replenishing grenade launcher that I never have to reload. Here’s why I think Dirty Bomb is worth your time.

    I’m going to have to check it out.

  • Brian Ashcraft has a translation of a report from Nikkei about how Konami treats their employees. Unsurprisingly, it’s awful. Your next game fails after a string of successes? You’re now demoted to scrubbing toilets, cleaning gym equipment, or making slot machines.

  • If you want to skip the waiting line to force the Windows 10 upgrade from 7 or 8 today, follow this link and click the buttons. I did this successfully on both a laptop that runs Windows 7, and one that runs Windows 8.

  • Memories Bucket

  • Alec Meer:

    Windows 10‘s privacy settings very much need to be frowned at. Essentially: unless you pay close attention to the fluffy options offered when you first install Microsoft’s new operating system, it’s going to quietly track your behaviour and use it to fire targeted ads at you, as well as keeping tabs on your location history, data from messages, calendars, contacts and God knows what else. It is a bit scary, despite coming off the back of Microsoft’s own pledge to offer ‘real transparency’. You may or may not be OK with this yourself, but in any event at least some of this stuff can be turned off after the fact. I’ll explain how to do that below.

    There’s a whole list of things you may want to do in Alec’s article. I disagree with his suggestion to stop using a Microsoft account for login, it’s a great feature that certain settings are shared between my laptop and desktop Windows installations, Cortana is similarly useful, but everything else is sound.

    Additionally, the peer-to-peer sharing of Windows updates is gross just like the Blizzard updater and should be disabled.

    To disable p2p sharing of Windows updates, do this:

    1. Go to the Settings program from the start menu:Start
    2. Click Update & security on this screen:Settings
    3. Click Advanced Options:Windows update
    4. Click Choose how updates are delivered:Advanced options
    5. Click the first toggle option and set it to off:ChoosegooseOff

    Now your computer won’t share updates with others.