My gaming console of choice is my Macbook Pro running Windows XP in Boot Camp.
Yeah, you serious gamers can stop your LOLing, I know it’s not a hardcore gaming machine but it gets the job done, even with modern games. And if you’re like me, it’s even less of an issue because you’re still playing catch-up with games from 2007. (e.g. I just downloaded and finished Portal a couple of nights ago.)
My MBP in Boot Camp set-up has one serious flaw aside from a very average graphics card: a lack of space on the Boot Camp partition. Unfortunately, when I built my the partition I only dedicated 18GB of hard drive space for Windows, a paltry amount for modern gaming.
Solution: External USB hard drive as a dedicated PC games server.
It’s easy. Buy yourself a cheap USB external drive to be your new games server, or do like I did and buy a more expensive and bigger drive and re-dedicate that old backup external drive as your new games server. The drive I’m using is a 2-year-old 250GB Kaser drive. Not the best quality, but this will just be used for loading games, not backing up family photos and important documents.
Format or defragment the drive to maximize its ability to read, and start loading that shelf full of games you’ve collected over the years.
Which is also easy of course. At some point during each game’s installation process, you’ll be asked where you want to install your game. Instead of going with the default C: drive, you can now choose your external hard drive, which for me is my G: drive.
I’ve tested this with about two dozen games, and they all work fine. And despite what I read on the web, I’ve experienced no discernible slow-downs or lags when the external drive is being accessed to load new levels.
The best part is that you can do this with Steam as well. Since Steam automatically downloads games to wherever the Steam client is located, it’s merely a matter of uninstalling your Steam client from your C: drive and reinstalling it on your external drive.
NOTE: If you’ve already downloaded Steam games and don’t want to have to reinstall them, then follow these steps:
1. Drag the “steamapps” folder out of the Steam folder to your desktop.
2. Uninstall Steam from the C: drive using the Add/Remove control panel.
3. Reinstall Steam to your new external hard drive.
4. Drag the “steamapps” folder from your desktop into the Steam folder on your external hard drive.
Games I currently have on my external hard drive include: Mass Effect, Half Life 2, Portal, GRAW 2, Crysis, Beyond Good and Evil, AudioSurf, Medieval 2: Total War, Oblivion, and many more.
PC gaming has never been better. I love being able to pick and choose my games with (almost) the same convenience and ease as picking songs in iTunes.
How to avoid being victim of an internet hoax
October 7, 2008Well, you can start by reading this great piece from The Independent.
The story outlines internet hoaxes and the culture that surrounds them. Many examples are cited.
From a web culture standpoint, my interest in the story starts here:
So true. And that fear of being gullible has led to a culture of skeptics who proclaim ‘Fake!’ in comments sections across the web, as the author points out.
It’d be interesting to know how this form of skepticism translates to everyday life. Do people yell ‘Fake!’ at the television for example? How about the newspaper?
The articles mentions, and I also recommend, snopes.com as one way to get to the bottom of internet scuttlebutt.