Matthew Peach

Lost for words

Archive for April, 2008

Gameplanet’s editor Daniel Cheer spoke to Tim Neale, presenter for “The Wire” on 95bFM today, in regards to Grand Theft Auto IV and censorship issues. Tim also interviewed Gordon Copeland, an independent Member of Parliament, who is calling for the game to be banned outright.

Copeland’s poor arguments for his cause will likely be enjoyed by gamers, as he advises multiple times that the game has “no redeeming features” and suggests that it is a simulator for learning how to kill in a similar way that a simulator trains astronauts to go into space.

Interestingly he doesn’t call for any other R18 material to be banned, despite his claims that children getting their hands on the game are his primary concern and there is certainly a lot of material out there which is inappropriate for children. Oh, and he also calls the game “Grand Auto Theft Number 4″ at one point.

You can listen to both interviews over at Gameplanet.

Phone books are a waste of trees

I can’t remember the last time I opened a phone book… and yet the things still get delivered to me, no questions asked. I’m not even in the damn thing.

In this modern world where a large percentage of the population has an Internet connection, is it about time we started “opting in” to phone books?

  • 1 Comment
  • Filed under: Random thoughts
  • No GST from fruits and veges?

    The Herald has a story today saying that the Public Health Association wants the Government to make fruits and vegetables GST-free.

    I’ve often questioned why it is so much cheaper for me to buy processed sugar/fat snacks than it is to buy vegetables, so I think this is a great idea. The question no doubt will be weather or not the government will recoup its costs down the track… with the theory being that a healthier population will need less healthcare.

    I suspect that in reality the change would primarily make the goods cheaper for existing consumers rather than causing a massive market shift - a little over $2 off a $20 purchase isn’t exactly the deal of the century, and packaged snacks are still likely to be cheaper - but it would be a positive step and I’d like to see it happen.

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  • Filed under: In the media
  • Simplifying newsletters

    Dylan has an interesting post on his blog today about the “keep it simple, stupid” concept and how his team is applying it to the new happysheep newsletter, which debuted in inboxes everywhere earlier today.

    Now, I’ve always been a strong supporter of using text e-mail over HTML in my daily e-mails - despite the fact that more and more of the Internet population seem to disagree with me - but we’ve been sending very graphical HTML Gameplanet Store Newsletters for years and it’s very much a habit that, so far, we haven’t tried to break.

    With that said, one of the things on our list for our new site is a newsletter renovation. I think that we should take a leaf out of happysheep’s book and simplify so that the newsletters are 1) easier to write; 2) easier to read; 3) hopefully less likely to be filtered as spam and 4) easier to prepare.

    Another thing we need to redo is the structure of our actual mailing lists. At the moment, if you’ve bought a PC Game, you will receive PC Game e-mails. That’s more or less how you subscribe to the list. What I’d like to do is give site users more options so that they can manage what they do and don’t receive without manually asking us to subscribe them, and without having to purchase anything first.

    I’d love to hear thoughts on this…

  • 1 Comment
  • Filed under: Work
  • What a difference two years makes

    Today the Miami Heat’s NBA season came to a dismal close with the worst winning percentage in the league at 15 wins and 67 losses. This gives them the worst record since Atlanta’s 13-69 in in 2004/05 and ties the franchise’s all-time worst season way back in 1988/89 - which also happened to be the team’s first year.

    The reason this is interesting is that two years ago the Heat won the NBA Finals in convincing fashion and last year made the Playoffs and (in the Championship year) Dwayne Wade was playing better basketball than anyone has since Michael Jordan. Since then Wade has been plagued by injuries (playing not much over half of the time) and his supporting cast has all but disappeared - Shaq has gone to Phoenix, Alonzo Mourning’s career is over, Udonis Haslem is injured and Antoine Walker and Gary Payton are also gone.

    Not much to say really except “ouch”. It’s rare to see the best become the worst so quickly; unless of course you’ve been following the Warriors over the last 10 years.

  • 0 Comments
  • Filed under: Sports