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More Media Exposure, Xbox 360
My friend Luke (who took me to Zero Hour) just called tonight and said he and I were on G4! The episode was this one: (links broken when video expired, will post soon) http://www.g4tv.com/g4tv/episodes/4855/Moore_Xbox_360.html and it will be replayed within the next few days if you get a chance to check it out, I'm going to try to record it and maybe I can post it here. We did a number of interviews at Zero Hour because of our unique story and strong interest in the business/marketing behind gaming. Aside from G4 we were featured in a few other articles including this one which was done for the local newspaper and has some interesting stats on gaming: (links broken when article expired, will post soon) http://www.avpress.com/n/03/1203_s12.htsMicrosoft did such a great job at this event! I have already thanked these people but I wanted to send another shout out to Titus, Ceasar, Ryan and Homer from GameSpot, Marilyn Ishak, Richard Irving, Simon Jones from Digital Outlook, Cliff Blezinsky (I like your blog), Arne Meyer, Jay Allard, and especially Clinton Fowler! Jay? Clinton wants to know why you keep falling off your bike! By the way, those developer special edition Xbox 360's are awesome, I really admire your hard work and the positive / rewarding culture that Microsoft fosters :) I want to join your company and I am currently job searching with Microsoft Australia! Maybe we will get to meet again at the Xbox 720 launch event???
Zero Hour - Mojave Desert - 11/20,21,22
Zero Hour, the culmination of multiple viral marketing (guerilla marketing) campaigns put on by Zed, AKA the Xbox team within Microsoft. Why was it done in the middle of the Mojave desert? To attract only the hardest core, most serious gamer enthusiasts... early adopters... trend leaders. Only 3,000 members of the general public were admitted into Zero Hour with over 64,000 applicants worldwide. While I was there I met people from California, Missippi, Chicago... all the way to Poland and Japan including MS execs all the way from Australia and the UK. J Allard, Corporate Vice President and Chief XNA Architect was there, I met him. Clinton Fowler, J's mountain biking friend who also works on the Xbox team was there as well :) and I got the chance to ask him EVERY Xbox/MS question I could think of. Not to mention Peter Moore, Cliff Blezinsky and many others. All of these guys work hard, you can just tell by talking with them. Clinton was planning to stay up for the entire 29hr stretch of Zero Hour (which doesn't include the 2.5hr trip it takes to get to or from LAX to Palmdale. It was amazing to speak with such dedicated and influential people. Almost every person at the event was important to Microsoft, hardly any of them were "hired hands". My interactions with Clinton, and others, began when they helped me with an Xbox 360 service featured at the event. Clinton helped me register and convert my Xbox Live account inside of this crazy white bubble tent (you can see the tent in the picture on the left). I spoke with another exec named Richard Irving out at the parking lot where he was handing out wristbands. I talked with all of these guys so much during the event that I ended up playing the Xbox 360 for less than an hour over the course of the entire 29hr event!  Artist rendition of the Xbox 360 Zero Hour event I have to give these guys props, they pulled this event off with world class. It was surreal to see a rendering of how the event "would look" online when I found out I was going, and then to actually see it in real life and have it match exactly. It was also envigorating to see a giant green light in the desert on the night of the 20th when we were first arriving, it was like "that's it, that's amazing!" The fact that I was able to hook up with a friend who lives in Chicago at the LAX and then trust eachother enough to drive down to Palmdale together and split a hotel is a testimate to the community Microsoft has fostered. I have beta tested over ten top PC, PS2, and Xbox titles so I know what's out there in terms of community, and what kinds of promotions are being done in this industry. Hats off to all of the hardworking individuals who made this a possibility, this post is about your comittment and passion for the community. Special thanks to Marilyn Ishak, Ceasar, Ryan from Gamespot, Arne Meyer from Edelman, and Simon Jones from digitaloutlook. For more on Zero Hour check out stories from GameSpot, IGN, G4 here & here, and a fan weblog called lowdown411
Xbox 360 Load Times To Fast?
Now this might sound like a strange topic, load times being to fast... but let me explain the problem before you call me crazy.
I just picked up a copy of Kameo and popped it into the 360, started the game, and watched the cinematic intro. All was well. The problem started when I progressed into the game a bit and ran into load times between diferent levels. The game puts up a loading screen and during the short wait a story element plot sequence is displayed in text. I'm not sure how critical the short paragraph is to the overarching story but I would shure like to read it IF IT DIDN"T LOAD SO FAST and force the text off the screen before I was through. In the older generations of game consoles you would have plenty of time to read story elements or hints durng load times but with newer hardware and 512MB of ram at their disposal for the Xbox 360 I think it's important for software developers like Rare to give us readers an option such as "begin level" which would hold the text up there a bit longer and only change the screen after we hit a button or something.
I experienced this problem/agrivation with Call of Duty 2 as well but to a much lesser extent. Call of Duty 2 displays these cool war quotes during load periods and also when you die, but sometimes it loads so fast that you don't finish the quote! I have almost been tempted to die on purpose just to finish the quote...
Xbox 360 Adidas Commercial
The Adidas commercial that comes preloaded on the Xbox 360 premium edition keeps crashing my system? It gets all the way to the end and then bam, my system shuts off and the lights on the front do a flashing red signal? Is anyone else getting this... On a more positive note, the commercial is pretty cool, it features pro soccer players running on a field made of metal beams where anyone could fall off into space! They do a lot of acrobatic tricks and guys keep getting knocked off the sides, it's pretty extreme. When I was a Zero Hour in the Mojave Desert at Hangar 71 Adidas stuff was sort of interlaced with the Xbox 360 signage. We all received Adidas hoodies with Zero Hour printed on them and they still had the price tags attached stating $49.99 which made us feel pretty special. Adidas also erected "the worlds largest foosball table" outside of the hangars and it featured a lifesized soccer ball as the foosball! Inside of the hangars there were small Adidas advertisements and a few plastic stands with Adidas shoes inside of them.
Xbox 360 Rants
okay here goes: with regard to the new "jump in" commercial: okay, marketing? It's all about communicating the feelings that products "will" give you, you don't focus on features - you focus on benefits. Graphics and bling are all features, the benefits are unclear for the broad masses (we do not represent the broad masses here at teamxbox okay) so when you see people of different cultures and lifestyles all having fun together, boys, girls, men, women, BMX bikers, two chubby chicas... all jumping rope together you see the benefits of a social gaming system that is open for anyone to just "jump in" and this slogan is short and concise so as not to be overwhelming and "complicated" two things that computers and high end games are well known for... Microsoft is doing just what they said, reaching out to a broader audience, using feelings and simplicity :) with regard to the complete package (with the chrome drive plate): Okay, so everyone has been complaining about how the chrome doesn't exactly match the white on the complete systems? Well, at first I was in the same boat... I like to have a streamlined cohesive look to my high end electronics, especially monitors and computers and stuff. After spending some time looking at both systems in pictures and reading about the 360 I came to a realization:begin realization transmission: the chrome will reflect the colors of the faceplate! Maybe it clashes a bit with white or draws too much attention, but with 99.9% of the other color faceplates the chrome is the obvious winner vs. the white. Can you imagine that hulking white door with any of the custom faceplates? maybe a few, but I know the chrome looks great with so many more!
Xbox360 shortage? Forced to get the "core" pack!!11
Dude, this is my prediction... Day of release, preorders at places like EB (who set up way too many preeorders) will sell out of the premium versions of the 360 and there will only be core systems left... Once this happans the unthinkable will ensue; people will begin buying the Xbox360 Core! We never thought it would happen this way, for all the wrong reasons, not only forced to buy the version with a white CD tray (instead of silver) but also being forced to buy all of the upgrades individually, costing well over $200.00! Terrible... I know, what can we do? what... can, we do...  (above is the Xbox 360 Core system)  (above is the Xbox 360 system)
Custom Star Wars Imperial AT-AT Walker Model
Since Star Wars has been back in fashion lately I decided to break out my old Kenner Star Wars Imperial AT-AT model. This toy is one of the coolest (and largest) Star Wars figures ever made! In fact, it was so cool that it was released once in the 80's when episode V first came out and again in 1995 as a remake. The model shown below is the 95 updated version and I got my hands on it when a kid in my neighborhood was selling it at a garage sale. I think I paid ~$20.00 for it (which is a lot for a garage sale toy) but I had special plans in store for it and the 20 was well worth it! Shown below, the once abandoned garage sale junk toy that was probably once considered "to big to keep around any longer" by someone's mom, has been transformed into a custom Star Wars figure / LCD monitor complete with composite connectors, stereo speakers, and hidden wiring in the left rear leg.    The only sad part about this awesome project is that I just sold it on ebay today... It turns out that it really is just too big to keep around, even for me. I plan on moving to Australia and this is just one of many cool items I will have to sell in order to lighten my load. Luckily, I brought in a hefty $200.00 for it which covered all of the parts and time put in but it couldn't buy the love I had for the time I spent building it. I guess in the end it was really just a large plastic reminder of all the fun I had! The model was built by cutting a square hole in the side of the AT-AT and sanding it down with a bastard file, removing one leg and cutting tiny nitches in the structural supoports where the wires were to be run, running wires up the leg for the stereo video & power and then installing connectors at the base of the leg and finally the screen and all of the switches in the body. I lucked out and found the five inch LCD at Best Buy a few years back for ~$100.00 when five inches still seemed big for a color LCD. The LCD package had almost all of the parts I needed because it was designed to be very versatile for gaming. The LCD was originally designed as a portable monitor for a PlayStation 2 and I just gutted it. Thanks for sharing in my Star Wars memories! Feel free to contact me for more pix or infomation on the project and where to get the parts if you decide to build one yourself!
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