New Steam Update Lets Players Trade Hats for Games
A beta update for Steam lets gamers trade virtual items for unused digital copies of games. Released Tuesday, the upgrade to Valve’s digital-distribution platform could co-opt a thriving black market in which players swap unwanted games for prized in-game extras.
Valve introduced hats — novelty pieces of headwear for game characters — to its cartoon-styled multiplayer first-person shooter Team Fortress 2 in 2009. These hats, along with upgraded weapons, could be earned by simply playing the game or by purchasing them with real money. In 2010, Team Fortress 2 received an update that allowed...
Airline Pilots Allowed to Dodge Security Screening
Federal authorities are tacitly acknowledging that, despite their best efforts, it’s impossible to keep domestic aircraft safe from all evildoers. That’s because if a pilot wants to crash a plane, the pilot can crash a plane.
With that in mind, the Transportation Security Administration began a program Tuesday allowing pilots to skirt the security-screening process. The TSA has deployed approximately 500 body scanners to airports nationwide in a bid to prevent terrorists from boarding domestic flights, but pilots don’t have to go through the controversial nude body scanners or other forms of s...
Amazon's Cloud Reader Still Doesn't Take the Web Seriously
Late on Tuesday, Amazon deployed its new Cloud Reader, a multiplatform HTML5 web app for reading and buying Kindle e-books in a web browser. Wednesday morning, the company issued a press release about the new product, after Wired’s Charlie Sorrel and many others had already written up their first impressions.
So, the cat is well out of the bag. We’ve known this was coming after Amazon pulled the purchase functionality from its iOS apps, Kobo announced its own HTML5 bookstore web app and especially since Amazon launched a Kindle for the web beta site almost a year ago.
Cloud Reader’s design is ...