FloboPuyo

Tetris and Bejeweled fans should love this. Back in the day, there was an incredibly addicting game I found for the Mac OS called Puyo Puyo. It played in a small window, and I’m not sure if it even had music playing with the game, but the concept was so addicting, I fell in love with it. Well, Puyo is back–and in more style than before!

Actually, if you do your research (such as referencing Wikipedia’s Puyo Puyo entry), you’ll see there’s a lot of history behind the game. I loved Puyo so much that I actually wrote a very rough Puyo engine in my high school programming class (that should date my Puyo Puyo find to 1996-1997). The engine was only text-oriented at that point, but naturally it could have driven a graphically-oriented game as well. Testifying to how addicting the game is, my friends would even sit and mindlessly play this little text-oriented Puyo clone that I made. I should try to recompile it and make it available for download, because I still have the source code. :-D
Anyway, back on track. A group of developers called iOS wrote a Puyo clone they call FloboPuyo, and it is a great clone. The graphics, music, and attitude of the game are all very well up to par. Please check it out! After all, it’s available for OS X, Windows, and Linux, so what possible excuse could you have to not check it out?

Virtual PC Competition

Speaking of Virtual PC, there’s some competition out there for Microsoft.

This really isn’t news, as there have always been alternatives to Virtual PC, even when it was owned by Connectix. There was SoftPC/SoftWindows and RealPC, now defunct; still in existence is the WINE Project, which is technically not an emulator; finally, still alive and well, although limited and/or difficult to use, are DOSBox and MacBOCHS, products of the open source community and Apple’s open acceptance of that community.

But now there is GuestPC. Weighing in at $69, it appears to be the cheapest alternative that does not sacrifice ease of use. Compared to Virtual PC’s $129 price tag, depending on how well this alternative emulator operates, it just may be a great choice.

Microsoft Acknowledges Macs May Get Infected While Using Virtual PC

I think this is the greatest thing ever! It is obviously undisputed that Windows machines are by far the most vulnerable machines in the world, but it is much more satisfying when a branch of Microsoft openly acknowledges this as well!

Check out the Top 10 Questions About Virtual PC from Microsoft, then scroll down to Question #10, “Does Virtual PC make my Mac more vulnerable to computer viruses?”

Indeed, in the answer, Microsoft openly acknowledges that Mac users are obviously exposed to the same vulnerabilities of a PC while they are running Virtual PC. Obviously–thankfully–these viruses will not be able to operate while any virtual machines running Windows are deactivated, and even if viruses do propagate to a Mac volume (by means of shared folders, for instance), they will not be able to run under the Mac environment. Nevertheless, the door is open for Mac volumes to be littered with virus files if a virtual machine running Windows is infected on Virtual PC. Indeed, this happened to me a few years ago, and it was a pain, because the virtual machine running Windows littered my Mac with virus files.

Microsoft is certainly forced to make such acknowledgments, and it is oh so sweet!

Virtual PC 7 for Mac Finally Here

This is just a quick note that Virtual PC 7 for the Mac has finally arrived.

I found out about it here: eWeek: Microsoft Releases Virtual PC 7.

It is very nice to read that Microsoft managed to eek out between 10%-30% more speed in this version, making it an upgrade worth considering. I’m sure the upper end of that percentage range is reserved for G5’s, since VPC 7 is now optimized for G5. Nevertheless, any speed improvement is welcome.

This is particularly exciting since Microsoft will be making Virtual PC 7 part of the Microsoft Office Suite, Professional Edition, as indicated in eWeek’s article, Office 2004 for Mac Hits Store Shelves.

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