House of Cards Has Staying Power

House of CardsHouse of Cards, a new mini-series on Netflix, never falls apart. This adaptation of a British TV drama, based on the novel by Michael Dobbs, stars multi-talented actor Kevin Spacey as Francis “Frank” Underwood, an oily Democratic majority whip, and Robin Wright as his wife, Claire, an unscrupulous non-profit head. The series is humorous and at the same time, very disturbing.

The funny but soulless Frank, turning directly to viewers in asides, mercilessly skewers his fellow politicians. He sees life as a chess game in which he knows each move several stages in advance. And, like a cat, he toys with his victims before destroying them. He may believe in karma, but he does not believe in morality. If you mess with his plans, the result could be fatal.

Claire, a garden-variety manipulator, is suave, well mannered and good-looking, but if you get in her way, you’re so fired. More spider than cat, she is moral up to a point, as long as nobody pushes her. And although she loves her husband, she feels something is missing in their relationship.

In this first season, Frank has an affair with a young reporter, Zoe Barnes, played by Kate Mara, who is desperate, ambitious, and will give anything, including her body, for a great story. Frank gets from her the inside information he needs to advance his schemes and the ability to plant stories to further his career.

One of these schemes is to take a drunken, drug-using, whoring congressman, Peter Russo, played with both manic self-destructive energy and a desire to reform by Corey Stoll, and turn him into a candidate for governor. Frank uses his wife’s non-profit to advance these plans, but in one of his few lapses, fails to see that he’s pushing her too far.

Initially playing to its funny side as Frank speaks directly to us about his machinations, the series turns increasingly dark, leading to a murder that reveals the savageness under Frank’s pleasant, patronizing exterior. By the end of the first season, the series is more political thriller than satire as Frank’s enemies start to figure out his plans.

For those skeptical of politics and politicians, House of Cards will not only reinforce that skepticism, but it will also prove highly entertaining.

Posted in Film, Review | Tagged Claire, Corey Stoll, Francis “Frank” Underwood, House of Cards, Kate Mara, Kevin Spacey, Michael Dobbs, , Peter Russo, Robin Wright, Zoe Barnes | Leave a reply

Gaming on Linux is Far Overdue

Somewhere along your computer career you have probably been introduced to a distribution of Linux. You probably tried a LiveCD, or even dual booted. The problem was that every time you wanted to play your favorite game, you had to reboot back into Windows. Eventually, you ended up just sticking with your Windows partition and leaving Linux behind.

The big question is: Why?

Why haven’t popular mainstream games like World of Warcraft, Battlefield 3, and Half-Life 2 been developed for Linux? What’s holding developers back from porting their games over to the Linux OS?

Many developers say the problem is that digital rights management does not play well with Linux. Digital rights management (DRM) is what developers include in their software to keep people from pirating it. There are many recent articles, including here and here, about how DRM is not the right direction we should be moving towards. People are going to pirate games anyway. They want to see their money go right to the programs, rather than big corporations (see: Humble Bundle).

Another reason going around for why games are not ported over is that there are so many different Linux distros that it would be too much to port to each distro. Well, this is true, but not every distro needs to be accounted for. Three of the top five used Linux distros are based on Debian.

It’s about time that mainstream games made their way onto the Linux OS. It will increase the user base of Linux greatly. For most people using Linux, the only thing keeping their Windows partition intact are the games.

For this reason, porting games to Linux could lower the Windows user base by a lot. Microsoft will be forced to provide a real benefit to justify paying for their operating system. And it’s not just the end-customer, OEM’s will start to think, “Hey, Linux is free, has a familiar look and feel, can run alternative open source applications, and can run games now. Oh, and now I can distribute computers way cheaper than I could with Windows.” Microsoft will be in trouble, especially when people stop paying for their precious Office suite and move over to LibreOffice or OpenOffice.org.

A company that has recently been talking seriously about working with Linux is Valve. Valve is known for developing games such as Portal, Counter-Strike, and the Half-Life series. Valve also created a client for buying and downloading games on your computer called Steam. Steam is one of the major distributors of PC games and also hosts a very large community for PC gamers.

Many games are released through Steam, so just moving Steam and the 2,500 games available could be a driving force to make gaming on Linux more mainstream. Valve did it for Mac, and it worked with great success. They ported over the Half-Life 2 engine games, and that was enough to get a decent user base.

The Steam for Linux closed beta has just started. The reason for the Steam for Linux beta could be attributed to Gabe Newell, the founder of Valve, calling Windows 8 “a catastrophe”, and stating that he is jumping ship to Linux.

“The big problem that is holding back Linux is games. People don’t realize how critical games are in driving consumer purchasing behavior. We want to make it as easy as possible for the 2,500 games on Steam to run on Linux as well. It’s a hedging strategy. I think Windows 8 is a catastrophe for everyone in the PC space. I think we’ll lose some of the top-tier PC/OEMs, who will exit the market. I think margins will be destroyed for a bunch of people. If that’s true, then it will be good to have alternatives to hedge against that eventuality.” – Gabe Newell (founder of Valve)

If Steam were to move to Linux, the first thing I would do is format my Windows hard drive to make room for more episodes of The Walking Dead. Now if only Netflix would switch over to Linux…

Note: There are ways to run some games on Linux, but their compatibility is limited. Wine does a decent job, and PlayOnLinux tweaks Wine a little better. Running games inside of a virtual machine is kind of moot. But we shouldn’t have to rig games to work in our operating system.

Posted in Gaming, Technology | Tagged Battlefield 3, Counter-Strike, Debian, digital rights management, dual boot, Gabe Newell, gaming, Half-Life, Half-Life 2, Humble Bundle, LibreOffice, , LiveCD, , , OEM, OpenOffice.org, operating systems, partition, , PlayOnLinux, Portal, Steam, Steam for Linux beta, The Walking Dead, Valve, , virtual machine, , Windows 8, Wine, World of Warcraft | 1 Reply