Author Topic: PS3 Arc  (Read 8159 times)



WhoDa?, shut up for the sake of the fanboy.  Let the 360 cigarette have his uber ragefest here.
Reading this thread better then anything else. "Arc is copying!" "BAWW 360 CONTROLLER climax FOR HAND"  :cookieMonster:

Oh you


The only problem; Barely any 360 fanboys here.

Both the 360 and the PS3 suck, so it's irrelevant.

Both the 360 and the PS3 suck, so it's irrelevant.
a bad pc is bad also

That is why you do not use computers from 2003.


Shovelware is a derogatory computer jargon term that refers to software noted more for the quantity of what is included than for the quality or usefulness. The term is also used to refer to software that is ported from one computer platform or storage medium to another with little thought given to adapting it for use on the destination platform or medium, resulting in poor quality.
The metaphor implies that the creators showed little care for the original software, as if the new compilation or version had been indiscriminately created/ported with a shovel, without any care shown for the condition of the software on the newly created product.
The term "shovelware" is coined with semantic brown townogy to phrases like shareware and freeware, which describe methods of software distribution.

Shovelware is often used to refer to conversions from one media format to another (also known as "porting"), in the manner floppy disc collections were aggregated onto CD-ROMs. Today there is potential for similar shovelware in converting PC websites into mobile websites with little thought to optimizing for the new platform.
[edit]"Shovelware" CD-ROMs

Although poor-quality collections existed at least as far back as the BBS era, the term "shovelware" became commonly used in the early 1990s to describe early CD-ROMs such as collections of shareware or public domain software. The large capacity of CD-ROMs — equivalent to around 450-700 floppy disks, the former distribution method of choice — encouraged producers to fill them by including as much existing content as possible, often without regard to the quality of the material. Software reviewers, displeased with huge collections of inconsistent quality, dubbed this practice "shovelware".
The practice of shovelware has largely decreased due to the limited capacity of removable media in modern computers compared to the growing massive file sizes of newer software packages.
Often, operating systems such as Microsoft Windows bundled games with the optical media it was distributed on.
[edit]Modern usage

The term "shovelware" has more recently been used in a more general sense by video game reviewers to indicate any product of disappointingly low quality due to a lack of time and effort by the developers. Additionally, many adaptations of other works, especially films into video games, are often considered "shovelware" until proven otherwise, due to their general low quality as a result of attempting to capitalize quickly on popular properties and content.
Shovelware is often bundled with consumer oriented hardware such as printers and scanners. Manufacturers try to add value to what are sometimes commodity products by including software to do all manner of things, some only vaguely related to the function of the hardware. Included software is often a cut-down version of the full product. Sometimes it is not possible to install just the driver; the shovelware must be installed as well.
Related to shovelware is bloatware, a negative term describing a program that has included too many features at the cost of usability, straightforwardness and use of system resources.

lern2google


I think I'm going to stick with Xbox 360. It's a hit (apparently) where I live. Just as long as you have Modern Warfare 2 you're pretty cool.

I think I'm going to stick with Xbox 360. It's a hit (apparently) where I live. Just as long as you have Modern Warfare 2 you're pretty cool.
but is it fun?
or are you bandwagoning?

but is it fun?
or are you bandwagoning?
Not fun at all. I'm just doing it so I look cool because PC gaming is for "rich nerds" apparently.

Not fun at all. I'm just doing it so I look cool because PC gaming is for "rich nerds" apparently.
I couldn't tell if that was sarcasm.