Ultimate Guide to Hosting a LAN Party 264
WebWord writes "The title says it all. This really is the best damn guide to setting up a LAN party I have ever seen. They cover all the details from equipment to food to network protocols. Excellent!"
Projector fun... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Projector fun... (Score:1)
I can't help but think how much more interesting those games would have been if we had done this. Everything was all set, but the teacher backed out at the last minute... something about "$500 bulbs" and "work to do"... whatever.
Re:Projector fun... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Projector fun... (Score:1)
Hollywood flicks are for morons who can't handle a book, and "real" parties are for people who can't meet someone and have sex without needing to get the women drunk first.
Well, if you like those two things, you'd probably need help getting your computer running and don't have a girlfriend. Maybe a LAN party isn't for you.
Sorry.
Re:Projector fun... (Score:1)
Re:Projector fun... (Score:1)
Like the "flux capacitor"?
Crazy old Doc Brown... why the hell couldn't he just call it an "inductor" like everyone else?
and you fit in so well (Score:2)
Bbbu-bbut (Score:2)
I see doom on the page - how long has it been since you've last played that game.
Honestly though, planning helps, but the article isn't that extensive.
Re:Bbbu-bbut (Score:1)
Re:Bbbu-bbut (Score:1)
We used to have a few quick rounds of Doom every time at the beginning while someone inevitably take a while to set up their computer. Until we started having them at work and play Unreal Tournament instead.
NO LAN PARTY I've ever attended (Score:2)
Pansies! (Score:3, Funny)
Poofters! Wimps! It doesn't get fun until after you've been up for 24 hours straight. Then you turn the volume wayyyy up, and shotgun about 4 cans of Jolt... Blammo! Good God, I'm hit! The monsters, they're all around meeee
Re:Pansies! (Score:2)
And then there was the now legendary four and a half hour long Age of Empires II battle, which started off as a three way, and one person dug in hard while I knocked off the other player... and then became the most epic seige ever (we both agreed not to use boats). At one point, five of his knights decimated an entire unit of mine - and I build units as 20 knights, two Monks, one builder, and two seige engines. It was horrible - the kind of thing that history records as the bloodiest battle ever.
Two days later, everyone recovered (somewhat) and we all met at my place for SFAM (Anime night), and I had a big sign on the door - "AOE Free Zone".
ROTT, Worms, AOE, ROTT, C&C, Worms, AOE, Red Alert II, ROTT, Worms, C&C... the twitch and cute buffer the long and intense nicely. And all hail prism tanks!
--
Evan "Who had only played Chrono Cross in the year before that, and hasn't played a single video game since" E.
Re:Pansies! (Score:1)
I don't think the concept would transfer over to FPSs, however, since the game is so much less social on screen... It may feel social when you type in a term window, but it's really a solo game, on-screen.
The other big problem, at least with the same formula, is that while the kids in M&M were a bit on the weird side for playing a live-action version of their game, one would have to be fucking batshit to do the same with an FPS... and there isn't a character to get "lost in", to boot.
I disagree on mice (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
I used to like the original MS mouse for it's weight, but now I have an optical Logitech wheel mouse, when ever I use someone elses mouse I find it feels too heavy and usually jumpy.
Although the high speed tracking problem can cause problems at times, I find nothing as smooth (both physical feel and tracking) and love the light weight.
I have a so called 2nd generation optical though.
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
Now, if you want a ballmouse that can operate at this sensitivity without producing jagged scrolling you have to buy a boomslang or something like that. However, the optical mouse you can get much cheaper will do exactly the same, so why waste the money?
k
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:3, Interesting)
So the 5 buttons, scroll wheel, and opitcal made me choose the m$ mouse. It took me a little while to get used the extra weight for the m$ie mouse, since it doesnt have a ball to roll on. A nice 3m mouse pad fixed that.
Ive been to Lan games where people still keyboard it. Some peeps even use a trackball, this I never will understand.
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
One mouse that was pretty decent is the Kensington Expert Mouse. It gives a real good feeling of movement because of it's size. And if you must use center handed'ness it has a really good feel to it. I think it also has increased DPI like the M$ Explorer mouse or the Razer Boomslang.
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:2)
FWIW, LanParty.com [lanparty.com] has had a hosting guide up for something like 3 or 4 years. It is a bit dated, but the info is still good.
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:5, Informative)
I dunno, maybe it's different mice for different folks, but you should give them another chance. =)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
Not exactly. (Score:2)
PS: If you don't believe me, just try whipping your optical ball mouse left to right, over virtually any surface, but particularly sub-optimal ones, and you'll see the cursor get totally lost and move in seemingly random directions.
Re:Not exactly. (Score:2)
I've tried to reproduce this with my optical mouse (a Microsoft IntelliMouse Optical USB -- http://www.microsoft.com/mouse/ [microsoft.com]), and CAN'T-- sure, when I do quick motions left to right (or the other way around) it fluctuates up and down ever so slightly, but this is more likely do to the fact that I'm really not moving the mouse EXACTLY left to right on a perfect line (in the natural position for using a mouse, your hand moves left to right more like the long blade on a cars windshield wiper). This is just moving left-to-right on a 1024x768 Windows desktop, I mention this in case you meant to try this someplace else (eg: in a specific game or something).
Regardless, I imagine optical mice will become the norm soon, and the technology is ever improving (it's my understanding that the processor inside current optical mice rivals a 486, if you can believe that.. quite a little bit 'o CPU power for something as basic as a moving input device if you ask me). I'm sure the old-style ball mice will be relegated to either a) collector's items or b) elitist "true" gamers (and at a premium price).
Re:Not exactly. (Score:2)
I move my hand left to right, playing close attention to the start and ending position AND the path, making sure that the device is firmly on the ground the entire time, yet I see the cursor moving in VASTLY different, and often opposite directions. For instance, I'll move it 5 inches to the left, and see it move as much as 1200 pixels up (vertically) the screen (a long distance given my sensitivity setting) or backwards (in the opposite direction!!)--neither are explainable given the undeniable general path AND final destination of the mouse. I also know other people that have actually tried this and they've all reported the same problem.
From a financial and engineering point of view, this problem is also very explainable. Because the optical technology works by sampling and comparing the previous frame, it stands to reason that there is a point where each frame is too different than the previous [or maybe even entirely different] such that it's simply impossible to determine the direction and speed of movement by comparing the two. Furthermore, it makes little sense for MS (or ANY company targeting the mainstream primarily) to increase the marginal cost of each unit, thereby reducing their profits significantly, just to design a device that may make 1% of the population happier just 30% more often.
In other words, it just doesn't make sense from a cost/benefit point of view. I frankly don't blame MS for this (though I'm no fan of theirs), it's a completely justifiable business decision. There is no question in my mind that these optical mice will and should replace virtually all ball mice, but the fact remains that it has this drawback over the traditional ball mice [and even there, I'm saying that with my suggested workaround, it makes an overall superior mouse].
Re:Not exactly. (Score:2)
I'm curious though, try this with your setup:
Whip your mouse left to right (or right to left) about 4 to 6 inches. I'll bet your cursor jumps well up or down, and maybe even well in the opposite direction.
Or if you run at, say, 1600x1200 like me, position your cursor in one corner of the screen and try moving to the opposite corner as fast as you reasonably can. Again, I'd be suprised if your results differ significantly.
Re:Not exactly. (Score:2)
Re:Not exactly. (Score:2)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:2, Informative)
And lacking a ball means any gunk just rubs off.
(I should point out that my model is the one advertised at having 33% better resolution or some such)
Re:I disagree on mice (Score:1)
I have to agree that they aren't perfect though. The tracking screws up at fast speeds, which means that you suddenly end up pointing the wrong way right in the middle of that flick shot.
I've heard that Logitech are bringing out a new optical mouse that has two sensors, and should remain accurate at much higher speeds, and I'm interested in seeing how that turns out. For the moment though, optical mice are far superior for standard OS work like graphics, cos they don't skip.
Deterioration (Score:1)
Re:Deterioration (Score:1)
I'm not proud of this, but it's the honest truth... the first LAN party I had after I got DSL was a Friday to Sunday shindig. NOT ONE GOD DAMN GAME WAS PLAYED. The culprit? Friday afternoon I had found the alt.binaries.* newsgroups and shared my new found bandwidth and knowledge with others... Good lord that was a lot of porn!
Interesting LAN guide (Score:1)
Why bother - go to a net café instead (Score:2, Insightful)
Nowadays, with a net/LAN gaming café on every corner it is much easier just going there instead - the iron is faster, the network is already set up, everyone has a decent chair, and they have more games than I care to count. At 2-3 an hour for the cafés, spending hours getting things set up for a private party really does not make sense to me.
What café? (Score:2)
The two attempts at a local net cafe in my area failed. They closed their doors and are gone. Perhapse they didn't understand the market. Or maybe the economics are different in this area. (shrug).
Re:What café? (Score:2)
They closed down, and the local D&D store in town "Merlins in Spokane Washingtion" has the only game PC's around (kinkos has 3, but for printing only). Merlins has Inet access, but when I was back home and needed VPN access, thier nat server couldnt handle IPsec correctly. (Its always something...)
Over here in Seattle, theres a place in little silicon alley that has a dozen pc's in enclosed booths with 29 inch gateway tvs. They actually have subs and base thumpers in the seats. Playing counter-strike on thier t1 was smooth as silk. Thou a tad expensive. Also me and my friend seem to be the only ones over 25 lol.
Don't plan TO much (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway, my experience is that you shouldn't overplan what activities/games should take place/be played when you are throwing a LAN party.
Mostly, just going with the flow is a really good idea, as pressuring people into playing a game they might or might not want to play, most often leads to a lot of bitching, and generally unsatisfied players.
Another thing you should consider (when hosting at home), is to offer other activities than LAN gaming.
Ofcourse, if you only have a weekend, then this mig ht not be all that important, but when we do LAN'ing, most of the participants take a week of from work, and then we do a 10-day stretch, and THEN its important to offer other activities, such as DVD movies (if you can get a projector, its a BIG thumbs up, ditto for a decent 5.1 surround system), if its summer, setup a barbeque, take an afternoon on the beach, etc.
I've found that this is a really great idea, which makes participants happy, and gives a generally much better ambiance at the LAN party.
Re:Don't plan TO much (Score:1)
Re:Don't plan TO much (Score:1)
Re:Don't plan TO much (Score:1)
Getting all the patches for CS or Unreal or something on your box when everyone wants to play is a real drag. That sort of thing needs to be done ahead.
I haven't done this but I think planning ahead a bit for what games to play at what times helps as well. Especially those games that need like 2-8person teams or something organized like that. You can fill the time with deathmatching or whatever other sort of fun you want.
The movies are a good idea as is buffet style food of some sort.
Man now I'm itching to throw a party.
This guy is too difficult! (Score:2, Troll)
We have lan parties typically every weekend. They consist of 10-20 people at any given time. It is extremely simple... some of us in our group work for the city and have access to one of their buildings (hookups are great). We hold our lan parties in a big room, have tables & chairs there for our use. We pitched in $5 each (one time fee) and bought a 24 port 10/100 hub. There are no designated break areas. People go on their own food runs if they're hungry, and we don't charge or have sponsors. Just a bunch of guys (and one girl) who get together and play counterstrike for hours up on hours upon hours.....Dick
Re:This guy is too difficult! (Score:1)
ALeX
Re:This guy is too difficult! (Score:5, Insightful)
I personally love DHCP, I can plug in my work laptop at home and not reconfigure any tcp/ip settings. I even tweaked my dhcpd.conf so that my MAC address gets the same IP and network settings for VPN.
Also, Now that switches are cheap, might as well spend the extra 10-20 bux and get a switch. 8 ports switches are like 40 bux now.
Re:This guy is too difficult! (Score:2)
The guide is for public LAN-parties, where some people may need guidance because it's their first time to such an event. For public events, a certain level of planning is necessary to avoid problems which just don't need to be considered when all attendants know eachother and the location and have met for a LAN before.
Besides, switches are cheap, the added cost compared to hubs is negligible. Switches avoid problems with network cards which are set to full duplex, perform much better in mixed 10mbit/100mbit situations and provide better overall bandwith. If new hardware needs to be bought anyway, don't go for hubs. If you got the hubs already, keep them.
It is worth noting though that other LAN guides recommend against DHCP because conflicting DHCP servers are hard to find unless you have manageable network equipment. And the more participants there are, the more likely someone will have forgotten that he's running such a server.
Re:This guy is too difficult! (Score:2)
ipconfig/all|more on problem machine, get address of DHCP server.
nbtstat -A ipaddress "WHO THE HELL IS ??????!? TURN OFF YOUR DHCP SERVER!"
ipconfig/release_all ipconfig/renew_all
Re:This guy is too difficult! (Score:1)
Also, DHCP is a snap to set up. If you let the Windows random assignment happen, there is always the chance that two machines will grab the same IP address. We're kinda cheapin' out right now by using my Linksys Cable/DSL gateway, which has built-in DHCP. We also use that to give the whole group Internet access via the usual host's cablemodem. Even works for multiplayer out in the wild (we typically do this with Counter-Strike). You can get a 4 port Linksys gateway/router for around $99 these days.
Now, if you're thinking that you need to have all 3Com gear, then yes, you will be spending huge bucks. Or if you get the idea that gigabit ethernet is your cup of tea... cha-ching, bye bye retirement fund. But equipment sufficient for running LAN parties can be found on the cheap. Keep this in mind - for the cost of a GeForce 3 at launch (~$400), you could have all the gear I've mentioned.
Address conflicts shouldn't happen (Score:2)
> happen, there is always the chance that two
> machines will grab the same IP address.
First of all it's not the "Windows" random assignment. The 169.254 stuff is a public spec, and so far both Windows and MacOS support it. It's called "Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses" and you can read about it here [zeroconf.org]. (Microsoft's implementation is called APIPA and you can read about it here [microsoft.com]).
Have you ever actually seen an address conflict happen? It's not supposed to under the spec. Each box after picking a proposed address is supposed to ARP it. If it gets a reply, it then tries again. And so on. Works kind of like a hash table.
Re:Address conflicts shouldn't happen (Score:2)
Lanparty.com (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a direct link to their guide to hosting a lanparty
http://www.lanparty.com/theguide/
I agree (Score:2)
Don't plan! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Don't plan! (Score:1)
When I use my Atari 600 XL I see blue horses flying around. The Legend has spoken.
Re:Don't plan! (Score:1)
How many keys do I have to hit to save? Control-what? Take this
One thing not to do: (Score:1)
Good Projector - Sony CPJ-200 (Score:2)
http://www.supremevideo.com/internet_specials/cpj
You'll need a dimish room for it to be effective, but we tend to have our lan parties in darkened rooms anyway. 16 monitors keeps things bright enough to walk around, yet dark enough for the projector to work fine.
lanparty.com! (Score:1, Redundant)
Personally, I'm getting too old to cart my 'puter across town and hook it up just to play games, but I sure had fun at the parties I did make it to.
My LAN parties (Score:1)
Me and my brother playing Red Alert!
That was the shit!
Nowadays I don't play anymore. Too busy chasing women and drinking Captain!
Peace!
The legend has spoken!
Haven't done a lan party in years. (Score:1)
I think it would be cool to get the ol' gang together for a lan party, the suggestion has come up.. but people don't want to move their equipment, bastards. Then there was the issue of a place to put the equipment for those interested.
Now that I have my own place (apartment) and everyone of us has at least 3 spare computers lying around.. this suggestion may come up again soon, I can only hope
bandwidth (Score:1)
*ahem* slashdoted *ahem*
Re:bandwidth (Score:5, Funny)
LAN Party? (Score:1, Funny)
Whither the SF Bay Gaming Scene? (Score:2)
A list of one-time and recurring LAN parties [bluesnews.com] is available Blue's News [bluesnews.com]. Notice something weird about it?
Yup. There's no regular LAN party in the San Francisco Bay Area. (BANGG (Bay Area Network Gaming Group) [bangg.org] appears to have gone quiescent.) Anyone out there know of recurring LAN parties on or near the SF peninsula?
Schwab
Re:Whither the SF Bay Gaming Scene? (Score:1)
www.gamerzday.com
We're an hour north up in Vacaville however.
Quite a few in Sac too... but that's a little far.
We got some things in the works to spread the LAN lovin' though. Don't be surprised if Gamerzday mutates and multiplies.
Re:Whither the SF Bay Gaming Scene? (Score:2)
I also help run a midsize (50-80) bimonthly lanparty [modestolan.com] in Modesto, about 90 minutes from downtown SF.
I went to the last three BANGG events, and they were good, but very irregular.
Ultimate Guide to Hosting a LAN Party COMING SOON! (Score:1)
Gamehouses are just starting to arrive on the US shores. They are a import from over the pacific.
If current economic trends continue, gamehouses will continue to rise in popularity because games will continue to require ever more complex hardware than before.
Plus setting up a network is easy when you got 3 network guys in the room (unless they start arguing over what's wrong with the network) but can be quite intimidating to the average user.
Broadband companies are dropping like flies.
So the time is good to start one.
I've looked at several game houses around where I live, and I know the secret to setting myself apart from the ordinary screwdriver shop gamehouse..
Game House with hard rock cafe style nostalgia gimmick.
Not rock and roll, game nostalgia, you know, old console systems and computers. Thresh's mouse from the first tourney he won, or his ferrari(actually carmacks). The first pong machine or maybe one of those atari store units with 100 cartridges in it.
Serve sugary sweet liquids and solids.
Anyways lan parties are nice, but i've done many and there is allways some kind of hassle. I can't provide hardware for my buds to play on cause I just can't afford it. Game houses, one's gonna be near you soon.
--toq
~~Mods *Note, posted with my real account because I stand behind my opinions, remember AC=karma whore
Wishy-washy namby-pamby corporate sponsored crap (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wishy-washy namby-pamby corporate sponsored cra (Score:2)
If you're looking to run a party, it's not as much of a party as it is for the party goers.
The people who set up and organize it will probably not be playing as many games, nor having as much fun as the guests because they'll be ironing out problems, setting out food, crimping another network cable, etc.
If this article helps them get things better organized beforehand, they then have the opportunity to play more and have more fun themselves... and thus be more likely to run another in the future.
So stick a sock in it, buddy.
it's all about fun (with pics) (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.hublan.com/hublan09/HubLAN9-6.jpg [hublan.com]
http://www.hublan.com/hublan09/HubLAN9-7.jpg [hublan.com]
lanparty.com (Score:1)
Re:lanparty.com (Score:1)
Well, I'm not really sure what this article is geared towards: a small party, with 24 Port 10/100 Switches and a router with built-in DHCP? (Let's leave aside the fact that everybody with ICS could potentially be running another DHCP and cause a nice colliding mess
Modem Wars (Score:1)
Gaming Cafes Instead (Score:2, Insightful)
dilweed's 15 minute guide to LAN party bliss. (Score:4, Informative)
I started out doing a 2 player thin coax LAN at my house.
That balloned up to a 12 player coax LAN at my house.
Then it became a 10/100 2 5-port hub, 8 player LAN at my friend Mikey's house...
The next step was a 40-50 player LAN in nice comfortable leather high back chairs and rented hotel space.
And now it's a 100-140 player LAN at Stars recreation center (www.stars.com) in Vacaville.
For lack of a better term I turned "pro". I now do it for money. Once you make the jump from garage LAN to paid LAN you have to keep the atomsphere of the garage LAN but deliever the reliability, power, and network of a professional LAN.
Garage LAN:
DIVERSIFICATION
Some people are console freaks, some people are PC freaks. Have plenty of both. Consoles are great, because you don't have to blow $500 to play a game. Big screens with movies are good too (but watch them copyrights on public viewings!)
PARTY ATOMSPHERE
Keep it relaxed and enjoyable. Do not break out the fine china and do not throw a LAN at a house or location with fine China to break. Loud music (techno, phat beats, or rock) is a must.
Professional LAN:
POWER
Buy, rent, or steal enough power so that there is never a blow circuit. Waiting an hour or so for the circuit breaker to cool down is retard (Go morons in Sacto!).
NETWORK
9 ms ping is your target. Have you ever tried to lightning gun in Rocket Arena 3 with higher than 50 ping? It sucks so much ass... Do you know how evil a railgun is at 9 ms ping?
Internet access is always very nice. More is better, but a little with do. If you have multiday events it's great to check your email. (Gets people to advertise your event to their buddies
SPONSORS
Everyone likes to get something for nothing. Give away prizes. Get some local or national company to pitch in and just give the stuff away. It's not that big a deal, but to a gamer it makes all the world.
TOURNAMENTS
Everyone likes to win too. Not only do you get the sweet file sharing at a LAN, but you also can prove your skilz. Run a baby single elimination tournament and then ballon it from there. Double elimination is good if you can handle the logistics... It gives everyone 2 games at least... even the people that suck at Quake 3 like me
LEGAL
If you allow minors, back off the pr0n and alcohol. You need stated policies and enforcement against them. That's the damn rules
Ok, it's 3 AM, I'm going to bed. Gamerzday is always looking for more locations to LAN... got any ideas?
(Damn it's 3:02... It took 17 minutes!)
Tournaments? Try... (Score:1)
Yeah, sorry for the blunt "spamming" but their intranet system is real nice for running 'paid' parties. They provide you with: Party registration, automatic guestlist and seatplan (Scripts are hosted on their servers) and just before the LAN starts, you can download the data for your LAN (ie guests, their payment status, which seats they reserved...) and their Intranet scripts and install them on a webserver of yours. That way, people can login to your LAN Intranet where you can put up tournaments, a board etc.
And now for the killer: The tournaments practically run all by themselves. You enter their parameters and then users login and register for the tourneys. Start the tourneys and that's it basically. The scripts determine the start matches at random and have users enter the results according to which it keeps track of the players. (Double Elimination included)
Phew... got longer than expected. Anyway, if you want to, give it a try. We've run several parties with it (one with 250 players, the others with around 70) and it keeps saving us a lot of paperwork at the LAN.
Tribscon lan party (Score:2)
We have normally over 200+ people, and each person chips in 25-50 bux for renting the room. (also couple bux of it goes for prizes)
At the 2001 tc3 we had tribalwar.com and wsbn sponser us, it was at portaland airport embassy suites. 2002 tc4 will be in SanFransico (Rumors)
Oh yeah, we had the Dynamix dev team show up again. Nice of them, since they were just canned. (fcking sierra...)
Great article except.... (Score:2)
Only problem was the author's crack, "Any smart people will run virus software anyways"... Hey Bite Me! I have virus software but I do not run it, I use my computer in a way that significantly reduces the threat of Virii. First, I have completely switched to linux, but before then in my Windows life, I have NEVER gotten a virus running rampant on my pc. I have found and dissected them, researched them (and the early virii were damned clever programs, the stuff now is all crap)
a SMART computer user doesnt need to run a virus scanning program, they dont get infected by the normal stupid channels by blindly opening email, downloading filez from untrusted sites, leaving shares open, etc... and yes I do scan once per day (well in my windows world I did) just to clean up any shared areas on the server.
Re:Great article except.... (Score:1)
The *ONLY* virus checking I have on the servers at work is a scheduled file based scan once a week.... and thats only because I don't trust the other sysadmin.
I have no virus checkers on my workstation, and I doubt I ever will. Any *nix IRC user will know the phrase "Do not IRC as ROOT"
Well, it probably would, because companies like VET and McAfee would then employ people to write better viruses, like the nimda virus, that exploits applications.
Who? me? Accuse virus scanner companies of employing people to make viruses thus increasing their profits? NEVER! They wouldn't do that. Thats immoral.
At School! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:At School! (Score:3, Insightful)
From experience... (Score:5, Informative)
Things that are important to us:
P.S. Why do people try to bring up the subject of terrorist attacks in nearly every slashdot discussion? That's really annoying to some people. If you're going to discuss terrorism, do it in a newsgroup about terrorism, or current events.
earphones (Score:3, Informative)
Re:earphones (Score:3, Informative)
In several games I've played, there have been cases where I waste a perfectly planned ambush / attack / whatever, simply because the other player heard the background noise coming out of my PC speakers, and knowing exactly where my character was.
Earphones are a necessity, whenever you're surrounded by hard-core gamers.
I got your lan party right here...... (Score:1)
Half rave, half lan party (Score:4, Interesting)
Nothing is more fun than having a DJ spin while you're playing Counterstrike, and having a large projection(life-size) screen of someone playing Cstrike on that.
Then when we were all gamed out, we watched Quake 1 and 2 done quickly, some strange music videos(one from Atari Teenage Riot involving erasing faces) and had a blast.
It's all the music of a rave, without the fucking e-tards, cudddle puddles, or police involvement.
Re:Half rave, half lan party (Score:2)
Thank God for LAN Parties (Score:3, Informative)
This weekend, I'm going to one of the best, if not the best, lan parties around http://www.gamersgauntlet.com/
They have networking and power consumption down to an art form. They give away prizes (last time a GeForce 2 Pro card was one prize), run tourneys, and all-around provide an excellent time. The staff is friendly and accomodating to everyone's needs. It really can't be beat.
I've hosted a few mini-lans at my house and I have to say that having some networking experience w/Linux has been a great help. Running the games servers on Linux has given me very favorable results (compared to win2k).
It's so sad that I'm 33 years old and addicted to LAN gaming. So sad.
jokes on you (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Get a GRIP (Score:1)
However, speaking as someone who has lived through a sustained series of terrorist bombing attempts, fixating on it is the worst thing you can do.
You could die tomorrow, under a car.
You could choke on a peanut.
You get on and live your life instead. You accept that your understanding of the way the world works was wrong; you adapt.
You live in the moment. That moment might include a LAN party.
You need to get a grip. Living life is what's important. Growing to be more than you are at the moment is important. Some god-fearing nutter is not important. Not unless you can DO something about it - and YOU can't.
Get OVER it (Score:1)
WHO needs priorities? (Score:1)
Re:Get some PRIORITIES (Score:1)
Are you seriously saying that all fun activity all over the world should stop, "just" because of what happened in NYC?
Its not, in any way, that I dont think this was a terrible terrible thing, but hey, life DOES go on, even after a tragedy like this.
Re:/. ed (Score:1)
Re:Best lanparty. (Score:1)
Do you know if takeover 2k2 is going to be
in Eindhoven as well?
(that would yet be another good reason the be an exchange student here, which I am right now
ALeX
Re:Virus Checkers? Whats this guy selling? (Score:1)
I'm sure glad I wasn't the guy with the virus'd file. He got the piss kicked out of him by some pretty upset drunk guys.
*chuckle*
Re:Virus Checkers? Whats this guy selling? (Score:1)
Virus checkers of today:
- Sit in your system tray, consuming 4MB of ram to keep you notified of the fact they're running.
- Intercept all file IO to ensure no viruses are written to disk.
- Pop up an alert users every time a suspect file is found, and usually prompt for an action.
- in Win9x systems, add 30 seconds to boot time to ensure that between the time the virus checker was stopped during a windows shutdown, and the time the commandline scan was run no viruses were added to your system.
Payload of most viruses:
- Intercept file IO
- Email themselves out to propegate
The new installs of Mcafee don't give you the option any more of just installing the command line client. And 'netshield' for servers happily sits there on your file server and adds another layer to your file IO.
Really it's not like wearing a condom, its more like staying 3 feet away from everyone of the opposite sex all your life because it 'minimises the risk of viral propigation'
It's absolute overkill spawned by market hype and paranoia.
There are *STILL* no viruses out that propigate without USER INTERVENTION.
Which means, if you do get a virus, YOU'VE FUCKED UP.
Installing virus checkers is like installing crumple zones on the bottom of PAN-AM aeroplanes so they are less likely to kill people in the event of a crash... the question shouldn't be "What can we do to make these aeroplanes better in a crash" It should be "Why the fuck do our aeroplanes keep falling out of the sky?"
Re:Virus Checkers? Whats this guy selling? (Score:1)
I've been a heavy computer/network admin for over a decade, have never run a virus checker on my computer and have never been infected. NEVER.
Plenty of my customers have though. Even with a constant barage of warnings and virus checkers running they always manage to infect themselves. Stumps me.
Mike