Necronom wrote:
Maybe you should read my post again. Not defending it in any way but the common misapprehension that downloading something illegaly equals stealing something is simply wrong...especially legally.
And yes brokenhalo, the law is clear on this...though not the way you meant it. One product is still there and can be sold while the other one is gone (stolen). Already guessed which one is which or still confused?
Actually, this isn't quite true. Intellectual property doesn't follow quite the same logic as tangible physical property does. No, you didn't lift a physical copy of e.g. Windows XP off of store shelves, but you are enjoying the benefits of the use of the software that would only otherwise come with a legitimate purchase (or a handful of other scenarios not relevant to the discussion). The tricky thing in the past 10 years or so has been figuring out how software/MP3s/etc. fit into traditional legal models concerning theft. The overwhelming legal precedent, however, is still that downloading material you haven't purchased a license to is theft, plain and simple. The RIAA has pretty much seen to that precedent concerning music, and most major countries in the world have laws concerning software piracy.
I'm not pointing fingers, demonizing, or getting up on a holier-than-thou cloud; it's just that as someone mentioned above there is NO legal or ethical justification for this sort of thing whatsoever. Again, not that you're a bad man if you do so, it's just disingenuous to claim there's nothing wrong with it from a legal standpoint.
seiatsu wrote:
Or if you don't want to get locked into a region, you can use VLC player on your PC. Nothing fancy to do. Just install the player and the DVD is playable without getting your region locked after four changes.
Is VLC able to overcome Windows' native DVD region coding as well? That was my understanding as far as playing DVDs on a Windows PC goes--you had to either have DVD software expecting a certain region (or essentially region-free, e.g. Media Player Classic) and then you had to set the region of the DVD drive as well. Does VLC allow you to get around the drive region issue?
seiatsu wrote:
(VLC is good to have anyway because it play virtually any video requiring any codec)
That was my reasoning for MPC, actually. Grabbing it as a part of the CCCP means I've yet to come across a file I can't play. Never was a big fan of VLC, though--there was something clunky-feeling about it whenever I tried using it. It didn't seem to have the zip of MPC.
But, uh, slightly on topic here, am I correct in my assumption that the multiplayer modes are multi-cart only?
Also, re:scoring, does having a large amount of lives really make much difference from a scoring standpoint? Someone who chews through 10 lives parked at the bottom of the screen scoring the smallest value chips is still going to have a much lower score than someone pulling 5's up in the boss's face on one life, am I right?