Jan 31

I visited the Trafford Centre yesterday.  The main reason for doing so was to allow both my wife and I to visit the Apple store.  We both have AppleCare Insurance on our iPhones and they had both been affected by a problem with the plastic casing; a small crack starting at the docking port and making its way up the back of the handset.

We got these replaced with no problems whatsoever – fantastic customer service and we decided to have a wander around whilst we were there.

I bought Sue a Sony Reader for Christmas.  It’s a Mills & Boon special edition (pink) PRS-300.  I’d had my eye on one for a while – long before I’d bought one for Sue, e-ink was something that looked fantastic.  There was a Sony Style shop at the Trafford Centre so I decided to go and have a look at the other model they have on offer – the touch (PRS-600).  I’d read a number of conflicting reviews – a lot of the negativity was aimed at the screen.  Due to the surface required for a touch screen interface, the screen was more reflective than the matte finish of the PRS-300.  I confirmed this almost immediately when I was unable to read the text on screen from a number of angles due to the florescent lighting in the store.

Up to this week I had been waiting for the announcement of the Apple iPad – it was pointless buying an E-book Reader as well as a tablet, I’d end up with having too many devices to carry around.  After disappointment with the press conference and knowing that I wasn’t going to be picking up the iPad (at least not the 1st generation) I’d decided I wanted the PRS-300.

There were a number of options available to me at this point.  I knew that I could get the reader online from WH Smith for £139.  I knew that Sony were selling it online for £149.99 and I knew that the prices other retailers were selling it for varied from £150-£199.  I decided to see if I could regain my faith in the high street; I’d have a go at bartering like my dad used to do (when we used to bother going to physical shops and not just buying things online).  I remember one occasion he was buying a Camcorder.  Currys and Comet were both situated within a few hundred meters of each other so we went to-and-fro playing them off one another.  One shop would throw in a bag, the other a bag and some tapes, back to the first and they’d throw in a spare battery along with the bag and tapes.  It was great fun and you could end up with a real bargain. This was all before the Internet really took off.

I decided that since we were out, wanting to have a wander around anyway that I’d set myself a little challenge and try to get hold of a Sony Reader cheaper than I could online. I want to make it clear that I didn’t set out to waste the time of any of the stores involved, I wasn’t trying to defraud them or con them into selling me something cheaper than they should have been doing, I was trying to satisfy my own personal curiousity about whether or not high street shopping could still be competitive when compared against the Internet.

Here’s an account of how it went.

Sony Style

They had the PRS-300 at 149.99 – matching their online store price.  I thought this was more than reasonable considering a lot of places tend to treat the businesses as two completely separate entities.  Also they had the readers on display, both (PRS-300 and PRS-600) were turned on, had books available to read and were on the display stands that allow you to pull the unit away from the stand to feel it in your hands properly. I decided the price was pretty good but that I’d go and have a wander around the other shops to see what they were offering.

WH Smith

They didn’t have the readers on display but once we tracked down a member of staff they checked in the back and confirmed that they had one in stock at £149.99.  I asked them why they were selling it for more than it cost from their website and they attempted to explain it in terms of delivery costs – it costs them more for them to have stock delivered to the store.  (They sell it online for £139 including free delivery to either store or customer).

Waterstones

Had a nice display cabinet next to the tills – you couldn’t hold one but you could see them behind glass.  They had an offer on this weekend where they were giving away a free £10 e-book voucher for their online store with all e-book readers purchases.  Price of the PRS-300 was £179.99.  The store was busy and I struggled to get hold of anyone – we decided to leave and come back a little later.

Sony Style

Back in the Sony shop I decided to try something out.  I didn’t lie as such but I asked an assistant if there was any room for maneuverability on the price as I’d seen it elsewhere.  He told me that if I bought one today I could have it for £134.95 as they were having a sale.  I asked him which colours they had in stock.  He replied “none”.  They’d have to order one in.  Sneaky! They’d order it in and I’d have to pick it up from the store, they weren’t willing to ship to my home address.  I’d have had to go back to Manchester from Bradford, negating any saving we’d have made.

John Lewis

Managed to find the Sony Readers in the electrical department on display stands which you could lift them from to read.  Some helpful soul had decided to delete all of the books on them, you could look at the menu but not a lot else.  Price was £179.99.  It took us ages to grab an assistant, even though there were a number of them hovering around – they seemed more interested in talking to one another than helping with customer enquiries.  We found one and asked him if they were willing to price match the other stores.  He told me their policy allowed for two options – either we bought the Reader at £179.99 and their price match department would verify the lower cost, send us a letter which would allow us to go back into store for a refund, or we could do it in reverse – wait for a letter which would allow us to purchase the reader at the lower price.  Again both options meant a return trip back to Manchester.

Waterstones

I decided to go back to Waterstones and it was a little quieter, managed to grab someone and ask them if they’d be willing to price match.  They got a manager who said unfortunately not.  They then tried to sell me an Elonex E-book Reader (I didn’t even know Elonex were still in business) and told me it was only £130 and it was better than the Sony because it read more types of PDF.  I decided to let this go and we left.  Again.

Currys.Digital

We decided to see if Currys had any in the shop. They had the unit retailing at £179.99, we were going to leave but I noticed they had a sign up by the tills which mentioned their price promise.  If you find it elsewhere within 15 miles/however many days they refund the difference + up to 10%.  I grabbed someone (again they were all for gathering in groups and ignoring the customer) and asked them if they’d price match a cheaper store I’d been in that day.  He went to get a manager who came over, got a reader out of the cabinet, printed off a label and took me to the till.  “That’ll be £179.99 please sir.”  “Oh, I said.  I was wanting to have it price matched with another store”.  I told him that Sony were selling them for £134.95 – he asked me if they had any in stock (drat) and I told him that they had them ready to order in 1/2 days.  He looked at me smugly and said “We won’t be price matching them then”.  I replied with “WH Smith are selling it for £149.99″ He asked me if it was the same model and the same colour, I told him it was.  He asked me if I’d told the shop assistant this, I said I had, he looked unhappy, went to find him and told him to check out the price at the other store.

The guy who I originally grabbed must have been late for lunch because he palmed me off onto someone else who went onto the net to have a look at the WH Smith Price.  They had the slowest Internet connection I’ve ever seen and it took a long time to sort out.  She saw that it was £139 online, she eventually phoned the store, got through, managed to get a price and was told £150 (price had gone up a penny!).  She checked with another manager who said that they would match the in-store price but not the web price.  I would be able to get it for £149.99 (£150) – 10% of the difference; in this case £30 so £3 off and a retail price of £147.  I asked if that was the best she could do – I told her I could order one from WH Smith today and have it delivered to my house for free on Monday/Tuesday.  I realised that it was only £8 difference but £8 is £8.  She agreed that every penny counts at the moment and said the only thing she might be able to do was offer some discount on the monthly payment protection plan for three years.  I told her I wouldn’t have the reader in three years but was going to buy it on my credit card so it would be protected that way.  I didn’t bother going into home contents insurance and things too but it’d covered under that as well.  I told her that I was very grateful for her time and thanked her but I was going to leave it. I did feel a little bad about having wasted her time.  If they’d done me a price at less than £140 I would have bought it there and then.  They’d have made a sale of £140 and I might have given them another go in the future.

As it happens, I left the Trafford Centre without a Sony Reader.

I had a good look when I got home at the WH Smith website, using Quidco I can get the reader for around £134 – 50p cheaper than the Sony shop were offering me it for.  This is an extremely good price (Sue’s reader at Christmas cost me £160) but at the moment I can’t really afford to buy it.  I could but I’d have no money left to spend on myself for the rest of the month.  In a month where you have Bioshock 2 and AvP coming out you need to save the pennies up!

I’m in no immediate rush to get hold of a Reader, as long as I have one before I go on holiday later in the year I’ll be fine.

It’s not all bad news for the high street, the Skechers shop got £120 out of Sue (after I’d run some price checks online to make sure you couldn’t buy them cheaper) and I bought a couple of iPhone cases from the Apple store spending around £60 (including £20 for a new case for Sue’s new iPhone) so we did do our part yesterday to help the retail industry.

To sum up – I think my own consumer habits have changed.  I can’t speak for the rest of the world or the rest of my generation but 9/10 I cannot bring myself to buy something from a shop if I know that I can order it online cheaper.

I understand that high street stores have overheads that online stores might not; more staff – certainly more customer facing shop staff, more costs regarding electricity, taxes, etc.  I just thought that with the economy being the way it is at the moment (even though we’re now out of the recession) that high streets might try to be a little more competitive.

I also realise that without the Sony Style high street store I wouldn’t have been able to hold the PRS-600 in my hands and confirm that the screen was unusable in bright light (making it a non-viable purchase for holiday sunbed reading).  With this case there would have been enough scope for me to build an opinion based on reviews from the web but its no match to holding the thing in your hand.

The thing that bugs me the most is that the online counterparts of the high street shops (GAME being the most prominent example) are treated like a seperate entity.  To me, there is no reason why an Xbox 360 copy of Left4Dead2 might be £34.99 online at www.game.co.uk and £42.99 on the high street.  I can use my reward card to collect (and redeem) points on purchases both online and in store.  I can return an item I’m not happy with that I bought from the website to a GAME store.  It’s silly.  With the two arms of the business being as conjoined as they are in that respect – why not do it with prices across the board?  I know it would make it more likely for me to buy a game whilst I’m in town on my lunch break.  As it stands at the moment I’ll buy it from the cheapest online store.  Sometimes this is the GAME website, other times its Amazon or gameplay.

Whilst I don’t want the high street shops to disappear, I’m not going to spend any of my hard earned cash with them if I can save money, spend it online and get the product I want 1-2 days later.  I’ve never been in such a rush that I’ve had to have something there and then.  (we’re talking electricals here, reptiles and other non-electrical impulse buys are excluded from this statement)

Thanks for reading :-)

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Jul 06

Further to my blog post back here it would seem that Lucasarts might be regretting disbanding their adventure game team (most of whom went on to work for telltale games).

They’ve decided to jump on the Steam bandwagon in order to distribute/reawaken their old catalogue.

Starting this Wednesday,games from the back catalogue will be released on Steam for purchase and download.

Lucasarts released this press release:

Future Back-Catalog Announcements to be Made at http://twitter.com/lucasartsgames.
Subscribe today!

Back by Popular Demand, LOOM, The Dig, Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, and
Star Wars Battlefront II Headline List of Games Soon to be Available via Direct
Download!
LucasArts Continues Initiative to Revive Classic Gaming Titles

SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – July 6, 2009 – Fans have asked and LucasArts has
delivered!  Today the company announced a new initiative in its effort to revive its
classic and beloved franchises by making its games available for the first time ever as
digital downloads online.

In this first round of releases, ten fan-favorite LucasArts PC games will be made
available Wednesday, July 8 on Steam®, Valve Corporation’s delivery and management
platform for the PC.  Scheduled for release are classic adventure titles like LOOM and
The Dig and hit action games including Star Wars Battlefront II and Star Wars Republic
Commando.

The complete list of games to be released on July 8 via Steam includes:

• Armed and Dangerous™
• Indiana Jones® and the Fate of Atlantis
• Indiana Jones® and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure
• LEGO® Indiana Jones: The Original Adventure
• LOOM™
• Star Wars Battlefront® II
• Star Wars Republic Commando®
• Star Wars Starfighter™
• The Dig®
• Thrillville®: Off the Rails™

“This effort is going to make it possible to introduce a whole new generation of gamers to
LucasArts’ classic games,” said Darrell Rodriguez, president of LucasArts.  “It also gives
more people a chance to play our games by making them available long after they’ve
disappeared from store shelves.  We hope our fans are as excited as we are about our
plans and we can’t wait to share what’s coming next.  This is just the beginning.”

This series of launches continues LucasArts’ new mission to revitalize its deep portfolio
of beloved gaming franchises.

LucasArts previously announced the return of the classic Monkey Island® franchise with
two new projects due to be released in the near future. Tomorrow, July 7, Telltale will
premiere the Tales of Monkey Island® game series on PC, delivering a completely new
epic storyline and swashbuckling flair that will unfold across five monthly episodes.  The
first Tales of Monkey Island chapter is expected to release for WiiWare™ in the coming
weeks as well.

The Monkey Island celebration continues on July 15 when LucasArts publishes The
Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition, a completely re-imagined version of the first
game in the series that adds updated high definition graphics, a re-mastered musical
score, and full voiceover to the classic adventure game originally launched in 1990.  The
Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition will be made available on Xbox LIVE® Arcade
for the Xbox 360® video game and entertainment system from Microsoft, and PC via
Steam and other online distribution channels.

Future announcements about the re-release of LucasArts’ back catalog titles will be made
through LucasArts’ Twitter feed at http://twitter.com/lucasartsgames.

About Steam
The leading online platform for PC games and digital entertainment, Steam delivers new
releases and online services to over 20 million PC users around the world. For more
information, please visit www.steamgames.com.

About Valve
Valve is an entertainment software and technology company founded in 1996 and based
in Bellevue, Washington. For more information, please visit www.valvesoftware.com

About LucasArts
LucasArts, a division of Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Ltd., is a leading developer
and publisher of interactive entertainment software worldwide for video game console
systems, computers and the Internet. Based in San Francisco, Calif., as well as on the
Internet at www.lucasarts.com, LucasArts was created in 1982 by George Lucas to
provide an interactive element to his vision of a state-of-the-art, multifaceted
entertainment company.

LucasArts, the LucasArts logo, STAR WARS and INDIANA JONES are trademarks or registered
trademarks of Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Ltd. or Lucasfilm Ltd. © 2009 Lucasfilm Entertainment
Company Ltd. or Lucasfilm Ltd. & ® or TM as indicated. All rights reserved.
Nintendo trademarks used under license.  WiiWare is available only through the Wii console.

Now I don’t know about you, but I’m a little disappointed with this initial run of releases.  I had a feeling that this might be what the announcement teased by @lucasartsgames on Twitter was going to be but I had hoped that we might be seeing a Full Throttle 2 or Day of The Tentacle 2 (maniac mansion 3) maybe even a revival of the X-Wing series.  I remember hearing the news that Full Throttle 2 had been canned – and Sam and Max 2.  I was distraught.  Telltale games did a good job with Sam and Max but it just didn’t feel right.  I hope they do a better job with the new episodic Monkey Island games (first one is out tomorrow – woo!)

Joystiq have the following quote up from Lucasarts president :

“We have the plans in our back pocket and if things go extremely well, we’ll roll out those plans and put them into action.”

He also hints at possible iPhone releases.

Who knows – if theres enough interest in the back catalogue, they might look to bringing back some of the classics.  I’ve seen it said that the Adventure game genre is dead – that’s bullshit.  It’s alive, well and waiting for the next best thing.

I am rubber, you are glue.

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May 07

What a turbulent couple of days we’ve had in the world of gaming.  Firstly, yesterday the news broke that Sony had bought the rights to the upcoming Ghostbusters game from Atari and would be making it a PS3 exclusive.  The news later cleared this up and we found out it’s acually a timed exclusive – the 360 version along with the wii verion will be hitting towards the end of the year.  This only affects gamers in the EU.  Sony – you’re shit.

If you think that Ghostbusters as a game is going to shift PS3 consoles – think again – the console just doesn’t have it.  I’ve owned mine for nearly 2 years now, it still takes 2nd place against my 360 and is used mainly as a blu ray player cum (thanks for the heads up Gareth) karaoke machine with Singstar.  If there’s a multi platform game I’ll buy it on the 360 every time.  Yes you have to pay Microsoft for Xbox live membership, but it bloody well shows in difference in service levels and download speeds.  All the timed exclusive is going to do is piss me off.  I’ll still be buying Ghostbusters on the 360, I’ll just wait until it gets released.  It’ll be a nice Christmas present.  If you’re lucky I might use my free lovefilm trial to rent your poxy exclusive. I’ll still buy the film when it comes out on blu ray but the game I’m waiting for the 360 version.

On the plus side, this makes me think that the game will be something special – we’ll have to see won’t we.

The other big news in gaming is that 3D realms has closed it’s doors.  Duke Nukem For(n)ever doesn’t look like it’ll ever see the light of day.  Citing a lack of funds causing the shutdown confuses me somewhat – they’ve just had a massive hit on the XBLA with Duke Nukem 3D – they must have made a packet with that.  I guess 12 years developing a game that’ll never come out really does affect your company in a negative way.  Oh well.  I guess it’s not the end of the world.

May 04

I’m eyeing up a Macbook or a Macbook pro at the moment.  It scares me :p

I’m a PC.  I am, I really, really am.  But I quite like the look of the macbook and my laptop is starting to slow down a little.

I play world of warcraft – runs on mac.

I’ve got the Sims 3 on preorder- runs on mac.

I want iTunes to work properly – runs better on mac.

I have a mobileme subscription – integrates with iCal, etc.

If I get a high enough spec one, I could bootcamp it, have it running XP for things that just won’t run on the mac, I guess older PC games and emulators and things? Unless there’s a dosbox for mac. (quick google says there is).  Damn.

I also fancy playing with the iPhone SDK and possibly using that as an outlet for my creativity.

I’ve always quite fancied one, they’re expensive, I’d probably have to find one on credit somewhere – PC world are offering that.  I can spend £700 on a 13″ macbook or £1350 on a 15″ macbook pro.   Quite a difference.  I’m not sure how the specs relate to PC specs in that – I’m not sure what it would mean I couldn’t run if I bought the cheaper model.  The bigger screen would be a definate plus.

At the moment I’m deep in thought, I fancy going out and buying one today.  Damn my impulsiveness!.

Feb 28

We went around to Andrew and Zoe’s last night and had a whale of a time.  Played around with the Flip and here are some of the results. 

I love singing.  You’ve also got to love my Elmo t-shirt.  awesome.

First up we have me and Andrew singing The Fray’s How to save a life.

Next we have Boston’s More than a Feeling, again Andrew and myself taking the mics.

Finally we have me and Zoe singing The Calling’s Wherever you will go.

Singing is something I really, really love doing.  My vocal range isn’t the best in the world but I’m happy with it :-p

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