BankID and Java plug-in in Firefox on Ubuntu

If you have problems running BankID (Norwegian Internet bank authentication) in Firefox on Ubuntu I might have the solution. I did at least have some problems starting BankID or more correctly starting Java in Firefox on Ubuntu.

I had already installed Sun’s Java implementation following the instructions I wrote about earlier. Then I had to use this trick which I found thanks to Eirik Hoem.

First, go the the plugins folder where you have installed Firefox (using a text shell/command prompt).

cd /usr/lib/firefox-3.0/plugins$

Next, create a symlink to where you have installed the Java plugin.

sudo ln -s /usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun/jre/plugin/i386/ns7/libjavaplugin_oji.so

Finally, restart your browser and the problem should be solved.

Game of the year 2008 – the ones I did play

I recently reviewed the games released in 2008 which I wish I had played.  2008 was yet another great year for gaming with several outstanding title. It is now over and it time to summarize the games I actually spent time with during the last 12 months. I’ll be starting with some games which were a bit disappointing and at best regular.

Regular at best

Age of Conan - Screenshot ageofconan.com
Age of Conan - Screenshot ageofconan.com

First up is unfortunately the Norwegian massive multi player online role play game (MMORPG) Age of Conan. I had great expectations for this game even though I never played any  other MMORPGs before. While Conan was supposed to bring more fighting and new elements to the MMORPG experience it was rather disappointing. The disappointment came perhaps not so much from the game itself but by the genre. Grinding and silly kill-30-bugs-quests is not something for me.

While Age of Conan failed at bringing more fighting to the MOORPG arena, other games focus only on the fighting. I tried a couple of them in Virtua Fighter 5 (360) and Fight Night 3 (360). I am no big fan of the fighting genre either and I guess both were doomed to fail at entertaining me for a long time. While Fight Night is a decent game, Virtua Fighter is a flat out boring.

With Fallout 3 coming out this fall and the previous Fallout games being recognized by many as some of the best games ever, I had to try Fallout 2 when I stumbled over it. I have many good memories with games released in the late nineties and early 2000 but I think the memories are better than the games themselves. Fallout 2 could not live up to the expectations I have of a game today and it was uninstalled fairly soon.

Good games

Bad Company - Screenshot gamepro.com
Bad Company - Screenshot gamepro.com

2007 and 2008 provided a lot of good shooters and I have played several of them this year. Going through Call of Duty 5 World at War, Bad Company (360), Halo 3 (360), Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter (360), Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter 2 (360), Rainbow Six Vegas (360) and Rainbow Six Vegas 2 (360) has been fun. However, none of these games provide any ground breaking experiences. Nevertheless, I should mention a few things which I really liked about Battlefield Bad Company. The sound is very good, and a gun shot actually sounds different indoors and outdoors. It is furthermore always fun to blow things up and the ability to take out the enemy’s cover with explosives is something which should be implemented in all shooters. Last but not least I love the silly humor in the game. It makes the characters  more likable and credible. It is perhaps not appropriate in all games but I think Dice (the developer) succeeded quite well.

Crackdown (360) and  Saints Row (360) are somewhat more open sandbox games than the plain shooters. I greatly enjoy the freedom these games provide.  Crackdown was one of the first open and quite good games for the 360 when it was released early 2007. Since I did not get an Xbox until early 2008 I could not play it until this year. Saint’s Row is shamelessly ripping-off Grand Theft Auto (GTA) but does so with style and I am really looking forward to playing the second game in the series.

Forza 2 - Screenshot ign.com
Forza 2 - Screenshot ign.com

My 2008 was as mentioned dominated by shooters and sandbox games. However, I also played a couple of other good games. The  only strategy game I played this in 2008 was World in Conflict which I wrote about earlier. With stunning visual but only a limited amount of strategy it turned out to be a good game. With a bit more strategy added to the mix, it could have been a great game. The next game is perhaps a bit of a surprise. I have never been a fan of racing and car games even though I have played classics like Indianapolis 500, Test Drive, Outrun, Street Rod and Stunts on the PC, Gran Turismo on the Playstation, Ironman Super Off Road on the Nintendo and Pit Stop on the Commodore 64. Forza 2 (360) was really a nice surpise. I enjoyed it and I might pick it up again when I have more time. Another game I should pick up again in Braid. The highly rated platform game was a bit of a disappointment in my eyes after reading all the outstanding critics. By all means it is a good game but it is not as good as expected and I have not finished it yet. When that is said, it is a truly remarkable achievement to make such a good game for one person.

Great games

Gears of War 2 - Screenshot gearsofwar.xbox.com
Gears of War 2 - Screenshot gearsofwar.xbox.com

The great games I played in 2008 are also dominated by shooters. With Gears of War 2 (360) coming out I had to replay one of 2006s best games, Gears of War (360) before I started with the new installment. Playing through the first game with a friend is still as fun as it was back in 2006 and the 2008 experience is even better. GoW 2 extends GoW in several ways and it is a blast going through it in two player mode. I have not played any of them online but it is supposedly great fun.

Left 4 Dead - Screenshot steamcommunity.com
Left 4 Dead - Screenshot steamcommunity.com

I am as said not much of a multi-player gamer on the 360 but I have had my share of online gaming on the PC the last year.  Call of Duty 4 Modern Warfare was in fact the first game ever, I have bothered to play a lot online. It arrived late 2007 but I continued playing it a lot way into 2008. The fall 2008, the CoD series got a new installment with the “copy cat” CoD 5 World at War. Even though World at War is a good game it was not as fun to go back to world war 2 as it is blasting away with modern weapons in CoD 4. On the other hand, 2008 gave us another great, hectic shooter in Left 4 Dead. Left 4 Dead is a massive zombie onslaught from Valve (which I was a big fan of until the decided to rip us off with their “European friendly prices”). Nevertheless, Left 4 Dead is a truly great game which I have had way too little time to play.

I would say the last two games I will mention fall into a category which I have been a huge fan of since System Shock (particularly the second) and later Deus Ex back in the nineties and early 2000. Both Mass Effect (360) and Bioshock have huge elements of shooters but they also have RPG elements and characters which can be developed to the players taste. Mass Effect 2 is probably one of the games I am looking forward to the most at the moment. Mass Effect succeeded at providing an interesting universe, good story and great game play. It was a bit repetitive in the end but I was particularly happy about playing such a game on the 360. Being a big PC fan I was a bit surprised how well the controls worked on the Xbox.

The last game I will mention is perhaps not a great game in the way Gears of War and Mass Effect are great games. However, having in mind the limited resources the developers have had to make it and how fun it actually is to play, I would say that Mount and Blade is a truly great game. Even though it lacks a good story it provides hours and hours of fun slaughtering other knights and taking over the kingdom. Try it!

Game of the year

Grand Theft Auto 4 - Screenshot gta4.net
Grand Theft Auto 4 - Screenshot gta4.net

My choice for the game of the year is not a very original one. Grand Theft Auto 4 has already won several such awards elsewhere but I cannot say how much I appreciated the care Rockstar (the developer) has put into every detail of the game. It is far from flawless (checkpoints anyone?) and it has received critics for several issues. Nevertheless, it has a great story, great developing characters and an amazing level of detail. Nico Belic is furthermore the most interesting protagonist since Gordon Freeman in Half-Life.

Game of the year 2008 – the ones I did not play

Another great year of gaming has passed with a bunch of poor, good and outstanding games. Many of which I have played but there are still several games which I have not had time to either get or play (yet). Christmas time is time for gaming and for game of the year awards. Plenty of other sites have summarized the games of 2008 in different ways and now it is my turn. I will start with the games I for some reason did not play. the following are the greatest games of 2008 which I did not play.

I have already own several games which I have had no time to play. These are great titles like Fallout 3, Far Cry 2, Red Alert 3, Saints Row 2 (360) and Sins of a Solar Empire. All these games have been received with pretty good critics and I am really looking forward to starting them up.

Fallout 3 - Art from Bethsoft
Fallout 3 - Art from Bethsoft.com

Fallout 3 is perhaps the game I am looking forward to the most as it has already been nominated or won several game of the year awards. However, some annoying problems (with codecs?) have stopped me from digging my teeth into it.

Far Cry 2 - Art from Ubi Soft
Far Cry 2 - Art from Ubisoft

Far Cry 2 is probably the game I will start playing first. I really look forward to some good first person shooter action and I expect Far Cry to be quite a lot shorter than Fallout. If I start with Fallout I will probably not be able to play any other game for a long time.

Dead Space - Screenshot from EA
Dead Space - Screenshot from EA

Additionally, I have a wish list currently consisting of Brothers in Arms Hells Highway, Civilization 4 – Colonization, Crysis Warhead, Dead Space (360), Fable 2 (360), Mirror’s Edge (360), World of Goo and X3: Terran Conflict. Many of these have gotten great critics and I will most likely get some or all of them. Particularly Dead Space looks like a very good game and it has also been nominated in several game of the year awards.

Little Big Planet - Scrrenshot from Gamespot
Little Big Planet - Scrrenshot from Gamespot

However, the best game which I did not play, is not in my collection nor in my wish list. Since I do not own a Playstation 3 I will most likely not play Little big planet. Nevertheless, Little big planet steals the game of the year award 2008 for the games I did not play. Little big planet is the only game which has even made me consider wanting a Playstation 3. I do not care about Metal Gear Solid, Gran Turismo or any other of the games available only on PS3. Little big planet is an innovative and cute newcomer which has totally charmed me.

St€am to offer games in “local” currency

Steam wants you to bend over
Steam wants you to bend over

Valve announced that they are going to start offering games through Steam in “local” currency. The local currency in Norway is according to Valve Euro. Last time I checked, Norway was not part of the European Union and our local currency is still “kroner” (Norwegian crowns). Offering games in Euro could have been fair enough unless they decided to keep the prices at the same amount as the prices in dollars. In other words 1$=1€. For a Norwegian that is today a price increase of 42%. Ridiculous!

I have earlier written about how satisfied I have been with Steam but I am not bending over and paying for instance about 480 NOK for Far Cry 2 through Steam when I can get it for 190 NOK from play.com.

Edit: Please leave a comment in this thread in Steams forum to show your unhappyness.

Building a Linux Pc for my parents

The Project

The project is to get my parents a new PC on which they can work, surf the web and read their e-mail. They wanted a small, compact and silent computer.

The Hardware

With these pretty moderate system requirements there is no need to cash out for a  high end graphics card or a multi core CPU. Computers like these often become expensive, noisy, very hot or all three. It is better to find something with moderate but high enough specifications which is silent and rather small.

Antec NSK3480 with a 380 watt PSU

I opted for the following hardware: First the Antec NSK3480 casing with a 380 watt power supply. The case is small, looks good and it is quite cheap when you consider that it has a PSU. It is however so small that it only fits micro ATX motherboards. Next I got a low power dual core AMD Athlon X2 4850e, a matching Gigabyte GA-MA78GM-DS2H motherboard with an onboard graphics chip and 4GB of DDR2 RAM. Moreover I got a Western Digital Caviar BLUE 160 GB hard disk and a Samsung SH-S203B DVD recorder. In addition to the PC itself I got a Logitech Cordless Desktop Wave (like the one I have myself) and a NEC 22WV 22″ LCD wide screen display.

In total everything cost about 5000 NOK or around 550 Euro. I think this is quite cheap when considering that you get a quite nice office machine with a LCD display and a cordless mouse and keyboard.

The Software

The first thing you’ll need is an operating system (OS). I prefer Linux because it is a very good OS with all the applications I need. Moreover, everything comes without licensing fees. So I started by downloading Ubuntu (the Linux distribution I normally use). The next thing you have to do is to make a bootable CD using for instance the open source CD recording tool InfraRecorder.

Insert the CD into the computer and install Ubuntu following the on-screen instructions. This is pretty fast and rather simple. The best thing is however that Ubuntu includes most of the applications and all the drivers (unless you have brand new and fancy hardware) you’ll need.

However, there are a few applications which need to be installed or upgraded. OpenOffice 3.0 is for instance not included in the October release of Ubuntu. The 3.0 version will be included later and I am sure 2.4 would do but there are a few additions in 3.0 which I like Luckily it is rather simple to upgrade from 2.4 to 3.0 using these procedures.

Add/remove applicaitons on Ubuntu

Next, I installed my number one e-mail client, Thunderbird. This is easily done by opening the “Apllications” menu in Ubuntu, clicking “Add/Remove…”, search for Thunderbird, select it and click “Apply Changes” like in the illustration above.

Next up is Skype. Even though this is NOT an open source application it is a rather useful tool for communicating with friends and family. Skype is pretty much installed the same way as OpenOffice, see these procedures.

Synaptic Package Manager

Ubuntu comes with a community implementation of the Java Runtime Environment (JRE). This is unfortunately a lot slower than Sun’s implementation so it is adviceable to install Sun’s JRE. This is done by choosing “Administration” on the “System” menu and then “Synaptic Package Manager”. In the Synaptic Package Manager, search for sun java and select “sun-java6-jre” and click apply, see the illustration above. To configure your system for using the newly installed JRE open a terminal window, type the following command (without “”) "sudo update-alternatives --config java" and select the right JRE.

For easy parental use I finally created launch icons for the most used applications like e-mail client, browser, text editor and spreadsheet. This is done by right clicking on the application in the menu and selecting “Add this launcher to the desktop”.

In addition to these applications you may need to install for instance the a flash player, codecs for video playback etc. However, the installation of these is started automatically when needed so the only thing you need to do is to follow the instructions.

The only thing remaing is to hand it over and hopefully not giving too much first aid when they start using it.