After bowling over just about everyone in its Monday press conference audience by bringing out the Beatles in the flesh to introduce the newest iteration of Rock Band, we almost overlooked the actual game which is, well… not as cool as the Beatles. But nothing really is. Be that as it may, we did have a chance to check it out in more detail Wednesday afternoon, and there’s little doubt that Harmonix pulled out all the stops in developing what’s likely to be the most popular edition of Rock Band ever produced.
Tag Archive: George
Shake It Up, Baby! The Beatles Rock Band to Ship September 9
MTV Games and Rock Band maker Harmonix have announced that the widely-anticipated The Beatles: Rock Band will go on sale to customers in North America, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand on September 9, 2009—that’s right, 9/9/09—for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Nintendo Wii. In the United States, the game itself will be priced at $59.99 as a standalone software title that’s compatible with existing Rock Band guitars, drums, and other controllers. However, Harmonix will also be offering two limited edition bundles: The Beatles Rock Band Standalone Guitars and The Beatles Rock Band Premium Edition Bundle, which will offer guitars, basses, and other instruments famously used by the Fab Four.
Beatles Online Next Year
You can already legally download the solo work of John, Paul, George and Ringo. But getting your hands on the work they did together has meant going out and buying CDs (or holding on to that oldvinyl) – at least if you want to do it legally. That will finally change in the next few months, according to an interview Sir Paul McCartney gave to Billboard.com. EMI has seemingly been on the verge of making the Beatles’ work available for legal download for quite a while now, but hasn’t tippedover the edge. Finally, though, it seems that most of the problems have been solved, with only one point remaining. "You’ve got to get these things right," McCartney said. "Youdon’t want to do something that’s as cool as that and in three years time you think, ‘Oh God, why did we do that?’" McCartney expects the music to be available next year, and it willdoubtlessly spark a spur in downloading, especially from baby boomers. One of the problems has been a legal trademark dispute between Apple Corps with computer maker Apple, which was settled in February.
By George, It’s An iPod Boombox
Chestnut Hill Sound has announced its George table-top speaker system for Apple’s iPod portable music player, Designed to appear to quality-conscious iPod listeners, the George system offers a tabletop speaker setup with AM/FM radio, alarm functions, and a wireless remote. And, of course, you can plug other audio sources into George, run audio from George to your audiophile speaker setup, and—coming soon—even tune into HD radio.
Rampage Coming Back
Remember that classic arcade game known as Rampage, where you controlled monsters that fought each other and destroyed buildings? It’s coming back in spring 2006 as a new video game on the PS2 and GameCube systems from Midway for $19.95.
Rampage: Total Destruction, said Midway, offers a new look at the old classic game featuring monsters George, Lizzie and Ralph. It brings in a variety of new monsters to collect and play. Almost everything in the playing environment can be destroyed and monsters can acquire upgrades throughout the course of a game. Players can go one or two as they destroy cities all over the world.
Symantec’s Customer Service Takes A Dive
Quote from the editorial:
“Symantec has officially lost my business. After talking with five different customer support guys over eight days, I’m completely wiped out. I feel like George Foreman after going fifteen brutal rounds with Muhammed Ali, only to hear him whisper, “Is that all you got, George?”
It wouldn’t have come to this if Symantec had just owned up to its responsibility, but apparently that wasn’t in the “Customer Care” handbook. It was a simple enough problem to fix.”
Dell Launches ‘PC Security’ Campaign
A record number of customers contacting Dell with computer performance issues caused by spyware and viruses shows how pervasive the problem is among home technology users, said Mike George, vice president and general manager of Dell’s U.S. Consumer business.
“Spyware is the root cause of many of the performance problems our customers face,” George said. “More consumers are using broadband and wireless Internet access in their homes. These are tremendous tools, but they also expose us to malicious software that attaches to our PCs as we browse the Internet.”



