Today, we went to the car show at the Warren in Woodham Walter.
The highlight of the trip for Shelley was that the owner of her favourite car let her sit in it.
A 1968 Ford Mustang fastback.
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Saturday, 10 May 2014
Saturday, 15 February 2014
Hydraulic Log Splitter
I have just received the Duocut 10 Ton Manual Log Splitter by Forrest Master. Having assembled it and used it a few times, I decided it was worth writing a review.
I'll come back to the assembly so that I can start off with something positive.
I purchased it from Arrow UK who had no hesitation in arranging a Saturday morning delivery for me. It turned up before 10am which was ideal.
It splits logs very easily.
I bought it because I was having trouble splitting some Elm that had recently been felled along the edge of one of our fields. The Elm was in a dangerous way because of the high winds we had over the Christmas period. Sadly quite a lot had to come down so I have a large pile to split.
I tried to split them with a splitting wedge and with a drop hammer type splitter, the type sometimes referred to as a Swedish splitter. Both of those methods have split everything else I have tried, including some equal and larger size Willow. Neither made even the slightest impact on the sections of Elm trunk!
Luckily a friend and neighbour had an 8 ton manual splitter that he had recently purchased. We tried one of the logs on that and with some effort it split it but at risk of breaking the splitter. I therefore decided I needed something a fraction more powerful.
I liked the look of the Duocut, with it's top and bottom blade arrangement and quite a large base plate to sit the logs on. That's what arrived today.
I put the first log on, sat the top blade just on top of the log, a couple of short pumps and it gripped the log and just a couple more easy pumps and the log split with hardly any effort. I was very impressed immediately.
The Elm is still tricky but so far every log, no matter what diameter, has split. I guess I've gone up to odd shaped 40cm (16") diameter logs, so far. All cut to a bit over a foot (30cm) long, as shown in the photos.
The only thing causing a problem is how entwined the grain of the Elm is, so that even though there is a full split from top to bottom, it still pulls back together. I'm not worried about that, now it has split I can finish it off with an axe or even a bolster, just to break the last bit.
It's not all good news though!
The assembly was tricky!
The tolerances of the manufacture are awful! There were a couple of bits that did not line up and needed some work to get together.
No tools are supplied. I don't mind this and I am sure any free tools supplied would not have been up to the job. I have a good set of tools. A reasonably good quality socket set, including socket mounted Allen (hex) keys which were a big help plus I have some very good quality hand held Allen keys.
I needed, 10mm and 13mm sockets, 10 and 13mm open ended spanners, 4, 5, and 6mm Allen keys and the oddest requirement was the sash clamp (or bar clamp would have done)! Just to be clear, the sash clamp is not part of the official assembly instructions!
The instructions are fairly clear except that the list of components is misleading. The two bolts that hold the foot pedals in to the bottle jack were already in the bottle jack but I was not to know that, so I thought I was two bolts short.
I also had two different types of 40mm bolt but they are not identified separately in the list. Their significance became obvious when I was bolting down the bottle jack. Anyway, as it turned out everything was present.
The manual is full of safety warnings, which I did read and eventually you get to some pictures followed by the instructions.
These are clear and for the most part putting it together is straight forwards but there are some changes to the design, not included in the instructions. The instructions claim a transit bolt for the lower axe blade, that was not present on my splitter, there was no hole for the transit bolt so it must have been completely omitted from the design. The bottle jack came with it's release valve assembled but the instructions assumed a transit plug needed to be removed, which it did not.
Now for the bad bit. One of the bottle jack mounting holes is so close to the rear pivot that the rear bolt will not drop in to place as intended.
This is where the two different types of 40mm long bolts is significant. The ones used for the wheels have a larger diameter head and would stand no chance of fitting in the gap at the rear of the bottle jack. The other two bolts have narrower but taller heads but still do not fit properly.
I tried to hammer it in but could not get a hammer in with enough force. Eventually I managed to get enough thread through that I could get the nut on and used brute force with the socket to pull the bolt down in to place. It was not easy and I did not like putting that much pressure on the bolt head. I also got the Allen key stuck and it took some bashing to get that back out.
It's in and secure and there is no reason to ever need to remove it.
The last troublesome bit was fitting the plate that the log sits on. I have a Land Rover, so I am used to poor tolerance and bolt holes in large chunks of metal not lining up, so getting this last bit together was fairly easy and did not need any of the drilling, usually associated with Land Rover parts!
The arms that stick out, to mount the plate on to, were nowhere near where they needed to be to get the bolts in. This is where I used the sash clamp to pull the arms together so I could drop the bolts in and get the nut just on the end of each bolt.
I then released the sash clamp and tightened up all the bolts. Not too tricky. Overall what should have been a 20 minute job took about an hour.
It's all together, feels very strong and it's not too difficult to haul about to where the logs need splitting. The dual action is easy to use and the return springs are the right pressure for the job.
Most importantly it splits the logs with no trouble. I just need a bit of nicer weather to get out and make my way through the mountain of tree trunk.
==
Update 9 June 2014
Using the splitter yesterday the hydraulic jack got stuck and would not go all the way down. The wedge had not been going down to completely level with the platform for a while but this time it got stuck at about 2 inches up making it useless!
I was all ready to send it back but as I had a pile of logs to do. I decided it was worth a fiddle.
To cut to the conclusion, the central plunger of the jack can be twisted to get it to drop properly.
I jacked it up so I could hold up the sprung wedge. I used a small crowbar pushed between the platform and the underside of the wedge. I wanted to make sure there was no chance the wedge could be pulled down while I was working on the plunger.
I found that with some initial effort I could twist the shiny plunger from side to side to get it to drop. I also discovered that the plunger is tight when twisted all the way either clockwise or anti-clockwise but in the middle it drops properly.
Since I adjusted the plunger it has worked perfectly.
I'll come back to the assembly so that I can start off with something positive.
I purchased it from Arrow UK who had no hesitation in arranging a Saturday morning delivery for me. It turned up before 10am which was ideal.
It splits logs very easily.
I bought it because I was having trouble splitting some Elm that had recently been felled along the edge of one of our fields. The Elm was in a dangerous way because of the high winds we had over the Christmas period. Sadly quite a lot had to come down so I have a large pile to split.
I tried to split them with a splitting wedge and with a drop hammer type splitter, the type sometimes referred to as a Swedish splitter. Both of those methods have split everything else I have tried, including some equal and larger size Willow. Neither made even the slightest impact on the sections of Elm trunk!
Luckily a friend and neighbour had an 8 ton manual splitter that he had recently purchased. We tried one of the logs on that and with some effort it split it but at risk of breaking the splitter. I therefore decided I needed something a fraction more powerful.
I liked the look of the Duocut, with it's top and bottom blade arrangement and quite a large base plate to sit the logs on. That's what arrived today.
I put the first log on, sat the top blade just on top of the log, a couple of short pumps and it gripped the log and just a couple more easy pumps and the log split with hardly any effort. I was very impressed immediately.
The Elm is still tricky but so far every log, no matter what diameter, has split. I guess I've gone up to odd shaped 40cm (16") diameter logs, so far. All cut to a bit over a foot (30cm) long, as shown in the photos.
The only thing causing a problem is how entwined the grain of the Elm is, so that even though there is a full split from top to bottom, it still pulls back together. I'm not worried about that, now it has split I can finish it off with an axe or even a bolster, just to break the last bit.
It's not all good news though!
The assembly was tricky!
The tolerances of the manufacture are awful! There were a couple of bits that did not line up and needed some work to get together.
No tools are supplied. I don't mind this and I am sure any free tools supplied would not have been up to the job. I have a good set of tools. A reasonably good quality socket set, including socket mounted Allen (hex) keys which were a big help plus I have some very good quality hand held Allen keys.
I needed, 10mm and 13mm sockets, 10 and 13mm open ended spanners, 4, 5, and 6mm Allen keys and the oddest requirement was the sash clamp (or bar clamp would have done)! Just to be clear, the sash clamp is not part of the official assembly instructions!
The instructions are fairly clear except that the list of components is misleading. The two bolts that hold the foot pedals in to the bottle jack were already in the bottle jack but I was not to know that, so I thought I was two bolts short.
I also had two different types of 40mm bolt but they are not identified separately in the list. Their significance became obvious when I was bolting down the bottle jack. Anyway, as it turned out everything was present.
The manual is full of safety warnings, which I did read and eventually you get to some pictures followed by the instructions.
These are clear and for the most part putting it together is straight forwards but there are some changes to the design, not included in the instructions. The instructions claim a transit bolt for the lower axe blade, that was not present on my splitter, there was no hole for the transit bolt so it must have been completely omitted from the design. The bottle jack came with it's release valve assembled but the instructions assumed a transit plug needed to be removed, which it did not.
Now for the bad bit. One of the bottle jack mounting holes is so close to the rear pivot that the rear bolt will not drop in to place as intended.
This is where the two different types of 40mm long bolts is significant. The ones used for the wheels have a larger diameter head and would stand no chance of fitting in the gap at the rear of the bottle jack. The other two bolts have narrower but taller heads but still do not fit properly.
I tried to hammer it in but could not get a hammer in with enough force. Eventually I managed to get enough thread through that I could get the nut on and used brute force with the socket to pull the bolt down in to place. It was not easy and I did not like putting that much pressure on the bolt head. I also got the Allen key stuck and it took some bashing to get that back out.
It's in and secure and there is no reason to ever need to remove it.
The last troublesome bit was fitting the plate that the log sits on. I have a Land Rover, so I am used to poor tolerance and bolt holes in large chunks of metal not lining up, so getting this last bit together was fairly easy and did not need any of the drilling, usually associated with Land Rover parts!
The arms that stick out, to mount the plate on to, were nowhere near where they needed to be to get the bolts in. This is where I used the sash clamp to pull the arms together so I could drop the bolts in and get the nut just on the end of each bolt.
I then released the sash clamp and tightened up all the bolts. Not too tricky. Overall what should have been a 20 minute job took about an hour.
It's all together, feels very strong and it's not too difficult to haul about to where the logs need splitting. The dual action is easy to use and the return springs are the right pressure for the job.
Most importantly it splits the logs with no trouble. I just need a bit of nicer weather to get out and make my way through the mountain of tree trunk.
==
Update 9 June 2014
Using the splitter yesterday the hydraulic jack got stuck and would not go all the way down. The wedge had not been going down to completely level with the platform for a while but this time it got stuck at about 2 inches up making it useless!
I was all ready to send it back but as I had a pile of logs to do. I decided it was worth a fiddle.
To cut to the conclusion, the central plunger of the jack can be twisted to get it to drop properly.
I jacked it up so I could hold up the sprung wedge. I used a small crowbar pushed between the platform and the underside of the wedge. I wanted to make sure there was no chance the wedge could be pulled down while I was working on the plunger.
I found that with some initial effort I could twist the shiny plunger from side to side to get it to drop. I also discovered that the plunger is tight when twisted all the way either clockwise or anti-clockwise but in the middle it drops properly.
Since I adjusted the plunger it has worked perfectly.
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Xbox One Day Two
Although this is the second day I have had the Xbox One in total I have only had about half a day to play with it and that was a good few hours of fun.
When it arrived the first thing I had to do after plugging it in was to wait for the obligatory day one update. My internet connection is not very fast because of where I live so I had planned to let that run while I was having dinner. It took a bit longer than that but before I went to bed I purchased my first game and started it downloading.
As I wanted the Xbox One in the living room I opted for a game I knew my wife would like. Need for Speed, Rivals. By morning it had installed.
Despite my poor Internet speed I do not want to have to play with the disk in the drive. Therefore it is necessary to purchase all my games as download. I am happy with this but I will have to be patient when a game comes out to wait for it to finish downloading.
Back to my first impressions.
The Good
Most important to me is that it has a good controller and it does. Fits my hand well and every action is very positive. If I had to criticise then I'd say the battery cover is a bit thin!
I like the design of the main box. It sits discretely in the living room without standing out. I disliked the 360 design because it was just too deliberately shaped and odd. The advantage of the slightly larger box of the Xbox One is that they have kept the noise down. It is quiet which is important to me because my plan was to have it in the living room as a media centre. Sadly that point appears in my Bad section, so read on.
The setup is also very easy. Hardly any, just the Kinect really. The Kinect just has a couple of next, next, next, screens and job is done. I found it very clever how the Kinect knows where I am based on the controller I am holding. My living room is too small to play many connect games. I have so little floor area that it detected my sofa as the floor! That had a very easy adjustment.
I only have the one full game and the free downloads. The graphics are a small step up and they run smoothly but on what I have seen so far the extra power of the new box has not been pushed very hard.
Now for...
The Bad
All the advertising indicated that the Xbox One could be the centre of my living room. Recent news articles were very pleased to announce that the Xbox One would be DLNA compliant and that the PS4 was not. There's Netflix, Love film, Sky and a few others I had never heard of BUT it won't play videos from my NAS box!
It is useless to me in the living room because IT WILL NOT PLAY MY EXISTING VIDEOS!
For me that is a big oversight. I will now move the box to my study to just play games on and carry on using my Xbox 360 as my media centre in the living room.
I hope Microsoft will add the feature in the future but for the time being it is only any good for playing games.
Having said that, at the moment that is the only really bad point I have found. If that is not important to you then you should be very excited.
The Ugly
This is the disappointing stuff or where it does not work so well.
Being able to swap back to the main menu without leaving the game is a good feature BUT they forgot to make sure the game writers took it in to account. Need for Speed Rivals gets confused if you swap players mid game.
When you return to need for speed from the other player, it says it is restarting BUT it restarts as the first player again and takes you back to the very beginning tutorials! Not permanent, just restart the Xbox One and continue from where you previously were. On that point not having an exit from a game is not ideal. The Xbox One needs an exit otherwise the game carries on running until you start something else.
The lack of useful media centre features that I want mean I have no use for split screen. It appears to work but I have no reason to try it out.
Another minor point against using the Xbox One in the living room is that the Kinect cable is not long enough. Don't get me wrong, it is a long cable but still not long enough for my small living room. At the moment it is too soon to be able to buy an extension lead.
It did make me laugh that the box I used to perch the Kinect on to position it was the box from my Ouya console!
The tiled interface is not bad but it is confusing as the tiles move about a bit. I'll get used to it. There are some bits missing. There is no way I can find to tell how much battery life is left in the controllers and no way to see how much disk space has been used.
I would have liked to use a keyboard for entering text, like I do on the Xbox 360, but this is not supported at the moment:
http://forums.xbox.com/xbox_forums/xbox_support/xbox_one_support/f/4269/p/1625784/4202454.aspx
The reply in that forum suggests using SmartGlass to get a more convenient keyboard.
For A Few Dollars More
Having said the above it is to be expected for a day one purchase. It will take time and I need to buy a few more games when the games designed to take account of more of the features of the Xbox One start coming out.
The main thing for a game console is was it fun to play. I spent all of yesterday afternoon crashing police cars in to racers in Need for Speed, Rivals and enjoyed every minute. So, yes, it is good.
No point in rushing to buy one yet but when a few more good games come out I think you are going to want one.
Enjoy.
When it arrived the first thing I had to do after plugging it in was to wait for the obligatory day one update. My internet connection is not very fast because of where I live so I had planned to let that run while I was having dinner. It took a bit longer than that but before I went to bed I purchased my first game and started it downloading.
As I wanted the Xbox One in the living room I opted for a game I knew my wife would like. Need for Speed, Rivals. By morning it had installed.
Despite my poor Internet speed I do not want to have to play with the disk in the drive. Therefore it is necessary to purchase all my games as download. I am happy with this but I will have to be patient when a game comes out to wait for it to finish downloading.
Back to my first impressions.
The Good
Most important to me is that it has a good controller and it does. Fits my hand well and every action is very positive. If I had to criticise then I'd say the battery cover is a bit thin!
I like the design of the main box. It sits discretely in the living room without standing out. I disliked the 360 design because it was just too deliberately shaped and odd. The advantage of the slightly larger box of the Xbox One is that they have kept the noise down. It is quiet which is important to me because my plan was to have it in the living room as a media centre. Sadly that point appears in my Bad section, so read on.
The setup is also very easy. Hardly any, just the Kinect really. The Kinect just has a couple of next, next, next, screens and job is done. I found it very clever how the Kinect knows where I am based on the controller I am holding. My living room is too small to play many connect games. I have so little floor area that it detected my sofa as the floor! That had a very easy adjustment.
I only have the one full game and the free downloads. The graphics are a small step up and they run smoothly but on what I have seen so far the extra power of the new box has not been pushed very hard.
Now for...
The Bad
All the advertising indicated that the Xbox One could be the centre of my living room. Recent news articles were very pleased to announce that the Xbox One would be DLNA compliant and that the PS4 was not. There's Netflix, Love film, Sky and a few others I had never heard of BUT it won't play videos from my NAS box!
It is useless to me in the living room because IT WILL NOT PLAY MY EXISTING VIDEOS!
For me that is a big oversight. I will now move the box to my study to just play games on and carry on using my Xbox 360 as my media centre in the living room.
I hope Microsoft will add the feature in the future but for the time being it is only any good for playing games.
Having said that, at the moment that is the only really bad point I have found. If that is not important to you then you should be very excited.
The Ugly
This is the disappointing stuff or where it does not work so well.
Being able to swap back to the main menu without leaving the game is a good feature BUT they forgot to make sure the game writers took it in to account. Need for Speed Rivals gets confused if you swap players mid game.
When you return to need for speed from the other player, it says it is restarting BUT it restarts as the first player again and takes you back to the very beginning tutorials! Not permanent, just restart the Xbox One and continue from where you previously were. On that point not having an exit from a game is not ideal. The Xbox One needs an exit otherwise the game carries on running until you start something else.
The lack of useful media centre features that I want mean I have no use for split screen. It appears to work but I have no reason to try it out.
Another minor point against using the Xbox One in the living room is that the Kinect cable is not long enough. Don't get me wrong, it is a long cable but still not long enough for my small living room. At the moment it is too soon to be able to buy an extension lead.
It did make me laugh that the box I used to perch the Kinect on to position it was the box from my Ouya console!
The tiled interface is not bad but it is confusing as the tiles move about a bit. I'll get used to it. There are some bits missing. There is no way I can find to tell how much battery life is left in the controllers and no way to see how much disk space has been used.
I would have liked to use a keyboard for entering text, like I do on the Xbox 360, but this is not supported at the moment:
http://forums.xbox.com/xbox_forums/xbox_support/xbox_one_support/f/4269/p/1625784/4202454.aspx
The reply in that forum suggests using SmartGlass to get a more convenient keyboard.
For A Few Dollars More
Having said the above it is to be expected for a day one purchase. It will take time and I need to buy a few more games when the games designed to take account of more of the features of the Xbox One start coming out.
The main thing for a game console is was it fun to play. I spent all of yesterday afternoon crashing police cars in to racers in Need for Speed, Rivals and enjoyed every minute. So, yes, it is good.
No point in rushing to buy one yet but when a few more good games come out I think you are going to want one.
Enjoy.
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Gloves
Our farrier uses these and they work well. He can pick up nails and properly work while wearing them: http://www.glovesnstuff.com/49p-PU-Palm-Coated-Klass-Polyester-Glove_A113ED.aspx
We've tried them and now use them all the time. I wear L/9 and Shelley wears S/7.
We've tried them and now use them all the time. I wear L/9 and Shelley wears S/7.
Saturday, 21 September 2013
People Never Change
I was amused by a quotation I read on Twitter the other day. It summed up conversations, recent experiences and the latest news.
“Times are bad. Children no longer obey their parents, and everyone is writing a book.”
That's not the significant bit. What I found interesting is that quote was one of many by Cicero. A Roman politician who lived from 106 BC to 43 BC.
Over 2000 years apart and the society we live in is still recognisable. At least modern back stabbing is limited to verbal comments... mostly.
“Times are bad. Children no longer obey their parents, and everyone is writing a book.”
That's not the significant bit. What I found interesting is that quote was one of many by Cicero. A Roman politician who lived from 106 BC to 43 BC.
Over 2000 years apart and the society we live in is still recognisable. At least modern back stabbing is limited to verbal comments... mostly.
Saturday, 29 June 2013
Ouya Early Crop
As previously mentioned I have had the Ouya for about a week now and I have been disappointed. In the last couple of days several new games have been released and so I was hopeful.
Here are my initial opinions of what I have tried. I should point out I have a very low tolerance for rubbish quality, poor interface design and inadequate tutorials or in game guidance about what to do. I have a life, I am not a teenager with endless hours to try things out, I have to be able to pick up a game, play it immediately and then go and do something else.
Flashout 3D
This was pretty much a launch game and has been shown off in several places. It suffers from overscan problems on my screen, meaning some of the menus and instructions appear off of the screen. This makes playing and setting it up difficult so I have not given this a fair chance yet. I played through a couple of races and it looked OK but it's not fun having to struggle with the menus!
First impressions last. I may or may not go back to this if they fix the menus!
Bards Tail
I was expecting more from this. Sadly the port was disappointing. The graphics appear in a window in the middle of the screen and are a bit too low resolution. That said, I can see the menus so I played on. Trouble is I got to a point where I could not find any way other than to die by being burnt to death by a big rat. There were no in game tutorials to help me past this point so I just stopped playing.
Final Fantasy III
I had high hopes for this being a well known series. The good news, everything worked and fitted the screen. Nice lead in to get you going. Trouble is, I am not a 6 year old any more so the style and game play was not to my taste!
For those that like that sort of game, you probably already know what to expect and will find it fun.
ShadowGun
I had been waiting for this having seen the trailers and was excited to give it a go. The good news is they have done a good job of the interface to fit the screen and to work with the controllers. The tutorial section at the start is just right. It was clear what to do and the path through the game was evident.
So far so good. The graphics look good as well. Not next gen AAA but plenty good enough for this genre. Think original half life but with improved textures. During the tutorial level I did struggle with the sensitivity of the controls. Before going in to the main level I tinkered with the sensitivity, which is the only adjustment. I got it a fraction better but it felt throughout the game that I was not fully in control.
It's a duck behind cover and shoot type game, but I found that on the easy setting I could often walk up to the normal enemies and just shoot at point blank range. The turrets required hiding and a nice touch is that some of the cover can be destroyed so you have to be careful where you hide.
Now for the problems. I found that aiming was difficult because the controller would often overshoot the target by a long way. Initially I thought it might be me but after some testing could show clearly that I could let go of the controls and they just ran on. In the worst cases the game got out of sync with my controls. I would press the controller to rotate then move forwards and nothing would happen then the character would spin and move while I was not touching the controls!
With patience I put up with these glitches which could last for a minute at times. I was still able to complete the entire free level but I found myself compensating for the lag. Pulling the trigger early or deliberately aiming off to hit a target a moment latter. That is not how I like to play a modern shooter!
For me this is still the most impressive game so far I've tried and I hope the controller problems can be sorted.
Muffin Knight
I saw this advertised as coming to the Ouya. I had no idea what it was about but looked like a polished game so worth a try.
This is another one where the interface has been correctly adjusted for the Ouya. Well done. There is a silly story to explain why you are a knight collecting muffins. Each level drops muffins and various creatures to avoid or shoot.
Initially OK but once it got more active I found the lag from the controls and the overrun while moving too frustrating. The good news is that you restart very quickly after you die.
Again, this is one for the youngsters and not my cup of tea.
That's it for games. The only other thing I have installed is the XBMC media player.
XBMC
This has to be side loaded and there are plenty of tutorials to tell you how to do that. Apart from the Ouya web browser not having any indication of the state of your download it was fairly easy to get up and running.
XBMC is a very polished App. It puts the rest of the Ouya to shame. It even includes overscan compensation so you can adjust the usable area to fit your screen.
I found it confusing to find the right network protocol to work with my network storage but that was partly because you need to attach the storage and then on a completely different screen connect to a folder and add it to your catalogue. I didn't bother to read any instructions and still managed to get it to work. I could have saved myself some time by reading up on what I should have been doing.
The good news, it works, I could play my videos and after the last Ouya update it stopped crashing when I tried to fast forward! XBMC works reliably. The only oddity is that despite its console background the controls only work with the D-Pad. I find the thumbstick much nicer to use but that does not work in XBMC at the moment.
It's not all good news though. The video quality is not as good as the other media player I use, which is my Xbox 360. That was disappointing. It also had some jitter during playback. If I had nothing to compare it with the video would have been fine but as I have a better player I am unlikely to use the Ouya for video at the moment. My belief is that this is because this version of XBMC does not use any hardware acceleration.
An Ouya specific version is being worked on and I have high hopes for that.
Summary
All in all, so far I have been disappointed with what I have tried but I can clearly see there is potential. I just need to be patient.
Here are my initial opinions of what I have tried. I should point out I have a very low tolerance for rubbish quality, poor interface design and inadequate tutorials or in game guidance about what to do. I have a life, I am not a teenager with endless hours to try things out, I have to be able to pick up a game, play it immediately and then go and do something else.
Flashout 3D
This was pretty much a launch game and has been shown off in several places. It suffers from overscan problems on my screen, meaning some of the menus and instructions appear off of the screen. This makes playing and setting it up difficult so I have not given this a fair chance yet. I played through a couple of races and it looked OK but it's not fun having to struggle with the menus!
First impressions last. I may or may not go back to this if they fix the menus!
Bards Tail
I was expecting more from this. Sadly the port was disappointing. The graphics appear in a window in the middle of the screen and are a bit too low resolution. That said, I can see the menus so I played on. Trouble is I got to a point where I could not find any way other than to die by being burnt to death by a big rat. There were no in game tutorials to help me past this point so I just stopped playing.
Final Fantasy III
I had high hopes for this being a well known series. The good news, everything worked and fitted the screen. Nice lead in to get you going. Trouble is, I am not a 6 year old any more so the style and game play was not to my taste!
For those that like that sort of game, you probably already know what to expect and will find it fun.
ShadowGun
I had been waiting for this having seen the trailers and was excited to give it a go. The good news is they have done a good job of the interface to fit the screen and to work with the controllers. The tutorial section at the start is just right. It was clear what to do and the path through the game was evident.
So far so good. The graphics look good as well. Not next gen AAA but plenty good enough for this genre. Think original half life but with improved textures. During the tutorial level I did struggle with the sensitivity of the controls. Before going in to the main level I tinkered with the sensitivity, which is the only adjustment. I got it a fraction better but it felt throughout the game that I was not fully in control.
It's a duck behind cover and shoot type game, but I found that on the easy setting I could often walk up to the normal enemies and just shoot at point blank range. The turrets required hiding and a nice touch is that some of the cover can be destroyed so you have to be careful where you hide.
Now for the problems. I found that aiming was difficult because the controller would often overshoot the target by a long way. Initially I thought it might be me but after some testing could show clearly that I could let go of the controls and they just ran on. In the worst cases the game got out of sync with my controls. I would press the controller to rotate then move forwards and nothing would happen then the character would spin and move while I was not touching the controls!
With patience I put up with these glitches which could last for a minute at times. I was still able to complete the entire free level but I found myself compensating for the lag. Pulling the trigger early or deliberately aiming off to hit a target a moment latter. That is not how I like to play a modern shooter!
For me this is still the most impressive game so far I've tried and I hope the controller problems can be sorted.
Muffin Knight
I saw this advertised as coming to the Ouya. I had no idea what it was about but looked like a polished game so worth a try.
This is another one where the interface has been correctly adjusted for the Ouya. Well done. There is a silly story to explain why you are a knight collecting muffins. Each level drops muffins and various creatures to avoid or shoot.
Initially OK but once it got more active I found the lag from the controls and the overrun while moving too frustrating. The good news is that you restart very quickly after you die.
Again, this is one for the youngsters and not my cup of tea.
That's it for games. The only other thing I have installed is the XBMC media player.
XBMC
This has to be side loaded and there are plenty of tutorials to tell you how to do that. Apart from the Ouya web browser not having any indication of the state of your download it was fairly easy to get up and running.
XBMC is a very polished App. It puts the rest of the Ouya to shame. It even includes overscan compensation so you can adjust the usable area to fit your screen.
I found it confusing to find the right network protocol to work with my network storage but that was partly because you need to attach the storage and then on a completely different screen connect to a folder and add it to your catalogue. I didn't bother to read any instructions and still managed to get it to work. I could have saved myself some time by reading up on what I should have been doing.
The good news, it works, I could play my videos and after the last Ouya update it stopped crashing when I tried to fast forward! XBMC works reliably. The only oddity is that despite its console background the controls only work with the D-Pad. I find the thumbstick much nicer to use but that does not work in XBMC at the moment.
It's not all good news though. The video quality is not as good as the other media player I use, which is my Xbox 360. That was disappointing. It also had some jitter during playback. If I had nothing to compare it with the video would have been fine but as I have a better player I am unlikely to use the Ouya for video at the moment. My belief is that this is because this version of XBMC does not use any hardware acceleration.
An Ouya specific version is being worked on and I have high hopes for that.
Summary
All in all, so far I have been disappointed with what I have tried but I can clearly see there is potential. I just need to be patient.
Ouya The Early Days
The Ouya has only been available for a few weeks and I have had mine about a week. Being a Kickstarter investor in the Ouya I am keen to see this games console succeed.
To cut a long story short, so far the Ouya has been disappointing. It shows promise but in my opinion has been released a little bit before it is ready.
My view so far:
Overscan
The biggest issue for me is the overscan problem. This is where some of the screen is clipped by the edges of the screen. Every screen is different and some screens will not have any overscan. For anyone working in TV or developing games for any other console, this is a well known issue. The solution used by both TV and games console manufacturers is to have a margin round the outer edge of the screen by 10% of the pixels. Nothing important is ever displayed in that 10% and all text is kept within the central 80% of the screen.
Other games consoles, probably all except the Ouya, have restrictions enforced against the developers of games. If anything important is in that outer margin the game can not be distributed. The developers soon fix that problem. Ouya advertise how open they are and because of that I think, they have "shot themselves in the foot." Leaving it up to the developer to make decisions that spoil the games for some people!
The standard XBMC media player which works on the Ouya allows you to set the visible limits of the screen and keeps all text within that. This works great. Sadly the vast majority of the initial crop of games on the Ouya have come from mobile phones and tablets which rarely if ever suffer overscan problems. The developers porting the apps are either ignorant of the problem or could not be bothered to fix it before releasing on the Ouya!
This has left a lot of disappointed Ouya owners that cannot find games that they can play. Their frustration is taken out on the Ouya support forums!
Controller Lag
This is one of those tricky areas. I cannot prove if the lag comes from the hardware or the games themselves however it is very frustrating.
All I can say is that in any of the fast action games I have played so far this becomes an issue. I have seen run on, where the character or object in a game keeps moving after I let go of the controller. I have seen continuous rotation, so the character spins when I am doing nothing and the worst is that I see the game play my key presses several seconds behind when I have pressed the keys.
Again, I hope this is one that developers, as they get more familiar with the Ouya, will be able to overcome.
A couple of other point while on controls. The touch pad is too vague and too fast to be of any use. I understand why it is there but it is nearly useless. So far the only manufacturing problem I have is that one key, left bumper, gets stuck on the controller housing. I may have to get a knife out to trim back some plastic!
Ouya User Interface
This is the last problem for now. Back to my previous point. It's just not finished. The front screen and the first level of sub menus are nice and clean and it is easy to find what you want. The Discover section initially had its foibles but Ouya improved those last week.
The problems are in the Advance menu where you get to what is clearly a completely unmodified mobile phone implementation of the interface. Now with the overscan I have it means that many of the essential options, like deleting files, are inaccessible! There are probably other options I can't use but I don't know what they are because they are off my screen!
This is one that clearly Ouya need to fix.
The Good News
I thought I should end on some positive points.
I look forward to some better games coming out and for the fixable issues to be resolved.
To cut a long story short, so far the Ouya has been disappointing. It shows promise but in my opinion has been released a little bit before it is ready.
My view so far:
Overscan
The biggest issue for me is the overscan problem. This is where some of the screen is clipped by the edges of the screen. Every screen is different and some screens will not have any overscan. For anyone working in TV or developing games for any other console, this is a well known issue. The solution used by both TV and games console manufacturers is to have a margin round the outer edge of the screen by 10% of the pixels. Nothing important is ever displayed in that 10% and all text is kept within the central 80% of the screen.
Other games consoles, probably all except the Ouya, have restrictions enforced against the developers of games. If anything important is in that outer margin the game can not be distributed. The developers soon fix that problem. Ouya advertise how open they are and because of that I think, they have "shot themselves in the foot." Leaving it up to the developer to make decisions that spoil the games for some people!
The standard XBMC media player which works on the Ouya allows you to set the visible limits of the screen and keeps all text within that. This works great. Sadly the vast majority of the initial crop of games on the Ouya have come from mobile phones and tablets which rarely if ever suffer overscan problems. The developers porting the apps are either ignorant of the problem or could not be bothered to fix it before releasing on the Ouya!
This has left a lot of disappointed Ouya owners that cannot find games that they can play. Their frustration is taken out on the Ouya support forums!
Controller Lag
This is one of those tricky areas. I cannot prove if the lag comes from the hardware or the games themselves however it is very frustrating.
All I can say is that in any of the fast action games I have played so far this becomes an issue. I have seen run on, where the character or object in a game keeps moving after I let go of the controller. I have seen continuous rotation, so the character spins when I am doing nothing and the worst is that I see the game play my key presses several seconds behind when I have pressed the keys.
Again, I hope this is one that developers, as they get more familiar with the Ouya, will be able to overcome.
A couple of other point while on controls. The touch pad is too vague and too fast to be of any use. I understand why it is there but it is nearly useless. So far the only manufacturing problem I have is that one key, left bumper, gets stuck on the controller housing. I may have to get a knife out to trim back some plastic!
Ouya User Interface
This is the last problem for now. Back to my previous point. It's just not finished. The front screen and the first level of sub menus are nice and clean and it is easy to find what you want. The Discover section initially had its foibles but Ouya improved those last week.
The problems are in the Advance menu where you get to what is clearly a completely unmodified mobile phone implementation of the interface. Now with the overscan I have it means that many of the essential options, like deleting files, are inaccessible! There are probably other options I can't use but I don't know what they are because they are off my screen!
This is one that clearly Ouya need to fix.
The Good News
I thought I should end on some positive points.
- Tiny
- Looks Good
- Easy to setup (just plug in the HDMI and power, job done)
- Upgrades are quick and painless
- Controller feels nice in my hand
- I particularly like the weight and where the batteries are housed
- Controller has the right number of buttons in the right places (for my liking)
- Wireless controllers connect easily to the Ouya
- Low cost
- Developers can self publish games (Indie games)
- Every game has a free demo (that is such a good idea)
I look forward to some better games coming out and for the fixable issues to be resolved.
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