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TRON 2.0 single-player demo

Marcel Klum   on 17 September 2003 - 18:23 · 9 comments & 371 views

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Not entirely surprising considering their track record of multiple demos in the NOLF series, Monolith Productions has released another playable demo of TRON 2.0, their recent cyberspace 3D action game. This single-player demo offers a "Program Initialization" cutscene and the "Abandoned Test Grid" mission where you battle the Seeker and some Resource Hogs, along with the already familiar tutorial and the new "Low Level Crunch" map in the Light Cycles section of the game.

News source: 3D Gamers
Download: TRON 2.0 sp demo (201Mb)
View: Official website


In an effort to stem the widespread copying of music over the Internet, the Recording Industry Association of America sued 261 computer users last week, and it plans to sue hundreds more. Several of those sued have expressed dismay that their Internet providers turned over information about them without their permission.

The association is the first to apply the subpoena provision in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 to identify people who make files available for others to copy from their personal computers using file-sharing software like KaZaA. Under the statute, copyright holders do not need a judge's signature to compel Internet service providers to turn over the names of subscribers.

The appeals court decision, expected later this fall, could have important consequences for the music industry's antipiracy campaign. Cary Sherman, president of the recording industry group, said today that using the subpoenas made it easier and less expensive for the organization to file so many lawsuits because it could consolidate the lawsuits in geographic regions under local lawyers hired for that purpose.

Verizon contends that the law was meant to apply only to material that subscribers post on Web sites that reside on computers controlled by Internet providers. The rise of peer-to-peer technology, which lets Internet users find and retrieve files on one another's computers, the company says, was not foreseen by Congress when it passed the law.

Verizon is also challenging the constitutionality of the law, arguing that if it does allow the subpoenas to be used in this way, it violates subscribers' rights to privacy and due process. Judge John D. Bates of Federal District Court in Washington ruled against the company earlier this year, forcing it to turn over the names and addresses of at least four Internet subscribers.

Sarah B. Deutsch, a vice president and lawyer for Verizon, said the company had received 200 subpoenas since then. It is complying with all of them, except for one in which a New York woman has challenged the recording industry's use of the subpoenas to identify her.

The hearing came as two Congressional committees prepare to examine the 1998 statute more closely. On Wednesday, the Senate Commerce Committee will hear testimony about copyright protection and consumer privacy from lawyers for Verizon and SBC, which has filed a separate challenge to the subpoenas in federal court in San Francisco. John Rose, executive vice president of EMI, and Mr. Sherman of the recording industry trade group will also testify.

Senator Norm Coleman, a Minnesota Republican, has scheduled a Sept. 30 hearing of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations that will address privacy issues as well as the broader effect of technology on copyright enforcement.

And Senator Sam Brownback, a Kansas Republican, introduced a bill today to protect Internet providers from the controversial subpoenas. His proposal would block subpoenas except in pending civil lawsuits or in cases where unauthorized copies were stored on Web sites.

News source: New York Times


Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 9 additional comments
#1 Spyder on 17 Sep 2003 - 18:57
cool i'll have to give this a whirl
#2 DirtyLarry on 17 Sep 2003 - 19:48
i really love the game... so different than other fps's out there a welcome departure...and it is completely cpu oriented so it is easy to get wrapped up in the concept... i recommend people at least try the demo, if not go out and but the game itself, because i am not sure if the demo (since i havee not tried it) will serve justice to the actual game itself...
(2 replies) #3 IGx89 on 17 Sep 2003 - 21:22
Did Neowin goof up and announce a month old demo, or is this demo different than the other previously released single player demo?
#3.1 Spyder on 17 Sep 2003 - 21:35
QUOTE
Monolith Productions has released another playable demo of TRON 2.0
#3.2 IGx89 on 19 Sep 2003 - 01:53
That doesn't mean anything; 2-3 months ago they released a multiplayer demo, so the month-old singeplayer demo is probably the "other" demo
#4 Monkeh on 17 Sep 2003 - 22:05
Bugs bugs, and more bugs.

That game plays like an early alpha release.
#5 acidbrnd on 18 Sep 2003 - 03:07
plays fine for me. The demo's may be buggy but the full game ran fine not a hitch.
#6 M$ Agent #2 on 18 Sep 2003 - 05:58
I have the full game and im stuck at the part where you upgrade to jump (right at the begining) and uuughhh lol maybe some one knows how to get it to work ? other then that the game looks fantastic !!!! I have an audigy sound card and the sound is awsome too !
#7 Gary_Player on 18 Sep 2003 - 07:00
I was so addicted, I beat it in 3 days...I didnt pay attention to school, my girlfriend, my cats, nothing...Just Tron...

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