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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Halo 4 Creators are Prepping for a Halo Comeback

June 6th, 2012Top Story

Halo 4 Creators are Prepping for a Halo Comeback

By Stephen Totilo

Halo 4 Creators are Prepping for a Halo ComebackHalo used to the biggest thing in multiplayer Xbox gaming. It's still a big deal, but for the last half-decade, Call of Duty has been the Xbox's main event.

At E3 this year, new Microsoft-owned development studio 343 Industries is making an interactive case that Halo is ready for top status again. They're not saying they're going after Call of Duty nor, as you'll see in my video interview here with 343's David Ellis, are they willing to articulate just why it is that Halo has slid some—and why, other than trying to make the best Halo ever, it can be a huge deal again.

Developer hype just might not be necessary for Halo 4, because the game itself is making a good case at E3. The new competitive mode called Infinity Slayer combines some of the points-based multiplayer combat seen in some PC shooters and Call of Duty and combines it with the shoot-grenade-melee-equipment flow of recent Halo games. It plays well, as our Tina Amini attested.

At E3, 343 is also showing a chapters for the game's co-op Spartan Ops mode, which will dole out five new 15-20 minute chapters for free each week for "months", all of them tied to weekly short Spartan Ops shows. (It's an ambitious plan, as Tina reported in greater detail earlier this week). The chapter that was running last night at Microsoft's big Halo 4 party played well, and looked extraordinary. Graphically, Halo has yet to look this good even on the Xbox 360. The lighting stands out.

Click to view Take a closer look at that lovely-looking Halo 4 Spartan Ops chapter in the clip here.

Click to view Here's my chat with 343's Ellis about how Halo 4 is shaping up, along with his picks for best weapon and equipment in the new game (at least of what's been announced.)

Halo 4 will be released for the Xbox 360 on November 6.

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Mitt Romney's Hotmail Hacker Would Like You to Know That He Is Very, Very Sorry

June 6th, 2012Top Story

Mitt Romney's Hotmail Hacker Would Like You to Know That He Is Very, Very Sorry

By John Cook

Mitt Romney's Hotmail Hacker Would Like You to Know That He Is Very, Very SorryYesterday, a tipster sent us a note indicating that he had successfully accessed Mitt Romney's Hotmail and DropBox accounts after guessing the answer to a security question—Romney's favorite pet. The Romney campaign later confirmed that "the proper authorities are investigating [the] crime." Now that tipster has written a letter of apology to Romney. Here it is.

Yesterday's original tip about the hack contained frustratingly little evidence—make that none—that the tipster had actually conducted the caper. He or she simply provided us with an alleged new password for Romney's mittromney@hotmail.com account, as well as the associated DropBox account, and invited us to log in. Since unauthorized access of an email account is viewed in certain law enforcement circles as a federal crime, we demurred.

A few screengrabs or copies of the emails would have been nice, though. We wrote back asking if the tipster had any proof of the hack claim, and concurrently sought comment from the Romney campaign. After we published a story on it last night, the tipster wrote us back and sounded...regretful.

Hello. Shortly after I sent the tip I did access the account. It was mostly newsletter Spam and a few short correspondences. While going through these I started to feel very guilty about what I had done. I then sent an email to one person in the contact list explaining and apologizing for what had happened and adding that I was going to try to close both accounts so that no one else could get in. I succeeded in doing this with the DropBox account but was unable to do so with the email do to it being a paid account. I instead changed the
password and the answer to the security question and emailed the contact with both changes so that they might be able to shut down the account on their own.

I did not share the emails with anyone else and have deleted all the DropBox documents that I downloaded.

Lastly I would like it to be known that I regret ever doing this and would like to apologize to Mr Romney.

Those read like the words of someone who was just travelling down the internet one day, saw some newly released documents revealing Mitt Romney's private Hotmail account, had a clever idea, walked right into a potentially serious crime without really thinking about it, and was now trying very hard to walk back out. We asked for more specifics. (And to be perfectly clear: We asked for details and recollections about any information the tipster may have obtained or viewed in the past. At no point did we ask anybody to access Romney's account.) The tipster wrote back:

With out going into too much information about what I saw, the impression I got was one that the email address is now being used as a spare address to be put in for things that demands an address for registration. The contact was a family member and outside of the tip I did not share the password with anyone else.

And then, early this morning, we received this detailed apology addressed to Romney himself.

I don't know to what degree you are in communication with law enforcement and the Romney campaign about this but, if possible, I would appreciate it if you could forward the following message to the Romney campaign.

To Mitt Romney,

The time between when I first saw the email address in the WSJ and my first sending in the tip about my hacking was only a half hour at most. During this time I never stopped to consider what it was I was doing, it was only after I had got in to your account, after I sent my tip that I really started to consider what I had just done. While I was in I had thought about the tip I had sent in, about my use of the word 'hack,' my mind drifted to the British phone hacking scandal which I have been following closely. It was then I was hit with a terrible revelation, what I had done was no different then the actions of the tabloid journalists that had horrified me so.

So I tried to fix what I had done as best I could. There was no way for me to undo the fact I had illegally broken into your private accounts but I could stop the spread of the breech. I shutdown the Dropbox account and deleted all the files that I had downloaded and then, when I found myself unable to shutdown the email I changed the password and and security question so that no one else could get in the way I had. Finally I have not and will not tell anyone what I have seen.

But none of this changes what I've done. I engaged in an egregious violation of another persons privacy, a violation made all the worse by way of your being a public figure who has so little privacy to begin with, a figure for whom what privacy can be found is doubtless a valuable gift. A gift I took away. For this I am sorry. When I hacked in it struck me as funny at first, but now... I have never felt as bad about something I have done as I feel right now.

I don't know if you'll take anything from this message. I wouldn't blame you for one second if you don't. I just want you to know how I've been feeling about this.

Considering the fact that the Secret Service reached out to us yesterday after the hacking item ran, it's unclear whether the apology will achieve its desired effect. The whole thing is a shame, really, since we didn't even get to read Romney's emails.

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How To Have A Killer Time At The Monaco Grand Prix For $100

June 6th, 2012Top Story

How To Have A Killer Time At The Monaco Grand Prix For $100

By Peter Orosz

How To Have A Killer Time At The Monaco Grand Prix For $100A hundred dollars? In Monaco? Surely that will buy little more than a candy bar to gnaw on while counting Ferraris. Actually, it will buy three hours of Formula One up close. If you know how to spend it. Here’s our guide for 2013.

The key to get your money’s worth in Monaco is to know what you’re looking for in motor racing. Unlike a ball game, a motor race is impossible to follow when you’re watching it live. The tracks are just too long.

Before Monaco, I’d been to exactly one race in my life, the 2007 24 Hours of Le Mans. It was an epiphany, one of the most amazing things I’ve ever experienced, but it wasn’t until a day later that I found out how the #2 Audi lost the lead on Sunday morning. Out there on France’s chilly West coast, it was all about existing for a day in a great bubble of noise and watching the glow of brake discs at dusk.

If you want to follow a race, don’t go. Watch it on TV. If, on the other hand, you’re interested in hearing just how brutal an F1 car sounds like, how effortlessly it toys with the laws of physics under braking and acceleration, get a ticket and watch it live. You won’t have a sense of how the race unfolds, but you’ll experience it on another level.

Tickets to see the Grand Prix in Monaco cost several hundred dollars, where “several” is a euphemism for “expect about a candy bar’s worth of change from a grand”. You’re almost better off hooking up with some friends and going on Airbnb to find an apartment with a balcony to rent for the weekend but that will still run to around $500 per person. And you’ll still get little sense of the race.

Free practice at Casino Square. Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images

The trick is to get a ticket to see Thursday free practice. There are three practice sessions before qualifying, of 90 minutes each, and two of them are on the same day. You’ll see the same cars at the same speeds on the same track taking the same corner, only for very little money. So when Jalopnik’s secret correspondent Natalie Polgar and I realized a few weeks ago that we’d be visiting friends in Italy at the end of May, we bought two tickets at €75 (~$100) a head for access to the grandstand on Casino Square, with a view on the rather tricky Casino corner and the downhill straight to Mirabeau Haute. If you’re also interested in seeing very rich and very thin European girls emerge bleary-eyed from suites at the Hotel de Paris when the engines are fired up, this same grandstand will do double duty.

Click to view

On TV, a single corner of a single track looks pretty boring. Up close, viewed from the grandstands, it’s a kaleidoscope of variety. A ninety-minute practice session flies by in an instant when you’re geeking out on the various approaches to this one single corner. There were rookies with little experience on the circuit, like Toro Rosso’s Daniel Ricciardo, who tried at least five or six different lines before settling on one and perfecting that. There was Michael Schumacher in his Mercedes, who must have driven thousands of laps of Monaco in his long career, and he never wavered a millimeter from his line. There was Fernando Alonso, a fabulous talent in a dog of a car, who produced great times in spite of visibly wrestling with his Ferrari, downshifting twice before the corner (nobody else took Casino like that). There were the poor HRT’s, mostly there to show that there is such a thing as a slow and terrible Formula One car. There was Lewis Hamilton in his McLaren, whose line was fluid and wildly original, completely unlike anyone else’s. Jenson Button, driving the same car, drove an entirely different line, hitting the apex as close to the D of a DHL ad as possible, all with eerie precision.

Then there’s the noise, the crazy, violent noise, which echoes and clatters in the natural amphitheater of Monaco Harbor. It makes you wish you’d brought earplugs and makes you glad you didn’t.

The greatest thing comes in the evening. At 7 PM on each day of the racing weekend, the marshalls open the track to city traffic. Natalie and I raced up to the train station, grabbed her little banged-up Fiat from the parking garage (parking was a reasonable $35 for the whole day), and proceeded to follow in the footsteps of pretty much everyone who’s ever counted in Formula One.

Felipe Massa at Casino Square. Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images

We passed two Ferraris on the start-finish straight in the shadow of the same Mediterranean pines known from countless photos, turned right at Sainte Devote, made the steep climb up Beau Rivage, took a detour at Massenet, then got out of the car to see just how close Button’s McLaren was to the Armco. It wasn’t hard to investigate. Tire marks were all over the place, the closest less than ten inches from the wall, which means that, taking into account the shape of a tire and that of a car, his front wing was barely over an inch from the barrier. On lap after lap after lap.

So it turns out that Formula One is pretty fantastic from up close. And that while Monaco may be a blast from the past, there’s something to be said for watching Formula One cars racing in a city, their exhaust fumes mixing with the riot of scents that’s a late spring day on the Mediterranean. If you’re in Europe next May? Go. Ticket vendor Gootickets is already selling ticket for the 2013 race.

Photos by Mark Thompson and Paul Gilham/Getty Images

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