I hope someone reads the whole way down to this response.
When I click on a game title and go to its 'Summary' page, where the heck did the dev/pub, release date, rating, # of players, online, etc. part go? That was an important thing IMO. I see a remenant of it there but it doesn't have as much info as it used to. Where did that go?
uwvark
It appears differently depending on whether GameSpot reviewed the game. The first two items are always there, and release date is there twice if the game has not been reviewed. GameSpot's rating is there along with Critic and User Score if GameSpot reviewed it, but if not then those two other scores are only located in the Reviews page. The number of players only appears on that page when the game has not been reviewed, but that information is always located in Game Details -- accessible via a link. In addition to those you mentioned, the genre only appears on that page -- it's always in Game Details -- when the game has not been reviewed, which I find to be rather important information and will make it a complaint of my own.
One minor thing I think should be changed is how GameSpot's score is displayed as 0.0 when the game hasn't been reviewed; one example is currently Rainbow Six Vegas for PS3. Perhaps it should be blank or display something like NR (Not Rated) instead.
I was going to post this in the "Gamespace changes live..." thread, but since it's already here I'll have to confirm that this is a big problem. It doesn't always do it, but it occurs enough to be very annoying. It does it in Firefox and IE7, so it doesn't appear to be some odd rendering bug of the engine.
You might help cancer but you sure aren't helping global warming, Folding@Home uses up the Cell processor completely and as a result the power consumption is going to be high.
So Don't bother to help 'cure' cancer and help global warming instead.
blacktorn
This is assuming that one's local power is supplied by a fossil fuel power plant, which is not always the case. My power is actually supplied by the Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station.
I'm glad to use some clean power if the simulation data can help researchers further understand the process of protein folding.
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