TECHBITS: Red Players; GlassDoor.com; Big Rigs; Airport Park




By The Associated Press



The scientists studied the outcomes of 1,347 matchups between elite teams playing "Unreal Tournament 2004," a so-called first-person shooter game. The main activity in the game is running around and shooting at the avatars of the opposing team.

As is the case with most team-based online shooting games, players of Unreal Tournament can choose to be on either the red team or the blue team, and their avatars wear those colors. But that choice is not as neutral as it seems: 55 percent of the time, the red team won, according to the study published this week in the journal Cyberpsychology & Behavior.

Neuroscientist Mihai Moldovan of the University of Copenhagen in Denmark said the reason was most likely that the color red may act as a psychological distractor for men, possibly because men flush and turn red when they're angry.

"While this is really an interesting analysis, the notion of red team versus blue team has been ingrained in the Unreal Tournament series for years. We don't anticipate any immediate changes to team colors," said Mark Rein, vice president of Epic Games, the Cary, N.C.-based developer of the series.

Another study found in 2005 that wearing red is an advantage in real-life sports. British scientists found that athletes wearing red in one-on-one events like wrestling at the 2004 Olympics were more likely to win.

The game results for the Unreal Tournament study were culled from public servers used by players around the world. Moldovan worked with researchers at the Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy in Bucharest, Romania, on the study.

• Peter Svensson, AP Technology Writer

___

Web site offers insiders' look at major employers

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Ever wonder whether you'd be better off working some place else?

A new Web site called Glassdoor is trying to make it easier to find out by compiling free snapshots of the current salaries paid by hundreds of major employers, along with reviews anonymously written by current and past workers.

"We think it's super important that people are able to find a job where they can go home happy at the end of the day," said Robert Hohman, Glassdoor's co-founder and chief executive.

The Sausalito-based startup's other founders include Rich Barton, CEO of online home appraisal site Zillow.

By providing free access to sensitive salary information and sometimes blunt reviews of companies, Glassdoor is bound to upset some employers, predicted Jupiter Research analyst Barry Parr.

"I like the idea, but there is absolutely no question that some CEO is going to see something negative on the site and hit the roof," Parr said. "It just makes me wonder how long it will take before they get sued."

A Glassdoor feature that allows workers to rate their CEOs could be particularly provocative.

Microsoft CorpYahoo IncJerry YangGoogle IncCisco Systems Incbig rigsmiles per gallonGeorgia Tech researcherLockheed Martinhttp://www.gtri.gatech.edu/Sea-Tac airportSea-TacPort of Seattlelicense plate numbersSuper Bowl partyGoogle IncYouTube


• Michael Liedtke, AP Business Writer

This content was originally posted on http://mootblogger.com/ © 2008 If you are not reading this text from the above site, you are reading a splog

0 comments: