Consumer Briefs
VIDEO GAMES
Get ready for James Bond, Guitar Hero
Activision Inc. announced that its first game based on the James Bond license, a franchise that once belonged to rival game publisher Electronic Arts Inc., will hit stores Nov. 7, the same date as the release of the new Bond movie "Quantum of Solace." The movie features the return of actor Daniel Craig, who played Bond in "Casino Royale."
At the annual E3 video game convention, Santa Monica-based Activision also showed off a new version of its Guitar Hero franchise. Scheduled for release in the fall, Guitar Hero World Tour adds a drum kit and microphone as well as a new guitar that has an accelerometer and a touch-sensitive slider bar.
Activision's newest entry in the music game genre also adds a recording mode that lets players create songs from scratch, using a library of beats, sounds and samples.
Some analysts question whether some of the added features will make the game too complex for mainstream players who bought Guitar Hero because it was easy to learn.
TAX PREPARATION
Block addresses civil union glitch
H&R Block Inc. is offering to reimburse part of the cost some couples in civil unions encountered when the company's online tax filing system refused to submit their returns.
The company is offering couples who can show documentation that they started online but had to complete the process at one of H&R Block's offices either a $100 coupon toward having their tax returns prepared or a free copy of H&R Block's TaxCut software.
The American Civil Liberties Union raised the issue in March on behalf of a Hartford, Conn., couple, Jason Smith and Settimio Pisu, who tried to file their joint state tax return as a civil union in January. The online network told them that the company's software didn't support tax returns from civil unions in Connecticut and recommended they complete their return at an H&R Block office.
ACLU attorneys said that was discriminatory because it was more time-consuming and the couple had to pay an extra $155 to file their taxes that way.
H&R Block spokeswoman Denise Sposato said the problem involved difficulties in meshing rules in the various states that allow civil unions with the federal tax system, which doesn't recognize civil unions. The company has developed a technical workaround, she said.
Customers can find more details by visiting taxcut.com/tax_tips/aclu.html.
