ad box 728 x 90
ad box 468 x 60
Hardware, Software, Code, PHP, ASP, Games, Reviews and Other Funky Stuff
Subscribe

Enter your email address:

Pic of the Month
Popular Posts

Archive for the ‘general’ Category

Ah i remember the old days of windows 95 and such

33.6 modems connecting at 28.8, downloads at 6k a second would have been fast in those days. I remember getting a 33.6 modem for my 16th birthday, doesn’t really seem like that long ago now. Almost the only form of communication on the net that was in real time was mIRC and ICQ. Tombraider was the best game out on any system, one of the breakthrough games. Everytime you re-installed windows you had to spend about a day finding all the drivers for every single piece of hardware you had to get it all working again. I think I was even maxing out my resoloution on my 14 inch crt monitor at that time.

Even windows media player at that time had a crappy icon ;) . It was good though, so much out there and no one really knew about any of it. The internet back in 1998, in australia anyway was not really main stream at all. I watched the movies like the net and hackers and thought none of that could really happen. (i know its corny now) but back then it was all inspiring, and its good to look back.

a poem on life

Thought this was cool, although kinda bleak:

This is how it works
You’re young until you’re not
You love until you don’t
You try until you can’t
You laugh until you cry
You cry until you laugh
And everyone must breathe
Until their dying breath…

~ Regina Spektor

Found originally here

Imagine playing bejeweled for 91 days solid

Anyone heard about that guy that played bejeweled 2 for 2200 hours scoring 2,147,482,575 points, just a few things about this one. Umm, i know that wow players have some crazy play times and such, but wouldn’t you go a bit insane playing that much bejeweled? Anyway as the story goes. No one will be bothered beating his time will they? that is approx 91 days (the equivalent of playing for 8 hours a day, five days a week, for an entire year) of playing bejeweled… crazy much. Can you imagine staring at this for 91 days solid?

imagine staring at this for 91 days!

Maybe im just not a hardcore enough gamer… I can live with that.

Check out the video:

Meet Mike Leyde [Bejeweled official site]

So there trying to censor the net even more eh

Looks like the internet “censorship issue is coming along well… once again” how many times can people say you cant boil the ocean without someone listening.

internet-censorship-nationalist-alternative

From Computer World:

It is the latest in a series of leaks from the anti-counterfeiting trade agreement (ACTA) talks that have been going on for the past two years. Other leaks over the past three months have consisted of confidential internal memos about the negotiations between European lawmakers.

The chapter on the Internet from the draft treaty was shown to the IDG News Service by a source close to people directly involved in the talks, who asked to remain anonymous. Although it was drawn up last October, it is the most recent negotiating text available, according to the source.

It proposes making ISPs (Internet service providers) liable under civil law for the content their subscribers upload or download using their networks.

To avoid being sued by a record company or Hollywood studio for illegally distributing copyright-protected content, the ISP would have to prove that it took action to prevent the copyright abuse, according to the text, and in a footnote gives an example of the sort of policy ISPs would need to adopt to avoid being sued by content owners:

“An example of such a policy is providing for the termination in appropriate circumstances of subscriptions and accounts in the service provider’s system or network of repeat offenders,” the text states.

Terminating someone’s subscription is the graduated response enacted in France last year that sparked widespread controversy. The French law is dubbed the “Three Strikes” law because French ISPs must give repeat file sharers two warnings before cutting off their connection.

Other countries in Europe are considering similar legal measures to crack down on illegal file-sharing. However, E.U.-wide laws waive ISPs’ liability for the content of messages and files distributed over their networks.

European Commission officials involved in negotiating ACTA on behalf of the E.U. insist that the text being discussed doesn’t contradict existing E.U. laws.

“There is flexibility in the European system. Some countries apply judicial solutions (to the problem of illegal file-sharing), others find technical solutions,” said an official on condition he wasn’t named.

He said the E.U. doesn’t want to make a “three strikes” rule obligatory through the ACTA treaty. “Graduated response is one of many methods of dealing with the problem of illegal file-sharing,” he said.

He also admitted that some in the Commission are uncomfortable about the lack of transparency in the ACTA negotiations.

“The fact that the text is not public creates suspicion. We are discussing internally whether the negotiating documents should be released,” he said, but added that even if it was agreed in Brussels that the documents should be made public, such a move would require the approval of the E.U.’s 10 ACTA negotiating partners.

The participating countries are the U.S., the E.U., Canada, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Singapore, Jordan, Morocco and the United Arab Emirates.

In a separate leak that first appeared on blogs last week, the European Commission updated members of the European Parliament on the most recent face-to-face meeting between the signatory countries, which took place in Mexico at the end of last month.

According to that leak, the Internet chapter of the treaty was discussed, but no changes to the position suggested by the U.S. last fall were agreed.

“The internet chapter was discussed for the first time on the basis of comments provided by most parties to US proposal. The second half of the text (technological protection measures) was not discussed due to lack of time,” the memo said, adding:

“Discussions still focus on clarification of different technical concepts, therefore, there was not much progress in terms of common text. The U.S. and the E.U. agreed to make presentations of their own systems at the next round, to clarify issues.”

The Commission official refused to comment on the content of the leaked documents.

Read the full article at Computer World

The Boneyard plane cemetery discovered an awesome collection of old warplanes

How cool is this! i dont know why they just keep all the planes there though, seems like a bit of a waste.

Spread across the huge 2,600 acre site, equivalent in size to 1,430 football pitches, is a collection of over 4,000 retired aircraft including nearly every plane the US armed forces have flown since World War II.

the boneyard warplanes 1

Now, for the first time, a series of high resolution satellite images of the four square mile-site have been released by Google Earth. They show in incredible detail the full range of aircraft found at the site.

Among the aircraft are B-52 Cold War-era bombers that were retired in the 1990s under the the terms of the SALT disarmament treaties signed between the US and the Soviet Union.

the boneyard warplanes 2

Also, on show are dozens of F-14 fighter planes which were retired from the US Navy in 2006 and featured in the Hollywood movie, Top Gun. The Boneyard has also featured in a series of films, the most recent being Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.

Located in Tucson, Arizona, on the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, the facility was first set up shortly after World War II. It was chosen for its high altitude and arid conditions, that mean the aircraft can be left outdoors without deteriorating too quickly.

A major industrial centre, AMARG manages an inventory of more than 4,200 aircraft and 40 aerospace vehicles.

Read the full article at BBC News

According to Torrent Freak Piracy Isn’t Killing The Movie Industry, Greed Is

At the box-office the major movie studios are raking in record profits, but their continuing refusal to widely adopt online business opportunities are hindering progress. According to the head of the Blockbuster video chain, the movie industry’s greed is to blame for holding back innovation.

First off, we have to make it clear that the major movie studios are doing great at the box-office, despite movie piracy riding at an all-time high. Other parts of the movie industry, such as video rental outlets, do seem to struggle and they have the studios to thank for this, not piracy.

In January of this year Warner Bros. announced that new DVDs will not be available at online rental outlet Netflix for the first month after they are released in stores. Warner Bros. hoped that this would increase DVD sales. However, the most likely side effect is an increase in piracy and a loss of income to Netflix.

It is a step back in a time where consumers are screaming for on-demand access and the flexibility to choose the option they want for their video consumption. The studios are clearly skeptical of all these ‘new’ technologies and are frantically adding restrictions to maximize their revenues, ignoring all market signals.

The greed of the music studios hasn’t gone unnoticed by Paul Uniacke, head of the Video Ezy and Blockbuster video rental chains. “Studio greed is what’s holding back video-on-demand,” he said in response to the studios demands to pay huge sums of money upfront if they want to offer on-demand streams.

blockbuster

“Movie studios are still as arrogant as the music moguls were before digital downloads and piracy destroyed them. The only thing that’s protecting the movie studios (from more widespread illegal downloading) now is file size,” Uniacke added.

Read the full article here.

Some random guy wins $1.2million from gluing lucky coin to step

Now i don’t know about you, but i think this has more to do with buying some lottery / raffle tickets than gluing a coin to a step… Slow News Day?

money

The ex-policeman, aged in his 50s, picked a winning ticket in the latest BoysTown charity lotto, netting him a luxury house on the Sunshine Coast worth more than $1.2 million.

And because he bought four tickets, which cost $15 each, he was given an extra prize – the choice between an Audi sportscar and $75,000 in gold bullion.

Feeling a tad old for the swish car, he took the gold and plans to cash it in for an overseas holiday.

The man, a bachelor who wished to remain anonymous, said he’d also sell the house – despite the lure of its views and nearby beaches – and use the money to pay off his debts.

He reckons his stroke of luck was all down to the gold coin.

via: iHeadlines