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Topics - chip!

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91
General Discussion / Whats on your clipboard!??
« on: January 19, 2007, 10:02:18 am »
READY??


CONTROL-V!


http://prdownloads.sourceforge.jp/cabos/23319/Cabos-0.7.1-Windows.msi?use_mirror=osdn




(haha.. I was just giving my friend the download link for Cabos)

92
Bugs & Feature Requests / Search Bit Che from FireFox and IE 7 search box
« on: January 16, 2007, 02:15:12 pm »
Here is an easy way to search Bit Che from your IE 7's search box in the top right corner...

Just import the attached .reg file into your registry, then restart IE 7 and select 'Bit Che' from your Search Providers list. Once you make a search, your browser will display a blank page since I can't find a way to get the Search Provider's box to directly use the BC:// search protocol.. so for the time being, we'll have to use a webpage I setup with a little java script that seems to do the trick! :)

example:
http://www.convivea.com/search/index.php?q=2007


93
Offbeat Relish / YouTube and Funny Videos
« on: January 11, 2007, 06:33:41 am »
alright, here's a thread to start posting funny videos we find on the internet (lets keep them PG-13 or cleaner)..


some good ones:   



SHOES  - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XT9MA-0oGMU



Interpretation of Trivium  - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNLDLyeepVs

94
Gaming / Online mystery games are back from the dead
« on: January 05, 2007, 07:53:31 pm »
By Gina Keating
source

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Mystery games are back from the dead, thanks to surging interest from older gamers and digital technology that makes them cheaper to produce and distribute, experts say.



Mystery games, which require players to solve puzzles to advance a storyline, were popular in the mid-1990s but then fell out of favor, said DFC Intelligence analyst David Cole.

"It became a very high-budget type product at the time the PC game genre was overcrowded," Cole said. "A lot of money went in (to production costs) and (game publishers) weren't getting a return on investment, so they pulled out."

While there is "a definite opportunity" to bring back the genre, as more mature PC users reach beyond free offerings like Solitaire, the challenge is getting them to pay to play, he said.

DFC Intelligence estimates that casual online games generated about $400 million in revenue in 2006, even while one of the fastest-growing demographics -- women over 35 -- was slow in shelling out cash for that purpose.

"The big way to reach them is retail distribution, which is always a challenge, Cole said. "It would be great to be in a grocery store or (convenience store) impulse purchase. That's why it's been tougher for this type of game."

Publishers of two popular mystery games, "Mystery Case Files" and "Mystery at Mansfield Manor" say word-of-mouth has been crucial in attracting the disproportionate numbers of older women who are playing.

Paul Thelen, chief executive of Big Fish Games, said the audience for "Mystery Case Files" is overwhelmingly female and over 35 -- a demographic the company plans to focus on with six coming installments of the mystery-themed games.

"This is a demographic of gamers who started five or six year ago with simple games. This was the next step for them," Thelen said. "Advertisement doesn't work for this demographic. It's kind of a secret industry because it grows by word of mouth."

The three "Mystery Case Files" games, including the latest title, "Mystery Case Files: Ravenhearst," have sold more than 700,000 units.

In "Ravenhearst," the Queen of England asks players to unravel a 200-year-old mystery in a rundown mansion by finding pages of a diary written by a woman who lived there.

Players advance the story by solving two kinds of puzzles: finding a list of objects in a room and unlocking exceedingly complex Rube Goldberg type contraptions to open a door.

The game takes about 20 hours to solve for first-timers and features different clues each time it is played, Thelen said.

Big Fish plans a retail launch for "Mystery Case" Files this spring at Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and other major retailers to get recognition for the title with consumers who may be leery of buying online, Thelen said.

The company launched a social networking site, www.mybigfishgames.com, to let fans earn free games for spreading the word about "Mystery Case Files" and its other offerings.

With not one dollar to spend on advertising, Rory Scherer, founder of Toronto company SR Entertainment, banked on the appeal of TV crime shows and mystery novels when he launched "Mystery At Mansfield Manor" last summer.

The interactive murder mystery movie puts players in the gumshoes of Detective Frank Mitchell to solve the murder on a stormy night of an oil baron who had gathered his family and employees at his mansion to announce changes to his will.

The electricity goes out during a rancorous dinner, and when the lights are restored, the mogul is dead.

"Mansfield Manor" takes two to three hours to play and features multiple endings.

The game's rich look and user-friendly Web site, praised by several reviewers, was achieved for $50,000, Scherer said.

Scherer, who dreamed up the idea for "Mansfield Manor" in business school, said the numbers add up to profitability.

"The technology that is available now made it all possible. It's very cheap ... you can get a worldwide audience right away (on the Internet)," Scherer said.

SR Entertainment recently inked a deal with Stonehenge Media Group Inc. to raise $2 million to make five more interactive games, Scherer said.

95
Offbeat Relish / Police hunt pub urinal thief
« on: January 05, 2007, 07:50:07 pm »
http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/oddlyEnoughNews/~3/71191353/newsarticle.aspx

LONDON (Reuters) - British police said Friday they were hunting a man who stole a urinal from a pub toilet.



The suspect walked into the Royal Oak pub in Southampton, on the English south coast, ordered half a pint of beer and then made several visits to the men's toilet.

There he carefully removed a white urinal from the wall, stuffed it into a rucksack and was captured on closed circuit television walking out with the bulging sack on his back.

"He made a very, very expert job of dismantling it from the wall and turning the water off. A very professional job," landlord Alan Dreja said in a video posted on the Southampton Daily Echo newspaper's Web site.

A police spokesman said the thief may have been a tradesman.

"One of the theories is the guy is some sort of cut-price plumber who is going round and stealing parts to order," he said.

96
Offbeat Relish / World's First Silent Ringtone Available
« on: January 05, 2007, 07:44:11 pm »
Posted by Annalee Newitz
http://blog.wired.com/tableofmalcontents/2007/01/worlds_first_si.html

Conceptual artist Jonathon Keats has created the world's first silent ringtone, a bootleg of John Cage's famous piano piece that contains four minutes and 33 seconds of silence. Cage performed 4'33" live before an audience in 1952. But, says Keats, Cage was limited by the technologies available at the time. His silence wasn't perfect because it wasn't digital -- nor could it be freely distributed via sound files. So Keats wrote "My Cage," a 4:33 minute ringtone of pure, unadulterated silence. You can get it for free from Start Mobile, a ringtone distributor, and Keats urges people to remix and mashup his ringtone as much as they wish.

From the ringtone ad:

    A remastering, "My Cage" is also a remix, introducing serendipity into the equation, delivering performances unpredictably, whenever calls come unexpectedly. The silence may take place without the listener being aware of it. Or the listener may hear a call - phantom silence - when there's no one on the line. "My Cage" all-encompassing: Even those who don't use it as a ringtone have the potential to experience it, in the silence of an unanswered call. Note: To fully enjoy this work, and to give callers the opportunity to enjoy the complete silence as well, it is recommended that you turn off your voicemail.


http://www.startmobile.net/M60-silent.html

97
General Discussion / Commercial space tour in 2010?
« on: January 05, 2007, 09:36:25 am »
http://english.people.com.cn/200701/05/eng20070105_338571.html
Source:Xinhua/Agencies


Amazon.com's founder, billionaire Jeff Bezos unveiled Thursday his prototype of private reusable spacecraft by posting photos and videos on the company's Web site of a test launch of it on Nov. 13, 2006, east of E1 Paso, Texas.



Bezos has been working on the project Blue Origin since 2000, during which time he has kept silent about his operation in the remote section of West Texas.

"We're working, patiently and step by step, to lower the cost of space flight so that many people can afford to go and so that we humans can better continue exploring the solar system," Bezos said on the Web page of his space venture, "Accomplishing this mission will take a long time, and we're working on it methodically."

Blue Origin is a project to design a new type of spacecraft called the New Shepard. The craft aims to blast three passengers and one crewmember almost 100 km into the air, giving them spectacular views and the right to brag that they have visited outer space.

The craft is designed to take off and land vertically, using downward-facing thrusters both to blast the one-piece vehicle into the air and to slow its descent as it returns to Earth. It is designed to blast into the air using a mix of 90 percent hydrogen peroxide and 10 percent kerosene, and its thrusters are switched off in mid-flight, giving it the high, narrow trajectory of a bullet fired almost directly upwards into the air.

The development vehicle Goddard presumably is named for Robert Goddard, considered the father of modern rocket propulsion for building and successfully testing in 1926 the first rocket using liquid fuel.

According to the planning application to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the aim is to run commercial trips by 2010.

Bezos said he was looking for 15 staff to help to develop the spacecraft, including an experienced aerospace engineer, a propulsion engineer and turbomachinery engineers.

98
Computers - Technology / PCs Get Set to Scream in 2007
« on: January 05, 2007, 07:43:01 am »
By Bruce Gain
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,72411-0.html?tw=rss.index

Flash-memory-aided hard drives and software that harnesses the full power of multi-core CPUs will make PCs speedier and more convenient in 2007.

Next-gen computers will boot up and load applications more quickly as speedy flash memory helps alleviate the bottleneck caused by the slower rotations of a traditional hard disk's components.

"You take all of that stuff from the hard drive and put it in high-speed memory, and the applications just pop," said Rob Enderle, principal analyst for the Enderle Group, who is testing a hybrid flash/hard-drive memory system from an undisclosed manufacturer. "Not only does the system come up faster, but the applications within the system come up a lot faster."

An Intel platform code-named Robson takes advantage of the flash-memory boost. Meanwhile, manufacturers including Asus, Fujitsu, Samsung and SanDisk will continue to work on flash-memory-based, hard-disk applications.

Flash memory's efficiency could also increase laptop battery life and shave time off the "very agonizing seconds" that pass as PCs awake from hibernation mode, said Mike Trainor, chief mobile technology evangelist for Intel. Such advances should increase demand for portable machines and further the demise of the desktop as the mainstream PC form factor.

"At some point, most folks are going to realize that they don't really need a desktop computer while laptops continue to drop in price," Enderle said.

For gamers, the flash-memory assist should mean shorter waits when games start or when changing levels.

"Gamers are going to love it," Trainor said.

At the same time, wide-scale rollout of quad-core CPU platforms by Intel and Advanced Micro Devices -- coupled, at last, with multithreaded applications designed to tap the technology's powerful parallelism -- will put more raw computing horsepower at PC users' fingertips.

For gamers, multithreaded code taking advantage of the new hardware could improve particle effects, so a game character's hand, for example, might be able to swipe away smoke. Characters could also be much smarter and craftier, as increased processing power boosts their artificial intelligence. Virtual opponents might start running when they perceive they are about to be blasted instead of staring blankly off into space, for instance, and the number of characters with which a gamer can interact in a scene should grow.

Quad-core technology "will have good benefits near-term and huge benefits over the next several generations," wrote Gabe Newell, co-founder of software developer Valve, in an e-mail.

Intel's Kentsfield quad-core platform could offer 60 times as much horsepower for boosting characters' brainpower, wrote Newell, although "you wouldn't actually do this because there are lots of other useful things to use those cores for."

Other advances coming down the pike in 2007:
Wireless Power

Wireless capabilities will become more powerful for traditional ethernet 802.11 Wi-Fi antennas and access points, as well as for cellular networks. 2007 should see wide-scale rollout of 3G networks for PC broadband access and possibly the finalization of the new 802.11n Wi-Fi standard.

An Intel chipset for laptops and portable devices will accommodate high-speed 802.11n and the wide-range broadband WiMax signals that service provider Sprint Nextel plans to offer. And semiconductor startup Amimon claims its wireless interface, which the company says is a different version of 802.11n, will enable manufacturers to offer antennas that enable wireless streaming at rates up to 1.5 Gbps of HDTV content from a PC to TVs with HDTV-quality resolutions that 802.11n cannot offer.

While it is already feasible to stream AVI video files from one PC to another over a Wi-Fi network, and watch them on a TV set connected to the second PC, vendors claim DVDs, HDTV and other high-def content will work just as easily this way in the near future. Wi-Fi networks remain finicky and unstable since their introduction to consumers several years ago, however, and it remains to be seen how well these new technologies will work.
Mini Auxiliary Laptop Screens

Manufacturers will add small second screens to laptops, utilizing Microsoft's SideShow platform to let users get e-mail, addresses and other information without firing up their machines. Redmond claims Windows Vista will allow painless setup, and expects SideShow to show up in keyboards, remotes and cell phones.
40-inch PC LCD Screens

Monster LCD monitors up to 40 inches wide will likely become readily available in vendors' product mixes before the year is out, with widescreen panels remaining all the rage. Per-inch panel prices will also continue to drop.
Dawn of DirectX 10

Microsoft's DirectX 10 application programming interface in Windows Vista should reach consumers in 2007. Geared toward games and other graphics applications, DirectX 10 is expected to not only boost game performance compared to DirectX 9 but to improve interfaces for applications like Photoshop.

99
Bugs & Feature Requests / Bit Che - 'Seed' the Installer via Bit Torrent
« on: January 03, 2007, 05:03:17 pm »
Hey, if you'd like to help spread Bit Che by seeding the latest version of the Bit Che installer, now you can!!! :)


http://convivea.com/download/bit_che_1_0_60.exe.torrent


100
http://blog.wired.com/monkeybites/2007/01/is_apple_the_ne.html
Posted by Scott Gilbertson


Apple computer is facing a new lawsuit in the U.S. which claims that tying the iTunes Store to the iPod violates anti-trust laws. The suit was filed by a user, Melanie Tucker, but will probably get class action status.

The core of the claim is that Apple violates anti-trust laws by refusing to allow music sold on the iTunes Store to play with other manufacturer’s MP3 devices. The lawsuit also alleges that Apple does not make it clear to customers that files downloaded from the iTunes store will only work with an iPod.

Before someone blasts me in the comments, let’s be clear, yes you can strip the DRM and convert iTunes Store bought music to MP3, but that’s a hack and not something Apple supports.

Apple tried to get the lawsuit dismissed back in November but a judge rejected that request on December 20.

Apple already faces a similar lawsuit filed in France and several Scandinavian countries are reportedly preparing similar cases.

What I’d like to know is how much of this alleged monopoly is a result of Apple’s decisions and how much of it comes from restrictions and DRM requirements that the recording industry wanted in place?

Obviously from a legal standpoint, who made things the way they are doesn’t really matter, but if the iTunes Music store sold DRM-free MP3s this lawsuit would disappear and the world would be a happier place.


101
Offbeat Relish / Camel sacrifice, spray-on condom among 2006 oddities
« on: December 31, 2006, 06:47:51 pm »
Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/oddlyEnoughNews/~3/68860215/newsarticle.aspx

Camel sacrifice, spray-on condom among 2006 oddities
By Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN (Reuters) - From the Turkish Airline workers who sacrificed a camel at Istanbul airport to celebrate a job well done to the German who invented snug spray-on condoms, the world was full of offbeat news in 2006.

While "Miss Israel" Yael Nezri was exempted from carrying her assault rifle in the Israeli army because it bruised her beauty queen legs, "Mr. Switzerland" Renzo Blumenthal lured lonely women who hate soccer to his country for the World Cup.

Careless thieves once again made headlines round the world. A burglar in Germany left behind a vital clue -- his finger tip.

"We usually find finger prints but it's not every day that the thieves leave the original there too," a police spokesman said. It took only a few hours to track down the thief.

A Jordanian salesman was arrested for trying to fleece a money exchanger with a fake ID card bearing a Brad Pitt picture.

In Vienna, burglars fled after finding eight severed human heads. A dentist had stored the mummified heads for research.

Village leaders in India ordered 150 men to dip their hands in boiling oil to prove their innocence after food was stolen.

An Australian man stopped for drunk driving threatened police with a live snake he picked up off the road.

In Cologne, a plastic surgeon cheated out of payment by two women using fake names gave "Wanted" pictures of their enlarged breasts to police. "It's probably the most unusual 'wanted' poster police ever had," wrote top-selling Bild newspaper, which helpfully published life-size pictures of the boosted breasts.

There were tragic moments too. In Hanoi, a Vietnamese man famous on a national TV program for his ability to resist electric shocks was electrocuted while fixing a generator.

In Rio de Janeiro, a Brazilian man died when he tried to open a rocket-propelled grenade with a sledgehammer.

STRANGE LOVE

The political year began with a bang when Vice President Dick Cheney accidentally shot a friend on a quail hunt.

In Hungary, Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany sparked rioting by admitting he lied to win a general election.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair's wife Cherie pretended to slap a cheeky teen-ager for a photograph but was questioned by police after child protection officers reported her.

In Bangkok, Thai coup leaders banned go-go girls from dancing near tanks and posing for photos with soldiers because they were distracting the troops.

Random acts of bad judgment in 2006 included: the Philadelphia man who pulled a gun on his 7-year-old son's football coach to demand more playing time; and in Koblenz, Germany, a woman who was caught driving her dead mother across country to save on mortuary transport costs.

Two women working at the German Labor Office got into trouble for writing emails at work moaning about their dull sex lives -- and sending the exchange to thousands of co-workers.

A pilot of Air Canada's Jazz subsidiary got locked out of the cockpit after stepping out to go to the washroom.

Three doctors in India were caught by a TV camera agreeing to amputate healthy limbs of beggars who wanted more sympathy.

Love had its strange moments too. Two prisoners in an Ivory Coast jail got married after falling in love through the peephole in an iron prison door.

And in Finland, a court ruled against a woman in her 20s who charged a 74-year-old man 25,500 euros ($32,000) to fondle her breasts on 10 occasions.

"Based on general life experience, it is indisputably clear that a 25,500 euro charge is disproportionate to the compensation in question," Judge Hasse Hakki told Reuters.

102
Music - Movies - TV / New Bands or New Albums Thread (share with us)
« on: December 31, 2006, 06:24:54 am »
Name:  The View - Hats Off To The Buskers  (2007)

Sounds like: sexpistols, beatles, new age indie rock, sorta..

Link:     bc://The View Hats Off To The Buskers


(copy and paste into your browser for now, ill get the forums fixed so you can click BC links in the future)..

103
Other Projects / SmallerPics.com - (beta) - Open for Business
« on: December 27, 2006, 09:10:50 am »
A simple web project that I've been working on with a friend is now open for business:

SmallerPics.com


Ever wanted an easy way to resize one of your pictures? SmallerPics.com allows you to take any picture and resize to 800 x 600 and about 100kb in file size. Perfect for email to friends or posting on the web, etc.


SmallerPics is beta and none of the advanced features are coded yet.

104
Bugs & Feature Requests / MOVED: Bit Che - IRC Chat Room!
« on: December 23, 2006, 11:51:05 am »

105
General Discussion / Ill be back in a few days
« on: December 18, 2006, 03:32:06 pm »
I'm having 4 wisdom teeth removed tomorrow, so I'm not going to be around for a couple more days.


This should be fun. They are going to give me the laughing gas and everything. Haha.

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