Mar
10
2009
The success of the Halo franchise is unquestionable. Bungie’s trilogy of first-person shooters established a standard against which most similar games have been judged for the past eight years. Thus, when Ensemble Studios picked up the task of bringing the Halo universe to real-time strategy, they faced two separate mountains to climb: maintaining the high quality demanded by fans of the series and developing for a genre that traditionally translates poorly to console play. Fortunately, they had a head start on the latter, bringing in a wealth of experience from the Age of Empires series. Creating an intuitive and dependable control scheme was a top priority, and their success in doing so makes Halo Wars a worthy addition to the series. Read on for the rest of my thoughts.

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Comments Off on Review: Halo Wars | tags: games, google, halo | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
bsk_cw writes “About a month ago, in Living free with Linux: 2 weeks without Windows, Preston Gralla wrote about what life was like for a long-time Windows user trying to live with Linux. His main problems came when he tried to install or update software. Loads of people responded with advice — so he went back and tried again. Here’s what he learned, and what did and didn’t work for him.”

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Comments Off on Living Free With Linux, Round 2 | tags: google, linux | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
carusoj writes “Researchers at Princeton University and University College London say they can identify unique information, essentially like a fingerprint, from any blank sheet of paper using any reasonably good scanner. The technique could be used to crack down on counterfeiting or even keep track of confidential documents. The researchers’ paper on the finding is set to be presented at an IEEE security conference in Oakland, Calif., in May.”

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Comments Off on Cheap Scanners Can "Fingerprint" Paper | tags: google, security | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
MessedRocker writes “I have at least a few USB flash drives around that I haven’t needed since I got my 16GB flash drive, a 40GB external hard drive which I haven’t needed since I upgraded to 500GB, and a couple of SATA hard drives I have pulled out of laptops which are either as large or smaller than the one I have in my laptop now. Furthermore, I don’t really know anyone who needs any hard drives or flash drives. What should I do with my small, obsolete storage devices?”

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Comments Off on What To Do With Old USB Keys, Low-Capacity Hard Drives? | tags: cap, google, laptop | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
WindBourne writes “China will be launching 2 new space stations this next year. One is for their civil program (as run by the military), while the second is openly for the military. It appears that there will be multiples of the military version to be launched in 2010, and that they are developing the same US Air Force Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) that was canceled in 1969. In addition, it appears that China is accelerating their timelines on a number of the earlier space announcements.”

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Comments Off on China’s New Military Space Stations Coming Soon | tags: china, google, program | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
Two free apps for the iPhone and iPod touch give users the ability to add any text they’d like, or their upcoming Google Calendar appointments, to their home/unlock screens. Check out how they work in screenshots.
Comments Off on Put Google Calendar and Notes on Your iPhone Wallpaper | tags: google, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
Today, after 50 years, Circuit City no longer exists. A moment of silence is in order.
Comments Off on Circuit City: And Now It’s Dead | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
Jerry had a motorcycle accident last May and lost a finger. When the doctor working on the artificial finger heard he is a hacker, the immediate suggestion was to embed a USB “finger drive” to the design. Now he carries a Billix Linux distribution and the Freddy Got Fingered movie as part of his hand.
Comments Off on Severed Finger Replaced with USB Linux Distro | tags: linux | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
An anonymous reader writes “After many years of release-free development, FFmpeg, the most widely used audio and video codec library, has finally returned to a regular release schedule with the long-awaited version 0.5. While the list of changes is far too long to list here, some high-profile improvements include the reverse-engineering of all Real video formats, WMV9/VC-1 support, AAC decoding, and of course vast performance improvements across the board. To commemorate the ‘lively’ discussions predating the release, 0.5 is codenamed ‘half-way to world domination A.K.A. the belligerent blue bike shed.’ The new version can be downloaded from the official website.” As another reader points out, FFmpeg is what makes some open source multimedia apps (like MPlayer, Xine, VLC and Kdenlive) so versatile.

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Comments Off on FFmpeg Finally Releases Long-Awaited Version 0.5 | tags: google, open source, web | posted in technical news
Mar
10
2009
An anonymous reader writes that “[Monday] evening, on systems with Norton Internet Protection running, users began to see a popup warning about an executable named PIFTS.exe trying to access the internet. The file was shown to be located in a non-existent folder inside the Symantec LiveUpdate folder. There were several posts about this to the Norton customer forums asking for help or information on this mysterious program. The initial thread received several thousand views and several pages of replies in a few short hours before being deleted. Several subsequent posts to the Norton forum were deleted much more quickly. These actions — whether actively covering up, or simply not well thought through — have spurred people to begin crafting conspiracy theories about the purposes of this PIFTS program. I for one am blocking the program until more information becomes available.” The current top link on Google for “PIFTS.exe” links to one of these deleted questions on Norton’s support boards, which sounds innocent enough: “I searched this forum but did not see PIFTS.exe. Any idea what this is?”

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Comments Off on Norton Users Worried By PIFTS.exe, Stonewalling By Symantec | tags: google, program | posted in technical news