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Sony tries to get down with the kids. Fails.
A ceremonious return!
Minimalistic Firefox: A simple guide

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Want to code again.

Sunday November 26th, 2006

Programming woes
Programming has been part of my life for over six years now, from the days of juvenile Visual Basic applications to full blown PHP backend solutions. It runs in my blood, I guess you could consider it a hobby.
But nowadays I’m bored of it. No, that’s a broad term, more specifically, I’m uninspired, lost and confused. I’ve got no drive any more, there’s no inspirational moment that causes me to fire open my favourite IDE and code something of use. It’s like writers block I guess, a void that’s difficult to crawl out of.
I can code well in C, C++, Java, PHP and Visual Basic (although I haven’t bothered with that for years) but every time I try to write (…)


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10 Essential apps I can’t live without

Sunday November 26th, 2006

Winamp - There’s just that something about Winamp that gives it the edge over Windows Media Player, perhaps it’s the lightweight interface, or the brilliance of the media library that it uses to organise my music. However, this looks set to change once Songbird becomes a more stable release

µTorrent - No competition, seriously. µTorrent absorbs a mere 4 - 6mb of memory and is quick to load. It boasts all the features you could want from a robust bittorrent client. Brilliance.

Media Player Classic - Simple video playback, what more could you want, open a file, a DVD or a stream and press play. Simple, yet brilliant.

PHP Designer - Probably the most robust php/html/css (…)


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Wii play together, if you’re able bodied.

Saturday November 25th, 2006

In all the excitement about the innovation of the Wii, the control scheme and the new ways games can be played, it’s never dawned on me that the console isn’t actually for everyone. As we all know, games like Zelda or Wii Sports require you to be mobile and have full control of your body to perform the actions within the game.

Did anyone stop and think about those who are unable to do this? Disability prevents people from doing things that more able bodied persons take for granted, and in some cases, people who are unable to use the Wiimote to it’s full advantage are alienated from playing the console.

After reading this article it’s bought things into perspective. The Wii sounds great and the (…)


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HD Wars

Friday November 24th, 2006

hdwars

It’s well known nowadays that there’s a divide in the future of optical media. On one side of the ring, we have Blu-Ray and on the other sits HD-DVD. Both offer their various differences in terms of storage and hardware, but in reality, they’re designed to do the same thing. Hold content in High Definition format.

The concept of moving on in technology, as it always does, is great. But it seems to of split a divide in all of the convergent industries. The film industry, for example has studios backing one or the other. The games industry as another example, we all know Sony has packed in a Blu-Ray drive for their media format of choice, while Microsoft has opted in (…)


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Blanket the UK with WiFi, A national campaign?

Thursday November 16th, 2006

The gadget show (Broadcast on Channel 5 in the UK) have just launched a ‘national campaign’ that entails encouraging the government to ‘blanket the entirety’ of the UK with free WiFi access.

Personally I think this is one of the best ideas I’ve heard all week, in this day and age anyway. Most gadgets nowadays involve some form of WiFi connectivity, from phones to PSP’s and obviously, laptops. In reality though, can we really use them wirelessly out in the open, being freely able to walk anywhere constantly connected? The simple answer is no.

As highlighted in the programme, coffee bars, hotels, fast food joints and even bars offer their own WiFi connection to use, but most of the time you have to pay before (…)


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Minimalistic Firefox: A simple guide

Wednesday November 15th, 2006

Mozilla FirefoxEveryone loves Firefox, it’s the browser of browsers. I need not explain why, one would think the reasons for switching were obvious. However, the default interface for it is rather, lets say, bulky. I’m a minimalistic person; I like everything on my computer to be organised and simple. My desktop consists of three icons, my music is located in one folder. In fact, you could say my whole hard drive is like a carefully sorted filing cabinet. It’s not OCD, I hope, I just like it that way.

So, intrigued? In this article I’m going to explain how you can achieve a perfect, more streamlined looking browser, whilst retaining those vital features we’ve known to grow and love. To give a (…)


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