Nov 29
S O U N D T O Y S . N E T
icon1 Robert Turner | icon2 Me | icon4 11 29th, 2005| icon3No Comments »

WHAT ARE SOUNDTOYS.

Soundtoys may take the form of art, games, generative music, interactive environments, shockwave movies, etc.

They could be described as “new audio visual experiences” , or multimedia experiments which explore the parameters of our new media world.They might be described as the fusion of audio and visual output through new technologies made available for the internet. But because this site intends to encourage the expansion of the possibilities of this new media, hard and exclusive definitions should be avoided, and each contributing artist to the exhibition is invited to provide their own views to help develop the dialectic.

The soundtoys site offers insights into the diverse and creative nature of the web which is available to todays ‘creatives’. Increasing numbers of these artists are exploring, researching and playing within the parameters of the medium: Designers, painters, film makers, installation artists, writers, photographers, printmakers, musicians, each bringing to the online audio visual domain their own intent, their skillset, their history. So many threads here interweaving to make this rich ever-evovling tapestry.. This diversity which is inherent to the internet is reflected not least in the variety of technologies explored in the works showing on the soundtoys site; shockwave, flash, vrml, java to name a few.

The synthesis of the visual to the audio is increasingly becoming a central issue in the development of interactive media on the web. The soundtoys.net site is a fusion of the arts and media incorporating a wide range of approaches to the medium of the internet and audio visual practice. The internet has become the the leading economic and artistic tool for our age. Words like ‘emergence’ are used to explain the propulsion of these medias into our daily lives. Convergence is used to describe the meeting of medias, and their the fusion through new technology. Our exhibition series and website is for artists to explore the paradigm of audio visual practice. It also functions as a fun site where the new and cutting edge of artistic research is exhibited and can be engaged with as online internet experiences.

The soundtoys site features a journal section which aims to provide a forum for debate around the creative use of new technologies for the internet, past, present and future. All interested parties - artists, writers, programmers, scientists, philosophers - are encouraged to post their related essays, texts, articles and debates, and we envisage that this journal will become a valuable reference and research tool which will inform current practice and future development.

Nov 28

Operating System(s): Mac OS X
Application: Apple System Preferences
Application Version(s): 10.0, 10.1

Use the system preferences to configure Mac OS X for AirPort Access.

From the Apple menu, choose System Preferences.

Click the Network icon.

Click the down arrow on the Show drop-down list and choose AirPort.

Click on the AirPort tab.

In the Preferred Network field, select or type the name of the AirPort Network you wish to connect to.

In the Network Password field, type the password for the AirPort Network.

Check the box next to Show AirPort status in menu bar.

Click on the TCP/IP tab.

Click the arrow box on the Configure pop-up list and choose Using DHCP.

Click the Apply Now button.

Close the Network window.

From the AirPort menu, choose Turn AirPort On.

The system is now configured to use the AirPort!

The Airport indicator on the Status Bar at the top should be lit (not grey)

Nov 25

At one Best Buy in suburban Seattle, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates showed up to help hand out 360s and engage in several not-so-impromptu Project Gotham Racing 3 sessions. "In the living room itself, Xbox 360 is our centerpiece and a product that redefines what goes on there," Gates told the Associated Press.

But for the vast majority of would-be purchasers, the quest for a 360 had less to do with visionary proclamations and more with rampant inconvenience–as well as the occasional anarchy. Problems were particularly prevalent in the San Francisco Bay Area, where members of the tech-obsessed populace were already lining up outside stores on Monday afternoon. By noon Tuesday, GameSpot staffers who had not preordered Xbox 360s witnessed sellouts of the console at dozens of locations, including Fry’s Electronics, Costco, Circuit City, and Game Crazy. At the Toys "R" Us in San Francisco’s Richmond district, which quickly ran out of its two-dozen-odd allotment of 360s, a hysterical woman demanded the manager come over to her house on December 25 to explain to her young son why he wasn’t getting a Christmas present.

Microsoft’s official retail partner for the 360 launch was Best Buy, which has several locations spread around the Bay. By 1 p.m. PST Monday, 35 people had set up camp outside the Santa Rosa Best Buy just north of the town of Sonoma, which expected to receive 190 systems; four hours later there were more than 100 people awaiting the outlet’s "Midnight Madness" sale. Farther south in San Carlos, a clerk at Best Buy was already discouraging callers from showing up at the witching hour, saying the crowd outside would soon exceed the store’s total allotment of 80 360s. In Rosevile, a throng of 300 customers waited hours, only to find the outlet had a paltry 57 units in stock.

On Tuesday, GameSpot staffers witnessed even more chaotic scenes at the local Target in Colma, on the peninsula south of San Francisco. There, a lone security guard spent most of the night shooing an increasingly unruly crowd away from the parking lot. The situation nearly spun out of control around 7 a.m., when the guard left his post for five minutes, prompting a mass influx of would-be customers eager to receive vouchers good for a 360.

When he returned, the security guard’s attempts to get the 100-plus-person crowd to form a line were rebuffed until the arrival of police and a California National Guardsman around 8 a.m. A trio of veteran GameSpotters witnessed the Guardsman quickly take control of the situation and move to the head of the line–where he promptly turned around and asked for a 360 voucher himself. The Guardsman then promptly fled the scene, voucher in hand, leaving police, Target employees, and a visibly agitated crowd to fend for themselves.

Even more underhanded events were afoot at the Target in the East Bay suburb of Pinole. There, voucher-scalping was rampant in the parking lot prior to the store’s opening, with some vouchers selling for as much as $300–not including the price of the 360. More enterprising profiteers purchased units and immediately resold them in the parking lot for as much as $800–over $400 more than the higher-end Xbox console’s $399 sticker price. By midday, the console was fetching well over $3,000 on eBay.

Many gamers who had planned to avoid the usual platform-day launch bedlam by preordering the Xbox 360 also encountered frustration. One GameSpot staffer was sent a reassuring e-mail saying he was number 35 of the 40 preorders guaranteed at his local EB Games, only to later learn the outlet’s allotment had been reduced to just 20 units, leaving him high and dry. Luckily, his subsequent 10-hour vigil outside Best Buy paid off.

Another GameSpot editor who had preordered his unit from Wal-Mart was sent a flurry of confusing e-mails regarding his unbundled, hard drive-equipped Xbox 360 and copy of Project Gotham Racing 3. Within seven hours of receiving his confirmation, the editor got another e-mail saying that both the system and the game had been cancelled. This past Sunday, the editor received an e-mail saying his Xbox 360 had shipped, but that his game order remained canceled. He had not received the unit as of press time.

However, not all Xbox 360 launch-day stories were tales of disappointment. Several attempts to acquire units at Costco and CompUSA were successful, although the latter store had no extra controllers and very few games on hand. A spontaneous visit to the Virgin Megastore in downtown San Francisco saw one buyer grab the last of the 14 360s on hand, thanks to a no-show.”>Xbox 360 has rocky start at retail - News at GameSpot: “At one Best Buy in suburban Seattle, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates showed up to help hand out 360s and engage in several not-so-impromptu Project Gotham Racing 3 sessions. ‘In the living room itself, Xbox 360 is our centerpiece and a product that redefines what goes on there,’ Gates told the Associated Press.

But for the vast majority of would-be purchasers, the quest for a 360 had less to do with visionary proclamations and more with rampant inconvenience–as well as the occasional anarchy. Problems were particularly prevalent in the San Francisco Bay Area, where members of the tech-obsessed populace were already lining up outside stores on Monday afternoon. By noon Tuesday, GameSpot staffers who had not preordered Xbox 360s witnessed sellouts of the console at dozens of locations, including Fry’s Electronics, Costco, Circuit City, and Game Crazy. At the Toys ‘R’ Us in San Francisco’s Richmond district, which quickly ran out of its two-dozen-odd allotment of 360s, a hysterical woman demanded the manager come over to her house on December 25 to explain to her young son why he wasn’t getting a Christmas present.

Microsoft’s official retail partner for the 360 launch was Best Buy, which has several locations spread around the Bay. By 1 p.m. PST Monday, 35 people had set up camp outside the Santa Rosa Best Buy just north of the town of Sonoma, which expected to receive 190 systems; four hours later there were more than 100 people awaiting the outlet’s ‘Midnight Madness’ sale. Farther south in San Carlos, a clerk at Best Buy was already discouraging callers from showing up at the witching hour, saying the crowd outside would soon exceed the store’s total allotment of 80 360s. In Rosevile, a throng of 300 customers waited hours, only to find the outlet had a paltry 57 units in stock.

On Tuesday, GameSpot staffers witnessed even more chaotic scenes at the local Target in Colma, on the peninsula south of San Francisco. There, a lone security guard spent most of the night shooing an increasingly unruly crowd away from the parking lot. The situation nearly spun out of control around 7 a.m., when the guard left his post for five minutes, prompting a mass influx of would-be customers eager to receive vouchers good for a 360.

When he returned, the security guard’s attempts to get the 100-plus-person crowd to form a line were rebuffed until the arrival of police and a California National Guardsman around 8 a.m. A trio of veteran GameSpotters witnessed the Guardsman quickly take control of the situation and move to the head of the line–where he promptly turned around and asked for a 360 voucher himself. The Guardsman then promptly fled the scene, voucher in hand, leaving police, Target employees, and a visibly agitated crowd to fend for themselves.

Even more underhanded events were afoot at the Target in the East Bay suburb of Pinole. There, voucher-scalping was rampant in the parking lot prior to the store’s opening, with some vouchers selling for as much as $300–not including the price of the 360. More enterprising profiteers purchased units and immediately resold them in the parking lot for as much as $800–over $400 more than the higher-end Xbox console’s $399 sticker price. By midday, the console was fetching well over $3,000 on eBay.

Many gamers who had planned to avoid the usual platform-day launch bedlam by preordering the Xbox 360 also encountered frustration. One GameSpot staffer was sent a reassuring e-mail saying he was number 35 of the 40 preorders guaranteed at his local EB Games, only to later learn the outlet’s allotment had been reduced to just 20 units, leaving him high and dry. Luckily, his subsequent 10-hour vigil outside Best Buy paid off.

Another GameSpot editor who had preordered his unit from Wal-Mart was sent a flurry of confusing e-mails regarding his unbundled, hard drive-equipped Xbox 360 and copy of Project Gotham Racing 3. Within seven hours of receiving his confirmation, the editor got another e-mail saying that both the system and the game had been cancelled. This past Sunday, the editor received an e-mail saying his Xbox 360 had shipped, but that his game order remained canceled. He had not received the unit as of press time.

However, not all Xbox 360 launch-day stories were tales of disappointment. Several attempts to acquire units at Costco and CompUSA were successful, although the latter store had no extra controllers and very few games on hand. A spontaneous visit to the Virgin Megastore in downtown San Francisco saw one buyer grab the last of the 14 360s on hand, thanks to a no-show.

Nov 24
Mathmatical Geniusususus
icon1 Robert Turner | icon2 Me | icon4 11 24th, 2005| icon3No Comments »

Nov 22

Some of you might remember the movie clip that made the rounds of a bulldog in a church parking lot skating around on a skateboard, now how you teach a dog to do such a thing is beyond me, maybe he was self taught? Well you can find out the hows, the whys and the wherefores at this talented dog’s website.

Maybe someone would like to start or already has a site for Dogs/Pets with Talent?

Let me know!

Nov 22
Texas Sues Sony BMG Over CD Rootkit
icon1 Robert Turner | icon2 Me | icon4 11 22nd, 2005| icon3No Comments »

Sony, what did you do?, its getting worse for Record Label “Sony”

Texas Sues Sony BMG Over CD Rootkit
By Nate Mook, BetaNews
November 21, 2005, 1:00 PM

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott announced Monday that he has filed suit against Sony BMG over the use of illegal spyware in its copy-protection mechanism that gained national attention earlier this month.

Abbott also disputed Sony’s claims that it had recalled all affected CDs, saying investigators were able to purchase “numerous titles at Austin retail stores as recently as Sunday evening.”

The lawsuit notes that Sony’s software uses a rootkit “cloaking” technique to hide itself from users and prevent its removal. Abbott says the DRM remains active at all times, even when Sony’s media player is not active, which has led to concerns about its true purpose.

“Sony has engaged in a technological version of cloak and dagger deceit against consumers by hiding secret files on their computers,” Attorney General Abbott said in a statement. He also highlighted the security concerns brought about by the rootkit.

“Consumers who purchased a Sony CD thought they were buying music. Instead, they received spyware that can damage a computer, subject it to viruses and expose the consumer to possible identity crime.”

Since its discovery in late October, news of the rootkit has spiraled out of control, with consumers and artists alike angry at the revelation. In an apology issued last week, Sony said it “deeply regrets any inconvenience to our customers.”

But that hasn’t stopped lawsuits stemming from consumers’ outrage, nor accusations of collusion between security companies and Sony. Texas becomes the first state to sue over Sony’s tactics. Consumer lawsuits have been filed in California and New York as well.

Under Texas’ Consumer Protection Against Computer Spyware Act of 2005, Abbott is seeking civil penalties of $100,000 for each violation of the law, attorneys’ fees and investigative costs.

Nov 21
DVD Shrink 3.2.0.15
icon1 Robert Turner | icon2 Me | icon4 11 21st, 2005| icon3No Comments »

If you like making your own DVD’s but find you cant get everything you want on one disk may I suggest you buy Nero 6 and get hold of the freebee below:

DVD Shrink 3.2.0.15
1.07MB (Freeware)

DVD Shrink is a freeware tool for fitting a DVD-Video disc on a single DVD-R.

DVD Shrink will also burn your backup DVD, if you have installed the latest version of Nero. If you already possess alternative burning software and prefer to stick with it, then you can still use DVD Shrink. The output from DVD Shrink can be saved as files on your hard drive, which you can then burn with software of your choice.

==================

Absolutely great application, I had some Video’s I shot on a Sony Handycam and they were copied to the computer and were some silly size, uncompressed MPG format, I had about 6 hours worth of footage. I simply setup my disk to how I wanted it, it was way oversize for the DVD but I told it to write to a directory and then I ran the application above and ran its compression function on the directory and told it to back it up to a CD and voila, worked like a charm, 6 hours of home video on a DVD and very little noticable loss of quality and sound.

Definitely you should donate to the developers if you use and find it worthwhile.

Nov 21

I would recommend that if your looking for temporary file and history clean-up programs to stop your computer from becoming overweight, putting on those unwanted bytes around the harddrive you need the following programs:

CleanUp! - A Steven J Gould creation.

Features and benefits

Covers your tracks on the Internet. CleanUp! deletes traces of you Internet activity that get stored on your hard disk. These things include:

* Browser cache
* Browser History
* Cookies
* Bookmarks and Favorites. Deletion of these is optional and disabled by default.

Supports all popular browsers. CleanUp! provides full support for the three most popular browsers used under Windows: Internet Explorer (versions 1.x-6.x), Netscape Navigator/Communicator (versions 1.x-6.x), Mozilla (1.x), Firefox (1.x) and Opera (versions 2.x-6.x).

Supports all popular newsreaders. Newsreaders including Microsoft Internet Mail and News, Outlook and Outlook Express, Netscape Communicator and Operas newsreader are all supported. CleanUp! optionally empties the newsgroup caches for each of these and can, also optionally, remove all subscriptions to newsgroups.

Removes Windows files tracking your use of the computer. This includes things such as removing “MRU lists” (storing a list of your Most Recently Used files) for various applications, emptying the Recent Documents folder, deleting entries from the Run and Find Computer dialogs, emptying Recycle Bins, emptying temporary folders, removing some unneeded registry entries, optionally resetting the high scores for Windows games, and more.

Supports other applications too. Almost all Windows applications store information on your hard disk about your use of the program - even if this is as minor as an MRU list. CleanUp! includes support for a variety of commonly used Windows applications.

Runs on 32-bit Windows. The same version of CleanUp! runs on Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows NT 4.0 Workstation, Windows NT 4.0 Server, Windows 2000 Professional, Windows 2000 Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server, Windows XP Home, Windows XP Professional and Windows 2003 Server.

Future proofed. What does this mean? By supporting user-defined (i.e. custom) directories and file specifications, CleanUp! 3.0 (and later) will be able to handle cleaning up of temporary files created by newer browsers and Windows applications.

Secure file deletion. You can optionally choose to “Wipe Clean” files as they are deleted. This takes a little longer but instructs CleanUp! to overwrite the files several times before deleting them. This makes it almost impossible to recover those files from the hard disk using even the most advanced data recovery techniques, ensuring you the greatest degree of privacy.

Free. That’s right, you can keep on using this program and it won’t expire. You are offered the chance to register CleanUp! and pay a price you think it is worth. Think of this payment as a tip - so please contribute something. This payment will help with the continued development of CleanUp! and allow me to make a living. This payment can be as low as $5 or as high as you wish. If you find CleanUp! useful and continue to use it, please register. See below for details.

Fast. Remove hundreds, even thousands of files and free up many megabytes, and sometimes gigabytes of disk space all in a matter of minutes.

Simplicity. A clean, simple interface - designed for novices, with an Options dialog allowing some flexibility for more experienced users.

Privacy information. There is no spy-ware contained in this program. We do not monitor your actions or e-mail. When you register this program, we will not give your e-mail address or personal details to anyone.

========

The Other Program is …

CCleaner

CCleaner (Crap Cleaner) is a freeware system optimization and privacy tool. That removes unused and temporary files from your system - allowing Windows to run faster, more efficiently and giving you more hard disk space. The best part is that it’s fast! (normally taking less that a second to run) and Free.

Cleans the following:

* Internet Explorer Cache, History, Cookies, Index.dat.
* Recycle Bin, Temporary files and Log files.
* Recently opened URLs and files.
* Third-party application temp files and recent file lists (MRUs).
Including: Firefox, Opera, Media Player, eMule, Kazaa, Google Toolbar, Netscape, Office XP, Nero, Adobe Acrobat, WinRAR, WinAce, WinZip and more…
* Advanced Registry scanner and cleaner to remove unused and old entries.
Including File Extensions, ActiveX Controls, ClassIDs, ProgIDs, Uninstallers, Shared DLLs, Fonts, Help Files, Application Paths, Icons, Invalid Shortcuts and more… Backup for registry clean.
* Windows Startup tool.

If you like and use this software then it is polite to make a donation to the author.

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