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Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 | Author: robtinbc

I was adding a friends address to the Pearl and he lives in Saanich, Well as I typed the a and the s are on the same button, apparently to the Blackberry my friend lives in “assnich”!

:shock:

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008 | Author: robtinbc

Recently we bought (at a flea market) the game Haunted Mansion for Game Cube, we have a Wii with some Game Cube controllers and a GC Memory card, We saved the game right before the point where we go passed doors with Zombie arms, we had 170 spooks in the lantern at this point and now we find that every time the Zombie arms try to grab at us the game freezes/crashes with a nasty tone and we can only unplug the Wii, it wont even turn off.Here is a vid of the point we get too right when it freezes but this lucky player has no problems:

HalfTorQ’s Blog - Haunted Mansion (Game Cube) On Wii crashing

Blogged with the Flock Browser

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Thursday, January 03rd, 2008 | Author: robtinbc

Category: Quirky, Tech  | Leave a Comment
Saturday, December 29th, 2007 | Author: robtinbc

Category: Quirky, Tech  | Tags: , , , , ,  | Leave a Comment
Monday, December 10th, 2007 | Author: robtinbc

 

cool inventions 2

 

 

The weight watch belt

 

Cool inventions 23
Fati’s lips

 


Cool inventions 1

 

Volkswagen Pool Table

 

Cool inventions 2

 

Pet Peek

 

Cool inventions 3
Pantone Colour Mug Range

 

Cool inventions 4
Cool inventions 5
Cool inventions 6
Cool inventions 7

Cool inventions 8

Cool inventions 9

Cool inventions 10

cool inventions 1

The drinkin’ tray

Cool inventions 13

Climbing Wall Light

Cool inventions 13

Stairs drawer

Cool inventions 14

Titanic lamp

Cool inventions 15

Book Safe

Cool inventions 17

Shower Mic

Cool inventions 31

Cool inventions 18


Cool inventions 19

Cool inventions 20

If you know Norwegian, please let us know if the LULL, an award-winning product made for GiForm 2007 is just a concept or not.

Cool inventions 21

Craftmade Ceiling Fans Warbirds Tiger Shark Indoor fan.

Cool inventions 22

Gloves designed by Tobias Wong

Cool inventions 24

Brushed Aluminium Armadillo Breadbin

Cool inventions 25

Cool inventions 26

PRO Thumb Wrestling

Cool inventions 27

Penguin Tea Timer

1 1

Nose Pencil Sharpener

Cool inventions 28

Paper Bag Vase

Cool inventions 29

Cool inventions 30

The Large Fish Bowl Book Ends or The Small Fish Bowl Bookends

Cool inventions 32

Cool inventions 33

Pacman hat

Cool inventions 34

Superman hanger

Cool inventions 35

Cool inventions 36

Toaster Teapot

Cool inventions 37

Skeleton Bones Black Halloween Socks

Cool inventions 38

Cool inventions 39

Cool inventions 40

Sling shot pen

cool inventions 3

cool inventions 4

Fred Twist and Spout Kitchen

cool inventions 5

Category: Quirky, Tech  | Tags:  | Leave a Comment
Friday, August 10th, 2007 | Author: robtinbc

I gave Gutsy a good try for a few weeks but there are too many little quirks, wanted to install an nvidia kernel component when I had the i810 driver, I tried reconfiguring the xorg adapter driver to be the intel and not the i810 and the screen rendering improved but still did not really make me happy as compiz and 3ddesktop didnt work.

cupsys had some access denied messages when installing packages and was generally too quirky right now to be a functional desktop, I knew the risks going to Gutsy and I gave it a shot. Maybe in a few more months I will try again.

I found a great rollback option forum posting that used something refered to apt pinning, worked like a charm:

http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=2604826&postcount=2

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Friday, July 20th, 2007 | Author: robtinbc

I was discussing peanut allergies with a colleage and how it didnt seen to exist in the 80’s,  this lead us on to the fact that perhaps the world is too pre-ccupied with being germ free and he came up with an interesting what if…:

“What if thumb sucking in children was a natural developmental process allowing children to expose the immune system to various germs to build immunity, children being very tactile in the learning process  and will obviously pick up germs as the y learn.”

I was always encouraged to go play in the dirt as a child,  I have no allegies or health issues to speak of as an adult,  am I just lucky?  :???:

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Thursday, June 28th, 2007 | Author: robtinbc

Maryland Professor Creates Desktop Supercomputer

Discussion at PhysOrgForum
Credit: Clark School of Engineering - University of Maryland
A prototype of what may be the next generation of personal computers has been developed by researchers in the University of Maryland’s A. James Clark School of Engineering. Capable of computing speeds 100 times faster than current desktops, the technology is based on parallel processing on a single chip.
Parallel processing is an approach that allows the computer to perform many different tasks simultaneously, a sharp contrast to the serial approach employed by conventional desktop computers. The prototype developed by Uzi Vishkin and his Clark School colleagues uses a circuit board about the size of a license plate on which they have mounted 64 parallel processors. To control those processors, they have developed the crucial parallel computer organization that allows the processors to work together and make programming practical and simple for software developers.

“The single-chip supercomputer prototype built by Prof. Uzi Vishkin’s group uses rich algorithmic theory to address the practical problem of building an easy-to-program multicore computer,” said Charles E. Leiserson, professor of computer science and engineering at MIT. “Vishkin’s chip unites the theory of yesterday with the reality of today.”

Desktop Parallel Processing

Parallel processing on a massive scale using numerous interconnected chips or computers has been used for years to create supercomputers. However, its application to desktop systems has been a challenge because of severe programming complexities. The Clark School team found a way to use single chip parallel processing technology to change that.

Vishkin, a professor in the Clark School’s electrical and computer engineering department and the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS), explained the advantage of parallel processing like this: “Suppose you hire one person to clean your home, and it takes five hours, or 300 minutes, for the person to perform each task, one after the other,” Vishkin said. “That’s analogous to the current serial processing method. Now imagine that you have 100 cleaning people who can work on your home at the same time! That’s the parallel processing method.

“The ’software’ challenge is: Can you manage all the different tasks and workers so that the job is completed in 3 minutes instead of 300?” Vishkin continued. “Our algorithms make that feasible for general-purpose computing tasks for the first time.”

Vishkin and his team are now demonstrating their technology, which in future devices could include 1,000 processors on a chip the size of a finger nail, to government and industry groups. To show how easy it is to program, Vishkin is also providing access to the prototype to students at Montgomery Blair High School in Montgomery County, Md.

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