Free Software FPS Games Compared

Monday, 31 December 2007 04:14 by Selecters

Linux-gamers.net has posted a thorough, although harsh, comparison of free software shooters. It compares seven open source shooter games in a lengthy discussion. Few have gone to the trouble of comparing and carefully examining the genre before. The author ranks the games in the following order (best to worst): Warsow, Tremulous, World of Padman, Nexuiz, Alien Arena, OpenArena, and Sauerbraten. In making these choices, it claims to use gameplay, design, innovation and presentation as criteria and includes a short history of free software shooters in the introduction.

http://www.linux-gamers.net/smartsection.item.81/comparison-of-free-software-shooters.html

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Adobe Quietly Monitoring Software Use?

Sunday, 30 December 2007 00:37 by Selecters

For months, users of Adobe Creative Suite 3 have been wondering why some of the applications regularly connect to what looks like a private IP address but is actually a public domain address belonging to the web analytics company Omniture. Now allegations of user spying are getting louder, prompting Adobe Photoshop product manager John Nack to respond, though many remain unsatisfied with his explanation.

Adobe confirms the function, saying they use information gleaned about user behavior to gain "business insight into how to create better user experiences." Don't want to be their guinea pig? Omniture lets you opt out

http://valleywag.com/338011/wear-tinfoil-hats-when-using-adobe-products

http://www.centernetworks.com/adobe-replies-to-spy-concerns

http://blogs.adobe.com/jnack/2007/12/adobe_ate_me_ba.html

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Time Zone change in Argentina approved yesterday night at congress

Thursday, 27 December 2007 23:52 by Selecters

Starting December 30th 2007 at 12:00a, Argentina adopts Daylight Saving Time.

Background

The government of Argentina has announced the implementation of daylight saving time (DST) in Argentina. The following are the start and end dates for the daylight saving time defined:

Daylight saving time begins:  Sunday, December 30th, 2007 at 00:00 A.M local standard time.
Daylight saving time ends:  Sunday, March 16th, 2008 at 00:00 A.M local daylight saving time.
Currently, computers in Argentina use the “(GMT-03:00) Buenos Aires, Georgetown” time zone setting. However, the default values for the “(GMT-03:00) Buenos Aires, Georgetown” time zone setting in Microsoft Windows do not reflect the daylight saving time start and end dates defined by the government.
As this change was announced by the government with a very short time in advance from to the actual date of the change, there was no time for Microsoft to provide an update for the operating systems. Given this situation, this is a procedure you can use to create a new Time Zone for Argentina until Microsoft releases the corresponding update.

More...

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BlogEngine.NET 1.3 released

Wednesday, 26 December 2007 21:40 by Selecters

BlogEngine.NET 1.3 has arrived!

You can download the new version here

New features here

Instructions for upgrading here

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How to wipe personal data from cell phones and PCs

Wednesday, 26 December 2007 21:13 by Selecters

Before you recycle your old computer, cell phone or smart phone, make sure that you wipe it clean of data. If you don't, your personal life could be laid bare. Worse, you could become a victim of identity theft.
But wiping your device clean of data may be harder than you think. Here are details about how to do it for cell phones and PCs.

Cleaning up cell phones and smart phones
With cell phones and smart phones like BlackBerries, you need to worry about more than your data -- make sure that your account has been terminated. If not, others will be able to make phone calls from your device, and you'll be footing the bill. So double-check with your carrier that the account has been terminated before you donate or sell your phone. If you've switched your account over to a new device and deactivated the old device on that account, check your bill carefully to make sure that the old phone isn't somehow still using that account.
Next, erase all of your stored information, including your phone book, any stored incoming or outgoing text messages, and memory of incoming and outgoing phone numbers, e-mails and so on. You can do this manually, one by one, of course, but if you do, there's a good chance you might miss some. And it can also be exceedingly time-consuming. So check your phone's manual for how to do a complete reset. A reset will wipe your phone of data and restore it to its factory settings.
A superb resource for figuring out how to reset cell phone data is put together by ReCellular, which buys, recycles and refurbishes wireless devices. Its cell phone data eraser site gives detailed instructions on how to erase data from many different makes and models of cell phones. Just choose your make and model, and you'll be able to download specific instructions for resetting it.

Wiping PCs
Just deleting files isn't good enough when you are going to recycle your computer. It's quite simple for anyone to restore those deleted files, even if they're no longer in the Recycle Bin. In fact, even deleting files and reformatting your hard disk won't completely do the trick. Someone knowledgeable enough and dedicated to the task will be able to restore your files, even from a reformatted disk.
Think there's nothing to worry about? You couldn't be more wrong. In 2003, two graduate students at MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science bought 158 used hard disks on eBay and other places. From those hard disks, they were able to discover 5,000 credit card numbers, personal and corporate financial records, medical records and personal e-mails.
Only 12 of the 158 hard disks had been properly cleaned of their data. Approximately 60% of the hard drives had been reformatted, and about 45% of the drives had no files on them (the drives couldn't even be mounted on a computer) -- yet the students were still able to recover data from them, using a variety of special tools. For details, see the news story from MIT.
What can you do? Get a disk-wiping program, preferably one that meets the U.S. Department of Defense's standards for disk sanitation. These programs will overwrite your entire hard disk with data multiple times, ensuring that the original data can't be retrieved. If you use them, be patient, because it can take several hours to wipe the hard disk.
Computerworld features editor Valerie Potter vouches for the free Darik's Boot and Nuke, which, unlike some competing programs, worked smoothly on the old Windows 98 machine that she recently put out to pasture. Download the software, which then creates a boot disk that wipes everything on the hard drive. It can be used with floppy disks (remember those?), USB flash drives, CDs and DVDs. A similar program that has gotten good reviews is Eraser.
If you've got a Mac, you can use Apple's built-in Disk Utility or download a third-party application like Mireth Technology's ShredIt X 5.8 ($25, free trial), which lets you shred single files as well as wipe your local hard drive, network hard drives and CD-RWs.
Everything clean? OK, now it's time to sell, donate or recycle your equipment. Find out what to do in "Out with the old: What to do with your unwanted tech gear."

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Microsoft to heat up battle vs. Flash in 2008

Wednesday, 26 December 2007 00:12 by Selecters
Microsoft's Silverlight will vie with Adobe for market share in the burgeoning RIA space.
Every good general knows that even the biggest army is useless if you can't get it on the battlefield.
Microsoft and Adobe will both experience a version of this dilemma in 2008, as they wrangle for market and mind share in the burgeoning RIA (rich Internet application) space, according to close observers of the companies.
"They both have their own power positions," said Forrester Research analyst Jeffrey Hammond, citing Flash's installed base, which has been pegged in the 90 percent range.
"The one place that Microsoft holds a wild card is with developers. There still are not that many Flex developers out there," Hammond added, referring to Adobe's toolset for RIA applications. The company is also developing the Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR), which lets Web developers build RIAs that can run on the desktop.
Of course, Microsoft's worldwide legions of programmers don't pose a great advantage if not enough users install Silverlight, its cross-platform browser plug-in for RIA applications.
"They need to get Silverlight on 70 to 80 percent of the Internet-connected machines," said Greg DeMichillie, an analyst with Directions on Microsoft.
One of the quickest ways to do that would be to ship the next version of Internet Explorer with Silverlight already embedded. But Hammond said this is unlikely, because doing so would likely prompt cries of outrage from competitors and perhaps antitrust lawsuits against Microsoft.
Microsoft has instead has tried to seed usage of Silverlight through other tactics, such as getting high-traffic Web sites like NBA.com to use it. That in turn compels site visitors to install the plug-in.
Silverlight 1.0 focuses largely on streaming media and therefore has more relevance for consumer-facing projects than enterprise IT shops.
That all changes with the next version, which is expected in beta form early next year. "Silverlight 2.0 is where it gets interesting," Hammond said.
The next release includes a subset of Microsoft's .Net Framework, meaning the company's vast base of developers can program against it using familiar .Net languages as well as tools like Visual Studio.
The company has also aimed at Adobe's sweet spot -- graphic design applications -- with its Expression line of products.
Adobe, on the other hand, may not have an adoption problem for its plug-in, and already has won the hearts and minds of graphic designers everywhere, but is not nearly as strong in tools as Microsoft.
"The biggest thing Adobe needs to bring FlexBuilder up to date with modern developer tools," said DeMichillie. "I would say they are two years behind Visual Studio."
"The other thing not to underestimate is the value of Microsoft's programming languages," he added. "C# and VB -- they are real programming languages," he said. "[Adobe's] ActionScript has certainly grown up in the last year or two, but you won't find people building industrial-strength applications with it."
While a wealth of smaller companies and startups have crowded the RIA platform space, DeMichillie said he expects only Adobe and Microsoft will emerge as true players.
"When you build a platform you need so many pieces," he said. "The other player trying to do this is Sun [with its JavaFX platform], but I don't think they have all the pieces."
Hammond is somewhat more conservative. He also sees Adobe and Microsoft as the eventual leaders, but joined by between five and 10 smaller RIA vendors.
For all the gamesmanship that is sure to unfold between Microsoft and Adobe in 2008, there is an overarching issue the firms must overcome, DeMichillie said: Convincing corporate developers that user interface development is just as important as the mainline systems that power their organization's core business processes.
"Their biggest problem is the backlog of applications they've got to build," DeMichillie said.

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Inside a Modern Malware Distribution System - Pushdo Trojan downloaders backend code and control server

Sunday, 23 December 2007 16:51 by Selecters
The Pushdo Trojan downloader's backend code and control server. Pushdo is a complex Trojan downloader that meticulously tracks its victims; much of its innovation is not in the Trojan itself but in its control infrastructure. Quoting: "The Pushdo controller also uses the GeoIP geolocation database in conjunction with whitelists and blacklists of country codes. This enables the Pushdo author to limit distribution of any one of the [421 different] malware loads from infecting users located in a particular country, or provides the ability to target a specific country or countries with a specific payload. Pushdo keeps track of the IP address of the victim, whether or not that person is an administrator on the computer, their primary hard drive serial number..., whether the filesystem is NTFS, how many times the victim system has executed a Pushdo variant, and the Windows OS version."

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Deluge Anonymizing Browser Now Includes Bittorrent

Sunday, 23 December 2007 16:48 by Selecters
"An open-source bittorrent client, Deluge, now provides an internal, anonymizing browser to protect its users from overzealous ISPs. The client runs on Windows, Linux and OS X. From the site: "Everyone knows that it is common practice for ISPs to do their best to either block or throttle bittorrent users. We believe that this is wrong and unethical, as there are many legal uses for bittorrent. If an ISP is throttling or blocking bittorrent traffic, you can pretty much bet that they're tracking which users visit bittorrent-related sites so that they can better block or throttle those users." Their forum has more info"

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Flash Vulnerabilities Affect Thousands of Sites

Sunday, 23 December 2007 16:38 by Selecters
The problem is compounded by the fact that some of the most popular Web development tools for generating SWF produce files containing the recently disclosed vulnerabilities. "Researchers from Google have documented serious vulnerabilities in Adobe Flash content which leave thousands of websites susceptible to attacks that steal the personal details of visitors. A web search reveals more than 500,000 vulnerable applets on major corporate, government and media sites. Removing the vulnerable content will require combing through website directories for SWF files and then testing them one by one. Updates in the Adobe software that renders SWF files in browsers are also likely, but they probably wouldn't quell the threat completely... No patch in sight from Adobe, that's the price to pay for depending on proprietary solutions."

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Some of the significant web trends and developments in 2007

Friday, 21 December 2007 21:56 by Selecters
iPhone – Launched in September this year, the iPhone is the invention of 2007. It has revolutionized the mobile browsing experience and the way web applications are being developed. Even though its open SDK has been delayed, many web sites have already rolled out iPhone-specific support to their hugely popular web application suite.

Google Gears – In May, Google announced Google Gears, an open source technology for creating offline web applications. Google Reader is currently the first application that is being tested; it allows users to download their RSS news feeds to their computer so that they can read stories offline. Since this is open source, developers can create offline web applications using JavaScript APIs.

Safari – Safari is the browser of choice for the Mac platform. In June, Safari for Windows was launched and since then, the browser has increased its share in the browser market.

Widgets – Introduced in 2006, widgets increased in popularity and continued to grow in 2007. The year 2007 has even been coined "The Year of the Widget" by Newsweek. Web Widgets are tiny web applications that allow publishers to syndicate their content on other sites. Widgets range from image slideshows to news tickers, from videos to polls, to other interactive applications.

Adobe AirAdobe Intergrated Runtime (AIR) is probably the biggest development of 2007. This well designed and very promising technology allows developers to use their existing web development skills in HTML, AJAX and Flash to build and deploy rich Internet applications to the desktop.

AJAX Frameworks – This year, there has been an increased interest in AJAX based frameworks. The number of toolkits keeps growing; according to Ajaxian.com, this month, there have been 241 registered AJAX toolkits and related libraries while in 2006 there were only 170.

Database Management Systems - Free versions of Oracle, SQLServer and DB2 have been released this year by Oracle, Microsoft and IBM respectively. This was done in response to the growing market share of open source database management systems like MySQL and PostgreSQL.

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Welcome to BlogEngine.NET 1.3

Friday, 21 December 2007 21:00 by Selecters

If you see this post it means that BlogEngine.NET 1.3 is running and the hard part of creating your own blog is done. There is only one thing you need to do from this point on to take full advantage of the blog and that is to set up the first author profile.

Write Permissions

To be able to log in to the blog and writing posts, you need to enable write permissions on the App_Data folder. If you’re blog is hosted at a hosting provider, you can either log into your account’s admin page or call the support. You need write permissions on the App_Data folder because all posts and comments are saved as XML files and placed in the App_Data folder.

Username and password

When you've got write permissions to the App_Data folder, you need to change the username and password. Find the sign-in link located either at the bottom or top of the page depending on your current theme and click it. Now enter "admin" in both the username and password fields and click the button. You will now see an admin menu appear. It has a link to the "Users" admin page. From there you can change the username and password.

On the web

You can find BlogEngine.NET on the official website. Here you'll find tutorials, documentation, tips and tricks and much more. The ongoing development of BlogEngine.NET can be followed at CodePlex where the daily builds will be published for anyone to download.

Good luck and happy writing.

The BlogEngine.NET team

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Comparing Browser JavaScript Performance

Thursday, 20 December 2007 21:41 by Selecters

Coding Horror has an interesting writeup on JavaScript performance in the big four browsers. He used WebKit's newly announced SunSpider to produce the results. If a probable anomaly in the IE7 results is overlooked, Firefox 2 is the slowest of the bunch. Atwood has also benchmarked the latest Firefox Beta, and its performance seems to be improved significantly.

http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001023.html

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Microsoft lets everyone try Windows XP SP3

Tuesday, 18 December 2007 21:25 by Selecters
The release candidate for the final upgrade to Windows XP will be made available to all on Microsoft's download site Tuesday evening Microsoft announced Tuesday that it would post the release candidate of Windows XP Service Pack 3 to its download site this evening at approximately 6 p.m. Eastern time.
The move marks the first opportunity for all users of the six-year-old operating system to try out its final upgrade. Previously, several thousand users were given access to test builds of SP3 only by Microsoft's invitation.
According to a company spokeswoman, the version that debuts Tuesday, dubbed a "release candidate" to note progress from earlier betas, will be available from the Microsoft Download Center. She was unable to say when the service pack would post to Windows Update so users can download and install it with the company's update service, however.
The final version of Windows XP SP3 remains slated for delivery sometime in the first half of 2008, the spokeswoman said. She also warned off casual users from trying the preview. "As this is a release candidate, we strongly encourage only those who are comfortable installing prerelease code to download Windows XP SP3," she said.
Recently, Microsoft has been downplaying the significance of Windows XP SP3. In a white paper posted to its Web site last week and also Tuesday, the company praised Windows Vista at XP's expense, reminding users that "Vista provides the most advanced security and management capabilities of any Windows operating system."
"Windows XP SP3 does not bring significant portions of Windows Vista functionality to Windows XP," the spokeswoman said.
According to the white paper, the Download Center version of XP SP3 will weigh in at about 580MB; the version downloaded and installed via Windows Update, however, will be much smaller, typically around 70MB.
Windows XP debuted in October 2001 and was last updated as SP2 in August 2004; SP3 will be the final major upgrade of the operating system.

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Microsoft releases Windows Vista Service Pack 1 SP1 Release Candidate

Monday, 17 December 2007 22:46 by Selecters

The Windows Vista Service Pack 1 Release Candidate (RC) is now available to the public. In addition to previously released updates, SP1 contains changes focused on addressing specific reliability and performance issues, supporting new types of hardware, and adding support for several new technologies. SP1 also addresses some management, deployment, and support challenges.

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/windowsvista/bb738089.aspx

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Upgrading to windows XP from Vista

Monday, 17 December 2007 20:32 by Selecters

A field report on upgrading to XP from Vista. Taken from the point of view that XP is the new OS, not vista ;-)

http://dotnet.org.za/codingsanity/archive/2007/12/14/review-windows-xp.aspx

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Kaspersky Blacklisted Keys Checking Tool

Monday, 17 December 2007 20:26 by Selecters

MANY of you asked for something like this. SO there you have:

Kaspersky Blacklisted Keys Checking Tool

Just Put some keys in the Extracted Directory & run KeyMon.exe in the directory. The Non-Blacklisted keys will be left over in the directory & the blacklisted one have been moved to BANNED directory in it!! Use the Non Blacklisted keys & Njoy!! Or simple: Just drag all keys you have to .exe file and then run it.

http://www.linksafe.info/show.php?show=244 (rapidshare link)

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Windows Server 2008 with Hyper-V beta download

Monday, 17 December 2007 20:25 by Selecters
Windows Server 2008 Release Candidate helps IT professionals to increase the flexibility and reliability of their server infrastructure while offering developers a more robust web and applications platform for building connected applications and services.
This time-limited release of Windows Server® 2008 Release Candidate will expire on June 30, 2008. After this time, you will need to uninstall the software or upgrade to a later release or a fully-licensed version of Windows Server® 2008.
This product requires a valid product key for activation within 30 days of installation.
If you have received a product key via email confirmation, you may use the key with the software you download from this site or with a DVD containing Windows Server® 2008 Release Candidate.

If you have not received a product key, you can obtain one by visiting one of the following sites:

Please refer to the Windows Server® 2008 Release Candidate: System Requirements and Installation Documentation

Start Hyper-V Windows Server 2008 iso download.

Hyper-V Release Notes

Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V Product Overview

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Microsoft releases beta of Hyper-V virtualization technology

Monday, 17 December 2007 20:24 by Selecters
Hyper-V, formerly code-named Viridian, is Microsoft's virtualization hypervisor for Windows Server 2008.
Hyper-V, formerly code-named "Viridian," is now available for download from Microsoft's Web site and is ready to be used with the current x64 beta version of Windows Server 2008, which is also available online. The technology, called a hypervisor, is the underlying virtualization technology for the server release, which is a major update that's expected to be released on Feb. 27, 2008. A beta of Hyper-V originally was planned to be released on that date as well.
Virtualization, or the ability to use virtual machine technology to run multiple OSes on a physical server, is widely seen as a disruptive technology and is becoming increasingly important as companies seek to cut costs and consolidate hardware in their data centers and IT environments. Microsoft had originally intended to release Hyper-V as part of the original release of Windows Server 2008, but the technology was delayed and is now scheduled to be generally available 180 days, or about six months, after Windows Server 2008 ships. Hyper-V's released was delayed earlier this year because Microsoft opted to pull out some originally planned features.
Hyper-V takes advantage of virtualization-optimized microprocessors from Intel and AMD and is meant to help Microsoft compete with virtualization leader VMware, which already has hypervisor technology on the market. Hypervisors allow for cross-platform support so that servers can run multiple versions of different OSes -- such as Windows and Linux -- side by side on one piece of hardware.
Bill Hilf, general manager of Windows Server at Microsoft, said customers have been asking the company for a built-in virtualization technology that works directly within the Windows Server environment so that it's easy to manage and implement. By design, Hyper-V is set up as what Microsoft calls a "role" within Windows Server 2008, and can be turned on or off as a customer wishes, he said. Roles are a new feature of the forthcoming release of the OS that allow servers to be set up so only the role or roles a customer wants them to play in the IT environment -- such as e-mail server or application server -- will be turned on.
Mike Neil, general manager of virtualization at Microsoft, said Hyper-V is meant to make the virtualization market "a two-horse race" between Microsoft and VMware. However, with Hyper-V not scheduled to ship until the second half of next year, the company has a lot of ground to make up to topple VMware from its leadership position. And Microsoft also faces pressure in providing built-in OS virtualization from Linux leader Red Hat, which already has integrated cross-platform virtualization into Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
Windows Server 2008 eventually will be available in multiple editions and will be offered with and without Hyper-V. Microsoft also plans to release a product called Microsoft Hyper-V Server specifically as a virtualization host environment in the second half of 2008.

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