LadyBug

    Video goes home: the Xbox 360

    Saturday, May 31, 2008, 05:47 AM [General]

    The Xbox 360, says Microsoft, is not just a games console, it’s an entertainment centre.


    More than 11 million Xboxes have been sold

    Start it up and behind the tabs that lead you to laser guns and racing cars is one labeled Media. Boot up your PC and run Windows Media Player and they’ll find each other, ready to play your video on your television. I’m testing three systems that deliver a digital video library to your television. The Apple TV delivered superb useability, now I’m going to look at Microsoft’s hot white box.

    Setup was simple once a library has been established in Windows Media Player and your Xbox is connected to your home wifi network. To do that you’ll need an adapter that can cost up to £60. Plug it in the back and it’ll do everything for you, finding the network and connecting to it automatically.

    There is a lot of content available to download in wmv (Windows Media Player’s preferred format and the only one the Xbox can play) as many websites publish their video content using it. Bittorrent.com, for example, has a large catalogue of films to buy or rent in wmv.

    Very few podcasters use it though, as it will not play on iPods or in iTunes, so if you have favourite video podcasts, you’ll have to keep them on the small screen.

    Once you’re running Windows Media Player click on the Library menu and choose Media sharing. Check the ‘Share my media, ’click on the Xbox 360 that should be showing in the network window and choose ‘allow.’ Back at the Xbox itself in the media tab on the start-up screen tab through to ‘video,’ then ‘computer.’ Your PC will be sitting there, ready for you to choose it.

    All the wmv video in your videos folder will be available to watch from your sofa. The directory structure is copied over so there’s a bit more clicking before you find the right file, but it’s easier to organize a large number of films this way than with the Apple TV’s long list.

    The interface is clear and the streaming is stutter-free, the only problems I have are the lack of support for widely-ised formats such as m4v or DivX and the amount of noise the Xbox itself makes. All the time it’s playing a video the internal fan is running at high speed, making a terrible racket.

    Also, one of the criteria I set for these tests is that you shouldn’t need a PC running next to the television. Thanks to streaming over wifi the PC can be in another room, but it does have to be on all the time. As most home PCs aren’t as economical to run as the Mac Mini I tested earlier, that makes this a very hungry setup.

    The Xbox draws about 160 watts, a PC about 200. 360 watts is more than four times the power used by the Apple devices and 30 times more than the Netgear Entertainer. In addition to this, given the Xbox’s tendency to overheat I’d be a little concerned about never turning it off.

    The console itself costs between £250 and £300, depending on the size of the hard disk and whether you want an HDMI cable to attach to your HDTV, a PC could cast from as much as two or three thousand pounds to as little as £100 from eBay.

    If you run your console and PC all the time then this arrangement could work for you, but I found it too noisy and had a nagging feeling of guilt as I felt the heat radiating from the corner of the room.

    It’s more expensive than the Apple TV but then you do get a games console thrown in. If that’s not a draw for you then the Xbox doesn’t offer much as a dedicated media centre. There are cheaper, more flexible ways of getting your PC’s content to your television, as I’ll explain tomorrow when I look at the Netgear Navigator.

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    say it like a cat!

    Sunday, January 6, 2008, 11:56 AM [General]

    cats
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    Cats

    Tuesday, December 11, 2007, 09:38 AM [General]

    Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

    Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

     

     Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

    Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

     

     Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

      Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

    Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

     Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

    Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

     

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    A strange and interesting anime

    Sunday, November 25, 2007, 03:57 AM [General]

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    Russian Doomsday Cult Holed Up in Forest

    Tuesday, November 20, 2007, 08:54 AM [General]

    By BAGILA BUKHARBAYEVA – 3 days ago

    MOSCOW (AP) — Doctors and rescuers were trying Friday to coax more than two dozen doomsday cult members into leaving their forest hideout near the Volga River, where they were awaiting the end of the world with the coming of spring.

    The cult members have threatened to blow themselves up with about 100 gallons of stockpiled gasoline if authorities forced them out of what officials described as a cave or bunker near the village of Nikolskoye, about 400 miles southeast of Moscow, said regional spokesman Yevgeny Guseynov.

    "Any forceful action is dangerous," Guseynov said, but he added that doctors and rescuers were nearby and trying to persuade the cult members to leave.

    Pyotr Kuznetsov, a self-declared prophet who established his True Russian Orthodox Church after he split with the official church, has not joined his followers. He was undergoing psychiatric evaluation Friday, a day after he was charged with setting up a religious organization associated with violence, Guseynov said.

    Russian state television broadcast footage of Kuznetsov speaking at the clinic where he was being examined.

    In it, he said that cult members initially aimed to dig small refuges where they could spend a day or two in prayer. But later, "we had the idea of making a big dugout for all of us to go to and stay there, just to avoid acts of hooliganism by the local population," Kuznetsov said.

    The 29 people — including four children, one only 18 months old — had stocked the cave with food and other supplies.

    Kuznetsov, who is thin and bearded, said in the footage on the Rossiya channel that he had not gone into the cave himself because "I had to meet others who were yet to arrive."

    On Thursday, black-clad Russian Orthodox monks carefully descended into the snow-covered gully to try to make contact with the cult, but members refused to speak with clergy. They were exchanging letters with Kuznetsov, however, and were in contact with doctors and officials, who promised food or medical supplies if needed.

    Kuznetsov blessed his followers before sending them into the cave earlier this month. Most of the adults were women, Russian newspaper Izvestia reported.

    Kuznetsov, 43, a trained engineer from a deeply religious family, declared himself a prophet several years ago, left his family, and settled in Nikolskoye. He began writing books, borrowing from a mixture of established beliefs, and visited monasteries in Russia and Belarus, recruiting followers, Guseynov said.

    Kuznetsov said his group believed that, in the afterlife, they would be judging whether others deserved heaven or hell, the newspaper Izvestia reported Friday. Followers of his group were not allowed to watch television, listen to the radio or handle money, media reports said.

    Anna Vabishchevich said her 41-year-old son, Alexander, and his wife and two teenage daughters were among the cult members. She said she was sending two relatives from Belarus to try to convince him to at least send the girls home.

    She told The Associated Press that her son, a railroad worker, came under Kuznetsov's influence several years ago. He stopped eating food packaged with the universal product code — which the cult regards as the mark of the Antichrist, she said.

    "My son was kind and now he is mentally ill, it's like he is hypnotized," she said between sobs.

    Alexander Dvorkin of the Moscow-based independent Center of Religious Studies said Kuznetsov's followers were in serious danger and "any wrong move" by authorities could cost lives.

    "Their minds are being manipulated, they are under the strong influence of their leader," he said.

    Dvorkin said that there are about 10 similar, nominally Christian cults in Russia, with members are living in isolation under the influence of a leader.

    He said authorities have so far been doing little or nothing about these cults and he hoped the crisis with Kuznetsov's group would force them to act on other groups as well.

    Russian Orthodox Church spokesman Georgy Ryabov said the emergence of Kuznetsov's cult was a consequence of "the absence of a system of spiritual and moral education" in Russia.

    "All Christians of Russia have to pray for them so they awaken and understand their mistake," Ryabov said.

    Associated Press writers Mansur Mirovalev from Moscow and Yuras Karmanau in Minsk, Belarus, contributed to this report.

     Here is the original link:

    http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5h39lhS81k9sVfh1H3xyHTvAOHX4gD8SUVO1G0
     
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