RSS RSS Subscribe

Posts tagged: Game

Apple Boots Molinker For Gaming Apps Store Rating System

comments Comments Off
By , December 14, 2009 10:46
Hot:

Well its an interesting story but not one that has been a true surprise.  I found it interesting since there is so much controversy over the Apple App Store that this seems to be a catch-22 for Apple.  What Do I mean?  Let me outline.

  1. Continue reading 'Apple Boots Molinker For Gaming Apps Store Rating System'»

Ubuntu 9.10 “Karmic Koala” Release Candidate – Installation Notes

comments Comments Off
By , October 25, 2009 13:11
Hot:

Released to the public on October 22 Canonical’s latest and greatest Ubuntu yet “Karmic Koala 9.10“.  For many folks using a Linux distribution probably ranks up there with a visit to the dentist, but I have to say that as the kernel keeps improving in leaps and bounds the software wrapped around it can just work on the majority of hardware without issue.

Sure many folks may try it out and find out that it ‘does not work’ with their specific hardware, but compared with last years 8.10 the numbers are down with the sad exception of two particular vendors; ATI and Intel.  ATI recently dropped support for much of their older hardware, but then released a new series of drivers that do support.  Thankfully using the older drivers or using the open source communities versions can at least get them working, if you have problems with the more supported drivers.  Intel on the other hand has basically thrust it’s middle finger up at the linux community with a blatant refusal to provide open source to allow many distributions to be able to integrate support, so for many it means booting to a broken system, and downloading proprietary drivers and praying it works.  Obviously this isn’t the end of the world, but from my perspective a seriously ‘good’ reason to avoid using Intel hardware,  especially if you want to use wine to run Windows games or applications, you’d do so much better with non-Intel chipsets.  nVidia has the best support out of the box for most people not only linux users, but also windows users that it’s becoming a staple requirement.  Don’t get me wrong, Intel does provide drivers, but do not expect them to work directly from installation.  In some cases the generic drivers get installed and it works, in other cases you’re faced with non-working hardware and off to the various support forums seeking a solution.  Thankfully they are available.

In my situation I decided to get a new laptop and specifically bought a Compaq CQ60 which features NO Intel or ATI hardware, simply so I could avoid any hassles.  I’m pretty good at fixing these issues, but if I am spending money and the amount is equal, why buy something with hardware that will not work?    So without further adieu, I release my notes on installing Ubuntu 9.10 x64 on this laptop.

Continue reading 'Ubuntu 9.10 “Karmic Koala” Release Candidate – Installation Notes'»

Editorial: Understanding why Malware infects your PC

comments Comments Off
By , February 19, 2009 14:54
Hot:

I saw this comment today on a malware site and I normally read them to see how folks troll malware sites looking for blame.
Folks, malware is your problem, not anyone elses.  I am constantly reminded how people fail to understand that its their actions and choices that cause the infections, and today social engineering is a big reason.
Even malware experts are not immune from falling victim to their tricks.  Its been like this for years and outside of the increase in targetted attacks,
its still the #1 reason.

Continue reading 'Editorial: Understanding why Malware infects your PC'»

My Old New PC

comments Comments Off
By , May 21, 2007 18:10
Hot:

Some of you looking at that title might wonder what I’ve been sniffing (packets I tell you!!, Packets!!) In fact this was an article I created on Sept 26, 2006 and actually never posted it!

That’s correct. I typed this article up back then and never published it. I decided that I could honestly publish this now as well I could show you guys some of the pictures I took at the time of building this rig. In early September of last year I finally had all my material for building my two new PC’s were in place. The DVR was cheap running in about $500.00 including all the cabling, keyboards and other miscellaneous stuff that adds considerably. Total system costs break down like so: Existing parts used: Video card. Cost: $0. New parts for PC: motherboard, cpu, harddisk, power supply, ram, case. Cost: $388 Reallocated parts for PC: illuminated keyboard, 50 foot VGA cable, wireless mouse, extended power supply cable. Cost: $112 even though I didn’t actually buy either the keyboard or mouse at this time, I already had them I included their costs since they were now at home in this system.

Ok I didn’t say I’d talk about the cheap system I threw together, I’ll get to the actual story from last September

Well this is a little bit older technology, but still on a very high end.

For this Gaming System I’ve hand picked the parts due to their excellent quality, warranty, and durability. To say nothing of offering the best features and designs to be found anywhere.

The start of our system begins with our case. A Cooler Master CM-Stacker 830. This is a phenomenal case for a gaming rig. However it’s greatness is also it’s curse. This case alone weighs as much as my fully assembled DVR rig, and I’m adding a lot of weight to this. Total should come in around 45~55 lbs completed. Thank god this case features a pair of handholds at the top of the case.

I could get into more and more detail about the case and it’s features but instead I’ll discuss them as I use and work with them. There are many. Primary ones are the many locations for fans, the front jack plate onto of the front of the case and the additional (duplicate) jacks on top with the power/reset buttons and HD activity light. Also is the airflow that this case allows by not having really solid walls. The black mesh is a open grill much like is found in many rack mount components. The other major feature this case offers is it’s size. It sits 22inches high and 25 inches long! Thats 56cm and 64cm for the rest of the planet. This case will support an ATX motherboard in two orientations, or a BTX motherboard.

Our motherboard is a ASUS A8N32-SLI Deluxe powered with an AMD Athlon FX-60 Dual Core CPU. We are using an ATX in normal configuration due to the heat pipes our motherboard features. This is a very important determination of the setup in our case and we will follow the instructions as directed by ASUS.


This is an awesome combination which should give us incredible gaming performance. However in order to not bottleneck the CPU any more than required, we chose the recommended and expensive RAM, Twin 1GB’s matched with the lowest latency we can get for this motherboard. Using unmatched ram is not recommended and we would much prefer to add another 2GB but….unless we are using a x64 compliant OS (not XP or less) it will not work. We could run Redhat or Fedora with 4GB but even this is not that easy to accomplish. We will run Vista on this box so hopefully we can eventually accomplish this.

After we have the RAM installed it’s time to mount the motherboard to the motherboard tray on the case. This makes working on this system very easy since we do not have to work with the entire case while loading the motherboard, etc. This prevents scratching the aluminum case unnecessarily.

All this makes a great computer except for the true power horse behind any decent gaming system…the video card, or in our case the Dual Video Cards. My choice was the extraordinary eVGA Nvidia 7900 GTX times two! These awesome babies are black with silver heat pipes, just perfect match for our black/silver system. They are HUGE! Each card fills two expansion slots (of course each only using ONE PCI-Ex16 slot) and each requiring it’s own power supply connection! These babies are going to get the electricity meter running.

Given the large size I decided to dry run the video cards to see how they would fit and how much they may interfere with the cabling I still need to do. I discovered these huge cards would be very troublesome in a smaller case, even a slightly smaller one, but not for me! Still the biggest problem is denying me access to any of the ports on the motherboard for the front panel connections primarily as well as thinking about using any other expansion slot in the case…it ain’t happening!

Another problem with the eVGA cards is the double slot tabs. My case seemed to have very tight slots to attempt to insert this card while using two of them at the same time. What a patience test! One I was able to stretch out enough to get the card to seat nearly perfect, the second one annoyed me so much I cut the tabs off the video card. My first custom modification ;)

Routing the front panel cables was a bit more challenging as they needed to either lie flat on the motherboard or route around the twin video cards. Since I didn’t want to use any of additional back plate connections since room is a premium with the eVGA’s, I got the connections in as best I could. The case offers a routing rack on both sides of the power supply/water cooler shelf, but I chose the one in the middle between the motherboard and the drive bays. This allowed all the wiring to be routed through and tied up except where it was not possible (one PCI-E power cable just wouldn’t reach until it was allow more direct access), or it was impractical (the ATX 12v connector just made sense to use the other routing since it was closer and hid the cable).

The Enermax Liberty Power Supply Unit is one of the nicest PSU’s I’ve bought without a lot on frivolous features. Ok, there were two which I’ll disclose afterwards, but I don’t want to detract from the nice features of this supply. This 750watt badboy has only built-in cables for the motherboard connections, of which we used all of them except the extra 12v motherboard connector since we are not using an advanced ATX or a BTX motherboard.

The supply itself is enclosed in a black mesh grill aluminum and has round cloth cables on most of the lengths. It features a selection of cables to add which consist of; 2 PCI-E cables; 2 Molex and 2 pSATA connections; and two more Molex and pSATA with Floppy connections also. All the cables come in a Velcro wrap storage bag for convenient and safe storage. I used all but one. Additionally it comes with a key tag necklace for what reason I’m not certain, other than you can wear it. But don’t try to attach the power supply to it. It’s a tad heavy for this necklace, but it’s great for thumb drives and other light weight items

After getting this all in place, like requiring a mounting plate to be removed to install the PSU, I’m now ready to start installing the drives. 4 SATA2 Seagate 7200.10 300GB hard drives go into the original 4-in-3 module. This is going to be converted into a RAID 0+1 array equaling roughly 610GB of storage in a mirrored striped array. Formatting this puppy will take most of the afternoon.

Adding a 5th Seagate on the second SATA controller and installing the 6th Seagate in the external enclosure I purchased so it can be removed and plugged in quite simply.
I will have roughly 1.3TB of storage on this box once it’s complete. Plus another 610GB for mirroring on the RAID0+1 array equals nearly 2 TB or Terabytes of disk space.

The case handles a total of 9 120mm fans and only comes with one. Ultimately I’m going to have 6-8 fans. The rear fan was replace with a white w/Blue LED fan. A chassis ceiling fan was installed of the same type and a third was installed on the lower left cage in the access door. Four fans will fill this space ultimately. Ensuring all the front panel connections are done prior to installing the video cards is important and routing the power cables also is done roughly. Technically we could boot this machine but first we want to check a few things and ensure we don’t need to access anything on the motherboard. We still have a matrix LCD display to install, yes in the case.

To top off the drives we add a Silver NEC DVD 16x burner that supports dual layer disks. This will become our workhorse drive but with all the storage space we’ll put Nero to work building virtual DVDROM’s. Below the burner we install our Matrix LCD display. This unit is red in difference to our silver/black/blue theme simply to give the appearance of an eye (ok now you’ll have to sniff or smoke something to get that image in your brain…). We still have room to add another 4 drives if we acquire another 4 in 3 module, which to date we cannot get. Bad CoolerMaster rep’s…BAD! But realistically we have no capability to run them unless I make them IDE…uh no. However it would allow me to split the 4 drives in the one into two modules and greatly improve airflow between the drives. However my drives run currently a nice 32 degrees so I’ve nothing to worry about at this time.

With the eVGA video cards installed, now the system looks very menacing and promising. We decide that it’s time to exchange the Molex connectors with the UV reactive ones I purchased. The Molex extractor tool is very handy, even though the task is not a highly rewarding one. I simply not using any of them except for the DVD Burner. The other two are attached to fans at the moment and will probably route to the matrix display. Two connectors you will probably never see will glow. Wow…

The time of trial now comes are we are ready to power up the system for the first time. Booting the system the first time was flawless, as everything came to life after powering the system. Quickly went into the BIOS to make a few changes and then rebooted to get the RAID and SATA controllers working. This proved to be a greater challenge. After a few driver upgrades and reconfiguring we get the drives setup, unfortunately our external SATA drive is missing the correct cable, which we will have to get at a later date.

Originally, I had planned to install Vista beta RC1 on this for the time being, later upgrading to the release version of Vista Ultimate 64bit, but none of my tricks could get the OS to see my SATA drives. I did have to install a floppy drive and have the drivers for the SATA I wished to boot from ready to go during OS setup. But otherwise nothing else needed to be modified from my setup to get this up and running.

Vista was not as accommodating. It simply hung during several phases of the install, but popping the DVD out of the drive usually moved it to the next step. This was not foolproof and was ultimately dumped as a choice and I installed XP SP1a instead. I may upgrade this to SP2, but that will have to be decided later. For now I want to get all the drives working and formatted, drivers installed, and get testing this box out.[Author's Note: At this point I have the PC playing with several OS's using various external SATA drives and Firewire drives, and I've now acquired my Vista Ultimate 64bit I'm going to reattempt this.]

So fan totals: Power Supply = 1 120mm; CPU = 1 80cm; Motherboard = 0; Video Card = 1/each = 2 80cm’s; Chassis has 1 in 4-3 mod, 1 rear, 1 top, 1 side, all 120mm. Total is 8. At this configuration motherboard is running at about 49 C. When we add the 3 other fans this should decrease the temps by about 4-6 degrees. [Authors Note: After getting another 3 fans to fill the side grill up with fans the temperature is now running at 44 idle and 46 peak. The CPU also never peaks over 61 and typically is running around 50] The real beauty is how quiet this whole thing runs at. It’s much quieter than many of my other systems

All the drivers installed ok, and we installed most of the bonus software that came with the hardware, even the time limited stuff, like Nortons Internet Security. Most of this we toasted including the buggy Forceware Firewall that comes with the product. Many other programs had issues with it.

Today the system still runs great. We have also acquired a pair of Viewsonic VX922 monitors to serve as our dual-monitor setup when not playing games, and perform very well when we reduce the output to one display for SLI mode. We have had many games installed and many framerates peaking over 140FPS. Even games like Oblivion we run constantly acheiving over 40FPS even with all the graphics on the highest settings using a display mode of 1280 by 1024. Yes, we do enjoy the games and the performance of these games on this rig. Now we are planning our next build…something to store a incredible amount of files on.

Windows Vista Beta Impressions

comments Comments Off
By , June 14, 2006 14:43
Hot:

As I’m sure you’re aware Microsoft had rumored to release Vista this year, but instead decided to delay its release.  We won’t be able to purchase Vista until 2007 now, but until next summer Microsoft has given everyone the opportunity to try Vista in beta test until it’s released.  I don’t think Microsoft has ever before offered a new OS release under a completely open beta. 

Downloading Vista is truly an easy thing, but as anyone who has used windows before, the real challenges occur during the installation and continue into the setup, and do not stop once you are logged in.

There are some nice cleanups and improvements over XP, but I’m afraid that I certainly understand why this product was delayed and certainly why there are still lots of unhappy MVP’s and users.

I have some feedback and initial impressions of the Vista product which I will discuss in future blogs but right now I want to give everyone the information about acquiring and installing Vista.

Keep in mind, getting Vista and installing it isnt any more difficult than any other OS installer or previous versions of Windows, unless you introduce limitations.  Vista really wants to use a powerful machine, and will seriously take advantage of newer hardware.  That certainly doesnt mean you have to upgrade or even buy a new PC for Vista, though it may not be a bad idea.  The time you will run into problems is when you have a box that barely ran XP, and you decide to upgrade/install Vista on this.  That would probably be a bad idea.  If you meet the minimum specifications you should be fine.  If you meet or exceed the recommended specifications you should be able to see and use a very powerful OS.

To start first thing to do is get the software and the license.

The first thing to do is to go to Microsoft’s Vista web page and download the ISO file.  This is a large roughly 3GB file so be prepared to spend some time downloading this, ensure you have enough free space available.  A high speed connection wouldn’t hurt either.  During the initial week of release the download servers were simply overwhelmed and many of the servers and additional processes simply broke.  At the time of writing this, you should have little difficulty as I\’m sure the initial demand has dropped. 

I have a fairly decent cable connection and had the ISO in less than one hour.  I didn’t really time it, I went out for lunch and when I came back I was ready to burn this to a DVD.  An ISO now needs to be burned to the DVD.  Any DVD Burning software that supports ISO images should be effective at making the Vista Installation DVD, in our case we used Nero Burning ROM which is one of the more common and feature rich software for removable media.  Nero was able to quickly create our Installation disk which we booted in our machine for installation.

Yes, a 3GB ISO is not going to fit on a CD, so DVD was the only option which leads to qualification #1 is that you must have a DVD Burner to create the Installation Disk, and the machine your installing to must have a DVD ROM drive.  I have heard some folks attempting to break this into a multi-CD format but I couldn’t be bothered to attempt this.  However this did limit a couple installation candidates for me, and I decided to be able to install this on a couple different setups so I decided to go the VMWare route for most of my installations rather than move DVD ROM’s around constantly. 

Ok, so you got the ISO downloaded, now just like a real Installation you need a product key which Microsoft provides you.  When you normally acquire the ISO it will step you through the process to getting a product key, but at the time I acquired it, this was broken.  Later I was able to go back and get one (actually two ) so this was only some confusion on my part trying to decide what I did wrong. 

You will need a Windows Live account (also known as Passport) and this is easy to setup and then allows you to go to the download beta section and then it will present you with both the download link and the product key for you to use.  The really nice thing about this is that the beta is good for one year roughly and this is exceptional.  I do believe microsoft wants as much possible feedback from the community prior to finalizing and releasing this product.  If so this may be the most demanding OS released in history and additionally one of the more supported and user-backed OS’s ever.   I say this because many linux distro’s and Apple are moving into Microsofts markets and taking advantage of the fact that many folks understand the value they get with non-microsoft OS’s and software.  However many users still require (or think they require) Windows in order to use their PC’s.  By offering Vista as a free beta for a full year you allow the users to grow accustomed to the OS, and when they do release it sales should be immediate.  Just like a game company releasing demo’s, this allows them to guage the market, demographic, potential share, potential growth projections based on beta reaction and feedback, etc.

So to say this was simply an ability for Microsoft to release Vista at no cost to ensure quick adoption of the OS would not be entirely incorrect.  I’m sure there were other reasons, some would say security issues, but I don’t think they would delay because of security issues, unless it was a core/fundamental process in one of the new features.  Other reasons may be because key features still don’t work as well as they should.  Regardless once you have your own copy installed you can decide this for yourself.

If you boot your computer from the Vista disk you quickly see a familiar looking setup environment.  One of the main differences is that awful blue background is gone and replaced with a nice web like white background that loads a image.  Since I chose to use VMWare to install Vista with for my first couple tests, I decided to install it on a fresh machine and had considerable problems.  This was apparently more of an issue with VMWare and following the helpful hints on their support forums enabled me finally get past this I only ever had this error with Vista.  No other OS including Windows varieties had this issue. 

I did not attempt this for real, but the idea crossed my mind, and that was to simply mount the install disk vs. burn and run from a DVD-ROM.  This is not recommended. 

The questionnaire was easier than XP in that it allowed you to get the installer running faster with less questions, the disk setup also is more friendly which allows you to pick which disk, and how to set it up and format it prior to you running the OS installer.  The default admin account is still created and the installer will ask you to create a user for your use (or more if you require, however I would not use this method for anything other than home-based/test installation).  For most users this will be enough to get everything working. 

The installer runs and about 45 minutes later (or more) it starts rebooting and initializing the desktop. This is the time to be patient and allow the installer to do its several reboots to get all the hardware initialized and working.  Hopefully you won’t have any issues with this, as I was using VMWare I had no difficulty installing the basic driver set, and when I added specific drivers for video card I was able to quickly find them online and install them.  The only downside to this I had was the numerous reboots before everything was ready to use.  I counted 14 reboots.

The really nice feature of the login screen is that a key set of features
for accessibility are moved here so that when you login, you can choose the features you want to use, otherwise once you login these features are no longer directly available.  I welcomed this change since windows 95 these features have been left as simple tools that any user can enable at any time, and they tend to cause operational issues that confuse users later.   By sticking these features at the login screen allows most users who never use these features to ignore them and move into the desktop with less ability to enable these ‘while using’ the system, whereas for those users who depend on these features they are able to set them before login so they can quickly take advantage of these features.

Now you login and the desktop loads and you are greeted with a familiar desktop with some interesting changes.  The icons on the desktop have increased  and they are much bigger.  You can even make them bigger than the default install.  I could not comprehend this.  I have used software in the past to make these smaller, and I would have jumped for joy to have discovered a ‘shrink’ or ‘smaller’ option for the desktop icons.  Nope.  Regular, huge and really huge only.  The start button has some nice changes which can be easily configured by right clicking on the taskbar and selecting properties.  The system properties have also taken over the traditional display properties when you right click on the desktop background.  This allows you to make the numerous changes as before, plus additional system property changes. This should make moving around the control panel looking for that setting much less likely in Vista.  For the most part the desktop changes are not revolutionary simply evolutionary but still not utilizing all the ideas that have been developed into other desktop UI’s over the last ten years.  Of course now the Vista desktop actually takes advantage of transparnency in the desktop that has actually been around since Windows 2000.  They’ve also added some nice features that take advantage of better utilization of older features.

From here you get to see the ‘Welcome Center’ which is a glorified control panel and allows the user to quickly get to nearly any setting for the system they might be interested in.  Microsoft Update along with the Security Center run immediately putting the checks into protecting your system from hackers and malware, and Microsoft Defender is running along with the Microsoft Firewall also.  Essentially the next thing is to install a Anti-Virus product, and the Security Center takes you to the one Vista-ready product (Trend Micro) but the product is not available for download.  The page indicates that the beta is running and only good til the end of the year, one could decide whether they wish to try this vista-ready product now, or wait for another or to try installing a current stable product and test it on the beta.

Next…New features highlighted and discussed.

Theme by Themocracy