Slashdot Mirror


Sony's R&D- Linux and PS3

Yousef writes "GameSpy has an interesting article about a presentation given by Sony's head of R&D for Entertainment. It appears that there are some very interesting things in store for the PS3, plus a complete Red Hat Linux installation for the PS2 and many other toys too. An interesting read."

8 of 165 comments (clear)

  1. ACs in da hitzouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Suck it, logged in bitchez!

  2. Signal11 returning to /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll
    I have heard it on good authority that Signal 11 has left kuro5hin because he has been offered an editor position here at slashdot.

    Perhaps the editors can make a comment about this to clear the air, and shutdown the rumor mill.

    So how about it? Whats the deal?

    1. Re:Signal11 returning to /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll


      That would be sweet!!!

      Do you have a URL for a reference?

      Like all proper slashdot posters, I am too lazy to go look up myself.

      My next Ask Slashdot will be "Does software exists that lets me time laundry loads and wipe my ass?" I'd go look on google, but I'm a lazy bitch

  3. Lose 99lbs in 99hours! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll
  4. Redhat for PS2? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll
    Can someone explain why on earth you would want to corrupt a perfectly good gaming machine with open sores software?

    So you can play tux racer?

    You people need to get a life.

  5. Scorpion king Soundtrack! Listen Now! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    Who the fuck is the guy pictured in this ad? He looks like a penis that somebody drew a face on. I think it's a backstreet boy, but I'm not sure

  6. Hinckley did not do it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    John Hinckley, Jr. and the Attempted Assassination of Ronald Reagan
    by: Lee Proctor, Roger Shoffner, and Robert L. McCartor, Ph.D.

    We dispute the government's claim that John Hinckley, Jr. was the
    would-be assassin who shot President Reagan. Hinckley certainly was
    present at the crime scene, and he had a gun in his hand. However,
    this article will prove that it was impossible for Hinckley to have
    acted in the manner described by the "official" version of the
    story. This is not a matter of doubt; the evidence clearly shows
    that the government's version of the assassination attempt could not
    have physically happened.

    During Hinckley's trial and the events leading to it, we have been
    unable to find any mention of the evidence presented by the
    government being questioned. Since the whole incident was captured
    by multiple video cameras, no one questioned the official version.
    It's all right there, plain as day, just like the government said.
    Right?

    Hinckley himself was suffering from a severe mental illness,
    rendering his recollections of the events suspect. So the video
    tapes convicted Hinckley in the minds of the public. Ironically, it
    is that same video evidence which shows beyond any doubt that
    Hinckley did not shoot Ronald Reagan.

    A second crucial evidence bag contains the Devastator bullets that
    Hinckley supposedly fired from his short-barreled .22 revolver. We
    obtained several Devastator bullets and conducted our own amateur
    ballistics tests. By comparing the actual specifications of
    Devastator ammunition to the government's evidence, one can clearly
    see that Hinckley could not have been firing Devastator bullets.

    Although his true role in the affair is yet to be uncovered, the
    only logical conclusion is that Hinckley was quite innocent of the
    government's charges. A second gunman with a rifle would fill in the
    holes in the government's case. Hence, a conspiracy.

    Next: Video reconstruction of the assassination attempt.

    The key to understanding the actual events during the assassination
    attempt is a reconstruction using the video tapes. We obtained three
    different tapes showing three different views of the shooting. The
    government's case, taken from Lincoln Chaplain's book, is as
    follows:

    Hinckley waited outside the hotel with a .22 short barreled revolver
    (actually an RG-14) loaded with six Devastator bullets. As the
    president approached his limousine, Hinckley fired six shots and
    wounded four people. The first shot hit Brady, the second hit
    Delahanty, the third landed in a building across the street, the
    fourth hit McCarthy, and the fifth hit the limousine's window. The
    sixth shot hit the side of the limo, slid down the car, ricocheted
    between the car body and window and wounded Reagan. [See Image 1]

    The videotapes clearly show this is utter nonsense. In the still
    images taken from the video evidence, each shot can be timed, and
    the relative position of the individuals noted. The last three
    digits of the time marker are the ones used to denote the events.

    Reagan was wounded under the left arm, just under the arm pit, by a
    bullet which had ricocheted and flattened to the size of a dime. The
    first shot is at time marker 2:00 on two of the tapes and 2:01 on
    the other. This series of still images shows Reagan with his left
    arm raised. [See Image 2]

    On the photo marked 2:11 Reagan is wincing, although this is shown
    more clearly on the videotape. [See Image 3] Another photo was taken
    at the same time which also shows Reagan's "grimace."

    Markers 2:10 and 2:11 denote the second shot. [See Image 3] Brady,
    barely visible behind Delahanty in the bottom photo, falls. Reagan
    still has his left arm raised.

    Markers 2:24 and 2:25 show the third shot. [See Image 4] Although it
    is not obvious in the still photo, this is the shot that hits
    Delahanty. Note that by this time Parr has grabbed Reagan from
    behind and has pinned his left arm to Reagan's side. Parr does not
    let go during the remaining time. After this shot, therefore, it is
    impossible for a bullet to enter Reagan's chest under the left arm.

    The forth shot occurs at markers 3:01 and 3:02. [See Image 5] This
    is the shot which hit McCarthy in his right abdomen and spins him
    around. Note that Parr still has Reagan's left arm pinned and is
    shoving him towards the limo.

    Stills 3:04-3:10 show Parr pushing Reagan into the limo. [See Image
    6] By 3:10 Reagan is out of sight. This is before the fifth shot is
    fired. Note that all of the persons wounded in the shooting have
    been shot except, supposedly, Reagan.

    The two photos at marker 3:27 are the most revealing of all. [See
    Image 7] This is the fifth shot. The photos show the back of Parr's
    light gray coat. Parr is in the gap between the car body and window,
    and Reagan is in front of Parr with his left arm pinned. By the
    fifth shot, Reagan is inside the limo with Parr on top. Reagan
    cannot be wounded without a bullet hitting Parr, and this is the
    fifth shot, not the last one. Hinckley's hand and gun are visible in
    the bottom right corner; it is obvious that he could only have shot
    Parr at this time, not Reagan.

    The last shot occurs at marker 4:05. [See Image 8] Only a very small
    section of Parr's back remains outside of the limo. Also note that
    Hinckley's arm is being pushed down by a secret service agent who is
    attacking Hinckley. This shot, according to the government, is the
    one which wounded Reagan. Unless Hinckley was using some sort of
    "magic bullet," that is impossible.

    For a bullet fired at this time to hit Reagan following the path the
    government described, it would have had to climb to hit the limo,
    slide down the car body, jump between the body and the window, make
    a u-turn, drop two feet, pass through Parr and Reagan's left arm
    without making a mark, then hit Reagan under the left arm, glance
    off his seventh rib, and travel through his lung stopping one inch
    behind his heart and one inch from his aorta. A .22 caliber bullet
    fired from the revolver Hinckley had cannot do this. No bullet can.
    It is impossible. Reagan was hit with the first shot, not the last.

    The sequence of the wounds is critical. Reagan could only have been
    hit under the left arm at the beginning of the shooting spree --
    when his left arm was raised. According to the hospital personnel
    who operated on Reagan, the president was hit by a ricochet. A
    ricochet could only have come from Reagan's left. The limousine was
    to his right. No bullet could have glanced off the car and hit him
    under his left arm. Therefore, the bullet must have glanced off the
    stone wall to Reagan's left.

    For Hinckley to have hit the stone wall from where he was, he would
    have had to aim well away from Reagan and fire almost around a
    corner. Also, his gun was a .22 caliber short-barrel revolver firing
    a .22 long bullet. Such a weapon is incapable of firing a bullet
    with enough velocity to hit the wall, hit Reagan, nick a rib, and
    cross through a large mass of tissue. Only a rifle firing a high
    velocity bullet, such as a .223 or similar rifle, could have done
    this. Hinckley had no such weapon.

    HINCKLEY did not shoot Reagan. It is IMPOSSIBLE.

    Supposedly Brady was hit by an Devastator bullet which exploded.
    From the casing, a Devastator cannot be distinguished from any CCI
    .22 bullet. The only difference is in the slug. The Devastator,
    manufactured by Bingham Ltd., is merely a regular .22 long with an
    aluminum canister filled with lead azide inserted in the bored-out
    tip. The explosive is in the canister, and the canister is in the
    copper slug.

    In "Thumbs Up," the author reports that the canister containing the
    explosive was removed from Brady's brain. This could not have
    happened. There is no way that the lead azide could have exploded,
    causing the slug surrounding the canister to explode, without
    destroying the canister. That is like finding the wrapping of a
    stick of dynamite after it has exploded. One may find fragments, but
    that is all. The doctors may have removed small portions of the
    canister, but it was stated that they removed the canister. That
    could not have happened.

    Furthermore, the Devastator explodes on impact, resulting in a large
    surface wound. Brady's wound was reported to be about the size of a
    pencil eraser, which is inconsistent with a wound inflicted by a
    Devastator. However, a bullet fired from a rifle does have enough
    velocity to hit the thick bone of the forehead, splinter, and
    continue through brain tissue.

    Two wounds could possibly have been inflicted by Hinckley, although
    in all likelihood they were not. Reports state that Hinckley was
    crouched and always firing in Reagan's direction. Delahanty was hit
    in the upper left area of his back. From the video, one can see how
    close Hinckley was to Delahanty. Hinckley would have had to point
    almost straight up to shoot Delahanty.

    McCarthy was hit on his right side, the side away from Hinckley. The
    shot had enough force to lift and spin him around. A .22 caliber
    long fired from a short-barrel revolver will rarely have enough
    force to do this. The angle and force of the shot indicate that it
    was unlikely to have come from Hinckley's weapon.

    During the last two shots, Hinckley's arm and gun are visible and
    the position of the wounded can be pinpointed. Neither of these
    shots hit any one. Yet the government's version of the shooting
    states something completely different and completely at odds with
    the facts. The government's version is a fabrication; it does not
    reconstruct what actually happened. It does not even come close.

    The descriptions given here of the capabilities of the Devastator
    bullet are based on our own tests of the Devastator bullets. The
    Devastator does not have a high-propellant charge. In fact, one
    round contains 0.15 grams, or 2.31 grains, of powder.

    We also examined the remains of Devastators which did and did not
    explode after firing. The actual behavior of the Devastator does not
    line up with the government's description. Any Devastator hitting
    with enough force to flatten to the size of a dime will explode; the
    angle of contact is inconsequential. Therefore the bullet which hit
    Reagan could not have been a Devastator.

    The slug removed from McCarthy was not described as looking
    different from other .22 slugs, yet the slug is the only distinctive
    part of a Devastator. At the time of the shooting it was stated that
    the bullet was widely available. However, we were unable to locate a
    gun shop which had ever stocked the ammunition.

    Hinckley called the bullets he purchased "Stingers," and they
    probably were. It took the FBI some time to conclude that the
    bullets were .22 caliber Devastators. In fact, even though they
    supposedly had both Hinckley and his weapon, it took them some time
    to deduce that a .22 weapon was used in the shootings. They first
    claimed it was a .38. There is little believable evidence that
    Hinckley fired Devastator bullets from his weapon.

    What actually happened, we do not know. However, the evidence
    clearly shows Hinckley could not have done what he was accused of
    doing. Another shooter with a rifle inflicted the wounds. The
    chances of two people randomly choosing the same time and place to
    assassinate the president are too astronomical to accept. Hinckley
    perfectly fits the mold of the "lone nut" assassin, making him the
    perfect patsy for a larger conspiracy. But what conspiracy? Who
    would have been involved?

    At this time, we simply don't have enough evidence to provide
    credible answers to those questions. But the evidence does show that
    Hinckley could not have acted alone. Hopefully further research on
    this subject will shed some light on the conspiracy behind the
    attempted assassination of President Reagan

  7. Re:PS2 and PS3 processors by silkySlim · · Score: 1, Troll

    Compared to PC hardware, the PS2 is SLOOOOOOW. It's core CPU is a 294 mHz MIPS. The real speed comes in with the specialized vector units (VU0 & VU1) that are specifically built to scream through large sets of 4 component floating point vectors (used as 3d coordinates in games) and perform a limited number of operations on them.