That's more or less what Halo 3 does, it's not actually a video per se`, but when you save a video clip and re-watch it, you're actually "playing" the game again. It's not an actual video.
Then I wish more games were like Halo 3. It automatically records all of your multiplayer sessions to a temporary library (Holds last ~20 sessions, I think.) and then you can flip over to Theater mode to pick and choose what you want to save. From there you can put them on your File Share and store them on your HD. Then you can recommend clips to your friends over Xbox Live and Bungie.net, etc.
I'm not saying all games should have modes as extensive as this, but auto-saving all of your temporary films would be great.
Hopefully Microsoft will follow suit with the 360. Too often have I been playing a game of Call of Duty 4, Halo 3, or Gears and you get that "WTF" moment that you wished you could have shared. I realize capture cards and the necessary cables aren't that expensive anymore, but it really is a pain. EA's Skate. had an option for this to, IIRC. But it was on EA's website, not YouTube.
I have a solution. The solution is available in packs of 100 for ten dollars. It is called.... CD-R. Just burn them and re-rip. Of course there will be a loss in quality, but somehow I doubt that the MSN music was encoded in anything higher than 128Kbps.
There are publications out there that produce news. Mostly unbiased news. They cost money. They are not free. They are not cheap. Why? Because only a relatively small part of the population is interested in what they have to say. So, they do not get a mass market to sell ads to. They do not get a large distribution to spread costs over. What they do get are people who want to know what is really happening and are willing to pay for that knowledge.
Could you point a young sap such as myself in the general direction of these publications you speak of then?
Instead of having to force PayPal users to use only specific browsers, they educate the consumers on safe browsing habits and not blindly clicking on "OMG SEND ME UR CC NUMBER AND BANK DETAILS LOLOL".
If you don't want to share it slap some encryption on it. Takes ten seconds in the router settings. Problem solved. If the owners of the WiFi can't put simple encryption on their signals, then they deserve to have it leeched off.
You run on bicycles??
That's more or less what Halo 3 does, it's not actually a video per se`, but when you save a video clip and re-watch it, you're actually "playing" the game again. It's not an actual video.
The joy of teabagging isn't restricted to only one platform. ;)
Then I wish more games were like Halo 3. It automatically records all of your multiplayer sessions to a temporary library (Holds last ~20 sessions, I think.) and then you can flip over to Theater mode to pick and choose what you want to save. From there you can put them on your File Share and store them on your HD. Then you can recommend clips to your friends over Xbox Live and Bungie.net, etc.
I'm not saying all games should have modes as extensive as this, but auto-saving all of your temporary films would be great.
Hopefully Microsoft will follow suit with the 360. Too often have I been playing a game of Call of Duty 4, Halo 3, or Gears and you get that "WTF" moment that you wished you could have shared. I realize capture cards and the necessary cables aren't that expensive anymore, but it really is a pain. EA's Skate. had an option for this to, IIRC. But it was on EA's website, not YouTube.
She's not getting into trouble for setting up a fake MySpace. Don't leave out the other half of the story so it sounds better for your POV.
Kingdom Hearts flashed through my mind as I hit submit, but that's the exception. The majority of Disney titles however, are utter garbage.
Interesting concept, too bad most Disney games aren't worth playing.
So how do you retrieve something that's not retrievable?
The List: -Yahoo
-Mozilla
-Mahalo
-Google
-Microsoft
-LinkedIn
-Jajah
-Facebook
-DoubleClick
-Adobe
I find it funny how they say Google is one of the worst places to work, yet everyone seems to want to work there.
Usenet is king when it comes to filesharing.
Yep.
In Soviet Russia, Zune doesn't know about You.
Holy crap I can't believe I giggled at that. Damn you, /.
I have a solution. The solution is available in packs of 100 for ten dollars. It is called.... CD-R. Just burn them and re-rip. Of course there will be a loss in quality, but somehow I doubt that the MSN music was encoded in anything higher than 128Kbps.
Actually, it's an *.FLV, and it's not a video of some web app, it's another RickRoll, which is becoming increasingly unfunny.
This isn't exactly on topic, but I think you should give it a read before you make a final opinion on what the article is trying to stay.
Instead of having to force PayPal users to use only specific browsers, they educate the consumers on safe browsing habits and not blindly clicking on "OMG SEND ME UR CC NUMBER AND BANK DETAILS LOLOL".
If you don't want to share it slap some encryption on it. Takes ten seconds in the router settings. Problem solved. If the owners of the WiFi can't put simple encryption on their signals, then they deserve to have it leeched off.
You agreed to it when you installed your 23484039057 billion Facebook "Apps".
There's a difference in having enough knowledge of the article and the article istelf being interesting enough to comment on.
FYI, don't say picture and link to a PDF. It can be an unpleasant surprise.