Mp3 doesn't support DRM. Actually, there are DRM'd mp3 implementations out there probably, but no digital music player will support them. The recording industry will NEVER allow the online sale of an un-DRM'd digital audio file.
The only common DRM formats out there are Apple's AAC FairPlay and WMA.
Check out page #2. Anyone who's been an IT director for 21 years should know that drawing a grey box over that using an AutoShape in Word won't really block those email addresses:)
Someone needs to figure out that boss's email address (by removing the grey box), and write an HTML mail that uses an MSHTML exploit to make a SolitareCam for us slashdotters:).
The best option would be to use a composite video cable.
That's right. Composite video. The one yellow cord.
Why? Because that's how the analog video is stored on the disc! The S-Video and Component and RGB outs on LD players merely apply a lousy dotcrawl filter then upsample.
Your computer can remove dotcrawl much better than a 10-year-old LD player's realtime removal thingy.
As for capturing audio, get a sound card with SP/DIF in and use that.
If you have DISH Network, get a DVB-S card, get Nagravision decryption software, and download Dish Network keys. You can get the raw MPEG2 stream that way:).
The e really has been associated with the internet (unfortunately). I've seen news reports related to the internet, and an image of the e is the "stock photo" off to the side of the article.
Often, the article doesn't even need to have anything to do with the world wide web:)
There was an IE theme for Mozilla, but it stopped being maintained for versions after mozilla 1.2. I used it for a while in my high school publications room, but then eventually switched over to Firefox.8 (school's been out before.9 was released).
Make a shortcut on his desktop that points to
iexplore.exe "http://foo.bar/", with foo.bar being the retarded IE-only site he so desperately needs. Have him use Firefox for everything else.
Might want to remove the IE toolbars and stuff too so he doesn't wander off elsewhere in that IE session.
Oh, and show him tabbed browsing. I have yet to find someone that doesn't sway over to Firefox.
By the way, if you aren't feeling quite as sneaky (I think I actually took this less-sneaky route myself), rename your new icon to "Internet", not "Internet Explorer". That way you're not just lying:).
I pretty much maintain all the computers in our high school's publications room.
I just installed Firefox, then deleted the IE icons and then created new ones that had the IE icon and said "internet explorer" but whose link went to Firefox.
If you owned one of these routers, could you figure out where those strings are then just type in random letters of gobbleygook that are the same lengths, and use it on your own router (not distribute it, because then you'd be giving the pass away:))?
Maybe somebody could make a program where:
User opens program
User points program to firmware file
Program opens firmware file and replaces the hardcoded passwords with gobbleygook that is different each time the program is run
Program writes new firmware to disk
User reflashes router with firmware patched by program
This seems like a good potential short-term solution to me...
If it has to record seven analog programs from one RF cable at once, it has to split the signal into seven signals, each with 1/7 the signal strength of the original. Since by the time it even reaches the computer, in most homes, the cable has already been split several times, there isn't much signal strength left there. The recordings from that thing are gonna look like really noisy shit.
Not to mention that the strength of a Japanese NTSC signal is less than that of a USA NTSC signal.
How do you THINK this country works?
ActiveX sucks. AAC does not suck. (and WMA sucks.)
That's the difference.
The only common DRM formats out there are Apple's AAC FairPlay and WMA.
If I were an administrator, I wouldn't want my employees installing their own ActiveX controls.
2 pass VBR, the average bitrate is 160.
No matter what the bitrate, WMA has a bad habit of cutting off high and low frequencies and doing other crappy things.
When are we going to get a music store with LOSSLESS files (e.g. Apple Lossless or WMA Pro)?
one of the many reasons I and other people use mozilla (instead of IE) is to AVOID activex controls.
release date was 9/9/99 :)
Someone needs to figure out that boss's email address (by removing the grey box), and write an HTML mail that uses an MSHTML exploit to make a SolitareCam for us slashdotters
That's right. Composite video. The one yellow cord.
Why? Because that's how the analog video is stored on the disc! The S-Video and Component and RGB outs on LD players merely apply a lousy dotcrawl filter then upsample.
Your computer can remove dotcrawl much better than a 10-year-old LD player's realtime removal thingy.
As for capturing audio, get a sound card with SP/DIF in and use that.
i'm reading slashdot at an apple store right now :)
I think I saw a titlebar change!
If you have DISH Network, get a DVB-S card, get Nagravision decryption software, and download Dish Network keys. You can get the raw MPEG2 stream that way :).
You'd just get a ton of requests of "where is internet explorer, internet is not the same as internet explorer" and other ignorant bullshit like that.
You have to draw the line of practicality somewhere.
Often, the article doesn't even need to have anything to do with the world wide web :)
There was an IE theme for Mozilla, but it stopped being maintained for versions after mozilla 1.2. I used it for a while in my high school publications room, but then eventually switched over to Firefox .8 (school's been out before .9 was released).
Might want to remove the IE toolbars and stuff too so he doesn't wander off elsewhere in that IE session.
Oh, and show him tabbed browsing. I have yet to find someone that doesn't sway over to Firefox.
By the way, if you aren't feeling quite as sneaky (I think I actually took this less-sneaky route myself), rename your new icon to "Internet", not "Internet Explorer". That way you're not just lying :).
I just installed Firefox, then deleted the IE icons and then created new ones that had the IE icon and said "internet explorer" but whose link went to Firefox.
No compliants, no spyware since.
People who don't understand pixel aspect ratios shouldn't be getting these cards before me. Dammit.
Netgear could make a download page with a script that gives each user a different firmware with different gobbleygook.
Maybe somebody could make a program where:
- User opens program
- User points program to firmware file
- Program opens firmware file and replaces the hardcoded passwords with gobbleygook that is different each time the program is run
- Program writes new firmware to disk
- User reflashes router with firmware patched by program
This seems like a good potential short-term solution to me...I know this: When I set my TV tuner to Japanese mode, the picture gets reallllly bright.
Not to mention that the strength of a Japanese NTSC signal is less than that of a USA NTSC signal.