Screw you all. The Sears tower is, always has been, and always will be, the biggest waste of Chicago's mone--- err, the tallest rape of resource--- the biggest metal thingy in the world!
1. Copy those three words. 2. Paste them into notepad. 3. Save them as "stopper.bat" 4. Drag that file into your Startup folder 5. DONE. 6. ???? 7. PROFIT!
I'm surprised we haven't seen an SCO-themed reply to that.
"We found five chromosomes which appear to originate from the Unix programmers we bought with the deal. As a result, we own your body in its entirety."
Of course, weeks would pass, and after the FUD builds, they'd start exclaiming that Linus Torvalds is a 1:1 genetic carbon copy of their own patented genes.
In case that didn't get across clearly (possible, I didn't fully explain)...
It allows you to compile a homebrew app for the GameCube in Linux. There's also one for OSX.
You don't need to burn ANYTHING. You don't even need a MOD CHIP.
You play PSO. You log onto "Sega's Network" (faked by some software). You use PSO Loader to load homebrew/backed up software.
Screw Soviet Russia, the Game Boy already plays YOU.
And on that other note...
1. Make GBA Wireless adapter.
2. ??? - Errr, no, everyone is gonna frickin' buy it, because it's being marketed with a POKEMON GAME.
3. YEAH, FRICKIN' PROFIT.
This is what I get for forgetting to turn off HTML formatting... a horrid run-on looking paragraph. I swear, there were three paragraph seperations in there.
How HARD would it be for Apple to just screw 'em all and change their name? iPPle, Aple, Manzana, SOMETHING.
Now, I'm sure you're all thinking the same thing : It'd be corporate suicide.
No, it wouldn't.
See, usually a name change is fatal because you then have to find a way to hold on to your casual customers, and live off the hardcore variety until then.
Well, see, it's different in Apple case.
All they HAVE are hardcore fans! Jesus, they wouldn't lose a damn DIME after renaming costs.
And just in case, how hard would it be to have a commercial like this ::: In the background, apple products. All of them. Apple logo is mosaic'd out/removed::
Announcer : "You know who we are. You know what we make. We can't tell you what we used to be called, but trust us, you know. Unfortunately, we can't use that name anymore. So please, when you're looking for our stuff, just look for...":: New name and logo are announced::
BAM. And Apple Corp. can go SCREW THEMSELVES.
It's like Peter Monoleux. Make another frickin' Syndicate game! So what if you don't have the license, Jesus, call it Tyndicate, we don't care.- Paraphrased from Something Awful
No buddy, not intentional. If Nintendo has one thing going for them, is that they spend more time fighting piracy than an idiotic business trend.
1. The GB-everything is free-region. 2. The SNES and N64 were region-protected by physical limitations. (Tho I think the N64 went a few steps further, the SNES's mod chip remains a sharp razor.) 3. The GameCube is MINIMALLY region-protecting. Three solder points, a couple of wires and a switch, costing you an astounding $3 in supplies at Radio Shack ($11 if you don't have an iron), is all it takes to make it region-selectable.
- Oh, and GameCubes using that trick aren't affected by the "bugs", so I'm pretty sure the "language flag" theory may end up holding some water here.
You know, a few things have become apparent over the last few years.
1. Microsoft can't get software to work right on an Operating system IT CREATED. (bought, stole, whatever, it's theirs)
2. Microsoft is trying to get this Trusted Computing initiative to work.
3. Microsoft has already tried a version on Windows XP and the X-Box.
4. Buffer overflows are gods.
Am I the only one who sees cheap exploits like this being the future of piracy? Maybe the hardware aspect of a real trusted computer is much stronger than the X-Box's...
Of course, Microsoft could avoid all this by making apps without significant flaws in them in the first place... right after thows genetric engineers get those damn pigs up 'n flying, anyway.
No beowulf cluster comment yet?
But, you could fit like, a few thousand in a cardboard box!
Screw you all. The Sears tower is, always has been, and always will be, the biggest waste of Chicago's mone--- err, the tallest rape of resource--- the biggest metal thingy in the world!
How to kill this in five (seven?) easy steps :
net stop messenger
1. Copy those three words.
2. Paste them into notepad.
3. Save them as "stopper.bat"
4. Drag that file into your Startup folder
5. DONE.
6. ????
7. PROFIT!
I'm surprised we haven't seen an SCO-themed reply to that. "We found five chromosomes which appear to originate from the Unix programmers we bought with the deal. As a result, we own your body in its entirety." Of course, weeks would pass, and after the FUD builds, they'd start exclaiming that Linus Torvalds is a 1:1 genetic carbon copy of their own patented genes.
In case that didn't get across clearly (possible, I didn't fully explain)... It allows you to compile a homebrew app for the GameCube in Linux. There's also one for OSX. You don't need to burn ANYTHING. You don't even need a MOD CHIP. You play PSO. You log onto "Sega's Network" (faked by some software). You use PSO Loader to load homebrew/backed up software.
It's a Linux COMPILER for the GameCube, NOT a distro. Jebus, RTFW.
Fucking a, how hard can it be to NOT make HTML FORMATTED the default. I LIKE my carraige returns, thank you very much!
Screw Soviet Russia, the Game Boy already plays YOU. And on that other note... 1. Make GBA Wireless adapter. 2. ??? - Errr, no, everyone is gonna frickin' buy it, because it's being marketed with a POKEMON GAME. 3. YEAH, FRICKIN' PROFIT.
Actually, in Soviet Russia, Lindows INSTALLS you. Lindows runs you in Iraq. You know, unless Red Hat comes in to liberate you.
Holy crap, really? Jesus, who've I been paying $50 a month for the last two years to, then?
And then, just who the HELL IS GIVING ME INTERNET ACCESS?!?!?!?! ARRRGGGHHHHH!!!!!!
:: crawls into the fetal position and shivers.... ::
OH MY GOD, THEY EVEN HAVE THEIR LOGO ON MY BILL!!! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRGGGHHHHHHH!!!!!!
This is what I get for forgetting to turn off HTML formatting... a horrid run-on looking paragraph. I swear, there were three paragraph seperations in there.
How HARD would it be for Apple to just screw 'em all and change their name? iPPle, Aple, Manzana, SOMETHING. Now, I'm sure you're all thinking the same thing : It'd be corporate suicide. No, it wouldn't. See, usually a name change is fatal because you then have to find a way to hold on to your casual customers, and live off the hardcore variety until then. Well, see, it's different in Apple case. All they HAVE are hardcore fans! Jesus, they wouldn't lose a damn DIME after renaming costs. And just in case, how hard would it be to have a commercial like this : :: In the background, apple products. All of them. Apple logo is mosaic'd out/removed ::
Announcer : "You know who we are. You know what we make. We can't tell you what we used to be called, but trust us, you know. Unfortunately, we can't use that name anymore. So please, when you're looking for our stuff, just look for..." :: New name and logo are announced ::
BAM. And Apple Corp. can go SCREW THEMSELVES.
It's like Peter Monoleux. Make another frickin' Syndicate game! So what if you don't have the license, Jesus, call it Tyndicate, we don't care.- Paraphrased from Something Awful
No buddy, not intentional. If Nintendo has one thing going for them, is that they spend more time fighting piracy than an idiotic business trend.
1. The GB-everything is free-region.
2. The SNES and N64 were region-protected by physical limitations. (Tho I think the N64 went a few steps further, the SNES's mod chip remains a sharp razor.)
3. The GameCube is MINIMALLY region-protecting. Three solder points, a couple of wires and a switch, costing you an astounding $3 in supplies at Radio Shack ($11 if you don't have an iron), is all it takes to make it region-selectable.
- Oh, and GameCubes using that trick aren't affected by the "bugs", so I'm pretty sure the "language flag" theory may end up holding some water here.
You know, a few things have become apparent over the last few years. 1. Microsoft can't get software to work right on an Operating system IT CREATED. (bought, stole, whatever, it's theirs) 2. Microsoft is trying to get this Trusted Computing initiative to work. 3. Microsoft has already tried a version on Windows XP and the X-Box. 4. Buffer overflows are gods. Am I the only one who sees cheap exploits like this being the future of piracy? Maybe the hardware aspect of a real trusted computer is much stronger than the X-Box's... Of course, Microsoft could avoid all this by making apps without significant flaws in them in the first place... right after thows genetric engineers get those damn pigs up 'n flying, anyway.