There's no flash on the pi, so it won't play YouTube videos I'm afraid. I wondered if it might work in Chromium using HTML5, but it doesn't seem to for some reason and I haven't had time to investigate why.
It does work in XBMC though (see http://www.raspbmc.com/) which you can write to an SD card in the same way that you did for Debian.
Mine arrived last Friday (18th May) from RS Components. I guess I must have been in the first 10,000 orders, which made getting up at 6am worthwhile!
I've been enjoying watching my 7-year old son playing with Scratch, and have also enjoyed trying out OpenElec XBMC and Raspbmc. The latter two can be a bit slow on navigating around the menus (and seem to get slower as time goes on) but they both play streamed videos (e.g. YouTube and IPlayer) pretty much flawlessly, even at HD. I'm sure they will both speed up with a bit of optimisation - these are the very first releases after all.
I got an awful sinking feeling on reading the post, but that didn't prepare me for the spewed-up-from-the-1990's mess of a website that greeted my nervous click on the SlashBI link. Who designed this shite? Who wrote the dry-as-dust articles? Who proof-read them??? What the hell are Slashdot thinking?
This couldn't be further away from what I imagine Slashdot to represent. Hopefully it will turn out to be a sick joke.
I bought in to the alpha version and haven't regretted a single penny of it. I've played and enjoyed Minecraft more over the past three months than any other game I've bought in the last decade. It hits the same sweet-spot of freedom, struggle and reward that Elite managed to nail in the '80s. And, coincidentally, Minecraft Alpha cost about the same as Elite did on the Spectrum all those years ago!
I really don't mind paying for alpha software that is this much fun, and 850k other people seem to feel the same
My gaming days go back to the Atari console, but for years now I've spent more time reading about games than actually playing them. Minecraft grabbed my attention recently, however, and I've played it more than any other game in the last decade. The appeal lies in its open-ended nature (it's the first game to bring back the feeling I had whilst playing Elite as a teenager) and in the beauty of the landscapes it can create. It also scratches the same itch that Lego does, by giving you a few basic blocks with which to build whatever your imagination can conjure up (castles in the air quite often). It's only in alpha now, but multiplayer support is beginning to take real shape and every update brings new goodies.
A woman could use an 'underwear insert' in the shape of a humongous cock and balls. Question is, would that mean she is more or less likely to get groped? And would she be groped by a male agent or a female one?
I've been using my PS3 and a Keysonic wireless keyboard for TV browsing for a couple of years now. Most of the navigation is done with the dualshock, with the keyboard used only for text entry. Once you get used to the dualshock controls, it's very easy to navigate around pages and quickly zoom in and out to make text readable. Flash video works pretty well, and a big plus is that (as far as I know) there aren't any PS3 viruses, trojans or botnets to worry about.
I bought my parents an Asus eee Box to do the same thing, and that works really well too.
I had exactly the same issue with two different family members. Endless viruses and trojans that no commercial package seemed to be able to avoid or remove properly.
For my parents, I bought an eee box. They only surf the net using the Splashtop interface, which runs outside of XP (I presume it uses Linux instead). They haven't suffered a single infection or one bit of slowdown in the past eight months and are absolutely delighted. The eee box fits nicely to the Vesa bracket on the back of their TV too!
For my sister and her family, I replaced XP on their PC with Ubuntu 9.0.4 (now 9.0.10). Again, no infections or slowdowns since. They now have enough confidence in the PC to actually buy stuff online, and like the fact that Open Office is so much better than MS Works.
Parallel or Serial universes, when stretched infinitely, both give the same results.
Our universe could simply be the current incarnation of an endless series of universes that stretch infinitely back in time, each one replacing the last. We are here to marvel at this universe because it's laws make it possible for life to exist, but the next (or previous) universe might not be so life-friendly. To our simple brains this seems amazing and 'special', but even if we're the first lifeforms in the last trillion different serial universes, that trillion would still be an unmeasurable dot on the infinite timeline of previous universes.
Nah. Given time they'll evolve their way around the problem. Just like bunnies, where the ones who don't stand staring at oncoming headlights have a much better chance of producing the next generation.
Seriously though, has anyone ever done a study to see if roadkill numbers have declined over the years as animals evolve the skills needed to avoid traffic?
How will Google interpret 15 million samples all sounding like 'squelch...squelch...squelch...squelch..squelch..s quelch.squelch.squelch.splat....aaahhhhhh!"?
I guess Kleenex will find their Google ads being delivered to users far more frequently.
Hey don't knock it! I was just kicking back, flicking through the articles on Slashdot after a 48-hour non-stop marathon of unbounded sexual pleasure with three gorgeous coeds, when I noticed that ad. Intrigued, I clicked the link and read their literature. It has made me realise what a hollow, unfulfilling life I lead. A string of simple, no-strings relationships with nubile young women in their sexual prime is no life at all really. I should be spending my time more creatively, by contributing to opens source projects, or perhaps building a voice-activated peanut dispenser using Lego Mindstorms, or even boosting the signal of the wi-fi connection that I'm 'borrowing' from my neighbour with the aid of a spare vibrator wrapped in tinfoil.
That Google ad sure hit the spot. I'll be a changed man when I return from Pine Creek!
...
[removes tongue from cheek and runs for cover]
This seems more like the kind of thing that should be developed under a cloak of secrecy at Area 51. My guess is that it's seen as an outside shot by DARPA, and the $10.3m pocket change they're throwing at it convinces me even more that they're just using this as "gosh ain't we high-tech and futuristic" publicity (or propaganda if you'd rather) blurb.
What seals it though is the 1950's Buck Rogers shiny treatment. Any self-respecting supersonic bomber has to have a mat-black paint job, surely?
Have a look at LogMeIn which allows you to log in to your desktop PC remotely. If nothing else, it's a great way of having a fully featured web browser running on your PDA!
The other 60% would give up online security for better sex.
...to have him removed from the Health committee and the Science and Technology Committee: http://epetitions.direct.gov.u...
There's no flash on the pi, so it won't play YouTube videos I'm afraid. I wondered if it might work in Chromium using HTML5, but it doesn't seem to for some reason and I haven't had time to investigate why.
It does work in XBMC though (see http://www.raspbmc.com/) which you can write to an SD card in the same way that you did for Debian.
Mine arrived last Friday (18th May) from RS Components. I guess I must have been in the first 10,000 orders, which made getting up at 6am worthwhile!
I've been enjoying watching my 7-year old son playing with Scratch, and have also enjoyed trying out OpenElec XBMC and Raspbmc. The latter two can be a bit slow on navigating around the menus (and seem to get slower as time goes on) but they both play streamed videos (e.g. YouTube and IPlayer) pretty much flawlessly, even at HD. I'm sure they will both speed up with a bit of optimisation - these are the very first releases after all.
I got an awful sinking feeling on reading the post, but that didn't prepare me for the spewed-up-from-the-1990's mess of a website that greeted my nervous click on the SlashBI link. Who designed this shite? Who wrote the dry-as-dust articles? Who proof-read them??? What the hell are Slashdot thinking?
This couldn't be further away from what I imagine Slashdot to represent. Hopefully it will turn out to be a sick joke.
Would the last person to leave Facebook please turn out the lights?
:-)
P.S. Can anyone spare a G+ invite?
I bought in to the alpha version and haven't regretted a single penny of it. I've played and enjoyed Minecraft more over the past three months than any other game I've bought in the last decade. It hits the same sweet-spot of freedom, struggle and reward that Elite managed to nail in the '80s. And, coincidentally, Minecraft Alpha cost about the same as Elite did on the Spectrum all those years ago!
I really don't mind paying for alpha software that is this much fun, and 850k other people seem to feel the same
My gaming days go back to the Atari console, but for years now I've spent more time reading about games than actually playing them. Minecraft grabbed my attention recently, however, and I've played it more than any other game in the last decade. The appeal lies in its open-ended nature (it's the first game to bring back the feeling I had whilst playing Elite as a teenager) and in the beauty of the landscapes it can create. It also scratches the same itch that Lego does, by giving you a few basic blocks with which to build whatever your imagination can conjure up (castles in the air quite often). It's only in alpha now, but multiplayer support is beginning to take real shape and every update brings new goodies.
A woman could use an 'underwear insert' in the shape of a humongous cock and balls. Question is, would that mean she is more or less likely to get groped? And would she be groped by a male agent or a female one?
I've been using my PS3 and a Keysonic wireless keyboard for TV browsing for a couple of years now. Most of the navigation is done with the dualshock, with the keyboard used only for text entry. Once you get used to the dualshock controls, it's very easy to navigate around pages and quickly zoom in and out to make text readable. Flash video works pretty well, and a big plus is that (as far as I know) there aren't any PS3 viruses, trojans or botnets to worry about.
I bought my parents an Asus eee Box to do the same thing, and that works really well too.
I had exactly the same issue with two different family members. Endless viruses and trojans that no commercial package seemed to be able to avoid or remove properly.
For my parents, I bought an eee box. They only surf the net using the Splashtop interface, which runs outside of XP (I presume it uses Linux instead). They haven't suffered a single infection or one bit of slowdown in the past eight months and are absolutely delighted. The eee box fits nicely to the Vesa bracket on the back of their TV too!
For my sister and her family, I replaced XP on their PC with Ubuntu 9.0.4 (now 9.0.10). Again, no infections or slowdowns since. They now have enough confidence in the PC to actually buy stuff online, and like the fact that Open Office is so much better than MS Works.
Parallel or Serial universes, when stretched infinitely, both give the same results.
Our universe could simply be the current incarnation of an endless series of universes that stretch infinitely back in time, each one replacing the last. We are here to marvel at this universe because it's laws make it possible for life to exist, but the next (or previous) universe might not be so life-friendly. To our simple brains this seems amazing and 'special', but even if we're the first lifeforms in the last trillion different serial universes, that trillion would still be an unmeasurable dot on the infinite timeline of previous universes.
Nah. Given time they'll evolve their way around the problem. Just like bunnies, where the ones who don't stand staring at oncoming headlights have a much better chance of producing the next generation.
Seriously though, has anyone ever done a study to see if roadkill numbers have declined over the years as animals evolve the skills needed to avoid traffic?
Given that all the models walk like manically depressed androids with broken arm-servo's. What's with that stupid walk anyway?
How will Google interpret 15 million samples all sounding like 'squelch...squelch...squelch...squelch..squelch..s quelch.squelch.squelch.splat....aaahhhhhh!"?
I guess Kleenex will find their Google ads being delivered to users far more frequently.
...it's just that all of the atoms in my body are getting further apart due to the natural expansion of the universe.
Sweet.
From 29th July: http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/07/29/063423 2
Hey don't knock it! I was just kicking back, flicking through the articles on Slashdot after a 48-hour non-stop marathon of unbounded sexual pleasure with three gorgeous coeds, when I noticed that ad. Intrigued, I clicked the link and read their literature. It has made me realise what a hollow, unfulfilling life I lead. A string of simple, no-strings relationships with nubile young women in their sexual prime is no life at all really. I should be spending my time more creatively, by contributing to opens source projects, or perhaps building a voice-activated peanut dispenser using Lego Mindstorms, or even boosting the signal of the wi-fi connection that I'm 'borrowing' from my neighbour with the aid of a spare vibrator wrapped in tinfoil.
...
That Google ad sure hit the spot. I'll be a changed man when I return from Pine Creek!
[removes tongue from cheek and runs for cover]
This seems more like the kind of thing that should be developed under a cloak of secrecy at Area 51. My guess is that it's seen as an outside shot by DARPA, and the $10.3m pocket change they're throwing at it convinces me even more that they're just using this as "gosh ain't we high-tech and futuristic" publicity (or propaganda if you'd rather) blurb.
What seals it though is the 1950's Buck Rogers shiny treatment. Any self-respecting supersonic bomber has to have a mat-black paint job, surely?
Have a look at LogMeIn which allows you to log in to your desktop PC remotely. If nothing else, it's a great way of having a fully featured web browser running on your PDA!