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Archive for May, 2008


Project Offset bought by Intel, so what?

(Monday, May 19th, 2008)

Project Offset, the running name of a company who promises to build one of the most expected action epic video games, has announced in February that they were bought by Intel. However, I have to admit that nothing has been shown since. Not even the slightest hint at what Intel intends to do with it.

Is the development still going on?

Just to let you salivate a little in advance, here was the trailer “leaked” to the Internet earlier in September 2007.


HD version
SD version

Doorways and streets in Shanghai

(Sunday, May 18th, 2008)


Street and bike - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles Sleeping barber - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles
Door and scooter - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles Narrow street - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles

Click on the thumbnails to enlarge them

Folded paper font

(Saturday, May 17th, 2008)

I do not often present character fonts, but this one is definitely nicer than usual with its elegant 3D effect of folded white paper.

Folded paper font

Source: DaniellaSpinat.com.

Free movie: B horror movies from the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s

(Friday, May 16th, 2008)

Logo Internet Archive

  • List from Internet Archive

Hollywood in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s created a long string of cheap horror movies that never reached the top rating lists. However, some of them, despite being left mostly abandonned by their authors, are worthy of some renewed attention. In this context, it is interesting to notice that the Internet Archive has recently pointed to a nice list of these B horror movies. In there, you will find (available for free download):

Colors in Shanghai

(Thursday, May 15th, 2008)


Three and three lanterns - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles Red lanterns and gold fishes - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles
Four red lanterns - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles Red lantern and green leaves - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles
Blue and yellow cords - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles Blue shirts - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles
Red peppers and red ears - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles Yellow spiral - Copyright (C) 2008 Yves Roumazeilles

Click on the thumbnails to enlarge them

Droste effect

(Wednesday, May 14th, 2008)

In the year 1956, “the Dutch graphic artist M.C. Escher made an unusual lithograph with the title ‘Print Gallery’. It shows a young man viewing a print in an exhibition gallery. Amongst the buildings depicted on the print, he sees paradoxically the very same gallery that he is standing in.”

The term was coined by the poet and columnist Nico Scheepmaker at the end of the 1970s. It is named after Droste, a Dutch brand of cocoa, whose box has a picture of a nurse carrying a serving tray with a cup of hot chocolate and a box of the same brand of cocoa.

You will find the following image and much more at AlgebraOfLife.

Droste effect example

Backup while you save

(Tuesday, May 13th, 2008)

FileHamsterIt is always a bit difficult to actually think about doing backups. Either you spend too much time thinking about it or you forget about it. For Windows, I found a nice free utility program: FileHamster from MOGware.

This small utility will allow you to automatically backup every single file you save or modify. FileHamster will create a full history track of your activity without even the need to think about it. It acts immediately (you don’t have to wait for a daily backup), and keeps everything. Of course, you need some free disk space, but it’s so much of a relief…

Sequel to F.E.A.R. - Project Origin trailers

(Monday, May 12th, 2008)

Assassin trailer


HD trailer
SD trailer

(more…)

Pink flamingo

(Sunday, May 11th, 2008)

Pink flamingo
Click on the thumbnails image to enlarge them

Pink flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber, Flamant rose). Brazil, 2007.

Newsgroups: Freely download big files

(Saturday, May 10th, 2008)

While everybody is speaking about downloads under surveillance of law enforcement forces and **AA groups defending the copyrights of music and cinema, I wondered where the download addicts were going now to get their load of big files.

I looked into the P2P networks heavily protected by a strong encryption and supposed to guarantee the anonymity of their uses (often named darknets). this claim seems to be well defended, but the available contents are limited and strongly influenced by the fight for liberties (and sometimes against the most paranoid conspirations) and very marginal behaviours (pedophily is really more present there than in the more common Internet you and me use everyday).

But I was also directed toward the Usenet newsgroups. It is clear that a large number of users are living a free life far from the preening eyes of most external observers. As a matter of fact, if you download from your ISP’s news server, the data flow is only visible by yor ISP and yourself. Nothing goes into the open Internet. Of course, some ISP decided to limit access to some of the newsgroups, but choice is still quite large and your tranquility is much more preserved than on a P2P network (and less than on a fully anonymous darknet).

What tools do you need to browse the newsgroups? A little more technical attention than on the simplest P2P networks, for sure. But the tools are relatively easy to find:

  • Grabit for WindowsA Usenet reader able to correctly read the posts containing attached file. You have to remember that more of these files are actually cut in parts, attached one by one to different posts and encoded using standard but very specific protocols. The most convincing free tool -for me- was Grabit for Windows that seems able to decode nearly anything, grabbing parts from different messages and sticking them together in files or directories. Most important, it understands how to work with *.NZB files that describe all the parts, all their locations, etc. for one attached file set.
  • A software tool able to work with *.PAR2 files that allow to run around the transmission errors (with the help of one sophisticated encoding, they can compensate for missing data or corrupted data, etc.) Here, I prefered QuickPar for Windows, one more free tool.

Note: Normally, Grabit doe sit all, but QuickPar for Windows still comes handy in case of failure.

The most impressive part of my tests has been download performance. 13 Mbit/s, I did not see this for a long time. The more because it was sustained for days (it goes down a little because of minor trafic jams at my ISP in the evening).

But you have to notice that if you look for a specific data content, newsgroups are not helping you. The way they are organized is favoring a lot the exploitation of very young content. If newsgroup search engines exist (Grabit has one that is partially submitted to subscriptions), the Usenet system will only host young data or data recently published.

Roseate Spoonbill

(Friday, May 9th, 2008)

Roseate Spoonbills and Snowy Egrets

Roseate Spoonbill and Wood Stork
Click on the thumbnails image to enlarge them

Roseate Spoonbill (Platalea ajaja, Spatule rosée). Brazil, 2007.

Robotic foosball table

(Thursday, May 8th, 2008)

It’s bit too slow to be a tough competitor, but it’s worth thinking about one more sport where the computer/robot is now actively playing against human beings.

Autonomous Foosball Table (at Instructables.com).


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Latest update: 23-aug-08

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