Nintendo Wii Gets Funky DDR Upgrade!

wiiquestionthumbnail.thumbnail Nintendo Wii Gets Funky DDR Upgrade! Bet you were thinking of RAM, weren’t you? No chips for you! Instead, we’re talking about Dance Dance Revolution, the Konami title that’s become a part of pop culture. For those that worried they just didn’t look silly enough, the Wii version incorporates hand movements via the motion sensor remote and nunchuk, and of course comes with a dance pad for good old fashioned foot stomping. Up to four players can play at once, so you kids out there will have no excuse for not getting jiggy with your folks.

Installing a Dual-Boot with Windows and Ubuntu

xptolinux Installing a Dual Boot with Windows and Ubuntu

With its modern installation tools, getting Linux on your hard drive is simple–at least compared to the bad old days. And Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon’s install process is about as streamlined as Linux gets.

Like a lot of people who try switching to Linux, you’ve probably installed a distro or two, mucked around with it for a few hours, changed the theme, and maybe browsed the web a little. Then, when it was time to work, you jumped back to Windows, and all was right with the world.

Things are much easier now than they were in the early days of Debian, Slackware, and Red Hat. Modern distros such as Ubuntu and openSUSE install with crucial applications (web browser, photo editor, email client, word processor, etc.) and support for most hardware out of the box. With Ubuntu, you can boot off the CD to determine whether or not your rig will work with the OS before you make a single change to the hard drive. You can tell if you’re going to have a problem before you hose your system, which is always a good thing.

Before we get started installing Ubuntu Gutsy Gibbon, you’ll need to download the appropriate ISO file from the Ubuntu downloads page and burn it to disc. For neophytes, we generally recommend starting with the x86 versions, even if your CPU supports AMD64 extensions. The proper file name for most people will be ubuntu-7.10-desktop-i386.iso.

To burn the disc, you can use commercial burning software (like Nero) or download and install the free ISO Recorder software. It’s also a good idea to run a backup before you get started (or anytime you muck around with your partitions, for that matter).

There are three ways to make space for your Linux install: You can delete an unused partition, install another hard drive, or let the Linux installer resize an existing partition. If you have an unused partition on your hard drive that you want to use for Linux, it’s a good idea to remove that partition before you start the install process, since Linux can’t install to an NTFS partition. We recommend dedicating at least 20GB of space for your Linux install. To get rid of the partition, open the Computer Management tool in Windows and delete that partition. In Linux, you’ll have a tough time telling which partition is which, so to avoid heartbreak, do your deleting in Windows. If you don’t have an unused partition, we’ll talk about resizing your existing partition during the Linux install portion of this story.

How-To installation of Ubuntu Linux


affiliate 468x60 Installing a Dual Boot with Windows and Ubuntu

Playstation 2 still alive and kicking with RealPlay

 Playstation 2 still alive and kicking with RealPlay

Good news for all Playstation 2 owners who want to play wireless motion-sensing games without needing to splash out on a new console (Do I say Wii?). The In2Games crew announced the imminent arrival of their RealPlay Wireless range of Playstation 2 games and controllers just in time for the Christmas rush. We’re talking about a set of six games retailing at £29.99 each (approximately $50 USD), IN2Games’ REALPLAY series which come with some nifty wireless motion sensing peripherals of its own. A plastic pool cue, a tennis racquet, golf club, steering wheel, bowling ball and a ‘Puzzlesphere’.

REALPLAY Tennis comes with a wireless tennis racket, which will detect every serve, smash, volley and lob.
REALPLAY Pool comes with its own cue, enabling potting precision within its many variations of pool and snooker.
REALPLAY Golf is packaged with a wireless club to register every drive, chip, hook and slice.
REALPLAY Racing comes with a steering wheel for the complete wireless racing experience.
REALPLAY Bowling arrives with an actual wireless bowling ball.
REALPLAY Puzzlesphere introduces a new concept of party game as players manipulate a physical sphere around vertigo-inducing courses.

Tatak Ng Apat Na Alon Tribe

ladiesbanner1.thumbnail Tatak Ng Apat Na Alon TribeThis is my Jeepney ride, the “Tatak Ng Apat Na Alon Tribe”. A group of people who’s working on to revive the Filipino traditions in Tattoo.
The Tatak Ng Apat Na Alon Tribe has about 40 members (then, 100 members now in the present and that does not include all the candidates to join). Most have been tattooed in the modern way, with tattoo machines. Some have gotten traditional hand worked tattoos. The traditional tattooing method involves the tattooist smearingthe skin with a mixture of soot and sugarcane juice. If sugarcane juice isn’t available other substances such as lard or hen’s dung can be used. The skin is then rapidly poked with the tattooing instrument, which ranges from the pointed metal pieces used by the PINTADOS, to the pieces of sharpened wood used by the kankanay tribe from Central Benguet. The tribe’s conscious individual and group efforts to revive and experiment with indigenous tattooing traditions of the Philippines have resulted in the revitalization of these indelible traditions with new design concepts. Elle Festin (Tribe) states, “We want to revive traditional tattooing and make it a norm for the Filipino youth of today. Because without this knowledge, there will be no ‘true’ history of our people.

Check Out Tatak Ng Apat Na Alon Tribe

Getting stronger with WordPress 2.3.1

wp 20 square button.thumbnail Getting stronger with Wordpress 2.3.1Finally, after a couple of days in Maintenance Mode by Michael Woehrer. Pinoy Console is back!!!

It was almost five days since we been out on the web due to some technical reason. First we move from self hosting to web hosting (Netfirms.com), after a month of testing, trial and error way of learning. Now I’m brave enough to start blogging and to learn more. And hoping soon I can share all the things I’ve learn along the way while I’m learning wordpress. Since some of the problem I encounter still unresolved in the forum. Now the Pinoy Console is 100% powered by Open Source Code, running in WordPress v2.3.1. fueled by PHP and MySQL. Much respect to Anthony Baggett for this theme Im using now. Special thanks to all programmer who unselfishly continue sharing there knowledge and making it accessible to everybody. Giving inspiration for people like me. Let’s keep the access to knowledge free, decentralized, anti-bureaucratic and anti-authoritarian.

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