RPG game for the masses | diamondwinter

October 15, 2009
Diamond Winter is a site created to share with you RPG games created by themselves.
They have the downloads available in Their download section.
The idea of the site is to help promote”http://diamondwinter.com“  RPG games and allow people like you to play them for free. Yes, free!
The special thing about this site is that all the downloads are directly from the site
and no torrents or other links .

Kamikaze moon mission finds dust or ice?

October 11, 2009

Three successively zoomed-in views showing the impact of a Centaur rocket stage in a dark crater on the moon as viewed by NASA’s LCROSS probe minutes before its own destruction.

(Credit: NASA)

In a brute-force search for ice on the moon, an empty 5,000-pound rocket stage traveling twice as fast as a rifle bullet crashed into a permanently shadowed crater near the moon’s south pole Friday, presumably blasting out tons of debris for examination by an instrumented probe that carried out its own kamikaze plunge four minutes later.

While the initial impact at 4:31 a.m. PDT did not prove especially dramatic–it was not even visible in real-time video from the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS)–scientists said a camera sensitive to temperature variations clearly recorded the flash of the Centaur rocket’s catastrophic crash.

More important, spectroscopic data indicated the presence of material of some sort above or near the impact point in a murky crater known as Cabeus, and instruments aboard NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter observed the Centaur crater and confirmed a plume of debris. But it was not immediately clear how extensive the plume was or how much material was blasted out.

Principal investigator Anthony Colaprete said it would take several days to analyze the data from the $79 million LCROSS experiment and reach a consensus on whether or not water ice was, or was not, detected.

“Life is full of surprises, we want to be careful and not make a false negative or a false positive claim,” he told reporters after the impact. “I’m excited we saw variations in the spectra because that means we saw something, and it was not just blackness. The information’s there, we just need to get to it.”

Asked if he had seen anything in the initial data to indicate the presence of ice, Colaprete said he had not yet had time to look for the telltale signals.

“We’re going to take our time and build up a case for water in the ejecta, if it’s there, or a case against it if it’s not there,” he said. “And then understand if we’re seeing variations, what do these variations mean? We’ve got to understand that before we say anything.”

Interestingly, a closeup of the thermal flash of the Centaur impact showed an elongated smear of light and not a concentrated flare as one might expect from a near straight-in impact. Colaprete said his team would look into what that might mean. Topographic data collected by other satellites indicated a relatively flat floor where the impact occurred.

LCROSS was launched June 18 as a companion payload to NASA’s $504 million Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft. Working in a 31-mile-high orbit, LRO is designed to create a high-resolution map of the moon’s surface to help identify sites for future manned missions.

It also will measure the solar and cosmic radiation that future lunar explorers will face, and map out the surface topology, mineralogy, and chemical composition of Earth’s nearest neighbor. One year will be spent scouting future landing sites, followed by three years of purely scientific observations.

While LRO was launched directly to the moon by a powerful Atlas 5 rocket, LCROSS and the booster’s empty Centaur upper stage were sent into a looping four-month orbit back around the Earth.

The spacecraft was designed to aim itself and the attached Centaur stage back at the moon, targeting a permanently shadowed crater near the south pole. Mission managers initially selected a crater known as Cabeus A, but after additional analysis of topographic data, the target was switched to nearby Cabeus, a crater measuring some 62 miles across and about 2.5 miles deep.

LCROSS successfully separated from the Centaur stage at 9:50 p.m. Thursday and then rotated 180 degrees to aim its instruments forward. A small rocket firing slowed LCROSS to ensure the proper four-minute separation from the Centaur.

Analysis of telemetry indicated the trajectory was right on the money–the Centaur is believed to have hit the surface within about 210 feet of the planned target–and LCROSS presumably flew through an ejecta cloud of some sort.

“Everything really worked out well,” Colaprete said earlier. “The spacecraft flew perfectly, the instruments performed, honestly, better than expected in some cases. We got interesting results. But again, these are just initial results…I can certainly report there was an impact, we saw the impact, we saw the crater and we got good measurements, spectroscopic measurements, which is what we needed of the impact event.

“So we have the data we need to actually address the questions we set out to address.”

The search for water ice on the moon is one of the holy grails of modern lunar exploration. Data from other spacecraft, including the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, show the presence of hydrogen, possibly from water ice, in the top three feet or so of lunar soil. Scientists initially believed ice from comets could be expected primarily in permanently shadowed craters near the moon’s poles, but more recent data indicated the presence of trace amounts over broad regions.

“It could be water, it could be methane, it could be hydrocarbons or organics,” Colaprete said during a pre-impact briefing. “From a scientific standpoint, this is incredibly important. Whatever the moon has collected over the last 3.5 billion years in terms of water, organics, materials from comets, asteroids, the sun, could be trapped in these pockets on the moon. It’s a time capsule, it’s a window into the past of the entire inner solar system, of Earth.”

Finding ice on the moon could be critical to future exploration or even colonization. With unlimited solar power, ice can be converted into water, oxygen, and hydrogen rocket fuel. Finding ice on the moon also would raise the possibility of similar deposits in similar environments across the solar system.

“Water in terms of exploration is very important,” Colaprete said. “Even if we don’t go back to the moon, it is a principle resource throughout the solar system. On Mars and beyond. The old Mars mantra was ‘follow the water.’ And really, that extends in my mind through the entire solar system and the entire universe. And so really, LRO and LCROSS are the first directed, focused steps in that direction on the moon.”



Apple launches new OS for iphones

October 9, 2009

Apple has announced that it will be lauching iphone OS 3.1.2 which is the upgraded version of the OS in iphone now.

Apple fixed three bugs, which may not seem like a lot, but they are important. Among the changes is a fix for what Apple says is a “sporadic issue,” where the iPhone would not wake up from sleep mode.

The update also resolves an issue that could interrupt the cell network until the phone is restarted. A bug that caused a crash during video streaming has been addressed in iPhone OS 3.1.2.

Apple said iPhone OS 3.1.2 is compatible with the iPhone, iPhone 3G, and iPhone 3GS. The update is available by plugging your iPhone into your computer and clicking on the update button in iTunes.

Once finished, your iPhone will restart and immediately alert you to a Carrier Settings update. This is a very small update that will be completed without needing to restart again.


Microsoft to launch new mobile

October 6, 2009

Microsoft is launching windows based mobile against competitors like Apple’s Iphone and Google’s Android.They have made deals with some big names like HTC,Toshiba, Samsung and  LG, to use the software (Windows 6.5) in more than 30 devices in over 20 markets around the world by the end of the year.

The new range of Windows Phone devices will battle with a slew of new handsets to be released in the next few weeks, in time for the crucial Christmas trading season. Orange will launch the Motorola Dext, which uses Google’s Android platform, while Sony Ericsson will launch the Satio, which has a mammoth 12.1 megapixel camera, and the rather more compact Aino.  O2 will be selling the Palm Pre.

Microsoft has shipped about 50 million Windows phones in the past few years, but recently its annual shipments are estimated to have been overtaken by sales of the iPhone.

Windows Phone, which was initially revealed in a ‘beta’ test version in February, sees the company jettison the traditional Windows menu system in favour of a new ‘today’ screen which gives the user a quick overview of their email, calendar, calls, instant messages and texts and provides easy access to web browsing through a new version of Internet Explorer which – crucially – supports Flash, unlike other devices such as the iPhone and Pre.


O2 to test Lte broadband

October 4, 2009

O2 the network operator will run trials of Long Term Evolution technology or LTE, in the UK, Spain, Germany, the Czech Republic and Argentina. The so-called 4G network could achieve mobile internet speeds of up to 340 megabits per second, almost a hundred times faster than the average broadband speed currently enjoyed by UK consumers, and 50 times faster than the 7.2 megabits per second mobile broadband connections available in United kingdom.

“We are working with the conviction that we can only offer our clients the maximum levels of quality and innovation,” said Julio Linares, chief operating officer at Telefonica, O2′s parent company.

“To do this, we are defining our strategy and the rollout of Long Term Evolution with the objective of driving mobile broadband and offering the best service from the moment that the equipment and terminals can support the new standards and are available for sale.”

Trials of the new technology are expected to start in early 2010, and technology suppliers for the field tests are expected to include Ericsson, Huawei and Nokia Siemens. No details have been given about which areas of the country will participate in the trial.

It will be the first LTE trials carried out by a network operator in the UK. Motorola started a localised test of the technology in May, confined to Swindon, but other operators, such as Orange and Vodafone, have indicated that they intend to roll out LTE networks in future.

In the United States, Verizon said it would be switching on its LTE network across the entire country early next year.

O2 this week recently lost its exclusive deal with Apple to supply the iPhone in the UK. Orange and Vodafone will also shortly start selling the iPhone range, signalling a price war among network operators as they battle to attract consumers.


Nvidia’s latest technology

October 2, 2009

Nvidia, a company  associated with the graphics processors mainly for high-end gaming computers  has revealed a few details on Fermi , its latest GPU architecture. Fermi is designed for general purpose parallel computing that can scale up to supercomputing levels.

Nvidia CEO and cofounder Jen-Hsun Huang said GPUs have gone beyond being just graphics chips and are now general purpose parallel computing processors with “amazing” graphics, stated at GPU Technology Conference in San Jose, Calif..

They say Fermi will be the foundation for Nvidia’s next generation of GeForce, Quadro and Tesla processors.

“Fermi differs from ordinary GPU’s, as it’s the first to be designed from the ground up for general-purpose computation with features like ECC (error-correcting code which is used to reduce soft errors in computing), support for C++, a true cache hierarchy and concurrent kernel execution that are critical requirements for the computing space,” as  said by Nvidia spokesperson Andrew Humber .


Blackberry-Worlds most expensive phone

September 30, 2009

Designed by Alexander Amosu’s device, this phone is made of gold and shiny rocks, and took 350 hours to make, reports The Sun.

The best part if the phone is, the device can be personalised with the owner’s name and company logo as well as offering a 24-hour concierge service focused on “accessing the inaccessible”.

And this glittering Amosu Curva Blackberry handset comes at a staggering cost of 125,000 pounds.

A mystery millionaire in the Middle East has snapped up the first of three limited-edition handsets.


MMORPG in India

February 10, 2009

The gaming industry in India has grown to such a level that nowadays the gaming cafes are spawning everywhere. And since I am working in a gaming company for the past two years i think i know about the Indian market. The gamers these days like to try out every kind of games and the mmorpgs are making it big. Before few years it would be hard to find someone playing mmo’s but nowadays u can see them everywhere literally. Some of the MMORPG’s that made it big in India are

  • Ragnarok
    This is a mmorpg which started the craze of gaming in India due to its huge advertisements and the cute characters. The boys wanted to try the game cause they got a hell lots of free hours in the starting and once they liked the game they used to sit for hours in front of the comp playing it. Some girls tried the game cause the game actually got some nice avatar like characters and some of them liked it due to tat.
    It was actually a 2d game and since it was the starting and due to the huge promotions by Level up games it was a big hit with the gamers but was not tat big with the company cause they wasted too much cash in the advertising department.
  • A3
    A3india which is launched by Sify is considered as one of the best mmorpg in the world due to the graphics and the story.To be short, the game play revolves around two cities namely Temoz and Quanto and since its a PVP based mmorpg you can kill anyone if u dont like him(thats if u can kill them or just die trying). And the town wars is one event no A3 player will miss. Cause it shows how powerful your town is.

These two are the only Indian servers offically released in India by their owners. Other than this the gamers have started playing international servers and most of the asians are called Gold Farmers in International servers cause of their imbalanced potential to make money and stuffs in the game. Due to these reasons many international servers have banned all the asian IP’s(for instance Two moons which is considered as the mmorpg till now or atleast till Aion comes)


Naruto Shippuuden 95

February 6, 2009

I was just seein the anime Naruto Shippuuden 95.It was actually nice when compared to bleach which started its fillers again.Even though naruto maybe a little slow it has a  nice response with the anime lovers. And i am not going to spoil the fun by tellin wats going to happen or wat happened this week. I am just going to give a few links in case any of u guys want to see it in High Quality or even want to see…

Naruto-Tv

And one more buffering site which offers high speed and HQ

Animefart

The link given above goes directly to the page which contains the episode.


Bleach 205

February 4, 2009

Bleach 205 is out and they have started the fillers again.In this episode the royal princess challanges her gaurd for a soccer game.So they have started all the boring stuffs again while the normal episodes where going fine.


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