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Input Devices

Is the Line-in Jack On the Verge of Extinction? 411

SlashD0tter writes "Many older sound cards were shipped with line-out, microphone-in, and a line-in jacks. For years I've used such a line-in jack on an old Windows 2000 dinosaur desktop that I bought in 2000 (600 Mhz PIII) to capture the stereo audio signal from an old Technics receiver. I've used this arrangement to recover the audio from a slew of old vinyl LPs and even a few cassettes using some simple audio manipulating software from a small shop in Australia. I've noticed only recently, unfortunately, that all of the four laptops I've bought since then have omitted a line-in jack, forcing me to continue keeping this old desktop on life support. I've looked around for USB sound cards that include a line-in jack, but I haven't been too impressed by the selection. Is the line-in jack doomed to extinction, possibly due to lobbying from vested interests, or are there better thinking-outside-the-box alternatives available?"
Piracy

Ubisoft's Authentication Servers Go Down 634

ZuchinniOne writes "With Ubisoft's fantastically awful new DRM you must be online and logged in to their servers to play the games you buy. Not only was this DRM broken the very first day it was released, but now their authentication servers have failed so absolutely that no-one who legally bought their games can play them. 'At around 8am GMT, people began to complain in the Assassin's Creed 2 forum that they couldn't access the Ubisoft servers and were unable to play their games.' One can only hope that this utter failure will help to stem the tide of bad DRM."

Comment Computer Recycling and New Electronics (Score 1) 323

Last year for the hell of it I took a class that actually looked at computer recycling. Not only did we look at what currently happens in a lot of places (eg. monitors sent to China, environmental disaster ensues) but at the other options as well.

I took a tour Noranda Recycling where they use an environmentally friendly process to recycle the electronics, but here is the thing. Almost everything they were sending throgh the shredder was new. I guess when something is returning twice to a store, functioning or not it is marked for desstruction. You can imagine the pain of watching hundreds of digital cameras sent into the shredder. After wards I asked the foreman if they ever took things home. He said that there was a strict policy to not take anything, working or not and that someone was fired every week for taking things. Laptops, memory, cameras it all went into the shredder. Enough to make a grown geek cry.

I just wanted to add, this place was hemoraging money as well.

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