The highly anticipated videogame slips to an early 2008 release as the Wii maker struggles to add online features and crank out more of the popular consoles.
It looks Nintendo has plenty more than just keyboard support in store for the Wii, with the company also taking advantage of a recent conference in Tokyo to announce a forthcoming DS demo download service for the console. Dubbed "Everyone's Nintendo Channel" (at least in Japan), the service effectively turns your Wii into your very own DS Download Station, with both game demos and videos available to be transfered to your DS. Unfortunately, there's no word as to when the service might actually become available, although we doubt Nintendo would risk raising the ire of the DS-toting masses by holding out on it for too long.
Several readers wrote in with a CNET report that raises novel free-speech questions. MySpace asked GoDaddy to pull the plug on Seclists.org, a site run by Fyodor Vaskovich, the father of nmap. The site hosts a quarter million pages of mailing-list archives and the like. MySpace did not obtain a court order or, apparently, compose a DMCA takedown notice: it simply asked GoDaddy to remove a site that happened to archive a list of thousands of MySpace usernames and passwords, and GoDaddy complied. Fyodor says the takedown happened without prior notice. The site was unavailable for about seven hours until he found out what was happening and removed the offending posting. The CNET article concludes: "When asked if GoDaddy would remove the registration for a news site like CNET News.com, if a reader posted illegal information in a discussion forum and editors could not be immediately reached over a holiday, Jones replied: 'I don't know... It's a case-by-case basis.'"
Shoehorning his adjectives doesn't change the facts:.NET is damn fast. Perhaps not "I need to raytrace downtown Manhattan." fast, but certainly fast for web services, desktop applications, mobile apps, and Windows PowerShell. Heck, it even beat out a C++ app where low-level usually succeeds--lifting big data structures--until Raymond Chen wrote his own allocator.
Posted
by
samzenpus
from the read-all-about-it dept.
Sebastian Bergmann writes "PHP is a widely-used general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for Web development. The interpreter that executes programs written in the PHP programming
language has been designed from the ground up to be easily embeddable (for instance into the
Apache Web Server) and extendable. This extensibility is one
of the reasons why PHP became the favourite "glue" of the Web: functionality from existing third-party
libraries (database clients or image manipulation toolkits, for instance) can be made available through
PHP with the ease of use you expect from a scripting language." Read the rest of Sebastian's review.
Posted
by
ScuttleMonkey
from the behind-the-curtain dept.
ThinSkin writes "In the first of a three-part series covering the people behind the new DirectX 10, ExtremeTech interviews Microsoft's David Blythe and Chris Donahue to discuss the development, decisions, and future of the new API. They answer several questions such as how different it will be than DX9, why it will only be for Vista (and not for XP), and when we might be able to see it."