Plasma TV’s

I’m looking to get myself a new TV, and after all the searching around, and review reading etc I think I’ve decided on the Pioneer PDP-436XDE. It’s 43" instead of 42", and it’s HD ready (for my shiny XBox 360 when it gets here). The main reason I have decided on this TV is because it seems to be the only sub 50" that is HD 1080i ready.

 

If there are any other’s that are 1080i ready and sub 50" then let me know, also if you own the Pioneer PDP-436XDE and have anything to say about it then please let me know.

Agent 47 on the Big Screen

It seems that Agent 47 (from The Hitman games) will be making an appearance on the big screen some time in 2007. Word has it that Skip Woods (Swordfish, Thursday) has signed up to write the screenplay.

 

That may be good, and even though Swordfish had it’s issues (I hate it how Hollywood have to dictate coding with flashing block’s of lego) it was not bad, and Thursday (his first flick) was also a worth a watch film.

The slight downside (although I don’t really mind him) is that Agent 47 will be played by Vin Diesel, hey at least he has a shaved head.

Lets see what the conversion is like, should be OK as at the end of the day it’s only another special agent movie.

Funny MS Video

Just goes to show that Microsoft do have a sense of humour

 

View the Video

New PS2’s Break compatibility

There is news going round that Sony’s new PS2 machine break compatibility with older PS2 and PS1 titles. That and it adds no new functionality to the system besides a new colour. Sounds like a bizarre and rather silly idea myself, however people that have bought the PS2 rather than the DC or XBox really only bought it because it looked pretty and had the advantage of played some games as well.

 

Just be careful if you pick up one of the new slimline silver PS2’s instead of the 360 you really want.

I’ve been sick

I’ve been laid out with a cold for the last couple of days, and what I do when I have a cold is code (don’t ask me why). I’ve been playing with a couple of things over the last few days, one of which is Ogre3D.

 

I have been trying to get to grips with C# recently, so I was playing with visual studio. Now Ogre3D does not (yet) have support for C# so I had to install the C++ components into Visual Studio. I then found the wrapper for it for both Delphi and C# so decided to play in those languages as well (see here for wrappers).

Anyhow enough rambling, if you can code in C++ (many variants) or Python then Pop over and have a play with it.

If however you don’t code yourself then try the demo’s or have a look at some of the various project’s that are using the engine.

Land Unrated Review

Just noticed that Olly has got a review of Land of The Dead Unrated up. He has not seen the UK cinema release but seems to like the DVD.

Pop over and have a read.

Is W.O.W Spying on you?

Seems there is some discussion going on over at Rootkit.com about Blizzards World Of Warcraft game.

 

Seems there may be a piece of what sounds quite nasty spyware in the game itself.

This from over at RootKit.com - This software is known as the ‘warden client’ - its written like shellcode in that it’s position independant. It is downloaded on the fly from Blizzard’s servers, and it runs about every 15 seconds. It is one of the most interesting pieces of spyware to date, because it is designed only to verify compliance with a EULA/TOS. Here is what it does, about every 15 seconds, to about 4.5 million people (500,000 of which are logged on at any given time):

The warden dumps all the DLL’s using a ToolHelp API call. It reads information from every DLL loaded in the ‘world of warcraft’ executable process space. No big deal.

The warden then uses the GetWindowTextA function to read the window text in the titlebar of every window. These are windows that are not in the WoW process, but any program running on your computer. Now a Big Deal.

I watched the warden sniff down the email addresses of people I was communicating with on MSN, the URL of several websites that I had open at the time, and the names of all my running programs, including those that were minimized or in the toolbar. These strings can easily contain social security numbers or credit card numbers, for example, if I have Microsoft Excel or Quickbooks open w/ my personal finances at the time.

Once these strings are obtained, they are passed through a hashing function and compared against a list of ‘banning hashes’ - if you match something in their list, I suspect you will get banned. For example, if you have a window titled ‘WoW!Inmate’ - regardless of what that window really does, it could result in a ban. If you can’t believe it, make a dummy window that does nothing at all and name it this, then start WoW. It certainly will result in warden reporting you as a cheater. I really believe that reading these window titles violates privacy, considering window titles contain alot of personal data. But, we already know Blizzard Entertainment is fierce from a legal perspective. Look at what they have done to people who tried to make BNetD, freecraft, or third party WoW servers.

Next, warden opens every process running on your computer. When each program is opened, warden then calls ReadProcessMemory and reads a series of addresses - usually in the 0×0040xxxx or 0×0041xxxx range - this is the range that most executable programs on windows will place their code. Warden reads about 10-20 bytes for each test, and again hashes this and compares against a list of banning hashes. These tests are clearly designed to detect known 3rd party programs, such as wowglider and friends. Every process is read from in this way. I watched warden open my email program, and even my PGP key manager. Again, I feel this is a fairly severe violation of privacy, but what can you do? It would be very easy to devise a test where the warden clearly reads confidential or personal information without regard.

This behavior places the warden client squarely in the category of spyware. What is interesting about this is that it might be the first use of spyware to verify compliance with a EULA. I cannot imagine that such practices will be legal in the future, but right now in terms of law, this is the wild wild west. You can’t blame Blizz for trying, as well as any other company, but this practice will have to stop if we have any hope of privacy. Agree w/ botting or game cheaters or not, this is a much larger issue called ‘privacy’ and Blizz has no right to be opening my excel or PGP programs, for whatever reason.

This really sounds a bit dodgy, I wonder if they use the same application the world over or just try it on over in the States (US law is less harsh on cyber crime than UK law). I would love to see someone push this one a little bit and see how Blizzard react. So far Blizzard have not said anything about the spyware process, although I expect they will have something to say in the not to distant future.

There is an application out called The Governor which will keep an eye on the Blizzard applications and tell you what it’s looking at. So far it’s not on the Blizzard ban list, but I won garantee that it will not be added to the list at some point in the future. See Rootkit.com for more information.

The D Movie

Tenacious D that is!

 

Yes Jack Black and Kyle Gass will be Tenacious D in the Pick Of Destiny. Th film is now out of pre-production an into production propper, and because of that the site is now live!

Hell ‘o Clock news episode 1 and 2 are there for your viewing, and oh yes The Devil does have email, so sign up for more news

Nissan GT-R Unveiled

Thanks to AutoBlog and Nissan GT-R Proto Website

 

More iPod backlash?

Thank God other people besides me and Dan are coming to the same conclusion about the gen5 iPod.

 

This Article from The Register is talking about the video part of the new iPod and concluding the same as me and Dan did, So What!

Pop over and have a look, there are some good point’s in it.

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