Jump to content

lfcrule1972

Beta Team Members
  • Posts

    7,098
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by lfcrule1972

  1. I'd just like to know of a program that converts any AVI file to SVCD. Anyone?

     

     

    You could try these - not sure whether you have or not.......

     

    http://www.audioutilities.com/avi-to-vcd/h...avi-to-svcd.htm

     

    http://www.boilsoft.com/aviconverter/

     

    http://www.softcities.com/AVI-to-SVCD/download/11084.htm

     

     

     

    Please note I have never used any of these so am not recommending them from personal use ! :thumbup:

  2. If you change the book type to DVD-ROM your standalone player stands a much better chance of recognising the disc - don't forget when a lot of the standalones were bought DVD+R DL didn't exist.... :)

     

    Oh and leave your settings on default as much as possible - these really do work best for all burns !

  3. I still laugh at that film Grain..... :lol:

     

    Pontius Pilate: So, youw fawtha was a Woman. Who was he?

    Brian: He was a Centurion, in the Jerusalem Garrison.

    Pontius Pilate: What was his name?

    Brian: Nottius Maximus, sir.

    [the Centurion giggles]Pontius Pilate: Centuwion, do you have anyone in your gawwison by that name?

    Centurion: No, sir.

    Pontius Pilate: Well, you seem awfully suwe, have you checked?

    Centurion: I think it's a joke, sir. Sort of like... uh... Sillius Sodus, or Biggus Dickus.

    Pontius Pilate: What's so funny about "Biggus Dickus? "

    Centurion: Its a joke name, sir.

    Pontius Pilate: I have a vewy good fwiend in Wome named "Biggus Dickus. "

    [guard laughs]

    Pontius Pilate: WIGHT! THAT'S IT!

    Centurion: Oh, but sir...

    Pontius Pilate: No, no, no. I want him fighting weally, wild, wavish animals by the mowning!

     

    Pontius Pilate: He has a wife, you know. Do you know what she's called? She's called... Incontinentia. Incontinentia Buttocks

  4. Really ? May have to check out that film then..... Will see if I can rent it here....

     

    @jack - I don't even know who Howard Keel is mate, and lets face it, it was you who took the time off work to watch him and his hose mate !! :poof:

  5. From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4436428.stm

     

    US heads for internet showdown

    By Clark Boyd

    Technology correspondent in Tunis

     

     

    _41017814_tunis_sign203afp.jpg

    World leaders, experts and campaigners are expected in Tunis

     

    The US is headed for a showdown with much of the rest of the world over control of the internet at this week's UN summit in Tunisia.

     

    Most net users probably do not spend a lot of time worrying about who runs the resource they are using, but there is a global battle brewing over that very question.

     

    The internet grew out of US military and academic research, and the US government still has certain measures of control over it.

     

    Other nations, however, are clamouring for a bigger say and are pushing for significant changes at the UN's World Summit on the Information Society.

     

    The issue is expected to overshadow the summit, which is intended to focus on how to take the internet to less developed parts of the world.

     

    Government role

     

    Most internet users around the world would agree that the internet has been functioning, technically, quite well.

     

    It is not a monolithic entity. In fact, it is comprised of some quarter of a million private networks that choose to interconnect with each other.

     

    A California-based non-profit created by the Clinton Administration in 1998, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) is charged with making sure that these networks talk to each other.

     

    Almost all of these things are in part the result of what happens when you get a bunch of diplomats in a room

     

    Jonathan Zittrain, Oxford University

    The organisation says its job is technical, making sure that web addresses take surfers to the right site.

     

    What Icann does not do is "run" or "control" the internet, according to Theresa Swinehart, General Manager for Global Partnerships at Icann.

     

    "Actually, nobody runs or controls the internet single-handedly. It is multiple parties, multiple businesses, users, and networks connecting to this. All these different groups, organizations and companies have a responsibility."

     

    But Icann operates under a memorandum of understanding with the US Department of Commerce. To some, that looks like American control of the internet.

     

    "The rest of the world doesn't want to see US hegemony here, in large part just for symbolic reasons," says Jonathan Zittrain, Chair in Internet Governance and Regulation at Oxford University.

     

    "So there's one set of countries, anchored by Iran, Cuba and China, that would like to see some process by which governments of the world have a much larger hand in controlling the shape of the internet."

     

    Many African politicians are also asking for "regime change" on the internet, and the European Union called in September for a new, international body to govern the net.

     

    US stands firm

     

    But the Bush administration and many in the US Congress reject the idea.

     

    We don't see any advantage in moving toward UN control. We just feel it would be bureaucratically heavy and frankly, unnecessary

     

    Bill Graham, Canadian government

     

    Both the US Departments of Commerce and State have reiterated that the US will maintain what they call "stewardship" of the internet. They contend that the US, working with Icann, is best placed to ensure an open, secure and stable online environment.

     

    And in a recent letter to the Wall Street Journal, Republican Senator Norm Coleman wrote: "There is no rational justification for politicising internet governance within a United Nations framework."

     

    That view has plenty of support outside the US.

     

    "We don't see any advantage in moving toward UN control," says Bill Graham, who works on internet governance issues for the Canadian government.

     

    "In fact, we're on record as opposing that. We just feel it would be bureaucratically heavy and frankly, unnecessary."

     

    Mr Graham supports a compromise measure, some kind of international forum that would have no oversight duties, but would help other nations feel like they have more input into how the internet functions.

     

    At risk

     

    Some in the anti-US camp are threatening more drastic action. They say, if the US won't cede some control, they will create their own internet.

     

    Michael Geist, who teaches internet law at the University of Ottawa, says that a world of multiple "internets" might not be a good thing.

     

    "What's at risk is the possibility that the communications system of the internet that we've come to rely upon, the ability for me to send an electronic message anywhere around the world, and similarly access websites around the world, and have little doubt that my requests will be recognised, is put in some measure of peril by the fact that we might have several different internets," he said.

     

    _41017554_africa_net203.jpg

    The UN summit is due to look at ways of getting more people online

     

    Few think this will actually happen, but the threat will be there as politicians and technocrats from across the globe meet in Tunisia from this week.

     

    Special preparatory meetings to address the internet governance issue are under way ahead of the summit's official start on Wednesday.

     

    "It's a political battle where, I think it was Henry Kissinger who once said, 'the fighting is so fierce, precisely because the stakes are so small'," says Oxford's Jonathan Zittrain.

     

    "Almost all of these things are in part the result of what happens when you get a bunch of diplomats in a room.

     

    "They'll find a way to have a grave disagreement, then have a way to work it through, and eventually come out with a communiqu?, and it may not have anything to do with the technically realities of the way the internet works."

     

    It would be better, Professor Zittrain says, for governments to focus on the serious internet issues that do need an international solution, especially things like spam, phishing, and cyber security.

     

    Others have called upon leaders to focus their efforts on the original intent of the summit to find ways to bring the benefits of information and communication technologies to the developing world.

     

    Clark Boyd is technology correspondent for The World, a BBC World Service and WGBH-Boston co-production

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.