Have you ever wondered playing your favorite audio
and videos in your pc is not enough because you wanted to play it with intense
volume? Well, if your conventional pc speakers don’t give you that pleasure you
can plug it out and keep it in safe forever…
Bring out your existing Hi-fi audio component then
hook it up using a stereo RCA cables; mostly available from your nearest
electronics center around town. Once you have your stereo RCA cable; plug those
RCA tips (usually Red – White or Red – Black in color) at the back of your
Hi-fi stereo within the left and right audio-in or line-in section of your
Hi-fi system and plug the 1/8 stereo tip at the audio-out section of your
soundcard. After doing your connection pre-select your audio source selector (every
Hi-Fi Stereo System has its Line In or AUX inputs on it) after doing so; you’re ready to enjoy your
music much better.
Friday, August 8, 2008
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Where in the world is Jim Ayson?
Since then I was been a consistent follower and reader of PC Digest due to its relevant content that regularly updates me from reading every magazine issues they had in the past. PC Digest itself has several informative contents including a column from Mr. Jim Ayson called the “Ayson Chronicles” – which one of the best column that contains informative and relevant inputs regarding computers and trends that contributed a lot of information and facts during those years.
Significantly, Mr. Jim Ayson was been an I.T. icon for me because of his impressive articles that brought me became a well-informed reader in my field of my interest. The “Ayson Chronicles” was of his remarkable contribution in awakening the minds of most Filipinos including myself in the progressive world of computing and technology.
Then after PC Digest has gone off the circles in 1995, I never had the chance to follow his tracks. Fortunately, throughout the years that I had been inactive from monitoring what has been going around the Pinoy computing communities. I never thought that Mr. Jim Ayson had gone far with his career in the field of Information and Internet Technology.
From his humble beginnings, the man had proven and excelled in his field of expertise that made himself such a success. Upon searching on the net, I have found that Mr. Jim Ayson was among “The Internet’s 10 Most Influential Filipinos” which was republished by WIRED Philippines.
Tuesday, January 1, 2008
Fatal1ty – The 1st Cyber Sports Living Icon
Johnathan Wendel a.k.a. “Fatal1ty” renowned as
the world’s 1st professional PC Gamer in the history of cyber sports.
His remarkable skill in cyber combat speaks for him and made him a well known living
icon for his cyber gamer fans and competitors. His endeavor in his chosen
career cost him countless of hours of training in front of his pc; and even
watching videos from his previous game leagues for him to analyze and correct
the flaw he made from his previous games.
Fatal1ty or Johnathan Wendel in real life is a natural born athlete and also competed in real life sports during his earlier days before he put his talent into cyber gaming. Fatal1ty considered playing real life sports that contributed an important factor that made him more accurate and responsive in making decisions during game play.
Fatal1ty inherited some characteristics of being agile, responsive, mentally and physically coordinated from playing live sport like tennis by which he was the team captain of his team during his high school years. Fatal1ty also spent two years in college before he decided to become a full time gamer and also mentioned that if he don’t succeed in his chosen career he’ll definitely back to campus again to pursue his full time study.
Fatal1ty’s ambition and empathy in gaming paid off and actually work for him. Who would ever think that gaming is only a form of creational hobby and never to become bread and butter for all gaming enthusiasts? Well, Fatal1ty breaks the barrier and contributed to justify gaming into much broader name called eSports or Cyber Sports.
Fatal1ty have had succeeded monetizing his talent or should I say “talent generated through extensive training and dedication”; at the age of 25 Fatal1ty had won 41 professional gaming tournaments in the US and in other major countries that made him rich over $300,000 in cash prizes. No one has come close to Fatal1ty’s remarkable success for winning 12 world titles in 5 different game areas from Quake III-Six World Titles 2000 / 2001, Unreal Tournament 2003-Cyberathlete Professional League (CPL) Winter World Champion 2002, Doom III - Quake Con2004 World Champion 2004, Aliens Vs Predator 2 – CPL Winter World Champion 2001, Painkiller – CPL USA, Singapore and World Tour Champion 2005.
His overall success made his name Fatal1ty a decal, a signature, and a symbol for most high-end hardware gaming components and accessories made by world class manufacturer of computer products; that lead him for such business opportunity and also came up with his own brand being sold worldwide.
In December 2006, Fatal1ty joined with CGS (Championship Gaming Series as its official spokesperson and event host for national game event that gave him much bigger exposure worldwide through Direct TV, SkyTV, and Star; and as a spokesperson for CGS many have had inspired and participated becoming a professional cyber athlete like Fatal1ty.
In August 2007, the Esports Awards Organization awarded the ever first Lifetime Achievement Award to Johnathan “Fatal1ty” Wendel who received the honor from showing his exceptional sportsmanship in the world of cyber gaming that made eEsports marked as the new sport for the young generation.
Fatal1ty or Johnathan Wendel in real life is a natural born athlete and also competed in real life sports during his earlier days before he put his talent into cyber gaming. Fatal1ty considered playing real life sports that contributed an important factor that made him more accurate and responsive in making decisions during game play.
Fatal1ty inherited some characteristics of being agile, responsive, mentally and physically coordinated from playing live sport like tennis by which he was the team captain of his team during his high school years. Fatal1ty also spent two years in college before he decided to become a full time gamer and also mentioned that if he don’t succeed in his chosen career he’ll definitely back to campus again to pursue his full time study.
Fatal1ty’s ambition and empathy in gaming paid off and actually work for him. Who would ever think that gaming is only a form of creational hobby and never to become bread and butter for all gaming enthusiasts? Well, Fatal1ty breaks the barrier and contributed to justify gaming into much broader name called eSports or Cyber Sports.
Fatal1ty have had succeeded monetizing his talent or should I say “talent generated through extensive training and dedication”; at the age of 25 Fatal1ty had won 41 professional gaming tournaments in the US and in other major countries that made him rich over $300,000 in cash prizes. No one has come close to Fatal1ty’s remarkable success for winning 12 world titles in 5 different game areas from Quake III-Six World Titles 2000 / 2001, Unreal Tournament 2003-Cyberathlete Professional League (CPL) Winter World Champion 2002, Doom III - Quake Con2004 World Champion 2004, Aliens Vs Predator 2 – CPL Winter World Champion 2001, Painkiller – CPL USA, Singapore and World Tour Champion 2005.
His overall success made his name Fatal1ty a decal, a signature, and a symbol for most high-end hardware gaming components and accessories made by world class manufacturer of computer products; that lead him for such business opportunity and also came up with his own brand being sold worldwide.
In December 2006, Fatal1ty joined with CGS (Championship Gaming Series as its official spokesperson and event host for national game event that gave him much bigger exposure worldwide through Direct TV, SkyTV, and Star; and as a spokesperson for CGS many have had inspired and participated becoming a professional cyber athlete like Fatal1ty.
In August 2007, the Esports Awards Organization awarded the ever first Lifetime Achievement Award to Johnathan “Fatal1ty” Wendel who received the honor from showing his exceptional sportsmanship in the world of cyber gaming that made eEsports marked as the new sport for the young generation.
Saturday, September 8, 2007
I show you mine, you show me yours
I knew my
title post would sound so nasty but I’m so sorry for that. I just want to share
my post what kind of computer that I’m using and I have been curious what other
people have. Hmm, this is not a battle of the pc or some sort just a sharing
moment for all of us; maybe for some they just want to know “that’s it, there’s
no big deal” and in my case I just want to be aware of the stories behind those
computer how people actually used it, how they benefit from selecting a
particular brand and how their computers stand the test of time. Isn’t great? So
we can generate a continuous awareness which brand is good and gone bad based
on our own experiences and the beauty of this is that we don’t have to rely on
particular reviews found on the net.
Well, Lemme
tell you my story, it was in 2002 when I decided to put up my small scale
internet cafĂ© – so I went from a local computer store and bought several half
identical brands for each parts that I preferred to use “of course not the best
brand and the fastest in its class during that time” my selections were based
on my limited budget so I ended up have these parts below and paid that
over-the-counter:
8x AMD AthlonXP 1700+ processors
8x Cold Master HSF
8x Asus A7V266-M Motherboards (socket A, built-in
audio)
4x PQI 128mb DDR 266
4x Kingston
128mb DDR 266
8x Inno3D MX400 64mb/64bit Video cards
4x Seagate 20GB 5400rpm (ST320014A)
4x Maxtor 10GB 5400rpm (2B010H1)
8x CNET Pro200 10/100 Lancard/NIC
8x PPC mouse ball (Free)
8x PPC keyboard (Free)
8x PPC speakers (not FREE)
8x 15” AOC 5en CRT
8x PPC Tower
casing /w PCC PSU 300w
8x Diamond Evolution 300w AVR (plastic type
casing)
7x Windows 98se retail edition w/ COA
sticker
1x Windows XP home retail edition /w COA
sticker
1x Sony FDD 3.5” 1.44mb
1x Asus 52x CD-Rom
1x 16 port CNET 10/100 Switch Hub
1x Box UTP-CAT5 (generic)
1x Generic Network Cable Tester
1x Crimping Tool (generic)
1x Artic Silver Heat Spreader
Obviously,
all the parts are made in China ‘So, China Rules! LOL’ except for the processor
I think that was made in Malaysia. Anyway, after all that tiring shopping I
went home and rested for a couples of hours; but after that I started put them
into pieces (hardware assembly – a no brainier task) ‘ehem I’m a business
management grad -- no formal training or whatsoever just had an experience
wrecking my old IBM XT clone PC with NEC V20 processor 8mhz turbo mode wow!
What a PC and a Pentium 3 MMX166mhz wow again, and by reading some ebooks and
printed books about computer carpentry LOL’.
So, after I
had done with my first task, I went to the software side so basically it took
me a number of hours before completing all the necessary software installed
from operating system, drivers, and games of course. Though it wasn’t the
hardest part; I felt so wasted from “putting on” and “pulling off” that CD
drive from one pc to the other, whew! What an experience having just a single
CD drive ‘How I wish I designed my pre-builder installation software and a BOOT
ROM for my NIC so I can access all the necessary installation software at one
point on the network, but my bad I don’t have enough resources to do that at
that time.’ But it paid off I had done everything and all my computers were up
and running on the next morning; sleepless night took me laid my back at the
couch.
I was snoring
“zzzzZZZZzzzzZZZZzzzzZZZZ” while I’m sleeping that’s what my wife said (Zen is
beautiful and sexy…), so basically I skipped my lunch on that day, in exchange
for a total recharge from exhausting long hours of working in the assembly line
‘LOL’. I’m up finally! But it was dinner time, so I sat down and enjoyed every
single menu that was prepared for me, there’s a sizzling steak, a Shanghai lobster meat, a
martini glass filled with coke, three cups of Chinese fried rice, a crispy
crab, and finally a mouth watering moisture chocolate cake. I must confess I
really love those meals and how I wish consumed them all before my wife woke me
up for the real dinner.
Oh Boy! I was
only dreaming…
So, after
taking my dinner I began working with network cabling that took me an hour
completing the task from measuring and cutting those UTP-5 cables and crimping
up those RJ-45 boots (thanks to the internet and I had printed those cabling
guide and P2P networking ahead of time). It’s been rewarding in my part that it
only cost me little time to read and comprehend every bit of information I had
found on the internet “cool there’s no need for an extra bucks for books or to
hire tech people”.
All computers
and cables were sat on its place; so, I began testing for network connectivity.
Poof it works! What I did is I pre-configured all my pc to have static IP
address from 192.168.0.1…192.168.0.9 and subnet 255.255.255.0 (thanks again to
windows help file for small home networking) it works! After testing using ping
for each network; I began running counter strike patch to 1.3 at that time and
I sat on my WINXP machine to host the de_dust map. I basically configured my machine
for 8 players so I could test its connectivity for the other machine to connect
on the host machine. Then one by one I tested running counter strike on each
machine and tried connecting on the host machine.
It turned out
successful for its connectivity. But, there’s a drawback the game doesn’t gone
well; because there’s a lag during game play, so I decided to change counter
strike’s default graphic engine which is DIRECTX into OPENGL then I invited
some kids including my daughter and my nephew for a LAN PARTY. So we played for
nearly an hour and the graphics turn out well with no lag until someone used a
smoke grenade that made the game lag again. But we continued playing the game
until my daughter used a sniper gun in which she claimed the cross site is not
accurate moving along with the mouse. So we continued again and at least we
discovered graphics issues during our game play. It’s nearly two hours when I
decided to conclude the game for the dry run.
Monday, July 16, 2007
The Spirit Lives On…
It was in the
mid-eighties, when new wave music hit in manila. It sounds too old though, but it
was a great experience to me that I was actually such a fanatic to that music
genre. I can still recall a lot of memories tuning-in on DW-XB102.7 fm on my
radio dial—a long gone radio station in the Philippines who started it all and
made new wave music so popular among the youth of that era.
WXB102 was the
biggest influential icon for my musical inclination to new wave music and of
course with a taste of fashion as well, I won’t forget those haircut styles and
mode of dressing down to my bla-bla shoes that I wore in every gig that XB had.
After two decades of hibernation, who would think that same old station would resurrect
again?
Well, it’s
good to be true! Thanks to Michael Sutton of Sutton Records USA, who made all
this possible. WXB102 is live again as it is used to be, broadcasting globally
over the internet.
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