Friday, February 27, 2009

Xbox Live gold members get (even) more benefits


Xbox Live Gold-level members aren't going anywhere anytime soon. Honestly, I'm surprised Silver-level members even exist if they can't even play games online. So, color me somewhat surprised that Microsoft will be offering even more incentive for Gold members to keep paying their $49 per year.

According to Ars Technica, the company is now offering weekly sales on gaming content for Gold-level members only. First up will be the game "Braid." Usually available for 1,200 gamer points, or $15, it will now cost Gold-level members 800 points, or $10.

According to the article, Microsoft says upcoming weekly sales will include the "hottest arcade titles, game add-ons, Xbox originals, and other great content."

Gold-level members get to play Xbox games online, and get early free demos and trailers, as well as video chat, photo sharing, and messaging with friends.

by Eric Franklin Source: news.cnet.com

Monday, February 16, 2009

Serial burglar caught on webcam

The Burglar as caught on a webcam

A house burglar was caught after a webcam on the owner's computer recorded images of him carrying out the raid.

Stills of serial raider Benjamin Park, 19, of Cambridge, were sent to an email address so even when he stole the computer, the images could be found.

Police said it was a "brilliant idea" of software engineer Duncan Grisby, who set it after a previous burglary.

Park was given an 11-month jail term by magistrates in Cambridge on Tuesday after admitting burglary.

"I was burgled three years ago and was annoyed at the time because I had thought about setting this system up then, but hadn't got around to it," said Mr Grisby.

"I was relieved it did what I'd intended it to when I was burgled again. It was nice to catch him in the act - but it didn't stop him from stealing my things.

So how does it work?

"The burglary was a real violation of my private space but at least he got caught.

"I just wish he'd got a longer sentence."

Mr Grisby said the system was easy to set up. "There are lot of products for Windows that you can use to do this - though I used some free software and wrote some extra software myself."

Police described Mr Grisby's idea as "absolutely brilliant".

"The webcam was set up in his computer and began filming once it registered motion. It captured every movement Park made," said Det Sgt Alan page, head of Cambridgeshire Police Burglary Squad.

"At one point he stared into the computer as if it might be making a noise or something to make him suspicious.

"He then stole the computer but it didn't matter because Mr Grisby had set it up so that as it was recording it was sending the images to an email address.

"When the break-in was discovered Mr Grisby simply gave us the email address and we were able to watch several minutes of footage and say, `That's Ben Park'.

"Mr Grisby is an extremely bright man. He'd set this up because he'd been burgled some years ago and the quality was superb.

'Better than alarm'

"It was better than a burglar alarm and when Park initially denied breaking in to the property we were simply able to show him the footage."

Magistrates heard Park, who has more than 13 previous convictions for theft, had stolen computer equipment and other property with a value of nearly £4,000 from Mr Grisby's study.

He committed the offence in February while on bail after being charged with an attempted burglary in Ely, Cambridgeshire, in August.

"The webcam made our job really easy," added DS Page. "It was a pleasure to show him the pictures and see his expression when we interviewed him."

So how did Duncan Grisby catch the burglar in the act?

There are many commercial software packages available to capture images from a web cam and send them to an e-mail address or over the internet to a web page.

But Mr Grisby took a more Do-It-Yourself route which requires some technical knowledge.

He used a cheap video camera which is plugged into a video card inside his PC to capture the images.

Software running on the PC - which must be left switched on and have an "always-on" internet connection - detects motion and activiates a separate program written by Mr Grisby.

That program instructs the computer to grab photos from the video camera - up to five stills per second - and then send them to an e-mail address or over the internet to a webpage where they are stored for viewing.

inputs by BBC UK

Plug pulled on live website seen by millions

On her final day as a pioneering internet celebrity, Jennifer Ringley got up some time after 7.30am, used her computer for a while at around 1.15pm, had something to eat at 6.15pm, and then apparently went out for the evening.

So it was clearly not the promise of ceaseless excitement that brought hundreds of millions of web users to Ms Ringley's site, which since 1996 has broadcast a live, unedited, 24-hour chronicle of her life from cameras set up around her apartment.

But Jennicam.org, an online experiment that predated the Big Brother TV series and laid the ground for hundreds of subsequent internet cults, still proved too exciting for PayPal, the company that handled the annual $15 (£8.38) subscription to Ms Ringley's site.

Visitors with nothing better to do than watch her cameras for hours on end occasionally caught sight of her naked, contravening PayPal's regulations and forcing closure of the site this week, according to an email Ms Ringley sent to subscribers. "They've disabled my account so I'm not able to accept subscriptions," the email read, according to one recipient.

Jennicam was established, initially as a college project, to "provide a window into a virtual human zoo," Ms Ringley wrote at the time. "I keep JenniCam alive not because I want or need to be watched, but because I simply don't mind being watched."

Since her main competition at the time was a live broadcast of a coffee-pot set up by Cambridge University computer scientists, it proved a popular notion.

A host of other "micro-celebrities" soon followed, including the Turkish web hero Mahir Cagri, whose kitschy web page, headlined I Kiss You!, spread around the world in days. Ms Ringley took her cameras with her as she moved from Pennsylvania to Washington DC, and on to California, where she reportedly now works for a social services agency.

Despite an early appearance on David Letterman's US talkshow, Ms Ringley's passion for publicising her life does not normally extend to accepting interview requests, and she was not responding to them yesterday.

But on the internet news group alt.fan.jennicam, enthusiasts and detractors were busy picking over her legacy, making little effort to disguise their hostility towards Ms Ringley's boyfriend Dex, and speculating about her future.

"I am glad she could get much more than her share of 15 minutes of fame and live to tell the story," one admirer wrote. "Furthermore, she has a good chance to resume a normal (albeit boring) life."

inputs by Guardian UK

The world's first webcam


The webcam was first used in the Computer Science Department of the Cambridge University in the year 1991. The webcam, then called the CoffeeCam, was not used for Videochatting but for pointing to the Trjan Room Coffee Pot and ran over MSNL (Multi Service Network Layer) - a network layer protocol designed for ATM networks.

Although, the camera was switched off on 22/Aug/2001 but the last picture clicked by the camera is shown above.

Differences between video chatting and video conferencing

There is a misconception between many a people that video chatting and video conferencing are none but one thing but there are many a differences between them, such as the following:
  1. The video chatting will always involve a chat software, handphone & a webcam but video conferencing will not require all this.
  2. The video while chatting will always be displayed in a small window or will not be of high resolution while in video conferencing the video will be of high definition.
  3. Webcams are used to capture videos in video chats while in video conferencing high quality sophisticated cameras are used.
  4. Video chat is free with many mediums such as free messengers while video conferencing may not necessarily be free.

Video Chatting

Video Chatting is a form of chatting which enables users to chat while watching the video of the person they are chatting with in real-time. Webcam is the most essential component required to Video Chat which captures video and transmits it to the other user in real time. Video Chatting has been made successful by chat softwares such as:
  • Yahoo Messenger
  • Windows Live Messenger
  • Skype