internet

Shareaza 2.0 Released

Shareaza 2.0 is out.

its a program that lets you search for files on the Gnutella, eDonkey, and "Gnutella 2" network.

it also acts as a BitTorrent client.

with the 2.0 release, Shareaza is released under the GPL, which means it will always be free and open source.

you can get Shareaza here:
http://shareaza.sourceforge.net/

you can also download its source code (seems to be written in C++)

Shareaza 2.0 Released Read More »

people on the Steam forum were driving me nuts

i wanted to install the High Definition pack onto Half-Life (updates some sounds, some character/player models, improves the look of some guns, etc).

the installer for the HD pack checks for the old/legacy registry settings to see where Half Life is installed to, and doesnt install if you have the Steam version installed - simply because the legacy registry settings dont exist with a Steam-installed version of Half-Life.

to find a solution, i did a search on the Steam forum.

i found lots of posts where people were asking to do exactly what i was trying to do, install the HD pack into Steam. some people even made the same post over and over in different sub forums looking for an answer.

this guide link was posted a few times as a solution to the problem: http://www.jan-ripper.de/articles/steam_hd/index.html

the person who made that guide lists the problem as being Steam not liking PAK files, and gives information on how to extract PAK files.
that info is helpfull --- but thats not the issue when installing the HD pack. the issue is if the HD pack doesnt find the registry keys from a legacy install, it wont install the PAK files in the first place. how can you extract the PAK files if you cant get them out of the installer??

so I made a post on the Steam forum asking if anyone had any REAL info needed to install the HD pack. people just told me exactly what the guide says - "install the HD pack, then extract the data from the PAK files" --- i mention that CERTAIN REGISTRY KEYS ARE NEEDED before it will install.

responses i got didn't help me at all, and made it seem like people were talking about something else. how many Blue Shift CDs were released with different versions of the HD pack? is my copy the only one that checks to see if you even have the games installed?

anyway, i figured out the registry keys it was checking for, learned exactly what keys it was looking at and where, and learned how to modify them to give me different options with the HD pack's installer.

basically, if the registry values arent there, you get this when you try to install the HD pack:

and if it does find the keys its looking for, you get this screen:

i dont know what i'm missing here - why i couldnt find any real information on the Steam forum, or why the people seemed clueless. what HD pack are they using that its install is so different from my version? i'm using the install off a Blue Shift CD i purchased at K-Mart over a year ago.

i made a simple guide that tells what registry keys to add to get the HD pack to install.

Update from the jan-ripper.de site:

"With the Steam Update on August 29th, 2005, Valve released the High Definition Models on Steam for all owners of Half-Life 1.
Since then you may easily install the shiny models for Half-Life 1, Opposing Force and Blue Shift."

Install the HD models:

steam://installaddon/halflifehd

Remove the HD models:

steam://removeaddon/halflifehd

people on the Steam forum were driving me nuts Read More »

just got Final Fantasy XI

... so far, i'm not impressed. i just got the PC version, and the controls are really bad. i'm gonna try playing with my gamepad. i might even get an adapter to use my PS2 controller on my PC.
i think i enjoyed EverQuest, Asheron's Call, Anarchy Online, Asheron's Call 2, and Dark Age of Camelot a lot more when i first played those. however, i might actually like FFXI when i get to know how to play it better. if i still dont like it after a month, i might go back to DAoC or try the Star Wars Galaxies online game.

just got Final Fantasy XI Read More »

One very good thing about iTunes...

First, you can listen to 30 seconds of all their songs for free.

This is the cool part of the service:
Basically, search for what you want, listing to it (if you've never heard it before or aren't sure if you selected the correct song). Once you know what you want - go load up Kazaa and download the full song.

iTunes is a great little app to browse and sample music (its like going to Best Buy where they have those headphones set up to listing to some CDs).

http://www.apple.com/itunes/

Of course, if you can afford it, just pay the $0.99 for the song you want. I don't think I would pay unless the songs are about $0.49 each.

Searching for "Gravity Kills" returned Zero results, which pissed me off. There are two CDs of theirs I was considering buying soon, and I wanted to see how easily I could get one song for $0.99 (to test the whole "buy a song download" concept, and see how their format works).

One very good thing about iTunes... Read More »