Sunday, April 02, 2006 - Posts

Halo for the PSP - Update

We've received an e-mail from 1337PSPM0dd3r, saying that through hard work, he and PSMonkey have managed to get an early beta of Halo running on the PSP by modifying the homebrew game 'Iris'. He has provided a video and a screenshot to prove it, and I've gotta say, they're pretty good.

This screenshot and the video provided look very promising, with the video featuring basic movement of the Master Chief, and if we're lucky we may see an early beta released soon!

Download the video!

Source: PSPUpdates

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Homebrew: New PSP Homebrew Releases for April 2, 2006

A good game, plenty of updates for popular, useful apps, and some help for developers so we can get more great homebrew - what a great day!

Games

The Dark Flower (Super Mario Mini Mod) - Clone of Super Mario Bros - fun!

Applications
PiMPStreamer v0.21 - Video streaming application.
PMPMod v2.00 - A major update to the very popular homebrew video player.
PSPiano v0.20 - Piano simulation application.

PSP Software Development
Lua wavlib Library - Helps you add audio and video capabilities to Lua applications.

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Funny: PSP R2: The Camera

This R2 unit has a bad motivator!


Yes, this is a leftover April Fool’s Day joke, but frankly, this one works for me. Polish photography site Fotopolis put together this mock up of the Sony R2, which combines PSP game playing functionality with high-end camera functions. Unfortunately, the site is in Polish, so I can’t read what I assume are hilarious Polish jokes about this thing, but the pictures are worth approximately 4,000 words.

Read the whole Sony R2 Story [Thanks, Falafello!]


Source: Kotaku
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You too can protect your PSP from scratches and fingerprints. Who needs the shiny?

The one thing that bothers me about the PSP is that I can never keep it clean. I've just learned to live with it; the thing attracts fingerprints. You can keep it locked up for days only to have it somehow produce fingerprints on the screen. If you have OCD there's no way you'll ever keep your sanity with the sleek black handheld. 

That is, until this overpriced gem. It's a cover for your system that is matte instead of shiny, it hides the fingerprints and smears much better than the stock cover. Sure it's US$35, voids your warranty, and is more than a little time consuming to put together. You won't have fingerprints anymore, and that's all that matters.

Of course, if you want to make your PSP hyper-ugly you can add the $17 red buttons and really do it up right. That is, until some German guy unpimps your ride and gives you a DS. 

I kid. I kid because I care.  

Source: ArsTechnica

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Apple's Next 30 Years - by Richard Doherty

Rick Doherty, a good friend and an incredible engineer, and who reviewed each of my books for technical accuracy, wrote this to celebrate Apple's 30th anniversary. -Auri

It was thirty years ago today - with acknowledgment to Sgt. Pepper's parent - that Apple Computer was formed. What more fitting a date than April Fools Day?

In the Spring of 1976, there were dozens of "personal" computers available through a handful of stores and startups. Many based around the 8008, 6800, F8 and a few based on the new "6502" processor.

One stood out. Apple. One computer delivered more performance per dollar, per watt, per keystroke than any other.

There can be no debating that Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs together formed the most fast-paced, effective engineering and visionary marketing team of the past century. With all due respect to Hewlett and Packard or Black and Decker, Woz's economical engineering genius and personal professionalism towards minimalist, robust circuit designs, and Steve Jobs' ability to to foresee and position for markets and applications yet un-thought of by others, have led to over a 2200 percent return over the Apple IPO 25 years ago and over 100 million products shipped.

The financial assistance of Arthur Rock and Mike Markkula? Invaluable. But it was Steve & Steve who propelled a Homebrew Computer Club schematic design into the most innovative computing and consumer electronics powerhouse of the end of the 20th Century.

We are unlikely to see any similar dynamic duo in this century. Consider, 1,000, nay, 10,000 hardware and software companies can trace their origins, inspiration or growth to Apple employment or relationships. Fully open hardware initially, quality software based in AppleSoft BASIC and later a lean, mean 32 KByte Mac Toolbox.

The societal effect is enormous hundreds of millions of children were educated in part on Apple machines. Increasingly, more and more film, broadcast and pod-cast media are enriched on Apples. Well over 100 million products over 30 years. A billion tunes in 3 years. This is the new math of innovation.

Per capita, extremely high innovation, both patented and trade secret. Closed architecture? Tell that to Tiffany's, Levi Strauss, Coca Cola or Porsche.

Over the decades, I have probably met more than 10,000 people who delight in sharing their own Woz or Jobs stories. All praise how much more fun and opportunity these two geniuses brought to a chaotic personal computer arena thirty years ago this day. To a person, they say time with either Steve made them much better at what they do.

These days, Woz teaches, still delights in practical jokes and dabbles in tech venture funding. Steve Jobs can sell his dreams, on his timetable and deliver the goods better than anyone else. Just ask any of the CEOs of the world's top media, PC and consumer electronics companies. Jobs envisions, and the world's finest designers and engineers fast-track craft that vision into insanely great products & services.

How very dull things might have been these last three decades had Steve & Steve not officially started a business called Apple Computers on April Fools Day 1976.

Thanks to Steve & Steve for a great first thirty years. And to Mike, Scotty, Jef, Andy, Bill, the Baums, and the thousands of others who helped extend the dream of Apple Computer. Today. thanks to Avi, John, Phil, Greg, Tony and others who have carried the dream forward.

Thanks again. Now, its time for all of you to get back to crafting the next thirty years of creative empowerment, style & wonder!

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PlayStation robbers put boy, 12, in hospital

Police are urging children to leave expensive gadgets at home after a violent robbery landed a 12-year-old boy in hospital.

The boy was robbed of his PlayStation Portable (PSP) games console on Friday at about 4pm, as he was leaving school in Hendon.

The games machine was one of this year's best-selling Christmas presents, but the £200 device is proving attractive to muggers.

Police revealed earlier this year that two-thirds of all street robberies involve the theft of expensive electronic equipment, and officers now fear that the PSP will follow the iPod as the target of choice.

The attack happened in Downage, when a group of teenagers approached the boy near his school gates.

He was thrown to the ground, injuring his hand, while his PSP and mobile phone were stolen. The boy was taken to Barnet Hospital, suffering concussion, cuts and bruising, and remained there over the weekend.

There have been two violent thefts involving PSP machines since they came onto the market at Christmas.

Acting Detective Chief Inspector Murray Duffin, of Barnet police, said: "Sadly, small portable items of technology are just too much of a temptation to some of the criminal fraternity and things like PSPs and iPods that are not used in school should maybe be left safely at home or kept well out of sight when in the street.

"The amount of violence used in this attack was unnecessary and gratuitous and we would hope that anyone with any information about this incident will contact us quickly."

One robber was described as Asian, aged about 18, and was wearing a green camouflage, hooded jacket. A second was a dark skinned European man, also aged about 18, and wearing a navy blue hooded top. If you have any information, call police on 020 8733 4595.

Source: Barnet Times

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Homebrew: New PSP Homebrew Releases for April 1, 2006

TONS of Homebrew Today (in typical weekend fashion), including a new version of eLoader! SWEET!

Homebrew Launchers

eLoader v0.97 "Bock" - Sweet! The latest, greatest version of Fanjita's and Ditlew's homebrew launcher for the PSP! Improved compatibility and more!

Games
PSP Tactics v1.01 - Lua Final Fantasy-type game.
Quake Multiplayer v2.0 - Now PSP Quake has multiplayer mode!
Sonic Avol 3 - Sonic Avalanche TI-83 clone.

Hacks
Choice+ - Custom interface for the eLoader homebrew launcher.
Font Package and Installer - Easily change the fonts on your PSP.

Applications
eReader v0.8 - eBook reader for the PSP. Two versions: 12 point font and 16 point font.
PiMPStreamer v0.13 - Wireless video streaming app.
PSPRadio Pre-Release v0.38.08 - Shoutcast client for the PSP. Two versions: 1.50 PSPs, 2.00 PSPs.

Emulators
DGEN 1.50 - Sega Genesis / Megadrive emulator.
NesterJ v1.20 Alpha - Nintendo Entertainment System (Original NES) emulator.

Demos
Project 3 "Falling Sand" - Port of the very cool SDL "falling sand" program.

PSP Magazines
PSP X Mag Issue 7





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