Sunday, April 29, 2007

Web Hosting Guide: Part 2

This is the second part out of the five part series where ITT discuses about Web Hosting.

My website's Name: How do I get one? Where do I get one?

All websites have a name, or URL, which is like directions to your

How Does My Website Get a Name?


All websites typically have a name - just like we are called www.FindMyHosting.com - This is a name that points to the space on the web where your website is physically located. In reality, your website will have an address which is just a set of numbers. This is called an IP address and it looks something like this 205.11.109.64 An IP address is a unique address (just like a street address) for your website location. Domain names like www.FindMyHosting.com are really just a pointer to the real address. This makes it much easier to remember websites.

When you buy web hosting it can be easier to let the web host handle everything associated with this. You just tell them the name that you want (www.yoursite.com for example) and so long as that name is available, they will set up your web hosting space so that when people type in that www address, it will automatically go to your website. You can check if a domain name is available on our domain registration page.

If you already have a domain name and need to transfer it to a web hosting account, then the domain records have to be pointed to your web hosting company. Most web hosts will handle this for you, but if you need to do it yourself then you will need to contact the company where you registered your domain name and provide the Nameserver address of your web hosting provider. Your web host will tell you what their Nameservers address is.

You probably don't want to buy your web hosting plan until your website is ready, but you might want to buy your website name early to prevent somebody else taking the name you want. Almost all companies that sell domain names will park your domain on their servers until you are ready to buy web hosting.


Click Here to Read More

Monday, April 23, 2007

Harry Potter - Order of the Phoenix - Trailer

Well, the trailer for Order of the Phoenix has arrived and I must say, it looks quite good. Technical difficulties spotted in the trailer currently includes the ability for magicians to fly over water without causing ripples, neat stealth technology...

Here's the Trailer


Click Here to Read More

Sunday, April 22, 2007

300 - rated PG

This video is old, but still good, if you haven't watched it, shuunnnnnn

anyway here it is:


Click Here to Read More

Friday, April 20, 2007

Web Hosting Guide: Part 1 - What is a Web Host

Here at ITT we will be, over the next five weeks in a five part effort, explain to you what web hosting is all about.

The first part begins:

What Is A Web Host?

A web hosting service is obviously non-tangible and it allows individuals and organisations to allow their own websites to be made accessible via the World Wide Web(www). It places your website onto a computer called a server where thousands (or lack of people, like mine) of people may access in order to view your website through the internet. Web hosts are companies that provide this space on the internet through servers which they own for use by their consumers as well as also providing internet connectivity, typically in a data center.
Webhosts can also provide data center space and connectivity to the Internet for servers they do not own to be located in their data center.
This server is just like any other computer, similar even to the one you have viewing this article right now, the only difference being that it is set up to serve websites to people around the WWW.

A web hosting company can host thousands of different websites on many servers and so basically is like renting out space on which you can do whatever you like. (In my case it's putting awesome information onto the net for all to read and share).

Some larger web hosting companies may own their own collection of servers, called a datacenter, and then rent some servers to smaller companies to resell. This way smaller companies don't have to buy large amounts of servers, and by renting the actual web space from a larger company they are actually paying less. Datacenters are definitely not cheap as they need reliable and fast connections (think many times faster than what your using right now) to the Internet and also have power backup systems and high security (no one wants their data stolen now do they) :P

In a sea of web hosting companies how do you know which one is best? Which one has the best plans at the best price? There are literally thousands of web hosting companies available in the market, all with different types of plans and at different prices. And without external help (not me :P ) it can be a serious assignment to look through all the options, especially if you are completely new to the webhosting scene.

For this time I'll start by giving the readers some basic options that all web hosting plans have:

Server Type: The type of server operating system, such as Windows 2000 server, Linux and Unix. If you plan on running a basic website then server type does not matter. However for more advanced and complex functions such as database functions, websites that serve up dynamic pages, then the server type will be more important.

Disc Space: Amount of actual space that is available for you to store web pages on the server hard disc. For example, a webpage containing only text may not go above 20kb, whilst a webpage containing java applications, pictures etc. will require much much more.

Bandwidth: Bandwidth is a measure of how much website traffic is available to you. This is usually calculated in a monthly basis. So everytime someone looks at your website, the server must send the information across the internet to their computer, this use takes up bandwidth. High traffic sites require more bandwidth requirements, but the average site does not. This also depends on how big your webpages are. One with low amounts of pictures will not require something high.

Email Accounts: Do you need email accounts? ITT usually prefers to use its external email address but using email address with the same domain name as your website sounds more professional.

And with that concludes the first part of the five part series, come back next time to get more info on the guide to webhosting. Subscribe to the RSS feed to make sure you don't forget!


Click Here to Read More

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Einstein was right, space and time bend.

Almost a century after Einstein made his famous remarks about the relationship between space, time and the speed of light, an expensive (US$700million) NASA probe seeminly proved that the universe worked the way Einstein predicted it would. (Although the rest sill hasn't been proven).
From: The Observer

The early results from Gravity Probe B, one of Nasa's most complicated satellites, confirmed yesterday (Saturday 14th of April) 'to a precision of better than 1 per cent' that any object with a mass will disturb space and time.

But this - what is referred to as the 'geodetic' effect - is only half of the theory. The other, 'frame-dragging', stated that as the world spins it drags the fabric of the universe behind it.



Francis Everitt, the Stanford University professor who has devoted his life to investigating Einstein's theory of relativity, told scientists at the American Physical Society it would be another eight months before he could measure the 'frame-dragging' effect precisely.

'Understanding the details is a bit like an archeological dig,' said William Bencze, programme manager for the mission. 'A scientist starts with a bulldozer, follows with a shovel, then finally uses dental picks and toothbrushes to clear the dust away. We're passing out the toothbrushes now.'

The Gravity Probe B project was conceived in the late 1950s but suffered decades of delays while other scientists ran tests corroborating Einstein's theory. It was Everitt's determination that stopped it being cancelled. The joint mission between Nasa and Stanford University uses four of the most perfect spheres - ultra precise gyroscopes - to detect minute distortions in the fabric of the universe. Everitt's aim was to prove to the highest precision yet if Einstein was correct in the way he described gravity.

According to Einstein, in the same way that a large ball placed on a elasticated cloth stretches the fabric and causes it to sag, so planets and stars warp space-time. A marble moving along the sagging cloth will be drawn towards the ball, as the Earth is to the Sun, but not fall into it as long as it keeps moving at speed. Gravity, argued Einstein, was not an attractive force between bodies as had been previously thought.

The theory explained

When Einstein wrote his general theory of relativity in 1915, he found a new way to describe gravity. It was not a force, as Sir Isaac Newton had supposed, but a consequence of the distortion of space and time, conceived together in his theory as 'space-time'. Any object distorts the fabric of space-time and the bigger it is, the greater the effect.

Just as a bowling ball placed on a trampoline stretches the fabric and causes it to sag, so planets and stars warp space-time - a phenomenon known as the 'geodetic effect'. A marble moving along the trampoline will be drawn inexorably towards the ball.

Thus the planets orbiting the Sun are not being pulled by the Sun; they are following the curved space-time deformation caused by the Sun. The reason the planets never fall into the Sun is because of the speed at which they are travelling.

According to the theory, matter and energy distort space-time, curving it around themselves. 'Frame dragging' theoretically occurs when the rotation of a large body 'twists' nearby space and time. It is this second part of Einstein's theory that the Nasa mission has yet to corroborate.




Special report
Space exploration

Interactive guides
Space exploration: interactive guides

Useful links
Nasa homepage
Nasa Watch (not a Nasa site)
Welcome to the Nasa Web
Space.com
The Planetary Society
Houston Space Chronicle
Encyclopedia Astronautica
Nasa Human Spaceflight (shuttle homepage)
Kennedy Space Center
European Space Agency
United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs
British National Space Centre
Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI)


Click Here to Read More

Friday, April 13, 2007

Zune 2.0 Info Leaked

Although the chances that these information might be inaccurate, the chances that Microsoft has already planned such things is just as high.
From [Zune]

•Zune 2.0 and the Flash Zune will be out this year.
•Zune 2.0 is like Gen 1 but thinner.
•Larger HDD, same doubleshot finish.
•Flash Zune is 3 by 1 1/4 by 1/4.
•Flash Zune is video capable
•Flash Zune's screen covers 75% of the front
•Flash Zune will have Wi-Fi
•Flash Zune will have doubleshot
•Design phase is over, but some tweaks to hardware will occur.
•2.4 million next-gen Zunes will be made before 2007's holiday season, and that 2/3 of em are the Flash Zune players.


Click Here to Read More

Sunday, April 1, 2007

Halo 3 Hundred

The guys over at Destructoid has pieced together a collection of 300 audio clips mixed with Halo 2-3 video clips and... it looks pretty awesome. Check it out below


Click Here to Read More

Black teenager who got 7 years to be set free.

This is a follow-up of a post I made a few weeks ago about a black teenager in Paris Texas who received seven years in prison for shoving a teacher's aide. This sparked nationwide controversy which helped with her 'early' release. However there are still unanswered questions. Will there be an investigation as to why this occurred in the first place? Will people get sacked? Will new laws be put into place.

Sadly I doubt any of that will happen. But I guess we can hope.

To read the full article from the Chicargo Tribune.

Or you could read the article below

HOUSTON -- Shaquanda Cotton, the black teenager in the small east Texas town of Paris whose prison sentence of up to 7 years for shoving a teacher's aide sparked nationwide controversy, was released Saturday.

Her release, ordered by a special conservator appointed to overhaul the state's scandal-ridden juvenile prison system, was the first of what could be hundreds as a panel of civil rights leaders begins reviewing the sentences of every youth incarcerated by the Texas Youth Commission to weed out those being held arbitrarily.

"We have no confidence in the system that was in place," said Jim Hurley, spokesman for the conservator, Jay Kimbrough. "And this case is an example of what we expect to happen if something wrong has been done to youths being held inside that system."

Cotton, who is 15, had no prior criminal record when she was incarcerated a year ago under an indeterminate sentence that could have lasted until her 21st birthday. Her case rose to national prominence and became the focus of ongoing civil rights protests after a March 12 Tribune story detailed how a 14-year-old white girl convicted of the more serious crime of arson was sentenced to probation by the same judge.

Cotton's case occurred against a backdrop of persistent allegations of racial discrimination inside the Paris public schools -- allegations that are the subject of a continuing probe by the U.S. Department of Education to determine whether black students in the district are disciplined more harshly than whites.

"When I learned about this case, I thought, this just looks so bad and smells so bad it made me hurt," said state Rep. Harold Dutton, the influential chairman of the Texas Legislature's juvenile justice committee. "I told [prison officials] I wanted her out of there immediately."

The superintendent of the Ron Jackson State Juvenile Correctional Complex in Brownwood, Texas, where Shaquanda Cotton is being held, called the girl's mother, Creola Cotton, Friday afternoon and told her she could come pick up the youth, Creola Cotton said.

But because it is a five-hour drive from Paris to Brownwood, and the weather in the area on Friday was severe, Creola Cotton said she couldn't reach the prison until Saturday morning.

Later Friday, prison officials, who had not told Shaquanda of her impending release, allowed her to call her mother.


'She nearly fell on the floor'

"She thought they were bringing her to the office to tell her I was not going to be able to visit this weekend like I was planning because of the bad weather, so she was already crying," Creola Cotton said. "I said, 'Oh, I'm still gonna come see you tomorrow. But you're going to be coming home with me.' She nearly fell on the floor."

Officials said Shaquanda Cotton was being released on 60 days' probation to allow her to access state health and counseling services. But after that, she would be completely free, they said. Creola Cotton said her daughter would not return to the Paris public schools but would pursue her GED at home.

What effect her release might have on the pending legal appeal of the youth's case was unclear.

Since she has been in prison, Shaquanda Cotton said that she had grown despondent surrounded by other youths who were hardened criminals, and that she had tried to commit suicide. Her sentence, which ultimately was up to the discretion of prison officials, had twice been extended, first because she would not admit her guilt as required by prison regulations and then because she was found with "contraband" in her cell -- an extra pair of socks.

Those sentence extensions drew the attention of Kimbrough, who was confirmed by the state Senate on Thursday as conservator of the youth prison system, which has been rocked by a sex scandal over allegations that guards and administrators coerced inmates for sex.

Kimbrough, a former deputy attorney general, said last week that he was convening a special committee to examine the sentences of all 4,700 youths in Texas juvenile prisons to determine how many might have had their sentences unfairly extended by prison authorities -- and that Shaquanda Cotton's was the first case he intended to review.

Prison officials said it was Kimbrough who personally ordered the girl's release on Friday.

Since the Tribune's first account of Shaquanda Cotton's case, her story has been circulated on more than 400 Internet blogs and featured in newspapers and radio and TV reports across the country. Two protests demanding her release were held in Paris and a third, to be led by Rev. Al Sharpton, was scheduled for Tuesday.

Even before news of her impending release broke Friday, the Lamar County District Attorney's office, which prosecuted her and pressed for her to be sent to prison for up to 7 years, made an abrupt turnaround and said the youth had served enough time and ought to be freed.


Court discrepancy revealed

"Let her out of TYC," said Allan Hubbard, spokesman for Lamar County District Atty. Gary Young. "Hell, she's done a year for pushing a teacher. That's too long."

Hubbard also backed away from claims he and Young made this week in numerous media interviews that the judge in the case, Lamar County Judge Chuck Superville, had had no choice but to send the youth to prison because her mother had testified that she would not cooperate with probation officials had the judge sentenced the teen to probation.

On Thursday, Young's official Web site contained this assertion: "This juvenile's mother (Creola Cotton) told the judge she would not comply with conditions of probation."

But a review of the full court transcript shows no such testimony. In fact, Creola Cotton repeatedly answered "yes" when asked in court whether she would comply with any conditions of probation that the judge might impose.

On Friday morning, after an inquiry about this discrepancy by the Tribune, the district attorney's Web site was altered to read: "Through her actions of non-cooperation, Ms. Cotton told the judge she would not comply with conditions of probation."


Click Here to Read More