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    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 21:09

    ::: Revealed - radiation threat from new wireless computer networks
    ::: Teachers demand inquiry to protect a generation of pupils
    By Geoffrey Lean, environment editor
    Published: 22 April 2007

    Britain's top health protection watchdog is pressing for a formal investigation into the hazards of using wireless communication networks in schools amid mounting concern that they may be damaging children's health, 'The Independent on Sunday' can reveal.

    Sir William Stewart, the chairman of the Health Protection Agency, wants pupils to be monitored for ill effects from the networks - known as Wi-Fi - which emit radiation and are being installed in classrooms across the nation.

    Sir William - who is a former chief scientific adviser to the Government, and has chaired two official inquiries into the hazards of mobile phones - is adding his weight to growing pressure for a similar examination of Wi-Fi, which some scientists fear could cause cancer and premature senility.

    Wi-Fi - described by the Department of Education and Skills as a "magical" system that means computers do not have to be connected to telephone lines - is rapidly being taken up inschools, with estimates that more than half of primary schools - and four-fifths of secondary schools - have installed it .

    But several European provincial governments have already taken action to ban, or limit, its use in the classroom, and Stowe School has partially removed it after a teacher became ill.

    This week the Professional Association of Teachers, which represents 35,000 staff across the country, will write to Alan Johnson, Secretary of State for Education, to demand an official inquiry. Virtually no studies have been carried out into Wi-Fi's effects on pupils, but it gives off radiation similar to emissions from mobile phones and phone masts.

    Recent research has linked radiation from mobiles to cancer and to brain damage. And many studies have found disturbing symptoms in people near masts.

    Professor Olle Johansson, of Sweden's prestigious Karolinska Institute, who is deeply concerned about the spread of Wi-Fi, says there are "thousands" of articles in scientific literature demonstrating "adverse health effects". He adds: "Do we not know enough already to say, 'Stop!'?"

    For the past 16 months, the provincial government of Salzburg in Austria has been advising schools not to install Wi-Fi, and is considering a ban. Dr Gerd Oberfeld, its head of environmental health and medicine, calls the technology "dangerous".

    Sir William - who takes a stronger position on the issue than his agency - was not available for comment yesterday, but two members of an expert group that he chairs on the hazards of radiation spoke of his concern.

    Mike Bell, chairman of the Electromagnetic Radiation Research Trust, says that he has been "very supportive of having Wi-Fi examined and doing something about it". And Alasdair Philips, director of Powerwatch, an information service, said that he was pressing for monitoring of the health of pupils exposed to Wi-Fi.

    Labour MP Ian Gibson, who was interviewed with Sir William for a forthcoming television programme, last week said that he backed proposals for an inquiry.

    Source : http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/hea...cle2472133.ece

    what do you think? ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 18:59

    I have wrote this story exclusivly for Dcemu because i feel the site needs news articles from inside the site too, to go along with external news.

    Sony, what do we know about them?

    They created the Sony PSP for one thing, but many users hate them.

    Users say that Sony are denying them the right to use the hardware that they payed for to its full potential. But are they? No.

    Sony has made it there stance from day one that they were going to do there up-most to prevent piracy on the PSP console. It was the first Sony console to have any firmware updates, Sony clearly were not happy with all the piracy that the PS2 endured.

    So every time a firmware is cracked to allow the illegal playing of ISO's and PS1 games from your memory stick, they release another update that fixes the leak.

    Lets look at it from Sony's point of view, they make there money on software sales not hardware sales.
    So every time a firmware is cracked to allow the illegal use of software on it they are loosing money.

    And because its a fine line between homebrew and Iso loading they have to block them both out of there official firmware, so they don't loose out on software sales.

    Another side to it is Emulators, now the majority of emulators are legal, but another interesting legality issue has arisen.

    Say Sony decided to support homebrew in official firmware, you could play all your Snes, Genesis, N64 etc games on your PSP for free.
    Nintendo of course now own the rights to sell some of those games on there virtual console for the Wii, so if Sony allowed users to play those games on there PSP's on official firmware, Nintendo could potentially sue them for it.

    So to reflect, you can see why Sony cant allow Homebrew in Official Firmwares. We should stop focusing on that and give Sony there due's for creating such a revolutionary Hand-held console for us all to enjoy.

    Don't forget, without Sony there wouldn't be a PSP so just remember that next time your ready to slate them

    Did you like this article? (Please tell me if you did)



    Give Feedback Via Comments ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 18:59

    I have wrote this story exclusivly for Dcemu because i feel the site needs news articles from inside the site too, to go along with external news.

    Sony, what do we know about them?

    They created the Sony PSP for one thing, but many users hate them.

    Users say that Sony are denying them the right to use the hardware that they payed for to its full potential. But are they? No.

    Sony has made it there stance from day one that they were going to do there up-most to prevent piracy on the PSP console. It was the first Sony console to have any firmware updates, Sony clearly were not happy with all the piracy that the PS2 endured.

    So every time a firmware is cracked to allow the illegal playing of ISO's and PS1 games from your memory stick, they release another update that fixes the leak.

    Lets look at it from Sony's point of view, they make there money on software sales not hardware sales.
    So every time a firmware is cracked to allow the illegal use of software on it they are loosing money.

    And because its a fine line between homebrew and Iso loading they have to block them both out of there official firmware, so they don't loose out on software sales.

    Another side to it is Emulators, now the majority of emulators are legal, but another interesting legality issue has arisen.

    Say Sony decided to support homebrew in official firmware, you could play all your Snes, Genesis, N64 etc games on your PSP for free.
    Nintendo of course now own the rights to sell some of those games on there virtual console for the Wii, so if Sony allowed users to play those games on there PSP's on official firmware, Nintendo could potentially sue them for it.

    So to reflect, you can see why Sony cant allow Homebrew in Official Firmwares. We should stop focusing on that and give Sony there due's for creating such a revolutionary Hand-held console for us all to enjoy.

    Don't forget, without Sony there wouldn't be a PSP so just remember that next time your ready to slate them

    Did you like this article? (Please tell me if you did)



    Give Feedback Via Comments ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 16:56



    Hi All,

    ProSystem is the best emulator of Atari 7800 game console, running on Windows system.
    It has been written by Greg Stanton, see http://home.comcast.net/~gscottstanton for details.

    Here is a port on GP2X of the version 1.1 that i had previously ported to PSP.

    What's new in this version :

    - Merge diff from ProSystem v1.2
    - Improve speed
    - Improve emulation accuracy
    - Add MMU hack stuff
    - Add option to display frame rate
    - New speed limiter function
    - Improve volume handler
    - Linked with my patched version of SDL
    - New background image
    - Bug fix in file requester

    How to use it ? Everything is in the README.txt file.

    Enjoy,

    Zx. ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 16:56



    Hi All,

    ProSystem is the best emulator of Atari 7800 game console, running on Windows system.
    It has been written by Greg Stanton, see http://home.comcast.net/~gscottstanton for details.

    Here is a port on GP2X of the version 1.1 that i had previously ported to PSP.

    What's new in this version :

    - Merge diff from ProSystem v1.2
    - Improve speed
    - Improve emulation accuracy
    - Add MMU hack stuff
    - Add option to display frame rate
    - New speed limiter function
    - Improve volume handler
    - Linked with my patched version of SDL
    - New background image
    - Bug fix in file requester

    How to use it ? Everything is in the README.txt file.

    Enjoy,

    Zx. ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 14:16





    Via Project64 Site

    Apparently the Nintendo Wii uses bluetooth for its wireless devices. A few clever users found a way to use this with Project64 through third-party drivers and software hacks. There is a video up on youtube about this, here's the video below.

    The most important thing you'll need to get this working is a bluetooth dongle, you can find these on eBay rather cheap, and obviously a Nintendo Wiimote. I haven't tried this myself, if anyone has we'd be curious to here from others!

    DIGG THIS



    YouTube Info:

    Using the Wiimote, Project64, GlovePIE, my
    homemade sensor bar, and a Bluetooth USB
    dongle, I've set up OoT to play with Twilight
    Princess controls.

    Special thanks to Carl Kenner for making GlovePIE
    and writing the script for TP.
    ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 14:16





    Via Project64 Site

    Apparently the Nintendo Wii uses bluetooth for its wireless devices. A few clever users found a way to use this with Project64 through third-party drivers and software hacks. There is a video up on youtube about this, here's the video below.

    The most important thing you'll need to get this working is a bluetooth dongle, you can find these on eBay rather cheap, and obviously a Nintendo Wiimote. I haven't tried this myself, if anyone has we'd be curious to here from others!

    DIGG THIS



    YouTube Info:

    Using the Wiimote, Project64, GlovePIE, my
    homemade sensor bar, and a Bluetooth USB
    dongle, I've set up OoT to play with Twilight
    Princess controls.

    Special thanks to Carl Kenner for making GlovePIE
    and writing the script for TP.
    ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 14:16





    Via Project64 Site

    Apparently the Nintendo Wii uses bluetooth for its wireless devices. A few clever users found a way to use this with Project64 through third-party drivers and software hacks. There is a video up on youtube about this, here's the video below.

    The most important thing you'll need to get this working is a bluetooth dongle, you can find these on eBay rather cheap, and obviously a Nintendo Wiimote. I haven't tried this myself, if anyone has we'd be curious to here from others!

    DIGG THIS



    YouTube Info:

    Using the Wiimote, Project64, GlovePIE, my
    homemade sensor bar, and a Bluetooth USB
    dongle, I've set up OoT to play with Twilight
    Princess controls.

    Special thanks to Carl Kenner for making GlovePIE
    and writing the script for TP.
    ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 13:41



    Hi All,

    ColEm is one of the best emulator of the ColecoVision videogame system
    written by Marat Fayzullin. It's running on FreeBSD, HP-UX, SunOS, Solaris,
    Linux, and other Unix systems.
    GP2X-Colem is a port to GP2X of Colem Unix version 1.0.

    What's new in version 1.0.2 :

    - Improve speed !
    - Improve emulation accuracy
    - Add MMU hack stuff
    - Add option to display frame rate
    - New speed limiter function
    - Improve volume handler
    - Linked with my patched version of SDL
    - Bug fix in file requester

    How to use it ? Everything is in the README.txt file.

    It should be the last version, only if major bugs are found.

    Enjoy,

    Zx. ...
    by Published on April 22nd, 2007 13:41



    Hi All,

    ColEm is one of the best emulator of the ColecoVision videogame system
    written by Marat Fayzullin. It's running on FreeBSD, HP-UX, SunOS, Solaris,
    Linux, and other Unix systems.
    GP2X-Colem is a port to GP2X of Colem Unix version 1.0.

    What's new in version 1.0.2 :

    - Improve speed !
    - Improve emulation accuracy
    - Add MMU hack stuff
    - Add option to display frame rate
    - New speed limiter function
    - Improve volume handler
    - Linked with my patched version of SDL
    - Bug fix in file requester

    How to use it ? Everything is in the README.txt file.

    It should be the last version, only if major bugs are found.

    Enjoy,

    Zx. ...
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