As always, comments are welcome.
Now, I'm fortunate enough to work for Sony but regardless of that I really like my PlayStation 3. What follows is my personal view and does not represent that of my employer or any other person.
Here's what I can do by itself at no extra cost:
* Play PS3 games obviously
* Watch Blu-Rays & DVDs in high-def. The DVD upscaling is the best I've seen
* Listen to music with a great visual display to match of planet earth in glorious HD
* Look at photos with a great looking slideshow that looks like someone throwing photos onto a table
* Wirelessly connect to the internet for browsing
* Download & play brilliant games from the PlayStation Store
* play online with other players at no extra cost
If you compare that to what you get out of the box from an Xbox 360 then you can see that it represents much better value. Especially if you tried to replicate everything it does with supporting hardware.
Here's what supporting hardware I've got, none of which is essential but it adds to the experience:
* Play TV
* PlayStation Portable
* BluRay remote
* Buffalo Terastation Duo - 1TB (Media Server)
* Full HD tv
Add in the PlayTV and you've got yourself a Freeview+ box (terrestrial freeview and a digital recorder) to watch and record digital TV
Now, layer onto this a PSP to connect to your PS3 via Remote Play and you can remotely connect to your PS3 from anywhere in the world and view photos, listen to music, watch videos and watch live tv and your recorded programmes!
Now, throw in a media server that your PS3 magically connects to and you can safely store all of your photos, music and video and access them either on your PS3 *or* on your PSP anywhere in the world!!
This only really scratches the surface of the capabilities of the PS3 but in the space of 3 months it's become the central entertainment hub in our house through which most of our onscreen entertainment flows.
I'm objectively happy that I chose a PS3 as the base on which to build everything. I'm very happy.
Sunday, 11 January 2009
Extending a wifi network - BT HomeHub & D-Link 2100AP
Firstly, my motivation for doing this was to improve the quality of my wireless network around the house as I now have loads of devices wanting to connect throughout the house - desktops, PS3, laptop, PSP, phones, iTouch, media server, the list goes on.
I've spent quite a few hours on this now and I've done a lot of investigation coupled with trial and error to get this working and I wished someone had shared their experiences.
I hope this helps someone, please post comments if you had feedback.
I started out with a BT HomeHub v1.0 and as you probably know, you can't replace the aerial and it's not very powerful so it needs help. I had an opportunity to try the HomeHub v2.0 and it doesn't work as it has some criticial software elements missing for some reason.
Despite a lot of messing around, the best signal I could get in my front room was 50% and the connection was spoaradic at best. Laptops were dropping connections and my PS3 kept getting dumped from PSN during downloads, while watching SingStar videos, listening to music from my remote media server.
After much digging, here's the setup I have.
* BT HomeHub v1.0 in my upstairs home office (this DOES NOT work with a HH v2.0 as they removed the critical bit)
* Dlink 2100AP hidden downstairs close to the front room
During my trials I had problems with WPA security and reverted the whole network down to WEP, I'll do some tests to see if I can restore the security but it's always worth going back to basics when you're trying to get something to work.
Once your 2100AP is turned on and theoretically working, go back to the HomeHub and navigate into the Advanced->Wireless->Repeater and scan to find your 2100ap, which is cunningly called 'default' by default. Select the checkbox and Apply to tell your HomeHub that it should send the wifi signal through this device.
On the 2100AP, you need to make a few changes:
* the device IP needs moving from 192.168.0.50 to 192.168.1.50 so it's on the same subnet as the HH. If you don't do this then you may as well have 2 seperate networks.
* you need to enable the DHCP server on the 2100ap, I set mine to go from 192.168.1.20 upwards but you must ensure that this DHCP range doesn't cross-over the HH DHCP range that usually starts at .64 and goes upwards. If you don't do this then your devices won't get a network address from the HH DHCP and it won't work. Again, I'll investigate this and see if I can remove the DHCP from the 2100AP and get this working just through the HH..
* Set the wireless mode to 'AP Repeater' and scan to find your home network MAC address, which will enable the 2100AP to talk to the HH - this closes the loop and bi-drectional communication and everything should now work!
I now have everything working just as I want it bar a few tweaks to simplify the setup.
I'll update this post with any fixes I make but please post comments with feedback.
I've spent quite a few hours on this now and I've done a lot of investigation coupled with trial and error to get this working and I wished someone had shared their experiences.
I hope this helps someone, please post comments if you had feedback.
I started out with a BT HomeHub v1.0 and as you probably know, you can't replace the aerial and it's not very powerful so it needs help. I had an opportunity to try the HomeHub v2.0 and it doesn't work as it has some criticial software elements missing for some reason.
Despite a lot of messing around, the best signal I could get in my front room was 50% and the connection was spoaradic at best. Laptops were dropping connections and my PS3 kept getting dumped from PSN during downloads, while watching SingStar videos, listening to music from my remote media server.
After much digging, here's the setup I have.
* BT HomeHub v1.0 in my upstairs home office (this DOES NOT work with a HH v2.0 as they removed the critical bit)
* Dlink 2100AP hidden downstairs close to the front room
During my trials I had problems with WPA security and reverted the whole network down to WEP, I'll do some tests to see if I can restore the security but it's always worth going back to basics when you're trying to get something to work.
Once your 2100AP is turned on and theoretically working, go back to the HomeHub and navigate into the Advanced->Wireless->Repeater and scan to find your 2100ap, which is cunningly called 'default' by default. Select the checkbox and Apply to tell your HomeHub that it should send the wifi signal through this device.
On the 2100AP, you need to make a few changes:
* the device IP needs moving from 192.168.0.50 to 192.168.1.50 so it's on the same subnet as the HH. If you don't do this then you may as well have 2 seperate networks.
* you need to enable the DHCP server on the 2100ap, I set mine to go from 192.168.1.20 upwards but you must ensure that this DHCP range doesn't cross-over the HH DHCP range that usually starts at .64 and goes upwards. If you don't do this then your devices won't get a network address from the HH DHCP and it won't work. Again, I'll investigate this and see if I can remove the DHCP from the 2100AP and get this working just through the HH..
* Set the wireless mode to 'AP Repeater' and scan to find your home network MAC address, which will enable the 2100AP to talk to the HH - this closes the loop and bi-drectional communication and everything should now work!
I now have everything working just as I want it bar a few tweaks to simplify the setup.
I'll update this post with any fixes I make but please post comments with feedback.
Tuesday, 6 January 2009
Independant game development - 20yrs on
Below is a list of games I was involved with during my time in independent game development - 1988 - 2008. I've now moved over to the publishing side to experience how the other half live.
More details here on MobyGames but it's partially wrong as it's based on game credits, which were occasionally wrong and frequently never acknowledged - http://www.mobygames.com/developer/sheet/view/developerId,133861/
More details here on MobyGames but it's partially wrong as it's based on game credits, which were occasionally wrong and frequently never acknowledged - http://www.mobygames.com/developer/sheet/view/developerId,133861/
Title | Target | Role |
To End All Wars | PS3 & X360 | Project Manager |
SWOS | XBLA | Project Manager |
Sensible Soccer | PS2 & XBox | Project Manager |
Buzz! The Sports Quiz | PS2 | Project Manager |
LMA Manager Pro | PC | Project Manager |
Club Football 2005 | PC | Project Manager |
PS2 & XBox | Project Manager | |
PC | Lead Programming, Project Manager | |
Barbie – Treasures In Time | PS2 | Programming |
PlayStation | Programming, Project Manager, Design | |
Rugby 2000 | PlayStation | Project Manager |
LEGO Project | PC | Project Manager, Programming |
AFL98 | PlayStation | Project Manager, Programming |
PlayStation, Saturn | Programming, Project Manager | |
Saturn | Assistant Programmer | |
PlayStation | Programming | |
Saturn | Programming | |
Theme Park | Saturn | Programming |
Amiga, Amiga CD32 | Design, Programming | |
Lothar Matthaus Super Star Soccer | Amiga, PC | Programming, Design |
PC, Amiga | Programming, Design | |
Amiga | Assistant Programmer | |
Amiga | Assistant Programmer | |
James Pond II – RoboCod | MegaDrive | Programming, Design |
Programming, Design | ||
Programming | ||
Programming | ||
Mantis | Programming | |
Pears | Programming | |
OOPS | Programming | |
T.R.A.P. | Programming |
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