La nueva inquisición

Iniciado por [DoodoM], Abril 11, 2007, 02:51:19 PM

Tema anterior - Siguiente tema

Jumentor

Jojojo, a ver si vemos la imagen esa de "SGAE - owned" más a menudo, será buena señal :D .

Tomato-Chan^3^

Cita de: "Beernardo"Jojojo, a ver si vemos la imagen esa de "SGAE - owned" más a menudo, será buena señal :D .

SGAE:Sociopatas Gordos atontados expresivos  :lol:

FireMaster

que se jodan, se van a quedar con las ganas de jodernos a todos los muy hijos de puta :twisted:


FRAG EM ALL!!!!!!

Kosta 666

Menos mal ke le han parado (de momento) los pies a la Sociedad de Gangsters y Atracadores Españoles...

SGAE-------> OWNED

chillinfart

Creo que vamos a ver un Micr*s*ft OWNED despuès. Echen ojo y ojete a este artìculo(en inglès):
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.html
He aquì un extracto bien representativo:
Cita de: "FU microsoft"Disabling of Functionality

Vista's content protection mechanism only allows protected content to be sent over interfaces that also have content-protection facilities built in. Currently the most common high-end audio output interface is S/PDIF (Sony/Philips Digital Interface Format). Most newer audio cards, for example, feature TOSlink digital optical output for high-quality sound reproduction, and even the latest crop of motherboards with integrated audio provide at least coax (and often optical) digital output. Since S/PDIF doesn't provide any content protection, Vista requires that it be disabled when playing protected content [Note E]. In other words if you've sunk a pile of money into a high-end audio setup fed from an S/PDIF digital output, you won't be able to use it with protected content. Instead of hearing premium high-definition audio, you get treated to premium high-definition silence.

Say you've just bought Pink Floyd's "The Dark Side of the Moon", released as a Super Audio CD (SACD) in its 30th anniversary edition in 2003, and you want to play it under Vista (I'm just using SACD as a representative example of protected audio content because it's a well-known technology, in practice Sony has refused to license it for playback on PCs). Since the S/PDIF link to your amplifier/speakers is regarded as insecure for playing the SA content, Vista would disable it, and you'd end up hearing a performance by Marcel Marceau instead of Pink Floyd.

Similarly, component (YPbPr) video will be disabled by Vista's content protection, so the same applies to a high-end video setup fed from component video. But what if you're lucky enough to have bought a video card that supports HDMI digital video with HDCP content-protection? There's a good chance that you'll have to go out and buy another video card that really does support HDCP, because until quite recently no video card on the market actually supported it even if the vendor's advertising claimed that it did. As the site that first broke the story in their article The Great HDCP Fiasco puts it:
EDIT: Màs palos al Wind*ws "Hasta la Vista". http://es.gizmodo.com/2007/01/29/jim_allchin_al_mundo_sobre_mac.html#more
Nine O' clock, charge your glock.