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iPod touch Fans forum -
1 hours and 52 minutes ago
 Category: Education
Released: Nov 20, 2008
Price: $2.99
Description:
Encyclopedia Learn Parts THE BODY: For some people, a machine means something made of metal, and
defines a machine as a structure consisting of a framework, and various fixed and moving parts, for
doing some kind of work. For doctors, scientific and you : now this definition applies not just to
metal machines, but to the human body. How our body works? Learn Parts Encyclopedia help you to
understand the basics diferents systems: 1. The nervous systems four basic parts. 2. Muscle System
and parts 3. Some internal organs of the body 4. Our Skeleton System basics parts head and body. 5.
And basics parts of the brain. Learn Parts Encyclopedia THE BODY : brings some pictures to enlarge
by touching the push pins. and have text to scroll down. Learn Parts Encyclopedia THE BODY will be
updated every month, especially on brains parts, muscle and skeleton. Please enjoy and let your
comments and suggestions always are welcome. or visit our website for more information.
Website: http://www.elsalvadorguia.com
Support Website: http://www.elsalvadorguia.com
Note: The description above is the official one supplied by the application
developer and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of this site or its staff.
Get it on iTunes: Encyclopedia The Human Body

|
Guardian Unlimited -
12 hours and 38 minutes ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/40964?ns=guardianpageName=Sport%3A+The+star+next+doorch=Sportc3=The+Observerc4=Rebecca+Adlington%2CSwimming+%28Sport%29%2Colympics2008%2CSport%2CSport+features%2CObserverc5=Not+commercially+useful%2COlympic+Gamesc6=Anna+Kesselc7=2008_11_23c8=1120185c9=articlec10=GUc11=Sportc12=Rebecca+Adlingtonc13=c14=h2=GU%2FSport%2FRebecca+Adlington"
width="1" height="1" //divpThe comedian Russell Howard said it best when he summed up what we all
love most about Rebecca Adlington. 'She's so normal it's fantastic, she looks like she could work
at Greggs! You know, "I've gotta go bloody fast, I've left pasties in the oven!"' As a fan of
comedy, no doubt OSM's Sportsperson of the Year would roar her head off at that. It is Adlington's
'Greggs' appeal that the British public relate to; her expression of delight after winning two
Olympic gold medals was so human it won over a nation. The unpretentious 19-year-old from Mansfield
is instantly likeable./ppOn the morning of the photoshoot, Adlington arrives straight from the pool
wearing a Team GB tracksuit, her hair wet from a 6am training session. She is not precious about
her appearance. She slings her coat over her lap, apologises to the stylist about the state of her
hair - 'It was in such bad condition after Beijing I couldn't get a brush through it' - and gets
down to the nitty-gritty of showbiz gossip from the previous night at the Cosmo awards. /ppThere
was Kim Cattrall ('Stunning in real life, not at all wrinkly'); drag queen Jodie Harsh ('At first I
thought it was Jodie Marsh!'); and Trinny and Susannah ('They never grabbed my boobs, but I haven't
got any anyway'); all were there to collect awards. Adlington's was Ultimate Sports Superhero,
which meant having to negotiate the dreaded red carpet. /pp'I don't know how to pose to save my
life,' she says. 'Someone said cross your legs, but my shoes were so high I'd have ended up
wobbling and looking like a prat. You know how celebrities do that thing where they keep the same
face on every single photograph? They never seem to get the whole... [contorts her face into a
series of gurns] whereas I always get that photo where I'm mid-sentence and looking awful.'/ppAs
Adlington chats away, the stylist applies the curling tongs and there is a loud sizzle. 'Oh my God,
is that my hair? I'm gonna leave with one side bald! Oh well.' Then, spying a large curl in the
mirror, she lets out a delighted squeal: 'I feel like Sandy out of Grease!'/ppAdlington confesses
she is a bit nervous about being photographed in a swimsuit. Why? She's an athlete, she's bound to
look gorgeous. 'Are you kidding?' she screams, 'I've got massive bingo wings, look. I've got this
armpit hanging out which is my pec muscle, it just, like, hangs over because it's so big. I've got
man shoulders, I'm not toned at all. And after Beijing I've put on a bit of weight.'/ppMost people
can reel off a list of things they dislike about their appearance, but they're either lying to make
you feel better, or they really are unhappy. Adlington is neither, just honest. She yanks up her
T-shirt and grabs a handful of her stomach. 'Look, I don't have a flat stomach. I've got the tyre.
All the other girls on my swim team are skinny. Like literally nothing rolls over. /pp'I do get a
bit insecure,' she continues, reflecting on all these new demands to be photographed. 'The worst
thing is the photographer, because you feel like they must have shot so many gorgeous skinny people
and then they've got to work with someone that's not.' /ppIn fact, the resounding verdict around
the studio today is, 'My God, hasn't she got great legs?' and 'Doesn't she look gorgeous?' She
does. Serene and beautiful, but wonderfully unaffected as, sweating under the hot photographic
lamps, she asks for a tissue. 'If you don't want to see something really disgusting, look away
now,' she says, wiping the sweat from her underarms with a grin. /ppAdlington has been famous for
only four months, but she has been swimming for 15 years. It started when she dived into a pool on
holiday, aged four, and paddled about like a natural. So her parents took her for lessons at the
local pool in Mansfield - due to be renamed after Adlington next month - along with her two elder
sisters. It was Rebecca who showed the most promise, swimming competitively from the age of nine.
By the time she was 12 she had joined her current coach, Bill Furniss, at the Nova swim club in
Nottingham, making the 20-mile round trip from Mansfield twice a day. /ppAll those years of
dedication and hard work, yet before Beijing you had to scour the internet to find anything written
about her. Swimming is rarely big news - even when she won 800metres gold at the world
championships in Manchester in April this year, there followed just one national newspaper article.
But Olympic medals are different, and after Beijing, with golds in the 400m and 800m freestyle,
Adlington was instantly hailed as Britain's most successful swimmer in 100 years. How, then, does
she reflect on her achievements? /pp'You know when I wake up in the morning I think, "Is it 5.20am
already?" rather than, "Oh I've won two Olympic gold medals." It's something that will never quite
sink in. The weirdest thing is just the fact that you can say, "I've won an Olympic gold medal".
That is the scariest thing in the world. I'm just a 19-year-old girl. Everyone keeps saying it's
really special, but I don't see myself as being special. It's like how you don't think you're
beautiful but someone else thinks you're stunning.'/ppAdlington says she misses the Olympics, the
camaraderie of being in a gang of friends. At times she makes it sound more like a holiday camp
than a highly pressured environment for elite athletes. /pp'I loved it out there. The hardest thing
was having to leave after we spent five weeks together. You found yourself picking up people's
accents and phrases - you do though! Like if someone's being an idiot the guys called them a tool
or a weapon, so when I got back home I start calling everyone a tool. When we got back together for
the Olympic parade in London we had such a laugh on that bus, just being back together again was
brilliant.'/ppBut when it comes to her own performances, the memories are more sober. 'You know I
was so nervous. Especially for the 800m. It is my main event, closest to my heart. Winning the 400m
was an unexpected bonus, but to get a medal in the 800m, that was always my goal./pp'Before the
race I got really emotional. I thought I was going to throw up, then I thought I was going to cry,
then I thought I was going to pass out. I had to lie down on the floor. Then I got in the call room
15 minutes before the race and suddenly I was fine. Michael Phelps was racing in the 100 fly and we
were all watching it on the TV. It was so close at the finish, everyone was like, "Oh my God!" He
won it by 0.01 of a second. I can't even click that fast.' /ppWasn't her own 400m final, against
the American Katie Hoff, similarly close? 'Oh no,' she says, casually, 'that was 0.07
seconds.'/ppThe battle for the 800m title was more than just a second gold medal for Adlington.
Breaking Janet Evans's 19-year-old world record was a physical experience more intense than
anything she had ever endured. 'It was the most painful race in my whole entire life,' she says. 'I
put every little bit of me into it, mentally and physically. When I finished my body collapsed,
probably because I pushed it a little bit too far, but I was so wanting to do it and so up for it
that the adrenaline just took over. Afterwards my body hurt, it had never been so sore. And you're
drained. It wasn't just the pain, it was the nerves, all week I'd had them. People don't realise
how tiring that is. You can't eat properly because you're so nervous. I lost 2kg in two days just
from the heats to the 800m final.'/ppEarly in 2005, when Adlington was 15, she had been forced to
curtail her swimming when she and her elder sister Laura contracted glandular fever. The disease
was not new to the Adlington family: the oldest daughter, Chloe, had gone through it five years
before and suffered so badly she had been forced to give up swimming. While Rebecca battled with
the disease and its after effects of chronic fatigue syndrome, the virus entered Laura's brain and
she lay in intensive care fighting for her life. /pp'It was a rough time for us. Laura had
encephalitis [swelling of the brain], I had my final year of GCSEs and wasn't feeling too hot. My
mum was really worried. In those situations family comes first and swimming has to come last. So
for a couple of months I focused on my family. My mum and dad were constantly at the hospital,
Chloe did everything else - looking after the house and driving me to training, while we kept the
rest of the family updated with phone calls. If there was any news, good or bad, or even if Laura
just woke up and spoke to us we'd be ringing round to tell everyone.'/ppAdlington's coach, Furniss,
wanted her to keep swimming so, with the agreement of her doctors, he created a pared-down regime.
'You have to keep the feel of the water going otherwise you lose your technique,' Adlington says,
'but every time I got in the pool I felt like I couldn't go anywhere. I felt as though I hadn't
slept and yet I was sleeping 12 hours a night. I felt heavy all the time, like I was 40 stone. Bill
was extremely good with it all. He never said, "Oh, she's ill, I'll leave her," he took a step
back, made me go easy and got me right. It was hard, but I didn't ever complain because I'd seen
what both my sisters went through, I was just grateful that I didn't have to give up
swimming.'/ppEverybody agreed that swimming was the best thing for her, but Adlington's parents
could not help but worry. 'You have two of your children with a similar type of viral infection,'
says her mum Kay. 'You ask yourself all sorts of questions. We monitored Becky's training very
carefully: if her appetite waned, if she couldn't sleep, if she was irritable. We didn't want to
scare her, though, we didn't want her to feel this was the start of what Laura had. But she must
have asked herself the question, "Will it do this to me?" In Laura's case the virus attacked both
the front and back of her brain, which made it more complicated to treat. The doctors pumped her
full of everything they could. It was up to her then. It was agonising./pp'We carried on with as
much normality as we could. School allowed Becky to drop one of her lessons so that after morning
training she could come home and have a proper breakfast, and dry her hair. Before she was ill she
just used to have her cereal in the car and go to school with wet hair. That sounds awful, doesn't
it? But we were always on the go.'/ppAdlington's parents shielded her from the worst of Laura's
illness, insisting that the other two daughters didn't visit her in intensive care. 'They didn't
want us to see her there with all the tubes,' Adlington says. 'It was a terrifying time. But it was
hardest on my parents.' That is not entirely true. Adlington had been tipped as a medal hope for
the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, but her illness left her unable to compete, which was a
tough disappointment to take./ppIn true Adlington style it isn't long before she starts cracking a
few jokes. 'You know, when Laura started getting better we were a bit nasty,' she says with a
smile. 'Where the illness had impacted on her brain she was doing some hilarious things. Like she
thought there were little men dancing on the end of her bed, or that the drip in her chest was a
baby, or the thing you wee through - the catheter! - she thought she was leaning on a pen and she
kept trying to move it. It was funny, but it was also scary.'/ppPulling through those events must
have made her stronger. 'It did,' she says, 'it definitely made me stronger and I wouldn't be the
person I am today without those things happening to me.'/ppWith the final photograph taken,
Adlington skips off to get changed back into her tracksuit, but keeps the Fifties-Style make-up on.
'I love it!' she says. 'I definitely want my hair like this for Sports Personality of the Year.'
Following on from her OSM accolade, Adlington cannot wait for the BBC awards night in Liverpool on
14 December, at which she is a favourite for the top three. She can barely contain her excitement
as she talks about the outfit she plans to wear; it is her effusiveness that makes her such a
genuinely appealing candidate. She has already chosen her dress and her shoes: all she needs now is
the trophy. /pp· Watch a a href="http://www.observer.co.uk/osm"video/a of Rebecca Adlington
collecting her OSM award./pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/rebeccaadlington"Rebecca Adlington/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/swimming"Swimming/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/olympics2008"Olympics 2008/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/sportfeatures"Sport features/a/li/ul/divdiv
class="guRssAdvert"a
href="http://ads.guardian.co.uk/click.ng/richmedia=yessite=Sportcountry=(none)spacedesc=rsssystem=rsstransactionID=1227444365998112312500652405"img
src="http://ads.guardian.co.uk/image.ng/richmedia=yessite=Sportcountry=(none)spacedesc=rsssystem=rsstransactionID=1227444365998112312500652405"
border="0" //a/diva href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media
Limited 2008 | Use of this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
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Autoblog -
13 hours and 29 minutes ago
pFiled under: a href="http://www.autoblog.com/category/etc/" rel="tag"Etc./a, a
href="http://www.autoblog.com/category/videos/" rel="tag"Videos/a, a
href="http://www.autoblog.com/category/toys/" rel="tag"Toys/a, a
href="http://www.autoblog.com/category/event-alert/" rel="tag"Event Alert/a/pa
href="http://www.speedandmotion.com/pictures/M4Ttoydrive/slides/DSC_0289.html"img vspace="4"
hspace="4" border="1" alt=""
src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.autoblog.com/media/2008/11/m4trun---2.jpg" //a small div
align="center"emstrongPhotos courtesy Speed and Motion/strong/embr //div /small br /It's not often
you see this many sports cars chasing a police cruiser, but this was for a good cause. To help get
things kicked off for the 5th Annual a href="http://
http://www.autoblog.com/tag/Motor4Toys/"Motor4Toys charity toy drive event/a, a bunch of
participants followed a police escort over to a local Toys "R" Us to start buying toys for the
December 7th event. The Motor4Toys group has been collecting gifts for needy children since 2004,
and to date has donated more than 38,000 toys. The unique thing about this organization is that it
is all centered around cars.br /br /a
href="http://www.speedandmotion.com/pictures/M4Ttoydrive/slides/DSC_0152.html"img width="220"
vspace="4" hspace="4" height="146" border="1" align="right" alt=""
src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.autoblog.com/media/2008/11/m4trun---1.jpg" //aMotor4Toys taps into
the Southern California car community and turns a huge car meet into one of the largest charity toy
drives around. Car guys and gals from all over the Southwest show up with their sports cars,
exotics, muscle cars, race cars and museum rides to help this worthy cause. Organizers expect to
see over 5,000 cars at the event's new home this year, The Anthem Building in Woodland Hills.
Entrance to the event is free for everyone, just bring along at least one new, unwrapped toy valued
at $10 or more. If you're in the Los Angeles area that weekend, make sure you stop by between 9am
and 1pm. And for those who can't make it, PayPal donations are also accepted. Hope to see you
there, and remember, every kid deserves a toy! emComplete details including maps to the new
location and mandatory insurance waivers can be found on the a
href="http://www.motor4toys.com/"Motor4Toys/a website. More photos of the drive can be found at a
href="http:// http://www.speedandmotion.com/pictures/M4Ttoydrive/index.html"Speed and Motion,/a who
provided a video from last year's event that we have posted after the jump.br //empa
href="http://www.autoblog.com/2008/11/22/supercars-make-charity-toy-run-in-l-a/"
rel="bookmark"Continue reading emVIDEO: Supercars make charity toy run in L.A./em/a/pp
style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both;"a
href="http://www.autoblog.com/2008/11/22/supercars-make-charity-toy-run-in-l-a/"VIDEO: Supercars
make charity toy run in L.A./a originally appeared on a href="http://www.autoblog.com"Autoblog/a on
Sat, 22 Nov 2008 18:33:00 EST. Please see our a href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/"terms
for use of feeds/a./ph6 style="clear: both; padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px;
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Toronto Classifieds at eClassifieds4U: Free Classified Ads in Toronto -
13 hours and 50 minutes ago
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Mac Forums - iPod touch -
1 days and 3 hours ago
Hewlett Packard (HP) has filed a lawsuit against Microsoft and is considering abandoning Windows
all together. HP would develop their own software for their PCs. I'm sure Steve Jobs just loves
seeing Microsoft in the begger's position. :D
http://www.forbes.com/2008/11/21/vis...rtner=yahootix
Try the above link first. Only if the link does not work for some reason, then I posted the text of
the article below.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FORBES -
Microsoft: Don't Mess With HP
Brian Caulfield, 11.21.08, 06:00 PM EST
Angry e-mails from HP to Microsoft could explain HP's skunk works project to build its own consumer
interface.
Watch your back, Monkey Boy. You may have messed with the wrong bunch of PC builders.
A court filing unsealed Thursday as part of a class-action lawsuit against
Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) revealed that Hewlett-Packard (nyse: HPQ - news
- people ) Chief Executive Mark Hurd e-mailed Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer to complain
about HP's "call lines being overrun," with customers struggling to upgrade to Vista. "I'm sure
you're aware of this," Hurd added. The full text of the e-mail has not yet been released, but
Hurd's complaints to Ballmer are the latest signs of escalating tensions between HP and Microsoft
caused by the launch of Windows Vista in 2007.
The lawsuit accuses Microsoft of slapping labels on PCs that said the machines were Vista-capable
when they didn't have the processing power needed to run some of the operating system's most touted
features.
E-mails released Nov. 14 as part of the case show Richard Walker, the head of HP's PC business,
hinting at the customer trouble to come in a Feb, 1, 2006, e-mail to Ballmer and other members of
Microsoft's management team. "I hope this incident isn't a foretaste of the relationship I will
have with Microsoft going forward, but I can tell you that it's left a very bad taste," Walker
wrote. "The decision you have made has taken away an investment we made consciously for competitive
advantage knowing that some players would choose not to."
That e-mail triggered panic at Microsoft. Jim Allchin, then co-president of
Microsoft's platforms and services division, quickly sent a follow-up note to Ballmer. "I am beyond
being upset here," he wrote. Ballmer pointed the finger at Will Poole, then corporate vice
president for client business, which is responsible for the Windows operating system. "I had
nothing to do with this," Ballmer wrote. "Will [Poole] handled everything. ... You better get Will
under control." Poole scrambled to repair the damage. "Jim [Allchin] is rightly upset that hp went
non-linear after having intel break explicit agreement with me and tell them of the new plan b4 we
could explain and mitigate," Poole wrote in a note to Ballmer and other Microsoft executives on
Feb. 3, 2006. "I have that under control with hp, for now, but was very painful. Some vp at intel
is to blame, we don't know who yet."
Ballmer's e-mail response: "Great by me but Jim [Alchin] is apoplectic. I know nothing of the
details, please advise." Allchin retired from Microsoft in January 2007. Poole later moved to
Microsoft's Unlimited Potential group, dedicated to closing the "digital divide," before leaving
Microsoft earlier this year.
And while practically everyone associated with Vista at Microsoft is now gone, Walker remains at
HP. And in in a twist worthy of The Sopranos, Walker has assembled a group dedicated to putting its
own stamp on the Vista operating system.
HP's Customer Experience group, led by Susie Wee, has quietly put it ahead of Apple (nasdaq: AAPL -
news - people ), by some measures, at incorporating new elements such as touch sensitivity into
computer interfaces (see "Fixing Vista").
The $1,149 HP TouchSmart tx2 Notebook PC, launched this week, is the latest result of that effort.
It puts the touch-screen interface HP developed for its TouchSmart line of PCs onto a notebook
computer. Many had expected that Apple would release a notebook with a
touch-sensitive screen first. Instead, Apple incorporated the multitouch gestures used on the
iPhone into its notebooks' track pads.
The moves hint that HP could bring some of its research muscle to bear on PC software. The company
has plenty of operating-system expertise, selling machines running Linux, Windows and a number of
its own operating systems, including HP-UX, OpenVMS and NonStop.
If HP wanted to, it could easily slap its whizzy touch-sensitive interface onto Linux or even a
proprietary operating system. And with its lion's share of the worldwide PC market, such an
offering would be an instant threat to Microsoft. It would also protect HP from having to compete
with anyone who managed to cram Vista onto his machine, a thought that we know has occurred to more
than a few of the big brains in HP's engineering department.
"It's not very often you get pulled out of a meeting by a group of engineers who feel that they
have had the rug pulled out from underneath them so that any competitive advantage we may have had
in the marketplace is taken away, enabling any Tom, Dick or Harry with a PC containing a
non-compliant processor/chip set to play at the same table," one e-mail from an HP employee
read.
So will HP try to take out Windows? HP's Walker has the means, and the Vista
debacle gives him a motive. Ballmer better make damn sure that when Microsoft launches Windows 7 he
doesn't give him the opportunity.

|
Nature -
1 days and 9 hours ago
Publication Date: 2008 Nov 20 PMID: 19020622br/Authors: Moldoveanu, T. - Gehring, K. - Green, D.
R.br/Journal: Naturebr/br/The Ca(2+)-dependent cysteine proteases, calpains, regulate cell
migration, cell death, insulin secretion, synaptic function and muscle homeostasis. Their
endogenous inhibitor, calpastatin, consists of four inhibitory repeats, each of which neutralizes
an activated calpain with exquisite specificity and potency. Despite the physiological importance
of this interaction, the structural basis of calpain inhibition by calpastatin is unknown. Here we
report the 3.0 A structure of Ca(2+)-bound m-calpain in complex with the first calpastatin repeat,
both from rat, revealing the mechanism of exclusive specificity. The structure highlights the
complexity of calpain activation by Ca(2+), illustrating key residues in a peripheral domain that
serve to stabilize the protease core on Ca(2+) binding. Fully activated calpain binds ten Ca(2+)
atoms, resulting in several conformational changes allowing recognition by calpastatin. Calpain
inhibition is mediated by the intimate contact with three critical regions of calpastatin. Two
regions target the penta-EF-hand domains of calpain and the third occupies the substrate-binding
cleft, projecting a loop around the active site thiol to evade proteolysis.br/br/post to: a href =
http://www.citeulike.org/posturl?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov%2Fentrez%2Fquery.fcgi%3Fcmd%3DRetrieve%26db%3DPubMed%26dopt%3DAbstract%26list_uids%3D19020622title=Entrez+PubmedCiteULike/a

|
LinuxDevices.com -
1 days and 16 hours ago
Eurotech subsidiary Parvus announced a more powerful version of its rugged tactical mission
computer. The Parvus DuraCor 810-Duo runs Linux on a 1.5GHz Intel Core 2 Duo with 2GB of DDR2 RAM,
and targets "high reliability" military and homeland defense applications, says the company.
|
DCEmu Forums:: The Homebrew & Gaming Network :: PSP Dreamcast Nintendo DS Wii GP2X Xbox 360 GBA Gamecube PS2 Forums - Dreamcast News Forum -
1 days and 17 hours ago
via Eurogamer
Sony has updated the PlayStation Store with a demo of LocoRoco 2, the BioShock Challenge Rooms and
a host of premium downloadables for Need For Speed Undercover along with usual candidates Rock Band
and Guitar Hero World Tour.
LocoRoco 2 is out in the UK today, although you might not know it from the game's low-profile
launch build-up. In addition to seeing what we thought of it in our LocoRoco 2 PSP review, however,
you can now grab the demo.
Elsewhere there's the promising but polarisingly priced BioShock Challenge Rooms, which introduce
three puzzly new levels that ask you to make the most of the game's varied arsenal of weapons,
plasmids and tonics, each with unlockable Trophies and secrets.
Meanwhile the DLC war between Rock Band and Guitar Hero goes monetarisingly on with Rock Band
add-ons from Dead Kennedys, Mission of Burma and Century Media Girls and Guitar Hero World Tour
downloads from The Raconteurs.
PSP Demos
PSone games on PS3/PSP Store
- Sim City 2000 (GBP 4.99 / EUR 7.99)
PS3 Add-ons
- BioShock Challenge Rooms (GBP 6.29 / EUR 7.99)
- LittleBigPlanet - Sack in the Box (free)
- LittleBigPlanet - LocoRoco Costume Kit (GBP 2.39 / EUR 2.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Aftermarket Body Kit Package (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Aftermarket Hoods, Spoilers and Exhaust Package (GBP 1.49 / EUR
1.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Wheels Package (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Collector's Edition Upgrade (GBP 6.99 / EUR 9.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Exotic Car Bundle (GBP 3.99 / EUR 5.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Muscle Car Bundle (GBP 3.49 / EUR 4.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Paint & Vinyls Package (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Tuner Car Bundle (GBP 3.49 / EUR 4.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Ultimate Performance Bundle (GBP 6.99 / EUR 9.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Ultimate Visual Bundle (GBP 3.49 / EUR 4.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Pro Handling Bundle (GBP 1.99 / EUR 2.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Pro Power Bundle (GBP 2.99 / EUR 3.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Race Handling Bundle (GBP 1.99 / EUR 2.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Race Power Bundle (GBP 1.99 / EUR 2.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Street Handling Bundle (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- Need For Speed Undercover - Street Power Bundle (GBP 1.99 / EUR 2.99)
PS3 Rock Band stuff
- Century Media Girls - "Closer" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Century Media Girls - "Forever" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Century Media Girls - "Swamped" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Century Media Girls of Metal Pack 01 (GBP 2.99 / EUR 3.99)
- Crooked X - "Gone" (GBP 0.59 / EUR 0.79)
- Dead Kennedys - "California Uber Alles" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Dead Kennedys - "Holiday in Cambodia" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Dead Kennedys - "Police Truck" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Dead Kennedys Pack 01 (GBP 2.99 / EUR 3.99)
- Mission of Burma - "Mica" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Mission of Burma - "That's How I Escaped My Certain Fate" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Mission of Burma - "That's When I Reach For My Revolver" (GBP 0.99 / EUR 1.49)
- Mission of Burma Pack 01 (GBP 2.99 / EUR 3.99)
PS3 Guitar Hero World Tour stuff
- The Raconteurs - "Consoler of the Lonely" (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- The Raconteurs - "Hold Up" (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- The Raconteurs - "Salute Your Solution" (GBP 1.49 / EUR 1.99)
- The Raconteurs Track Pack (GBP 3.99 / EUR 5.99)

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Boing Boing -
1 days and 17 hours ago
Researchers are using Guitar Hero to help train amputees who will use electrical signals from their
residual muscles to control next generation bionic arms. From IEEE Spectrum: In mid-October, Johns
Hopkins University researchers Robert Armiger and Jacob Vogelstein traveled to RP 2009 partner Duke
University, in Durham, N.C., to test the system on its target demographic, in this case Iraq
veteran Jon Kuniholm. Kuniholm’s right hand was lost to shrapnel three years ago. About to
finish his Ph.D. at Duke’s Center for Biologically Inspired Materials and Material Systems,
Kuniholm has been a volunteer for the DARPA program for the past two years and is the outspoken
founder of the Open Prosthetics Project, an open-source Web site, independent of DARPA, that aims
to make prosthetic-arm technology as open source and collaborative as Linux and Firefox. With
electrodes attached to his residual arm, Kuniholm was able to operate the frets using signals from
the muscles there. “It’s fun,” says Kuniholm, who achieved the highest score
reported by the experimental subjects: 70 percent. Kuniholm says that while Air Guitar Hero is the
only game so far that requires individual finger movement to train an amputee to deal with those
muscles again, the real success is in striving for a realistic goal. “You’re doing
something simple,” he says. “It’s not rocket science. But you have to do it fast
and you have to time it right.” For Those Without Hands, There's Air Guitar Hero...br
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