PS3 Gaming General Archives



This weekend I finally got around to finishing my Audio Concepts B-Flat Coax 8″ in-ceiling surround speaker install. I detached the B-Flats from their ceiling mount and stuffed fiberglass insulation (the cotton candy kind, rated R13) in the cavity between ceiling joists. According to the B-Flat installation instructions and in-ceiling/wall tips elsewhere, the insulation should improve sound quality. The end result was not what I expected.

Surround satellite speakers in multi-purpose rooms have always been a problem. Where do you run the long lengths of cable? I’ve tried wireless speaker systems at various frequency and have never heard anything but static. You can try running your speaker cable along your baseboard or even opt for a raceway system like those sold at Cable Organizer. What if you have to jump a doorway, opening to another room or get around a large fireplace’s brick façade? In-ceiling and in-wall speaker installs have the highest wife-acceptance-factor (WAF) because of their invisibility. You get to run your speaker cable inside the wall then to the attic and then back down inside a wall to the speaker.

My in-wall speaker needs first arose with the set-up of my living room home theater in my new house. I had the TV and equipment cabinet against the north wall and needed to get surround sound behind the sofa sectional on the east and west walls. To the east I needed to pass a bank of three windows to the wall area behind our chair-and-a-half. The west side was not so simple. The north end of the living room opened up to our dining room, presenting a 10 ft gap to traverse with no moulding or other architecture to hide wires behind. The living room’s west wall has about six feet before the kitchen’s east entrance. I could hide speaker cable along the east side’s baseboard run. I could do the same on the west side if I ran the wire around the dining room, over the north kitchen entrance, then onto the baseboard of the west wall. This amounted to more cable than I was willing to buy and install.

Running in wall speaker wire through my attic looked like the best solution. Unfortunately, I have no desire to venture into the attic with its past or present wasp nest, blown in insulation and cross beam obstacle course. The trap door to the attic is in the ceiling at the south end of the house opposite the living room. I can’t imagine stepping from ceiling joist to joist without putting a foot through the ceiling. Could I find a compromise between invisible in wall wiring and easy but ugly along the baseboard wire?

DeCorp Dewire is a “thinner than a business card” ribbon of speaker cable that is first glued to your wall or ceiling and then spackled, sanded and painted over for a virtually invisible cable installation. I measured the two runs to my proposed surround speaker locations on either side of the living room. I ordered the Dewire flat speaker cable, their special spray glue, spackle and banana plug and pin terminations. The Dewire would run straight up my wall, across the ceiling and the down each side wall to connect to the speakers. This the same route the in-wall attic run would make but without the attic.

After some searching of the major home electronics magazines and review sites I found little in the way affordable in-wall speaker recommendations. The Audio Asylum and AVS Forum communities pointed me toward the Audio Concepts B-Flat 8″ Coaxial In-wall loudspeakers. For under $200 the B-Flat’s promised performance rivaling $1000 in-walls.

After the careful purchase of the surround speakers, the invisible speaker cable and a drywall saw, I failed to ever install the speakers. Other home projects’ precedence was my excuse. Really, I just dreaded the thought of gluing the cable to the wall and ceiling, and then plastering over the wire sloppily and making a mess of my wall. My lack of experience with a trowel and spackle knife paralyzed me.

Months passed. I avoided watching any movies that promised a dynamic and exciting surround mix. I was stuck with stereo. My wife and I endured one romantic comedy after another. Then everything changed.

We refinanced our house last summer including an equity line of credit. My wife got to upgrade our kitchen, hallway bathroom and lighting while I got to build a humble front projection home theater in half of our basement’s rec room.

In this new home theater I could use the B-Flat in-walls as in-ceilings. An in-ceiling install rated high on the WAF scale. Electricians ran the Dewire flat speaker cable through ceiling and out through the square holes they cut for the B-Flats. I was not using the Dewire as intended (glued to a wall and hidden under spackle and paint just like a drywall seam), but I already invested nearly $200 and the Dewire does the same job as in-wall rated speaker cable.

I installed the B-Flats myself after the electricians finished the more difficult hole cutting and wire running part of the process. I simply tightened the four ***** posts at each corner. The screws will rotate a clamp that catches and holds the other side of the drywall or ceiling board until tight. An electric screwdriver will speed the tightening of the long screws. You have to balance the coaxial speaker driver and surround in one hand while you tighten the four screws. The only bad part of this process was the extra heat near the ceiling. I was sweaty. I was careful not to over-tighten the screws as the clamp mechanism was all plastic and the ceiling board can easily be crushed back to ripped paper and drywall dust.

Next I calibrated with the Avia Guide to Home Theater DVD. Avia’s 85 db test tones proved stressful for the B-Flats. I detected some clipping when I bumped up the surrounds’ levels to reference level. The clipping is not an issue while watching a DVD or playing a video game. I never raise the volume of the Onkyo TX-DS989 AV receiver above -15 db (0 is reference). The initial calibration pushed the surround levels to +6.5 and +7 (the front stereo channels are set to +4)

After stripping out of my insulation protective gear (gloves, painter’s cap, safety goggles, respirator and Tyvek cover-alls), I recalibrated the surround sound channel balance. To my surprise, the surround levels needed another decibel to reach reference level. I thought they would need less power with the insulation’s damping.

Of course, I have only run the test tones through the B-Flats. I haven’t had the chance to listen to any DVDs yet to see if my insulation made a difference. I am hoping what loudness I lost is gained in clarity, tonal accuracy and imaging.

By: Kyle Kolbe

About the Author:
Father, Husband and Geek. My geeky interests have not changed since I was a kid. I still love comic books, anime, role-playing games, console video games, indie rock, imported toys and mecha models, bad American and great British sitcoms, and all the tech that let’s me experience these hobbies to their fullest. Now that I’m married with children, I’ve had to strike a balance between supporting and pleasing my family and feeding my geekery hunger. Lucky for me, my wife is very accomodating and even geeks out with me on occasion (the ladies love Joss Whedon’s “Firefly”). My two year old likes anything that moves on the front projection screen and makes noise, so far she is easy to please. Geekwithfamily.com exists to enrich the lives of fellow geeks and the friends and family who put up with them.



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A reference model is a connectional blueprint of how communications should take place. It deals all the processes required for effective communication and splits these processes into logical groups called layers. When a communication system is contrived in this manner, it’s known as layered architecture.

The OSI model is hierarchical, and the same benefits and advantages can implement to any layered model. The most-valuable purpose of all such patterns, especially the OSI model, is to let different vendors’ networks to interoperate.

Advantages of applying the OSI layered model let in, but are not small to, the following:

It divides the network communication process into smaller and simpler components,   thus aiding component development, design, and troubleshooting.

It allows multiple-vendor development through standardization of network components.

It encourages industry standardization by setting what procedures occur at every layer of the model.

It lets several types of network computer hardware and software to communicate.

It prevents changes in one layer from affecting other layers, so it does not hamper

development.

One of the best procedures of the OSI specifications is to assist in data transfer between several hosts—meaning, for lesson, that they enable us to transmit information between a Unix host and a PC or a Mac.

The OSI isn’t a physical model, though. Rather, it’s a set of guidelines that application developers can use to produce and accomplish applications that run on a network. It also allows a framework for creating and applying networking standards, devices, and internetworking strategies

The OSI has seven layers, spread into two groups. The upper three layers determine how the applications inside the end stations will intercommunicate with each other and with users. The last four layers define how data is carried end to end.



By: M. Aslam

About the Author:



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hi
is it possible to use a ps3 motherbord in u are computer and install windows xp or vista on use it as a normal pc


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One of the biggest frustrations when you are trying to work is a slow computer.  Help desk personnel everywhere will tell you that this is by far the number one problem most users report.  Even the newest and speediest machine can slow to a crawl if it is experiencing the top PC problem today: invalid registry entries.

What are these invalid entries and why do they slow down your PC?  As you install and remove software, the internal system database called the registry is modified.  As time goes by, errors and incorrect entries begin to accumulate.  With these incorrect entries in the main system database, your PC gets confused and slows down.  Pretty soon, you get to a point where you have to do something if you want to get any work done.

The easiest way to get slow computer help is to download one of the new and powerful registry cleaner programs available over the web.  These reasonably-priced utilities are easy to use and can get your system back in top shape in just a few minutes.  Run the program, and it will scan your system for errors. Then it will give you the opportunity to fix the problems automatically.  Just point and click, and your are done.

Try one of these powerful programs; it is the best weapon you can get to battle a slow computer.  Help yourself to this easy way to fix your problem computer yourself, without having to hire a professional technician. You’ll save money and be productive again very quickly.



By: Carl Ringwall

About the Author:

Don’t trust your PC to registry cleaners that don’t work! We tested the best – read our reviews



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Audio problem on Windows XP PS3?




I bought a copy of windows XP SP3 and my default OS is Vista. I successfully installed it, but my only problem is that it doesn’t have sound, and I do not know what software to install. My PC is a emachines W3653(I know it’s not a good computer don’t criticize). Can someone help.

BQ: How can I dual boot these two OS’s

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