Forum Find: Custom MR2 with the Ultimate Car-Puter
Written by Alex (nedge2k)   
Saturday, 13 September 2008 02:54

Words fail me. I am in utter awe of what this guy has accomplished and I can only imagine the work that has gone into getting a PC to monitor and control almost every aspect of this Mr2, let alone the custom interface that spans three screens! Fuckin amazing!

Filed under: Aftermarket, Gadgets, Etc., Tech, Toyota

Click above for a massive gallery of the MR2 Carputer

Upon first inspection, MR2forum.de member LaroCroft's second-generation (SW20) Toyota MR2 is simply a tastefully modded example of a cult favorite. However, peer inside and all preconceived notions are immediately thrown out the targa top.
Any "For Sale" thread that requires "Knowledge in electronics, skills in PC technology and knowledge of programming (especially Visual Basic)" is a clear indication that things inside have gotten thoroughly out of hand. Just check out the gallery and you'll see what we're talking about.
The entire instrument cluster and center console have been replaced with three screens displaying every conceivable function and parameter of the MR2's systems. The trio of displays are controlled by either a touch screen interface or a center console-mounted knob (ala iDrive), and allows the drive to manipulate everything from fuel consumption to engine temp; climate control to GPS functions; mirrors, radar/laser, the wireless transfer of music from a home computer, lights, fog lights, and on and on and on.
It's pure insanity and incredibly cool. And the best part: it's for sale in Germany - assuming you've got the programming chops to actually leave your driveway.

Gallery: Toyota MR2 Carputer

[Source: MR2Forum.de]

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Forum Find: Custom MR2 with the Ultimate Car-Puter
Damon Lavrinc
Fri, 12 Sep 2008 00:59:00 GMT

 
I love this…
Written by Alex (nedge2k)   
Saturday, 23 August 2008 15:07

Source

 
Three Really Annoying Phrases
Written by Alex (nedge2k)   
Saturday, 23 August 2008 14:52

I don't what it is but it seems like everyone is saying these phrases at the moment and I don't know why they annoying me but they do, immensely!

 

"Going forward" - everyone seems to be saying this in business

"For sure" - all the F1 drivers seem to be saying this at the moment

"Ask the question" - another business related one that does my head in

 

I think "for sure" annoys me because there are so many other things that could be said but F1 drivers, Lewis Hamilton especially, just seem to use it in reply to everything! As for the other two, well, I think they're just pretentious buzz-words that people in business use to make themselves sound more professional.

 
Concurrent RDP Sessions and Shadowing in Vista
Written by Alex (nedge2k)   
Friday, 15 August 2008 21:53
Many, many moons ago, I posted about how you can "hack" Vista Home Premium to allow you to RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) into it. The origins of that hack were to allow multiple (concurrent) sessions on a Media Centre machine using RDP - basically, allowing multiple users to be logged on to the machine both remotely and physically at the same time, using the same credentials. Why? Well, say you have a Media Center machine plugged into your TV and wanted to do something user-specific on it without interrupting the people watching TV/Videos etc. Under normal circumstances, if you RDP'd into the machine, using the same credentials as the already logged in local user (watching the TV), it would log off that user and whoever was watching the TV would just see a login screen - not good. This "hack" stopped that from happening :) Of course, it soon turned out that a side-effect of this hack was that, once it and some other files were copied, it allowed users of OS's that didn't support Terminal Services (the service that allows you to RDP into a machine), such as Vista Home Premium, to now reap the benefits of RDP and concurrent sessions. Now, a lot of people new to RDP think that enabling concurrent sessions will allow you log into a machine as an already logged in user and remotely control said machine - and they'd be right! Where they are usually wrong, is in thinking that the local user logged on and sitting at the PC etc. will be able to monitor what they are doing (see the mouse move etc.) and most people who claim to be "in the know" will say, "no, that's not at all possible" and recommend they try VNC - which, when compared to RDP, sucks ass. Notice I said "claim" because these people are talking through their collective arseholes. At this point, you're probably wondering a)what the hell this is all about and b)why I'm contradicting myself. Well, this is where I introduce the little known "shadowing" technique. When two users are logged into a machine with the same credentials, whilst they both have access to everything that user account would normally have access to including files etc., they cannot directly interact with each other, as they are in different "sessions". That is, of course, until the remote user finds out that he can achieve VNC style control of a machine by using shadowing in RDP! All the remote user has to do is decide which session they want to shadow by opening the Start Menu, hitting "run", typing "cmd" and then typing "query session" - this will then give a list of available sessions - and then type "shadow" followed by the session name or number. Just typing "shadow console" into the run box will take you straight to the locally logged on user. The remote user now shares the same "session" as the local user and can now monitor what the local user is doing, and vice versa :) Of course, if more than one person were logged in remotely and you needed to render some kind of support to them, all you would have to do is check which session they were in and shadow it, simple :) You could also create a batch file and put it in the quick launch bar for one click shadowing by creating a new text file, renaming it to shadow.bat and then filling it with the following:
@echo off C:WindowsSystem32Shadow.exe console exit
So why the huge post on a topic that most could care less about? Well, why not! There's enough people blogging about crap these days that could easily mislead the uninformed. At least if they read this, they'd be that little bit more informed :)
 
Wordbook test post
Written by Alex (nedge2k)   
Friday, 04 July 2008 21:36

...just seeing if this works

 


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