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-SkYnEt-

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Everything posted by -SkYnEt-

  1. Just how it sounds. NO FAMAS, NO PROBLEMS!
  2. NO WAY! Okay tell me the server. I need to get on this.
  3. Hey guys. I'm hosting a team radio for voice chat on Roger Wilco. Roger Wilco lets you use voice chat on any game. It lets you assign a hotkey on your keyboard you use to talk to other gamers in the server. I thought this would be useful for Desert Combat. Get the program at http://rogerwilco.gamespy.com. My Roger Wilco Server for [TAC]> is: 68.54.11.211:3783/[TAC]> Deset Combat
  4. -SkYnEt- replied to Wellsy's topic in Main Hall
    B(.)(.)BZORZ!!!!!
  5. I used 3d studio max
  6. What i'm looking forward to is the Favorite Server List. I have to write them down if i wanted to go back!! lol.
  7. I'll bring my laptop, spare time stuff. Although during Basic Training I will not be able to do much of anything for 2 months because Basic Training you can't bring that stuff. When I'm stationed and in a the barracks, i can continue.
  8. 1st Render of the T-800 Model http://www.fa-thearmory.net/albums/album04/trender1.jpg
  9. i have some tech demos for my T3 game, aside from that, i have 1/4 of a game.
  10. The T-1 was in the game, along side that mini HK. I remember looking at the Battlefield 2029 mod for BF1942, and being amazed at their T-800 model. They had legal trouble with C2 Pictures, and had to call it quits. Reason for that im suspecting, is T3:WOTM had the same engine as Battlefield, and C2 was scared most people would play their game instead of buying the retail game. Since i'm using my own engine, and keeping my game on the down low, i hope i won't have any trouble.
  11. i have an engine going right now, that i programmed myself, with the help of a collision dll, called nuclear glory. Sooner or later i'm going to need some beta testers for my benchwork. I hope this game comes out like i expect.
  12. Now being i love programming 3d games, and i was SO DISSAPOINTED at the Atari Game: Terminator 3:War of the Machines, i'm going to program my own. Don't worry it'll be free. Some differences about my game, and Atari's nasty work. 1.) Unlike Atari, i will not create my own stupid looking cyborgs. 2.) Unlike Atari, i will not make the game so brutally boring, after 30 minutes you want to stop. 3.) I'm not worried about money, and a deadline to finish it. 4.) I WILL HAVE THE T-800 Model. Can you believe they didn't even include the original terminators, from the movies in Atari's game?!?! Except the Mini-HK, and T-1. I've been working on this game for a year now... so don't expect me to quit. By the way just for fun, here's a poster: http://www.fa-thearmory.net/albums/album02/tposterjpg.jpg
  13. I love FA, i know... But after playing for years it gets old... BUT usually when i don't play, that means I'll play again. Odds are I will.... By the way, i do believe it almost past FA's bedtime as far as popularity goes. I dunno, it doesn't look so good anymore.
  14. It's down, i dunno if it was scheduled. Just to point that out. I don't think i can handle not playing DC..... !!!
  15. Takes me a minute or two, but i don't think thats long. I usually get in second or third.
  16. I understand being tired! Oh God.... Most i've stayed up is 48 hours unwillingly! Camping Trip up in Upper Michigan (by the way looks awsome in the summer), anyway, i just went to sleep at 2am and couldn't sleep. Rock was in my back and it was cold being Michigan gets cold at night. Worst of all no blanket and no pillow. Both had been lost by the handlers. To make a long story short, i had to stay up 48hours to get home in Indiana. I didnt hallucinate, so i was glad i didn't. From now on, i'm scard from that experience. =)
  17. I got mine for 29.99 at Electronic Boutique. US Dollars
  18. Just thought i'd pick it up. Looks like im now part of the Dessert Combat TAC. Sweet man. As for Basic Training for the Army, i'm set to go the middle of February. So I'm not gone yet.
  19. The tracker is pretty cool, look at my Sig. Neato!
  20. For an MOS, i'm going to be Computer Systems Analyst, as for Boot camp, I'm looking forward to the m4 qualifications (i was told, boot camp doesn't have any m16a2s anymore). Also i wanna do the gas mask thing, that looks fun to do
  21. Well, it seems that all the battles have got to me. From Firearms, and America's Army. I enlisted myself into the Army, and going to free our country from suicidal maniac terrorists. Wish me Luck!Shane
  22. NO M79/M-203/GP-25 NO DRAGUNOV NO SSG-3000 NO M-82 NO ARTILLERY NO SPAWN CAMPING NO PRONING NO M-60/PKM/M-249 No Fun? Um... that's half the game... Strict I say for sure.
  23. From The Website: By Tech Live staff Printer-friendly format Email this story The Web is a vital source of information and a powerful record of the news events and cultural preoccupations of a given moment. As the Web evolves, some of those records could be lost. That's why the Internet Archive is stepping in to help preserve them. Today Cat takes a trip back in time with the Wayback Machine to show you how it works. The Wayback Machine allows people to visit archived versions of stored websites. Type a URL. Select a date. Begin surfing on an archived version of the website. For now, going "way back" means back to 1996. Archivists collect data every two months, so users will be able to find what a website looked like during a 60-day period, not necessarily on a particular date. Even the project's organizers admit they won't be able to save much of the Web's past. "A lot of homepages are gone," said Internet Archive Director Brewster Kahle. "Most webpages that were around in 1996 aren't here anymore, and some of the best webpages are out of print." Kahle began working on the Internet Archive in 1996. Last year, the archive became the purveyor of the largest text collection in existence -- its holdings surpass even those of the Library of Congress, Kahle said. The Library of Congress, Xerox PARC, IBM, and the Smithsonian are among many research groups working with the Internet Archive to store their data for posterity. The Wayback Machine was designed to provide historians and other scholars with a research tool. However, Kahle said, the project also has practical purposes for Web designers, attorneys, and journalists. The database can store 100 terabytes of data, the equivalent of tens of millions of books. Kahle said he hopes the Wayback Machine will eventually be able to locate all publicly available sites. Other areas of the site, such as the Moving Image Archive also hope to preserve culture. It holds almost 1,000 films, digitized by the Prelinger Archives, that focus on everday life, culture, and industry.

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