Massive Attack

The pioneering force behind the rise of trip-hop, Massive Attack were among the most innovative and influential groups of their generation; their hypnotic sound — a darkly sensual and cinematic fusion of hip-hop rhythms, soulful melodies, dub grooves, and choice samples set the pace for much of the dance music to emerge throughout the 1990s, paving the way for such acclaimed artists as Portishead, Sneaker Pimps, Beth Orton, and Tricky, himself a Massive Attack alumnus

Massive Attack - Blue Lines




http://www.filesonic.com/file/64960587/Massive_Attack_-_Blue_Lines.rar


Massive Attack - Protection



http://www.filesonic.com/file/64959433/Massive_Attack_-_Protection.rar


Massive Attack - No Protection: Massive Attack Vs. Mad Professor



http://www.filesonic.com/file/64961677/dfg.rar


Massive Attack - Mezzanine



http://hotfile.com/dl/56842113/d4eefe1/Massive_Attack_-_Mezzanine.rar.html



Massive Attack - 100th Window



http://www.filesonic.com/file/64959978/Massive_Attack_-_100th_Window.part1.rar
http://www.filesonic.com/file/64961145/Massive_Attack_-_100th_Window.part2.rar


Massive Attack - Heligoland



http://hotfile.com/dl/56671229/54cced4/Massive_Attack_-_Heligoland.rar.html

Nano-Thermite in the WTC Dust

9/11: Loose Change Final Cut

An Invention that Could Change the Internet

The biggest internet revolution for a generation will be unveiled this month with the launch of software that will understand questions and give specific, tailored answers in a way that the web has never managed before


The new system, Wolfram Alpha, showcased at Harvard University in the US last week, takes the first step towards what many consider to be the internet's Holy Grail – a global store of information that understands and responds to ordinary language in the same way a person does. Although the system is still new, it has already produced massive interest and excitement among technology pundits and internet watchers. Computer experts believe the new search engine will be an evolutionary leap in the development of the internet. Nova Spivack, an internet and computer expert, said that Wolfram Alpha could prove just as important as Google. "It is really impressive and significant," he wrote. "In fact it may be as important for the web (and the world) as Google, but for a different purpose.

Tom Simpson, of the blog Convergenceofeverything.com, said: "What are the wider implications exactly? A new paradigm for using computers and the web? Probably. Emerging artificial intelligence and a step towards a self-organising internet? Possibly... I think this could be big."Wolfram Alpha will not only give a straight answer to questions such as "how high is Mount Everest?", but it will also produce a neat page of related information – all properly sourced – such as geographical location and nearby towns, and other mountains, complete with graphs and charts.

The real innovation, however, is in its ability to work things out "on the fly", according to its British inventor, Dr Stephen Wolfram. If you ask it to compare the height of Mount Everest to the length of the Golden Gate Bridge, it will tell you. Or ask what the weather was like in London on the day John F Kennedy was assassinated, it will cross-check and provide the answer. Ask it about D sharp major, it will play the scale. Type in "10 flips for four heads" and it will guess that you need to know the probability of coin-tossing. If you want to know when the next solar eclipse over Chicago is, or the exact current location of the International Space Station, it can work it out.

Dr Wolfram, an award-winning physicist who is based in America, added that the information is "curated", meaning it is assessed first by experts. This means that the weaknesses of sites such as Wikipedia, where doubts are cast on the information because anyone can contribute, are taken out. It is based on his best-selling Mathematica software, a standard tool for scientists, engineers and academics for crunching complex maths."I've wanted to make the knowledge we've accumulated in our civilisation computable," he said last week. "I was not sure it was possible. I'm a little surprised it worked out so well."

Dr Wolfram, 49, who was educated at Eton and had completed his PhD in particle physics by the time he was 20, added that the launch of Wolfram Alpha later this month would be just the beginning of the project."It will understand what you are talking about," he said. "We are just at the beginning. I think we've got a reasonable start on 90 per cent of the shelves in a typical reference library."

The engine, which will be free to use, works by drawing on the knowledge on the internet, as well as private databases. Dr Wolfram said he expected that about 1,000 people would be needed to keep its databases updated with the latest discoveries and information. He also added that he would not go down the road of storing information on ordinary people, although he was aware that others might use the technology to do so.

Wolfram Alpha has been designed with professionals and academics in mind, so its grasp of popular culture is, at the moment, comparatively poor. The term "50 Cent" caused "absolute horror" in tests, for example, because it confused a discussion on currency with the American rap artist. For this reason alone it is unlikely to provide an immediate threat to Google, which is working on a similar type of search engine, a version of which it launched last week."We have a certain amount of popular culture information," Dr Wolfram said. "In some senses popular culture information is much more shallowly computable, so we can find out who's related to who and how tall people are. I fully expect we will have lots of popular culture information. There are linguistic horrors because if you put in books and music a lot of the names clash with other concepts."

He added that to help with that Wolfram Alpha would be using Wikipedia's popularity index to decide what users were likely to be interested in. With Google now one of the world's top brands, worth $100bn, Wolfram Alpha has the potential to become one of the biggest names on the planet.Dr Wolfram, however, did not rule out working with Google in the future, as well as Wikipedia. "We're working to partner with all possible organisations that make sense," he said. "Search, narrative, news are complementary to what we have. Hopefully there will be some great synergies."

What the experts say

"For those of us tired of hundreds of pages of results that do not really have a lot to do with what we are trying to find out, Wolfram Alpha may be what we have been waiting for."

Michael W Jones, Tech.blorge.com

"If it is not gobbled up by one of the industry superpowers, his company may well grow to become one of them in a small number of years, with most of us setting our default browser to be Wolfram Alpha."

Doug Lenat, Semanticuniverse.com

"It's like plugging into an electric brain."

Matt Marshall, Venturebeat.com

"This is like a Holy Grail... the ability to look inside data sources that can't easily be crawled and provide answers from them."

Danny Sullivan, editor-in-chief of searchengineland.com

Cannabis Growing Guide



http://rapidshare.com/files/232500869/Cannabis_Growing_Guide.pdf

Computer Graphics Using Java 2D and 3D



http://rapidshare.com/files/232501588/Computer_Graphics_Using_Java__2D_and_3D.chm

Definitive Guide to Linux Network Programming



http://rapidshare.com/files/232508297/Definitive_Guide_to_Linux_Network_Programming.pdf

Foundations of 3D Graphics Programming



http://rapidshare.com/files/232521523/Foundations_1_.of.3D.Graphics.Programming-1846281857.pdf

Greg Green - The Cannabis Grow Bible 4th Edition



http://rapidshare.com/files/232523229/Greg_Green_-_The_Cannabis_Grow_Bible__4th_Edition_.pdf

Java Network Programming 2nd Edition

1565928709_lrg.jpg image by virtualzin

http://rapidshare.com/files/232529865/Java_Network_Programming_2nd_Edition.pdf

Java 3D Programming



http://rapidshare.com/files/232539669/Java_3D_Programming.pdf

Killer Game Programming in Java



http://rapidshare.com/files/232548905/Killer_Game_Programming_in_Java.chm

Marijuana Grower's Handbook



http://rapidshare.com/files/232552654/Marijuana_Grower_s_Handbook.doc

The Joint Rolling Handbook



http://rapidshare.com/files/232562586/The_Joint_Rolling_Handbook.pdf

The Joys Of An Herb Garden At Home



http://rapidshare.com/files/232564985/The_Joys_Of_An_Herb_Garden_At_Home__Version_3_.pdf

Marijuana Grower's Guide



http://rapidshare.com/files/232565179/The_Marijuana_Grower_s_Guide.doc

Dave Chapelle - Black White Supremacist


Clayton Bigsby - More amazing videos are a click away

Dave Chappelle - Grape Drink

Reggie Watts: Lost In The Options

Reggie Watts: Lost in the Options from Jake Lodwick on Vimeo.

A Flight of Reggie Watts: Episode 1

A Flight of Reggie Watts: Episode 1 from steamclam on Vimeo.

Reggie Watts: The Beginning is Near

Reggie Watts: Out Of Control

The Lonely Island - I'm On A Boat

The Lonely Island - Jizz In My Pants

The Lonely Island - Like A Boss

9/11: Blueprint For Truth

























Funny

Genius

iCube


Police Stop and Searches Treble

The number of people who police in England and Wales stop and search under anti-terrorism laws has trebled in just a year, but only a handful result in arrests

Officers were last night accused of abusing their powers after it emerged just one per cent of around 124,000 "suspects" targeted in 2007/08 were arrested - and only a fraction of those were for terrorism related offences. Nearly 90 per cent of the searches were carried out in London by the Metropolitan Police, which saw a 266 per cent increase, with the aftermath of the attempted nightclub bombing in the Haymarket in the summer of 2007 blamed for the rise. The level of stop and searches for other suspected offences also increased to more than a million last year - the highest for a decade.

There was also a sharp rise in the number of times the public had to justify their activities to police in so-called "stop and account" incidents. Members of the public were stopped and questioned by officers more than 2.3 million times last year after a rise of 26 per cent. It is the equivalent of one in every 20 people being stopped, although that proportion plummets to one in ten for the black population. Chris Grayling, the shadow home secretary, said: "People will be highly suspicious about the scale of stop and search under terror laws. "This will only serve to reinforce the view that many anti-terror powers are being used for unrelated purposes."

Home Office figures showed a total of 124,687 people were stopped and search under anti-terror laws in 2007/8, up from 41,924 in 2006/7. But only 1,271 arrests - or one per cent - were made as a result and just 73 of those were for terror offences. Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said: "These statistics will only fuel the fear that anti-terror powers are being overused by the police and for reasons other than they were intended for. "When only one in nearly 2,000 stop and searches under the Terrorism Act results in an arrest for a terror offence, questions must be asked about how effectively these powers are being used. "There is a real risk that indiscriminate or excessive use of stop and search may alienate the communities we rely most on for intelligence, which is a far more crucial tool in the fight against terrorism". Most other police searches are carried out under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE), which were up nine per cent last year to 1,045,923, nearly half of which were for suspected drugs offences. It was the highest total since 1998/99 and the fourth year in a row that numbers have increased.

Met offices carried out almost 400,000 stop and searches - the equivalent of one in every 19 people in the capital. Using both terror and non-terror powers, 1,223,860 people and vehicles were stopped and searched by police in England and Wales last year, a 17 per cent increase. Black people remain proportionately the most likely to be stopped and increasingly so. Black "suspects" are now almost eight times more likely to be stopped and searched than a white person, up from a seven to one ratio the year before, according to separate figures from the Ministry of Justice. Asians are more than twice as likely to be stopped than whites. The MoJ figures also showed officers used powers to stop people and demand they account for themselves some 2.35 million times last year, separate figures revealed. That was up by a quarter on the previous year and is set to get even higher after the Home Office pledged to make it easier for officers by scrapping a form they must fill in every time they stop a member of the public. The figures on ethnicity showed black people were almost three and a half times more likely than white people to be stopped on the street and questioned by police.

Forces began to record statistics on the ethnicity members or of the public called to stop and account following recommendations made in the Macpherson report into the death of Stephen Lawrence. Corinna Ferguson, a lawyer for human rights group Liberty, said: "A threefold increase in anti-terror stop and search is the clearest signal that these powers are being misused. "Only six in 10,000 people stopped were arrested for terrorism, let alone charged or convicted. "And the disproportionate impact on ethnic minorities is even greater than in previous years."
Home Office minister Vernon Coaker said the rise in anti-terror stop and search last year was in part linked to the failed bombings in London's Haymarket. He said: "It is important that the police have the right powers available to keep our communities safe. "Stop and search is a power aimed at disrupting crime and responding to intelligence and levels of risk. "It is an important tool for the police - helping tackle knife crime and fight terrorism. "But we are clear that its use must be proportionate, which is why there is clear guidance about when and how these powers should be exercised and we are working with the police and community groups to ensure that the powers are implemented fairly. "Today's statistics show an increase in the use of terrorist-related stop and searches which reflects the police response to the terrorist threat during the 2007-2008 reporting period, most notably the events in Haymarket, London."

Incredible Ball Pen Art

These may look like photographs, but these amazing pictures are the creation of the Spanish artist Juan Francisco Casas, who creates his large artworks using just a blue ballpoint pen. He uses up to four 14p ballpoints on one picture, and his works are already a sell-out at exhibitions and gets up to £3,750 each. Formerly a traditional painter, Juan began the drawings three years ago based on photographs of nights out with his friends. His photo realistic ballpoint pen drawings are based on the incredible detail photos that he takes on his camera. We have seen many artists who can drawings of lifelike figures, but not with blue Bic pen!









What Started the Swine Influeza


Rapidshare Hands Over Uploader’s Details, House Raided (Dirty Fuckers)

In Germany, the file-hosting service Rapidshare has handed over the personal details of alleged copyright infringers to several major record labels. The information is used to pursue legal action against the Rapidshare users and at least one alleged uploader saw his house raided. Like many new releases, Metallica’s latest album “Death Magnetic” was uploaded to the popular file hosting service Rapidshare one day prior to its official release date last year. Since users don’t broadcast their IP-address or distribute files to the public directly though Rapidshare, it came as a surprise when the police raided the house of an uploader a few weeks ago.

At first it was unclear how the identity of the uploader was revealed, but today German news outlet Gulli said it had found out that this was likely to be accomplished by creative use of paragraph 101 of German copyright law. It turns out that several record labels are using this to take legal action against those who share music on Rapidshare. Previously the paragraph was only used by rights holders to get the personal details of those who share copyrighted works on file-sharing networks. It basically enables the copyright holders to get “permission” from a civil judge to ask ISPs to disclose the personal details of a user behind a certain IP. Now, however, this also seems to be the case for file-hosting services such as Rapidshare, which is based in Germany.

This of course opens up the possibility for rights holders to go after a wide range of file-hosting services and potentially even BitTorrent sites. Indeed, everyone who now uploads a torrent file to a site hosted in Germany is at risk of having his personal details revealed. Although it will be impossible to prove that the uploader actually seeded the file it might be seen as assisting in copyright infringement. Pretty much all torrent sites keep track of the IP-addresses of their (.torrent) uploaders, and if the rights holders can get the IP-address of people who upload to file-hosting services such as Rapidshare, they can easily extend this to BitTorrent sites hosted in Germany. A dream come true for copyright holders, but a nightmare for the privacy of Internet users

Classic Indie Albums

Indie rock takes its name from "independent," which describes both the do-it-yourself attitudes of its bands and the small, lower-budget nature of the labels that release the music. The biggest indie labels might strike distribution deals with major corporate labels, but their decision-making processes remain autonomous. As such, indie rock is free to explore sounds, emotions, and lyrical subjects that don't appeal to large, mainstream audiences — profit isn't as much of a concern as personal taste (though the labels do, after all, want to stay in business). It's very much rooted in the sound and sensibility of American underground and alternative rock of the '80s, albeit with a few differences that account for the changes in underground rock since then. In the sense that the term is most widely used, indie rock truly separated itself from alternative rock around the time that Nirvana hit the mainstream. Mainstream tastes gradually reshaped alternative into a new form of serious-minded hard rock, in the process making it more predictable and testosterone-driven. Indie rock was a reaction against that phenomenon; not all strains of alternative rock crossed over in Nirvana's wake, and not all of them wanted to, either. Yet while indie rock definitely shares the punk community's concerns about commercialism, it isn't as particular about whether bands remain independent or "sell out"; the general assumption is that it's virtually impossible to make indie rock's varying musical approaches compatible with mainstream tastes in the first place. There are almost as many reasons for that incompatibility as there are indie-rock bands, but following are some of the most common: the music may be too whimsical and innocent; too weird; too sensitive and melancholy; too soft and delicate; too dreamy and hypnotic; too personal and intimately revealing in its lyrics; too low-fidelity and low-budget in its production; too angular in its melodies and riffs; too raw, skronky and abrasive; wrapped in too many sheets of Sonic Youth/Dinosaur Jr./Pixies/Jesus & Mary Chain-style guitar noise; too oblique and fractured in its song structures; too influenced by experimental or otherwise unpopular musical styles. Regardless of the specifics, it's rock made by and for outsiders — much like alternative once was, except that thanks to its crossover, indie rock has a far greater wariness of excess testosterone. It's certainly not that indie rock is never visceral or powerful; it's just rarely — if ever — macho about it. As the '90s wore on, indie rock developed quite a few substyles and close cousins (indie pop, dream pop, noise-pop, lo-fi, math rock, post-rock, space rock, sadcore, and emo among them), all of which seemed poised to remain strictly underground phenomena

Afghan Whigs - Gentlemen



Artic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not



Blur - The Best of Blur



Dinosaur Jr. - You're Living All Over Me



Happy Mondays - Pills 'n' Thrills and Bellyaches



Interpol - Turn on the Bright Lights



The Jesus and Mary Chain - Psychocandy



Joy Division - Unknown Pleasures



LCD Soundsystem - LCD Soundsystem



Manic Street Preachers - The Holy Bible



My Bloody Valentine - Loveless



Oasis - Definitely Maybe

Pavement - Slanted & Enchanted



Pixies - Surfer Rosa



Primal Scream - Screamadelica



Pulp - Different Class



R.E.M - Automatic for the People



Radiohead - OK Computer



Razorlight - Up All Night



Sebadoh - III



Smashing Pumpkins - Siamese Dream



Sonic Youth - Daydream Nation



The Cure - Disintergration



The Libertines - Up the Bracket



The Smiths - The Queen Is Dead



The Stone Roses - The Stone Roses



The Strokes - Is This It



The Verve - Urban Hymns




The White Stripes - Elephant



Yo La Tengo - I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One


http://rapidshare.com/files/118476537/Yo_La_Tengo_-_I_Can_Hear_the_Heart_Beating_as_One.rar