Headed For The East Coast Man

Thursday, January 1, 2009

How to Burn PS3 Games Successfully

So you want to know how to burn ps3 games? Well this article may help you out. You see there are a couple of ways in which you can burn your ps3 games but they both methods vary in complexity. One method requires you do download and install several different software applications in order to get a successful copy of your ps3 games, while the other requires one install and is basically a one step operation.

The benefit of downloading the several application methods is that it is free, all the suggested software that is need is free although depending on what operating system you use some of these software applications may indeed conflict with your PC which means that you won't be able to follow through with the whole process. You will also have to launch several different applications one after the other in order to get to the final stages of burning the ps3 backup so this method is time consuming.

The other method requires purchasing software but the benefit of this is that it's a one step process and all you need to do is launch the one application and it will basically do the rest. With this method all you need to do is place your original ps3 games into your DVD burner, launch the software application, press a button and away it goes. The software will then start building an image of the game and once it's finished it will let you know so you can insert your blank media into the PC and burn yourself off a copy of your game.

Of course the whole benefit of burning your Ps3 games is that you can use the backup copies and safely store away the original ps3 game where it will be safe then if you somehow scratch or damage your backup then all you need to do is burn yourself off another copy. If you were to scratch your original Ps3 games then it would be unplayable and you would have effectively just wasted $100 on a game you can't play, tragic!

To find out more about this software to burn ps3 games come and visit our site below.

For more information on how you can Copy Ps3 Games please look at our How To Copy Ps3 Games site.

A Palestinian firefighter shouts at the scene of an Israeli air strike on the home of senior Hamas leader Nizar Rayyan in Gaza January 1, 2009. Israel killed a senior Hamas leader in an air attack on his home on Thursday, striking its first deadly blow against the top ranks of the Islamist group in a Gaza offensive that has claimed more than 400 Palestinian lives.  REUTERS/Suhaib Salem (GAZA)AP - An Israeli warplane dropped a 2,000-pound bomb on the home of one of Hamas' top five decision-makers Thursday, instantly killing him and 18 others, while the Israeli army said troops massed on the Gaza border were ready for any order to invade.

Second Life - Different Ways to Make Money in the Second Life Virtual World

Second Life should be thought of as a community more than a game. While it may have some things in common with MMORPGs, allowing massive numbers of players to interact with each other online, what Second Life doesn't have is an end game. There's no level 70 to hit. Competition certainly exists inside the Second Life virtual community however, just like it does out here in the 3-D world and like our own reality, that competition tends to revolve around money and the things that money translates into, most notably - property.

Once you create your own Second Life avatar and start exploring, you'll soon realize that all the cities, the coffee shops, the clothing that people wear, the homes their character inhabit, were made by other residents just like yourself. The shops that items are displayed in may be owned by the creator of the items or it could be owned by a landlord, but someone has definitely bought the land where any shop is built. The same goes for nightclubs and houses. Some Second Life residents own entire islands.

The currency of Second Life is the Linden. They work like dollars and you exchange them for good and services within Second Life. Linden dollars can be purchased online or they can be earned within the community. There are lots of different ways to make money in Second Life and some people participate in Second Life primarily because they want to exchange the virtual dollars for real dollars. This is all perfectly legal as well and appears to actually be encouraged by the creators, Linden Labs.

There are lots of different opportunities to make money in Second Life, depending on what your skills are. Many designers who are great with graphics design the clothes and accessories that the avatars wear. Someone else might decide to run a nightclub and collect admission fees. Another person could simply be a bartender in that nightclub, working for a wage. The opportunities are endless and resemble how things work in the real world, but all of this is now done virtually.

The best way to get to know Second Life is to just go ahead and sign up, build an avatar and start exploring. The Second Life website at secondlife.com actually has a lot of great information about how the economy works and they even run an economy blog and keep statistics on their economy, much like economists develop statistics for the US govt on our economic health. Once you get to know the virtual world a bit better, it's likely you'll come up with your own niche and ideas for making money and can start exploring how to best find opportunities - whether you want to simply have fun and build up your own stakes within the game, or want to start trading virtual money for the real thing.

To jump start your money making endeavors on Second Life, check out the Second Life Riches guide to making money in the virtual world.

Many people buy and sell Lindens and other Second Life stuff on Ebay, so you may want to browse some of the Second Life auctions just to get an idea of how virtual money is translated to real money.

Protestor Ephrosine Daniggelis holds a placard in front of U.S. president-elect Barack Obama's vacation compound in Kailua, Hawaii December 30, 2008, during a protest against the Israeli attacks on Gaza. (Hugh Gentry/Reuters)Reuters - A small group of placard-waving pro-Palestinian demonstrators gathered near U.S. President-elect Barack Obama's vacation retreat in Hawaii on Tuesday to protest against the Israeli airstrikes in Gaza.