official Gran Turismo 5
-
Recently Browsing 0 members
No registered users viewing this page.
-
Similar Content
-
By indospot
Sony confirms PlayStation Store closure on PS3, PSP, and PS Vita
by João Carrasqueira
Just over a week after initial reports came in that Sony would be shutting down the PlayStation Store on some of its older consoles, the company has now confirmed exactly that. In a notice on its website, Sony says the stores on PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable will shut down on July 2, while the PlayStation Vita will shut down on August 27, the exact dates mentioned in the earlier report.
Over the weekend, some users noticed that the old web version of the PlayStation Store, which included the ability to buy games for these older platforms, is no longer accessible either. To be fair, Sony launched a new web portal for the Store in October and warned that only the platforms on that store - the PlayStation 4 and 5 - would be supported going forward, but the old version was still accessible until recently.
Until the closure of the PlayStation Store on each of these consoles, you can still buy games for them through their own built-in stores. After the closure, though, you won't be able to buy games, movies or other video content, or in-game purchases on these platforms. You also won't be able to redeem gift cards that give you wallet funds.
However, if you have vouchers for specific games or PlayStation Plus subscriptions, they will continue to work after these dates. You'll also still be able to re-download any content you've purchased, as well as games claimed through PlayStation Plus - as long as your subscription stays active. Should you have any funds in your wallet after the closure, you can use them on newer platforms or request to have them refunded to you.
While the closure of the PlayStation Store on older consoles may be upsetting to some users, all of these platforms are pretty old or irrelevant. If you've been holding off on a specific purchase on these consoles, now is the time to do it.
-
By Copernic
Universal Media Server 10.4.1
by Razvan Serea
Universal Media Server is a DLNA-compliant UPnP Media Server. UMS was started by SubJunk, an official developer of PMS, in order to ensure greater stability and file-compatibility. The program streams or transcodes many different media formats with little or no configuration. It is powered by MEncoder, FFmpeg, tsMuxeR, AviSynth, MediaInfo and more, which combine to offer support for a wide range of media formats. Because it is written in Java, Universal Media Server supports all major operating systems, with versions for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X.
To see a comparison of popular media servers, click here.
Universal Media Server 10.4.1 changelog:
General:
Fixed broken transcoding for some users Fixed file scanner freezing on some files with external subtitles Fixed support for HEVC (H.265) via tsMuxeR Renderers:
Fixed detection of some Samsung 4K (UHD) TVs (thanks, jkl16!) Translation updates via Crowdin: Dutch (100%) (thanks, johnnygood!) German (100%) (thanks, pipin!) Korean (99%) (thanks, VenusGirl!) Norwegian (85%) (thanks, nhanssen88!) Spanish (100%) (thanks, Julio Alberto García!) Dependencies:
Bump spotbugs-maven-plugin from 4.2.0 to 4.2.2 Download: Universal Media Server 10.4.1 | 160.0 MB (Open Source)
Download: Other operating systems
View: Universal Media Server Website
Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
-
By indospot
Sony reportedly shutting down PlayStation Store on the PS3, Vita, and PSP this summer
by João Carrasqueira
With the PlayStation 5 now out in the wild and slowly making its way to gamers (and scalpers) around the world, Sony seems to be planning to shut down the PlayStation Store on a number of its older consoles. This is according to a report by TheGamer, citing sources familiar with the matter, and it indicates that you'll soon be unable to buy digital games on the PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable, and PlayStation Vita.
The first platforms on the death row are the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable, whose stores are set to close on July 2. It makes sense for these platforms to be shut down, seeing as both consoles are two generations old at this point, having received successors even before the PlayStation 5. The more recent PlayStation Vita is getting cut off on August 27, almost two months later.
The PlayStation Portable was first released on December 12, 2004 in Japan, and throughout 2005 in other markets. It was Sony's first portable console and it competed with the Nintendo DS, and it was fairly successful, with an estimated 80 to 82 million units sold in its lifetime - the last official number is 76.4 million and refers to March 2012, but units continued to be sold for a while after that.
Meanwhile, the PlayStation 3 was released in November 2006 in Japan and North America, and despite a slow start due to its ludicrous launch price, Sony turned the tide and sold 87.4 million units of the console (as of March 2017), beating out the Xbox 360 by a small margin.
As for the PlayStation Vita, it's the most recent of the three consoles, but it's also the least successful. Launched in late 2011 in Japan and early 2012 worldwide, the PlayStation Vita is the successor to the Portable, and it sold so poorly that Sony stopped reporting sales figures in 2012. You can't find any sales data for the console on Sony's corporate page, either, but it's estimated the console sold 16 million units in its lifetime. Because of that, despite being more recent, it wouldn't be surprising if Sony is discontinuing the PlayStation Store on it as well.
-
By Copernic
Universal Media Server 10.4.0
by Razvan Serea
Universal Media Server is a DLNA-compliant UPnP Media Server. UMS was started by SubJunk, an official developer of PMS, in order to ensure greater stability and file-compatibility. The program streams or transcodes many different media formats with little or no configuration. It is powered by MEncoder, FFmpeg, tsMuxeR, AviSynth, MediaInfo and more, which combine to offer support for a wide range of media formats. Because it is written in Java, Universal Media Server supports all major operating systems, with versions for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X.
To see a comparison of popular media servers, click here.
Universal Media Server 10.4.0 changelog:
General:
Added renderer config setting DisableUmsResume for renderers with their own resume support, like Samsung TVs Improved speed of transcoding to H.264 by up to 3x Fixed MEncoder crashing when trying to downmix 7.1 AAC to 5.1 AC-3 Fixed renderer SupportedVideoBitDepths setting Improved memory use and speed when resume is disabled Fixed renderer resolution and bitrate limiting Fixed broken transcoding for some users since the previous release Renderers:
Improved support for VC1 codec on Sony Blu-ray UBP-X800M2 (thanks, thechrisgregory!) Improved support for many filetypes on Kodi (thanks, thechrisgregory!) Improved support for 12-bit video on VLC Translation updates via Crowdin:
Estonian (24%) (thanks, Tanel K!) Japanese (97%) (thanks, Katsuhide.M!) Russian (91%) (thanks, Dmitry Lavrentev!) Dependency updates:
Bump git-commit-id-plugin from 4.0.3 to 4.0.4 Rolled back FFmpeg Download: Universal Media Server 10.4.0 | 160.0 MB (Open Source)
Download: Other operating systems
View: Universal Media Server Website
Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
-
By Copernic
Universal Media Server 10.3.0
by Razvan Serea
Universal Media Server is a DLNA-compliant UPnP Media Server. UMS was started by SubJunk, an official developer of PMS, in order to ensure greater stability and file-compatibility. The program streams or transcodes many different media formats with little or no configuration. It is powered by MEncoder, FFmpeg, tsMuxeR, AviSynth, MediaInfo and more, which combine to offer support for a wide range of media formats. Because it is written in Java, Universal Media Server supports all major operating systems, with versions for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X.
To see a comparison of popular media servers, click here.
Universal Media Server 10.3.0 changelog:
General:
Improved automatic maximum bandwidth setting and enabled it by default Improved performance of browsing folders Fixed being able to click the web interface button before it is browsable Fixed matching and prettifying some TV episodes Fixed binding to virtual network interfaces by default (can still be forced) Renderers:
Added support for foobar2000 mobile (thanks, jps92!) Improved support for Apple TV 4K Fixed audio support on Bravia EX 500 Translation updates via Crowdin:
Arabic (96%) (thanks, خليل مراطلة !) Chinese (Traditional) (thanks, Austin Zhang!) Czech (100%) Danish (100%) (thanks, NCAA!) Finnish (100%) (thanks, Esko Gardner!) Italian (96%) (thanks, Roberto crescia and tiwi90!) Korean (99%) (thanks, VenusGirl!) Polish (100%) (thanks, Karol Szastok!) Portuguese (100%) (thanks, mariopinto!) Russian (91%) (thanks, Artem4ik and Dmitry Lavrentev!) Slovak (96%) (thanks, Lukáš Praznovec!) Swedish (100%) (thanks, Erik Karlsson!) Turkish (100%) (thanks, Burak Yavuz!) Dependency updates:
Bump checkstyle from 8.40 to 8.41 Bump FFmpeg to latest Bump thumbnailator from 0.4.13 to 0.4.14 Bump twelvemonkeys-imageio-version from 3.6.2 to 3.6.4 Download: Universal Media Server 10.3.0 | 164.0 MB (Open Source)
Download: Other operating systems
View: Universal Media Server Website
Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
-
Recommended Posts