2, no wait 3. Oh no that one fell from the table, it was an accident. Yeah 2. :P
Cyb0rg360's forum posts
Suuweeeett!!! I can't wait! One of my all time favorite series'! 8)
Demons Souls
Make a ton of potions to heal yourself. There are two different ones if I remember correctly. Also, see about you and your companions equipment. Upgrade whatever you can, add runes where you can. Upgrade your weapons, etc. I had a tough time and then I levelled up a bit more and equipped some badass armor and took him down like he was nothing. Check the Emporium, if your stats aren't high enough for better gear you can buy the potions that reset you to level 1 with all of your unlocked points available.
[QUOTE="BakedDank420"]That wont work for me, i've been downloading the firmware for over 30 minutes now and still on 39% Meanwhile i've been reading and apparently you can only change the password if the console is the one where you created the account, and since for me that was the old fat 60GB that YYOD on me i wont be able to change it on my 320gb slim. So i'm guessing its gonna take me a couple of days to get back online -_- That can't be right. I have a phat and a slim. I downloaded the update on the slim logged on and was prompted to change my password. The phat was the one I created the account on. I have yet to even use the phat again, but my password is changed so I am assuming I will log on and just enter the new password. .You don't need it to send you an e-mail, all you need to do is log in to PSN (ON YOUR PS3) and it will automatically ask you to change your password.
Kane04
Same here. . .I changed my password before I even got the e-mail.
GamerChick2083
Yeah, your IP is class C so change the last octet. All your devices should only have that last one different. Changing it to 200 should work. I don't remember if your devices are assigned in numeric order or not. It would make sense, but I forget how DHCP assigns the addresses exactly. Anyway, go for it and see what happens.
Here's an idea. I am assuming you aren't subnetting and all of your devices are on one network. You could have a pretty large range of IP addresses on one network. Count how many devices you currently have using the network. Look up your laptop, or any of the device's IP addresses and then add enough numbers to avoid giving it the same IP address. For instance, if a device is IP 192.168.34.12 then you have to change the last number, as 192 is a class C IP address.
1-127 is class A. Meaning the first octet of the address is the network ID. example:122.34.56.6 (122 falls within the range of 1-127)
128-191 is class B. Meaning the first TWO octets are the network ID. example 145.68.34.2 (145.68 is the network ID, 145 falls within the range 128-191)
192-223 is class C. Many home networks are class C. Class C means the first THREE octets are the network ID example 199.168.43.9 (199.168.43 is the network ID, the last octet is the Host ID. In a class C network (if you are not subnetting) you have 256 possible IP addresses 0-256, the host ID range. So you could theoretically choose any number between 0 and 256, although on many networks 0 and 256 are reserved. 0 for the ID and 256 for a broadcast ID, so stick between 1 and 255.
I'm finally back on PSN. Now I wonder if there's anyone to play with yet??
Like most early adoptions of new technology there will be a niche market for these things until it is integrated with everything else (or not, in which case some other tech will come out). That's the funny part about this area of tech, it's for entertainment primarily, but it has the potential to do a whole lot more for different industries. The average person won't see past watching netflix in bed with a lightweight screen, which is nice, but again it's just about surfing and consuming entertainment. Unlike needed tech, like the infrastructure for IPv6 to replace the current burnt out IPv4 IP addressing scheme, these toys will get all the attention and headlines. Granted these devices, for what it's worth, do drive some of the development of more high tech networking and communication protocols, so I see them as a good thing. But then again I never hated it in the first place,lol
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