__12 November 2012

__4 more views form half past 3 to beat the webstibe I don't even write on

















Friday, August 31, 2012

UPDATE #1: Ayo, Why do have Awesome Stuffs above?

I sigh up for AdSense and within 1 week they disable my account this was un-fair. Google AdSense don't send you any checks (as they promise). So I sign up for http://chitika.com/. I going do a update post at least every week

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Apple iOS 6: Stage 1: Apple banning all Google apps including YouTube and Maps.

Tim Cook, chief executive officer of Apple.Inc, banning all google apps and website on iOS6 and future device . That including Google Search, Gmail, Maps,YouTube, Earth, Translate and Voice. Without the biggest app on iOS 6, Apple is worry that everyone will go to Google's Android so in the USA  (Lucky in UK) Apple going to court to ban the Samsung Galaxy S and S2 and the Galaxy Tab 10.1

Apple are making a better version of Google Maps and Earth. On Google Earth most of it flat. Apple Maps it's like google earth meets maps meet 3D Model City.
Apple's Scott Forstall showing off the new map iOS 6
iOS 6 is build-into iPhone 5. I don't think soon banned YouTube

Here the laster

Friday, May 11, 2012

Minecraft notches 50m downloads


I recently be playing a game (alot) called Minecraft 


With 50 million registered players and a hardcore community, Minecraft is one of indie gaming's most astonishing and important success stories.

Originally released on the PC in 2009 as a working project, the title has been evolving ever since, adding new features, rules and modes and now a console conversion. Along the way, it has quietly become such a vital cultural force it even has its own Lego set. Which, if you know anything about Minecraft, is a delicious irony.
If, however, you still don't anything about Minecraft (wha... what?!), imagine a Lego set crossed with a resource management simulation. That is basically it. When you start a game, the engine builds a vast landscape via procedural generation, meaning no two worlds are the same. You're now free to explore this blocky Eden, climbing its mountains, strolling along beaches and staring up at the slabs of white cloud that float past like cubist spacecraft... Read more at

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Goodbye and Thanks.... Not Yet

Click here to go to my YouTube channel


I am moving on from a website blogger to YouTube. I been much more successful on YouTube that on this website.
I have no choose but to closed this website unless you donate to proof why that website should stay online. Donate from a little as 1p. If everyone donate £3 every mouth, that will keep the website alive. You can donate by PayPal, MasteCard, Vista, American Express .ect.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Google Maps 8-bit Quest Mode






Google Maps is exploring a brand new frontier with its next expansion: the Nintendo Entertainment System.
If you click on Quest it will turn Google Maps into an 8-bit, classic video game wonderland.
“Our engineering team in Japan understood the importance of maps on retro game systems,” writes Tatsuo Nomura, software engineer with Google Maps, at the application’s official blog. “With the power of Google’s immense data centers, and support from Nintendo and Square Enix, we were able to overcome the technical and design hurdles of developing 8-bit maps. Today, we’re excited to announce the result: a version of Google Maps for NES, with beautiful low-res graphics, simple and intuitive controls, and a timeless soundtrack.”
The maps pay homage to the classic NES role-playing game Dragon Warrior, which was known as Dragon Quest in Japan.
Users can even view landmarks in 8-bit form, including The Statue of Liberty, the Washington Monument and Mount Rushmore. Fortunately, no Slimes were encountered during our journey.
Google has also posted a great video walkthrough on YouTube of the spoof application for NES, including troubleshooting tips such as “blowing on the cartridge.”