Showing posts with label Tutorial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tutorial. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Minecraft 1.8 - The Bountiful Update.

So, yesterday Minecraft V1.8 dropped. The longest and biggest patch/revision to date, having taken almost an entire year to develop after the release of 1.7 in October last year.

Having spent some time reviewing the changes, and a little time in game, as well as the fact me and my friend Evic will be kicking off our new cooperative lets play this evening, I can confidently say I am excited to get into the new version of the game, and some of the changes I have seen or read about are awesome!

My world preview video for the Coop Lets play world.


The major changes revolve around new blocks, new mobs, material changes, changes to villagers as well as a batch of fun and interesting miscellanious changes.

World Generation:
There is a new option on world creation to create a custom world. With this, you can use a selection of sliders and check boxes to decide what is in your world, and how much presence for certain things there will be. A fantastic way to create challenge maps, or just something that looks a little different.

In ocean biomes, there is also the chance of discovering an ocean monument - large underground structures containing rare materials and guarded by new mobs - the guardians. To say they sound challenging is an understatement. Physics changes mean that arrows wont work under water (beyond 2 blocks) so you need to get up close to them, and to do that likely means crafting lots of water breathing potions.

Mobs:
On the subject of mobs, there are a lot of mob changes and additions. There are passive mobs, such as bunnies, that can be killed for food and leather scraps that can be combined to make leather. Guardians, which guard the monuments, and Endermites, which spawn around nether activities, like Endermen teleporting, and are similar to Silverfish. Sheep now drop meat, bunnies drop meat and can be used with a large recipe to make Rabbit Stew that restores 10 food and 12 sustenance, making it the most potent food in the game. Additionally, the Wolf AI has changed, they now actively hunt skeletons, and scare them away. Give a dog a bone eh?

Villagers:
Villagers have had an overhaul. The trade system is more effective and there are more unlocked trades, and villagers also have a level of willingness that goes up as you trade with them, making them susceptible to breeding with other willing villagers if they get to a certain level. They also have professions, which will dictate their tradeable goods. Best keep them villagers alive ;-)


Enchanting:
Enchanting levels have been changed, and enchanting also uses Lapis Lazuli. Finally, a use beyond blue dye for this most useless of blocks.

Some other changes include making certain items stackable, like doors, and also making wood items like doors, fences and the likes actually have colour to match the base material. This makes for much better customisation. Other items include armour stands where you can hang up armour or mob heads - which themselves are gathered from blowing up mobs with a charged creeper. THere are also a load of new blocks ranging from new types of stone, to slime blocks (trampolines!) and sponge blocks (hold water).

On top of this there have been a butt load of tweaks and bug fixes. If you have not had the chance yet, get in there and enjoy!! :D

Saturday, April 2, 2011

The RSS feeder. What is it, and how do you use it! **TUTORIAL*


An RSS feed is in its simplest form a lazy data gathering method. It is free to use, and after you read through this - you will see it is also easy too. It is used most commonly for blogs, news sites and various other sites that get content updated regularly. I only know a handful of people who have bothered to work out how to set them up - but for the most part, they swear by them. In this article, I shall endeavor to educate you to set up an RSS feeder for use in your daily web-life :)

Step the 1st: Set up a feed reader.
A feed reader is a site that you update with the feeds you wish to follow, and it will automatically gather the data for you to view within the reader interface. The advantage of this is that you can have a large number of articles that highlight themselves for your attention, to read at your discretion - instead of you having to search the web, type URL's or go to bookmarks. (The only real downside to the whole thing is the site you are visiting may rely on ad-revenue and at about 30p a connection - potential customers never actually visit the site - but this is not your concern!)

I recommend Google Reader as your first port of call to get your hands on a feed reader. If you already have a Gmail account - then you already have a feed reader, you just have to populate it! I have my homepage set to iGoogle so that I have everything organised in the one area when I open a browser window. Calendar, new items to the feed reader, news items, weather, etc etc.

Step the 2nd: Add feeds.
Blogs, web pages, news articles and various other places that have their content updated frequently often have a link to an XML document that contains the code for the reader to parse the information into your feed reader. Usually they are represented with the following:

RSS Feed icon.
or
 "Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)"

When you click these links you will either be taken to a page where you are asked to select the feed reader you use from a list OR you are provided with a confusingly long wall of text. The former is easy. The latter requires you to copy the URL in the address bar and manually add the address into your Feed Reader. This is simply a case of selecting the "Add a subscription" icon at the upper left section of the page (at least for Google Reader) and pasting the URL into the address bar.

Step the 3rd: Enjoy.
That is it! You will now have your subscriptions in the sidebar and can click on them whenever you see them flag up with a number e.g "number(3)" instead of "number".

Go out, and enjoy the extra tool in your Geeky arsenal :) I use mine for blogs, podcasts and comics. It rocks.

Just dont ask me how to MAKE an RSS feed... Kinda know how... Never wanna try!
-V