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Solve All of Your Pro Evolution Soccer 2008 Issues With Konami's FAQ

In case you've already labeled PES 2008 as a bad game, you should first listen to a couple of Konami's pieces of advice before going back to FIFA 2008. It seems that many PS3 gamers who own a copy of the Pro Evolution Soccer 2008 title were frustrated by the game's issues, the most important one being its major slowdowns. Konami's here to save the day through its recent update that includes a neat FAQ, designed to make all the PES-related problems disappear. Keep in mind that the producer advises you to play the game on a "HD TV with an HDMI or component cable and the Playstation 3 set to output in 720p resolution or above". However, a couple of users reported slowdown issues which surfaced when they played the game with the above-mentioned PS3 setup (cables included). That's not the only bug that's plaguing the game right now, as playing it online turns into a frustrating experience because of its huge lag.


Florida shifting to voting system with paper trail

But most of the machines in other states were purchased with federal money provided under a 2002 law that required states to upgrade from old punch-card and lever systems.

New York is planning to buy either screens with printers or optical scanners, New Jersey is adding paper trails to its touch screens and Connecticut is buying the optical scanners. A recent survey by Election Data Services, a Washington consulting firm, estimated that 36 percent of the nation's counties have bought electronic machines, including some with printers attached, while 56 percent have the optical scan systems.

Mr. Holt said his bill would require the return to paper ballots by next year's presidential primaries, and it would authorize $300 million in federal money to upgrade the machines.


Not All Goodmail Partners Have A Whitelist

Microsoft has yet to join the program, a deal that would boost that number to 85 percent. Bulk email senders wanting to bypass the spam filters at Yahoo, AOL, Time Warner Road Runner, Comcast, and Cox, can now do so for a quarter of a cent per email. Or, as Goodmail competitor and third-party reputation service Habeas' CEO Des Cahill puts it, at a cost of $2.50 CPM. Goodmail unveiled its CertifiedEmail product last year amid a storm of controversy when AOL appeared to be forgoing its email whitelists (free sender reputation lists) in favor of fee-based Goodmail. The press was quick to take note, calling the arrangement an email tax, or a kind of postage that could derail small online businesses and non-profit organizations that depended on bulk email. AOL decided to keep its whitelists after significant public pressure.


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