The weapon that you start out with in halo 3 is an assault rifle and as your side arm some kind of futuristic pistol. other weapons that you can pick up during game play are battle rifles, sniper rifle, plasma rifle shotguns grenades and other futuristic weapons.
Archive for October, 2008
Weapons In Halo 3
October 7, 2008Weapons In COD 4
October 7, 2008in cod 4 your character stars usually with an m4 and a side arm that is usually and m9 or an colt 45. you can pick up other gun durring play such as mp5s, m60s, G3s, ak47s and other modern guns
Playing
October 6, 2008Multiplayer
October 6, 2008we have not played the campaign yet in halo 3 as we did in cod 4 but we have played multiplayer in both games and can conclude that the multiplayer in cod 4 is alot better it is just better because it is more realistic
Research DRM
October 3, 20081. DRM is an acronym for Digital Rights Management, a broad term used to describe a number of techniques for restricting the free use and transfer of digital content.
2. The RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) is an organization that represents the music recording industry’s intellectual property rights.
3. MPPA is an acronym for Motion Picture Association of America, which was originally titled the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors Association of America. It is an organization to which many of the major movie producing studios belong, including Buena Vista, Sony, Paramount, Fox, Warner Brothers, and Universal. The principle work of the organization is to control distribution of movies, work to combat illegal copying of films, and to administer film ratings.
4. RealDVD is an easy-to-use application that lets you save your DVDs — movies, TV shows, or home DVDs — to your PC digitally and legally. Best of all, you can play them from your hard drive whenever and wherever you want without the discs.
5. EFF is the leading civil liberties group defending your rights in the digital world.
fter signing onto a letter earlier this week that demanded access to draft work being done by Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) negotiators, the EFF and Public Knowledge took their complaints about the secret treaty a step further today and filed a lawsuit to gain access to negotiating materials.
Perhaps no topic over the past year has been cause for more uneasy speculation within the intellectual property community than the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), primarily because the negotiating process for this treaty has been behind tightly closed doors. Now two US-based public interest organisations have filed suit against the US trade office in charge of the negotiations, in hopes of being able to gain access to the records currently under lock and key.

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