Acronym Definition
TKEL Total Kinetic Energy Loss
TKEL Tele Kanematsu Electronics Ltd.
TKEL Tele Kell-Cellano (blood group system)
TKEL Tele Kelme - Costa Blanca (Tour De France cycling sponsor)
TKEL Teach Kelvin (temperatire scale)
TKEL Telecomm Kiel, Germany - Holtenau (Airport Code)
TKEL Tell Knowledge Engineering Laboratory
TKEL Tau Kappa Epsilon Learning
TKEL Thermal Knife Electronics Lab
TKEL Thyssenkrupp Elevator Limited
TKEL Total Kinetic Energy Lead
TKEL Track Angle Error Lab
TKEL Track to Track Lap
TKEL Trusted Key Element Level
TKEL Turbulent Kinetic Energy Level
TKEL Tracker Electronics
TKEL Tau Kappa Epsilon Lab
Kel may refer to:
* Kel, a feminine or masculine first name
* KEL, the IATA airport code for Kiel-Holtenau airport in Germany
* Kabataş Erkek Lisesi
ΤΚΕL Tau Kappa Epsilon Locator
Tau Kappa Epsilon (ΤΚΕ or Teke, pronounced T-K-E or IPA: /ˈtiːk/, as in teak
wood) is a college fraternity with chapters in the USA, and Canada, and
affiliation with a German fraternity system known as the Corps of the Weinheimer
Senioren Convent (WSC). There are currently 263 active TKE chapters and colonies
throughout the United States and Canada. Tau Kappa Epsilon was founded on
January 10, 1899 at Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Illinois. The
Five Founders of TKE are Charles Roy Atkinson, Clarence Arthur Mayer, James
Carson McNutt, Joseph Lorenzo Settles, and Owen Ison Truitt.
Tau Kappa Epsilon was originally named the Knights of Classic Lore, with the
goal of establishing a fraternity where membership is based on personal worth
and character rather than wealth, rank, or honor.
Symbols and traditions
Apollo
The mythological ideal or patron of Tau Kappa Epsilon is Apollo, one of the most
important of Olympian divinities. The Grecian god of music and culture, of light
and the ideals toward which all Tekes must constantly be striving. Typifying the
finest development of manhood, the selection of Apollo is most appropriate.
Badge
The official membership badge, made of gold and adorned with three white pearls,
is by far the most important item of TKE insignia in general use. This badge may
only be worn by initiated undergraduate members. Jeweled badges, crown set with
pearls, diamonds, rubies or emeralds, according to choice, may be worn by alumni
members. Frequently the standard membership badge is used as a token of
engagement. Miniature badges are also available for mothers, sisters, wives,
chapter sweethearts or for engagement purposes. The TKE 'badge of gold', unique
in its design and distinctiveness, has never been changed since its adoption.
The triangular badge is worn at an angle so that the left side of the triangle
appears vertical. This is done to reflect the geographic positions of the three
original chapters.
Carnation
The red carnation is the flower of the fraternity. From this flower the color
for the coat-of-arms, flag, and other symbols. Red carnations are also worn
during initiations and at TKE banquets. The Red Carnation Ball is a dance that
many chapters celebrate, and is named after the flower.
Office Titles Prytanis: President
Epiprytanis: Vice-President
Grammateus: Secretary
Crysophylos: Treasurer
Histor: Historian
Hypophetes: Chaplain (Academics)
Pylortes: Sgt. at Arms (Risk Management)
Hegemon: Educator
Coat-of-Arms
The heraldic definition of the TKE Coat-of-Arms is "A shield of a Norman form,
upon which has a bend with five equilateral triangles, surmounting a scroll
bearing five Greek letters, and surmounted by a skull, or death's head,
three-quarters profile. This assemblage is done in the official colors, cherry
red and gray, properly mantled." It may be used only by official members of the
Fraternity on stationery, jewelry, and other personal effects. It is used by the
Fraternity upon its official stationery, membership certificates, and other
documents. Modified slightly several times during the early years of Tau Kappa
Epsilon, the present Coat-of-Arms, adopted in 1926, was designed by Dr. Carlton
B. Pierce and Ms. Emily Butterfield.
Flag
The present design of the TKE flag, as adopted at the 1961 Conclave, features
five voided triangles, in cherry red, on a gray bend surmounting a red field.
Because it is patterned after the shield of the fraternity Coat-of-Arms, the
flag is readily associated with Tau Kappa Epsilon. Individual chapters may also
purchase and use pennants and wall banners of various designs. These usually
employ the name or Greek letters of the fraternity and chapter, and may
incorporate the basic TKE insignia. TKE insignia may only be purchased from the
Offices of the Grand Chapter or a merchant licensed by the fraternity
headquarters.
Founders' Day
On or near January 10th of each year, undergraduate and alumni chapters of Tau
Kappa Epsilon celebrate the founding of our Fraternity and honor the five
Founders. This day, known as Founders' Day, is usually celebrated by a
traditional banquet. At this celebration, contributions are collected for the
Founders' Student Loan Fund, and the Grand Prytanis sends a subtle message to
each chapter to be read as part of the program.
The Horse Shoe
In April 1921, members of the Fraternity at The Ohio State University made their
way to the Conclave in Madison, Wisconsin. At the conclusion of the vote
granting their charter as Omicron Chapter, one of the members pulled from his
pants pocket a rusty horseshoe which the fraters had picked up along the way.
Believing that the horseshoe had granted the chapter good luck, the tradition
began to pass the horseshoe down to each chapter. The original horseshoe was
lost during WWII at the Alpha-Chi Chapter, University of Louisville, Louisville,
Kentucky (it was replaced with a new horseshoe to continue the tradition).
In mid-1995, the original horseshoe was discovered by Past Grand Prytanis Rodney
Williams among some artifacts belonging to Alpha-Chi Chapter, which had been
held for years by a charter member of the chapter. At the 49th Biennial
Conclave, the original TKE horseshoe from Omicron Chapter was displayed, and the
story behind its loss explained.
The Creed of Tau Kappa Epsilon
* To Believe in love and loyalty to my College, my Fraternity, my Country, and
my God;
* To Believe in the worthiness and dignity of my fellow man, and judge him
solely upon his personal worth and character;
* To Believe with fidelity in the traditions and ideals of my Fraternity, and
upon my sacred honor, to uphold them;
* To Believe in the constant search for truth, and through it, to seek the goal
of wisdom;
* To Believe in the life based upon integrity, justice, sincerity, patience,
moderation, culture, and challenge in order to serve as a responsible, mature
member of society;
* To Believe in the cardinal principles of Love, Charity, and Esteem and to use
them to guide my life;
* To Believe in my Fraternity as a brotherhood of gentlemen in perpetual quest
of excellence as a way of life.
International officers
Grand Officers
* Grand Prytanis (president) - Mark K. Johnson
* Grand Epiprytanis (vice-president) - Dr. Herbert L. Songer
* Grand Grammateus (secretary) - Kevin H. Pollard
* Grand Crysophylos (treasurer) - Edmund C. Moy
* Grand Histor (historian) - Charles J. Trabold
* Grand Hypophetes (chaplain) - Rodney G. Talbot
* Grand Pylortes (parliamentarian)- Robert A. Jarred
* Grand Hegemon (educator) - Christopher Hanson
Professional Staff
* Chief Executive Officer - Kevin Mayeux, CAE
The eight Grand Officers along with the CEO act as members of the executive
board of the fraternity. Their titles are derived from the titles given to the
officers of undergraduate chapters. With the exception of the Grand Prytanis
(president) the honorific titles do not necessarily reflect the duties of these
officers. The CEO handles day-to-day operation, finances and the administration
of the international organization.
Notable alumni
Government
* Robert L. "Bob" Barr, Jr. (Beta-Sigma) - U.S. Congressman (Georgia)
* William K. Brewster - U.S. Congressman (Oklahoma)
* Robert A. Butterworth, Jr. - Florida Attorney General
* Robert C. Byrd (Alpha-Pi) - U.S. Senator (West Virginia)
* Ryan C. Crocker - U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Lebanon, Kuwait and Syria
* Gary Doer (Zeta-Iota) - Premier of Manitoba
* Charles Foti, Jr. - Louisiana Attorney General
* William Hagan - Political writer and Communications Director for Congressman
Mac Collins
* Ed Moy (Lambda)- 38th Director of the United States Mint
* Mike Huckabee (Beta-Psi) - former Governor of Arkansas & 2008 Presidential
Candidate
* Roger W. Jepsen - U.S. Senator (Iowa)
* Joe Knollenberg - U.S. Congressman (Michigan)
* Earl Pomeroy - U.S. Congressman (North Dakota)
* Carl D. Pursell - U.S. Congressman (Michigan)
* Greg Pyle - Chief of the Choctaw Nation, Oklahoma
* James H. Quillen - U.S. Congressman (Tennessee)
* Ronald W. Reagan (Iota) - 40th President of the United States
* Albert Rosellini - Governor of Washington
* John G. Rowland - Governor of Connecticut
* Richard B. Stone - U.S Ambassador to Denmark
* Wesley W. Watkins - U.S. Congressman (Oklahoma)
* Charles E. Whittaker (Alpha-Phi) - U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Business and Industry
* Keith Connolly - Vice President Global Strategic Sourcing AT&T
* Kevin M. Dotts (Alpha-Tau) - CFO of EarthLink
* Edward C. Droste (Epsilon) - Co Founder of Hooters Restaurant
* Dr. James Goodnight (Beta-Beta) - CEO of the SAS Institute
* James P. Evans (Gamma-Omega) - CEO of Jenny Craig, Inc., former president and
CEO of Best Western
* Earle H. Harbison, Jr. (Xi) - retired president and CEO of Monsanto
* Conrad M. Hilton (Alpha-Omicron) - Founder of Hilton Hotels
* James M. Kilts (Delta) - Chairman and CEO of The Gillette Company
* W. Alan McCollough (Delta-Upsilon) - former chairman and CEO of Circuit City
* Paul W. Mobley (Gamma-Kappa) - chairman and CEO of Noble Roman's pizza
* Charles W. Moorman (Beta-Pi) - president and CEO of Norfolk Southern
* Robert L. Nardelli (Zeta-Theta) - CEO of Chrysler, Former Chairman, President
and CEO of The Home Depot
* Howard D. Schultz (Theta-Iota) - Principal Owner of Starbucks
* Harold A. Shaub (Alpha-Tau) - retired president and CEO of the Campbell Soup
Company
* Charles Rudolph Walgreen, Jr. (Upsilon) - Chairman of Walgreens
Education
* Dr. Luther Fred Carter - President of Francis Marion University
* Gregory L. Geoffroy (Alpha-Chi) - President of Iowa State University
* Dr. Robert M. McKenzie - East Stroudsburg University Professor and author of
Comparing Media from Around the World
* Dr. William V. Muse - Chancellor of East Carolina University
* Dr. David Shi - President of Furman University
* Joseph J. Sisco - President of American University
* Hoke L. Smith - President of Towson University
* Scott Cowan - President of Tulane University
* Brian Wansink - Cornell University Professor and author of Mindless Eating:
Why We Eat More Than We Think
Athletics
* Terry Bradshaw (Beta-Zeta) - NFL Pittsburgh Steelers Super Bowl MVP and TV
Analyst
* Lou Carnesecca - Former St. John's, Hall of Fame, Basketball Coach
* Rich Dozer - President, Arizona Diamondbacks & former President, Phoenix Suns
* George S. Halas (Gamma) - Founder of the NFL, owner & coach of the Chicago
Bears
* Roy Jones Jr. (Tau-Psi) - WBC, WBA, IBF, WBF, IBO, NBA and IBA light
heavyweight championship professional boxer
* Duane Kuiper - Former MLB second baseman and Baseball Commentator
* Marv Levy (Zeta) - Former Head Football Coach Buffalo Bills
* Richard F. "Digger" Phelps - Notre Dame Basketball Coach and TV Analyst
* Phil Simms (Mu-Sigma) - New York Giants Super Bowl MVP and TV Commentator
* John L. Smith - Former head football coach, University of Louisville &
Michigan State University
* Paul Wight Jr. (Beta-Chi) - Professional Wrestler also known as his in ring
name The Big Show
Entertainment
* Eric Bloom (Kappa-Zeta) - Lead singer of Blue Öyster Cult
* The Everly Brothers (Gamma-Rho) - Vocal group
* Fred Dryer (Gamma-Lambda) - TV's "Hunter" & NFL player
* Arthur Ferrante and Louis Teicher - Musicians
* Merv Griffin (Gamma-Delta) - Entertainer and TV personality
* DeWayne Jessie - Actor
* Willie Nelson (Nu-Xi) - Country music Songwriter and singer (honorary member)
* Les Paul (Gamma-Delta) - Guitarist and pioneering electric guitar inventor,
best known for association with the Gibson Les Paul
* Elvis Presley (Beta-Psi) - Rock 'n' Roll singer and actor
* Robert Rockwell (Gamma) - actor
* Danny Thomas - Entertainer and TV personality
* Lawrence Welk (Alpha-Xi) - Musician
* Robert Wuhl (Epsilon-Omicron)- Actor
* John Zacherle- "Zacherley" Television Host and Voice Actor
Military and NASA
* Andrew M. Allen — NASA astronaut
* Earl E. Anderson — Youngest 4-star general in the United States Marine Corps
* Gerald P. Carr (Beta-Sigma) - NASA astronaut, Commander U.S. Skylab IV
* John Fisher — Rear Admiral, United States Navy, President of The Navy League
* Roy K. Flint — Dean, United States Military Academy at West Point
* Joseph Ralston - Supreme Commander of NATO
* Steven W. Squyres — Principal investigator of the Mars Exploration Rover
Mission., Chair of the NASA Space Science Advisory Committee NASA
Philanthropic, literary, and religious
* William A. Fowler (Omicron) - Nobel Prize for Physics, Nuclear Astrophysics,
Professor
* Bruce Gordon - Former president of the NAACP
* David R. Jones - Editor, New York Times
* William Least Heat Moon (Beta-Theta) - writer and traveller
TKEL Tracker Electronics
Tracker is the generic term for a class of software music sequencers which, in
their purest form, allow the user to arrange sound samples stepwise on a
timeline across several monophonic channels. A tracker's interface is primarily
numeric; notes are entered via the alphanumeric keys of the computer keyboard,
while parameters, effects and so forth are entered in hexadecimal. A complete
song consists of several small multi-channel patterns chained together via a
master list.
How it works
There are several elements common to any tracker program: samples, notes,
effects, tracks (or channels), patterns, and orders.
A sample is a small digital sound file of an instrument, voice, or other sound
effect. Most trackers allow a part of the sample to be looped, simulating a
sustain of a note.
A note designates the frequency at which the sample is played back. By
increasing or decreasing the playback speed of a digital sample, the pitch is
raised or lowered, simulating instrumental notes (e.g. C, C#, D, etc.).
An effect is a special function applied to a particular note. These effects are
then applied during playback through either hardware or software. Common tracker
effects include volume, portamento, vibrato, retrigger, and arpeggio.
A track (or channel) is a space where one sample is played back at a time.
Whereas the original Amiga trackers only provided four tracks, the hardware
limit, modern trackers can mix a virtually unlimited number of channels into one
sound stream through software mixing. Tracks have a fixed number of "rows" on
which notes and effects can be placed (most trackers lay out tracks in a
vertical fashion). Tracks typically contain 64 rows and 16 beats, although the
beats and tempo can be increased or decreased to the composer's taste.
A basic drum set could thus be arranged by putting a bass drum at rows 0, 4, 8,
12 etc. of one track and putting some hihat at rows 2, 6, 10, 14 etc. of a
second track. Of course bass and hats could be interleaved on the same track, if
the samples are short enough. If not, the previous sample is usually stopped
when the next one begins. Some modern trackers simulate polyphony in a single
track by setting the "new note action" of each instrument to cut, continue, fade
out, or release, opening new mixing channels as necessary.
A pattern is a group of simultaneously played tracks that represents a full
section of the song. A pattern is intended to represent an even number of
measures of music composition.
An order is part of a sequence of patterns which defines the layout of a song.
Patterns can be repeated across multiple orders to save tracking time and file
space.
There are also some tracker-like programs that utilize tracker-style sequencing
schemes, while using real-time sound synthesis instead of samples. Many of these
programs are designed for creating music for a particular synthesizer chip such
as the OPL chips of the Adlib and SoundBlaster sound cards, or the sound chips
of classic home computers. These programs are also often called "trackers" and
are listed in this article.
Tracker music is typically stored in so-called module files where the song data
and samples are encapsulated in a single file. Several module file formats are
supported by popular music player programs such as Winamp or XMMS. Well-known
formats include MOD, MED, S3M, XM and IT.
History
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards.
Please improve this article if you can. (March 2006)
The term tracker derives from Ultimate Soundtracker; the first tracker software.
Ultimate Soundtracker was written by Karsten Obarski and released in 1987 by
Electronic Arts for the Commodore Amiga. Ultimate Soundtracker was a commercial
product, but not much later shareware clones such as NoiseTracker appeared as
well. The general concept of step-sequencing samples numerically, as used in
trackers, is also found in the Fairlight CMI sampling workstation of the late
1970s. Some early tracker-like programs appeared for the Commodore 64, such as
Rock Monitor, but these did not feature sample playback, instead playing notes
on the computer's internal synthesizer.
The first computer game to feature tracker music was Amegas (1987), an Arkanoid
clone for Amiga. The music, which was composed by Obarski, is generally
considered the first MOD music ever made and is well known by fans of "old
school" computer music.
Most early tracker musicians were from the United Kingdom and Scandinavia. This
may be attributable to the close relationship of the tracker to the demoscene,
which grew rapidly in Scandinavian countries, and the relative affordability in
the UK of computers able to run tracker software. Tracker music became something
of an underground phenomenon, especially as so much contemporary chart music was
then sample-based dance music (a genre relatively simple to produce with
step-based sequencing). In fact, several chart-topping 1989/1990-era dance
singles strongly foreshadow compositional trends in tracker music which would
remain popular for many years to come; in particular, 808 State's "Pacific" and
Octave One's "I Believe". Both tracks rely heavily on muted, detuned saw-wave
background pads which play four-tone augmented major seventh chords in chord
patterns which fit the pentatonic scale; an unsyncopated 4/4 drum beat runs
underneath. Though this particular musical arrangement was scarcely heard
earlier, an overwhelming number of tracker compositions in following years used
the exact same pattern.
The popularity of the tracker format may also be attributable to its inclusion
of both score data and samples. In the early 90s, the price of wavetable sound
cards for personal use was very high, and the expressive capabilities of the
cheaper FM-synthesizer sound cards were rather limited. A tracker requires
neither of these sound card features.
The first trackers supported only four channels of 8-bit PCM samples, a
limitation derived from the Amiga's Paula audio chipset. However, since the
notes were samples, the limitation was less important than those of synthesizing
music chips. For example, a process which became a cliché in early pop-rave
chart tunes was to sample chords and play them back on a single channel. Rapid
chordal stabs, often of fifths, were the hallmark of Altern-8 and other
transient techno phenomena. Later tracker software, most famously OctaMED,
allowed for eight or more channels, whilst special hardware could allow for
16-bit playback.
Over time, 'tracker music' became something of a term of derision for
stereotypically ravey, computer-game-style pop tunes, whilst the difficulty
involved in adding 'swing' to a mechanistic sequencing style resulted in much
4/4 music based around strict four-bar sections, often using similar samples.
One tracker trying to address these issues is Radium; however, it is debatable
whether Radium itself qualifies as a tracker at all.
PC
Over the 1990s, tracker musicians gravitated to the PC. Although the IBM and
compatibles initially lacked the hardware sound processing capabilities of the
Amiga, the advent of the Sound Blaster line from Creative, PC audio slowly began
to approach CD Quality (44.1kHz/16-bit/Stereo) with the release of the
SoundBlaster 16.
Another soundcard popular on the PC tracker scene was the Gravis Ultrasound,
which continued the hardware mixing tradition, with 32 internal channels and
onboard memory for sample storage. For a time, it offered unparalleled sound
quality and became the choice of discerning tracker musicians. Understanding
that the support of the tracker/demo-scene would benefit sales, Gravis gave away
some 6000 GUS cards to participants. Coupled with excellent developer
documentation, this gesture quickly prompted the GUS to become an integral
component of many tracking programs and demos. Inevitably, the balance was
largely redressed with the introduction of the Sound Blaster AWE32 and its
successors, which also featured on-board RAM and wavetable mixing.
The responsibility for audio mixing passed from hardware to software (the main
CPU), which gradually enabled the use of more and more channels. From the
typical 4 MOD channels of the Amiga, the limit had moved to 8 with Amiga OctaMED,
16 with ScreamTracker 3 on the PC, then 32 with Fast Tracker 2 and on to 64 with
Impulse Tracker 2.
As such, hardware mixing did not last. As processors got faster and acquired
special multimedia processing abilities (e.g. MMX) and companies began to push
Hardware Abstraction Layers, like DirectX, the AWE and GUS range became
obsolete. DirectX, WDM and, now more commonly, ASIO, deliver high-quality
sampled audio irrespective of hardware brand.
Current state
Tracker music lives on today. It can be found in modern computer games such as
the Unreal series and Deus Ex, as well as a considerable number of indie games.
However, the easy availability of software samplers/synthesizers and sequencers
has caused most professional musicians to adopt other music software.
Nonetheless, tracker software continues to develop (as of 2007). Some of the
early Amiga trackers such as ProTracker, OctaMED have received various updates,
mostly for porting to other platforms. ProTracker having resumed development in
2004, with plans for releasing version 5 to Windows and AmigaOS, but only
version 4.0 beta 2 for AmigaOS have been released.
Buzz, ModPlug Tracker, MadTracker, Renoise, reViSiT, Skale, Psycle, and others
offer features undreamed-of back in the day (improved signal-to-noise ratios,
automation, VST support, internal DSPs and multi-effects, multi I/O cards
support etc.).
During August 2007, of these trackers, Renoise was the most active in
development. Development is resuming on Skale and reViSiT is technically a
Tracker VST plugin in the spirit of Impulse Tracker, not a stand alone program.
Tracker files have also become popular in the Game Boy Advance community; unlike
the original Game Boy, the Game Boy Advance has the hardware and processing
power to support tracker music, which offers good quality while taking up little
space compared to MP3s or other forms of audio.
The traditional tracker stigma of unwieldy, complicated programs (aimed at a
predominantly technologically-minded audience) is slowly being cast off, as
programs become more accessible and user friendly. As such, tracking has
recently enjoyed a mild resurgence as people begin to appreciate the importance
of laying down music as quickly as possible - the musical equivalent of touch
typing.
Kenan & Kel
Most famous for his role in Kenan & Kel which ran from 1996 to 2000, totaling 61
episodes. He starred alongside his good friend Kenan Thompson. He began his
acting career when he was 13, and at 17 became well-known as an original cast
member on Nickelodeon's All That from 1995 to 1999, before he and co-star Kenan
Thompson then starred in Kenan & Kel. Mitchell also starred in a 1997 major
motion picture, titled Good Burger, which is the movie version of one of his and
Thompson's sketches from All That. Kel Mitchell's character in Kenan & Kel made
him famous for antics and persona. The duo also appeared together in Sister
Sister. Between 2000 and 2003, he was the voice of T-Bone in the children's
cartoon series Clifford the Big Red Dog. In 2006, Mitchell played a one-time
spokesmodel for KFC, constantly using the phrase "____ a little". Kel Mitchell
also made an appearance in the 2004 Kanye West music video 'all falls down' as
the luggage collector at the beginning of the video. In 2005, Mitchell portrayed
Manny Sellers in the sitcom One on One. In 2007 Kel started appearing on BET's
'Take the Cake'.

Are you interested in
mult-player online internet games? Such as runescape and neopets?Internet
Game Online-games, tips, cheats and kids forumsAnother
good forum is the Internet Junction For Gamers IJFG.COM
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More IJFG.COM Jokes, Pranks, Runescape and other cool games at IJFG.COM.
RuneScape is set in a medieval fantasy world, similar to "Guild Wars" or
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with most massive multiplayer online roleplaying games (MMORPG), there is no
overall objective or end to the game. Players explore, form alliances, perform
optional tasks, and complete quests for rewards and to build character's skills.

RuneScape has often been one of
the top massive online role playing games. It is a unique game. But, with a
unique game, comes unique players. Players get bored, and then try to develop
cheats....autos or bots that will help them achieve success in their beloved
games of Runescape 2.
RuneScape is a virtual world which
is divided into two part: Members Areas and Non-Members areas. People who pay to
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first start playing runescape, moves around the game on foot; either by running,
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rs. They can choose what to do, and when, whether it be training their
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Of course the king of all game
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trick
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The master of massive multiplayer
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Trik.com; this site is one of the best today. The forum section,
Trik.com forum, originally came from IJFG.com (Internet Junction For
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issues. The full name was Internet Junction For Gamers, Runescape Market and
More. This site had Jokes, Pranks, RuneScape and other cool games. RuneScape is
set in a medieval fantasy world, similar to "Guild Wars" or "EverQuest," where
players control character representations of themselves. As with most MMORPG,
there is no overall objective or end to the game. Players explore, form
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characters' skills.
Trik.com continues IJFG.com's
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With the rising popularity of
commercial MMORPG games came the desire from ardent players of these games to
run their own servers beside the ones run by the game's creator. Since the
original server software is not usually available, the behavior of the server
has to be re-engineered. This can be done by analyzing the data stream with the
original server, or by disassembling and analyzing the client which is
available.
Ultima Online was one of the first
large MMORPGs. Due to its openness in implementation, server emulators arose
very quickly, even during the beta stage of development. The destination to
which the client connects was changeable by simply editing a text file. In beta
stage the client-server data stream was not encrypted yet. The term server
emulator became known through Ultima Online server reimplementation such as UOX,
which was the pioneer. Many forks and reimplementations followed UOX, because
its source code was released under the GNU General Public License relatively
early. RunUO is today the most widely used UO-server emulator. After RuneScape
implemented anti-cheating measures, many gamers left and started their own
private servers. The best place to discuss the private server is at
Trik- The Master of Private Server.
Another useful site is
Rune
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A defining moment in internet
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