Final Fantasy VII OST
Genre: Soundtrack
Country: Japan
Date: 2007
Audio codec: MP3
Quality: VBR 192-320 kbps
Playtime: 2:20:36
CD1:
1 Fragments of Memories -D.M.W-
02 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”Successor”
03 Mission Start
04 First Mission (from FFVII ”Opening ~ Bombing Mission”)
05 The Mako City
06 Patriots on a Moonlit Night
07 Encounter
08 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”Dreams and Pride”
09 Last Order – Crisis Mix (from ”LAST ORDER FFVII”)
10 Burden of Truth
11 Wandering on a Sunny Afternoon
12 Conflict
13 Controlling the Iron Beast
14 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”Under the Apple Tree”
15 The Summoned (from FFVII ”Those Who Fight Further”)
16 The Burdened
17 On the Verge of the Assault (from FFVII ”Those Who Fight”)
18 The Clandestine Dark Suits (from FFVII ”Turk’s Theme”)
19 The Skyscraper of Iron and Steel (from ”LAST ORDER FFVII”)
20 Combat
21 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”Scars of Friendship”
22 A Flower Blooming in the Slums (from FFVII ”Aerith’s Theme”)
23 Sky-Blue Eyes
24 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”With Pride”
25 Melody of Agony
26 March on the Frontier (from ”LAST ORDER FFVII”)
27 A Moment of Courtesy
28 A Beating Black Wing
29 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”Truth Behind the Project”
30 The Face of Lost Pride
CD2:
31 Why (CCFFVII Mix)
32 Town Where the Sunlight Doesn’t Reach
33 A Changing Situation
34 The Mako-Controlling Organization (from FFVII ”Shinra Company”)
35 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”To a New Post”
36 A Closed Off Village (from FFVII ”Anxious Heart”)
37 Farewell Melody
38 The Gloomy Mansion
39 A Momentary Rest
40 Prelude of Ruin
41 The World’s Enemy (from FFVII ”One-Winged Angel”)
42 Night of Seclusion
43 Duty and Friendship
44 Theme of CRISIS CORE ”Chaotic Battlefield”
45 Wilderness of Desertion
46 Melody of Resolution
47 Moonlight Wandering (from ”LAST ORDER FFVII”)
48 An Ancient Hymn Sung by the Water
49 Howl of the Gathered
50 Those Who Accept the Protection of the Stars
51 SOLDIER Battle
52 The Price of Freedom
53 Why
54 Fulfilled Desire
55 to be continued (from FFVII ”Opening ~ Bombing Mission”)
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CES 2010 : Google building a Nexus One for enterprise
Previous Apple engineer, Andy Rubin went on to co-found mobile computing outfits Danger and Android. He sold the former to Microsoft and the latter to Google, where he is now vice president of engineering. He’s also the guy quarterbacking development of Google’s Android mobile operating system and the Nexus One–the Smartphone with which Google hopes to fundamentally change the way people buy cell phones.
In conversation with All Things Digital’s Walt Mossberg Friday, Rubin talked about the mobile space, Google’s plan for an enterprise version of the Nexus One, and its vision for the way phones should be bought and sold. Walt starts off by asking Rubin about just how involved Google was in the development of the Nexus One.
Rubin replies, “We threw out crazy ideas to our partners at HTC, and they were pretty good about plucking the good ones out of the air and building them into the device.”
Walt asks about the new business model Google’s launched in concert with Nexus One. Was this something the company planned all along?
“This is the next phase of Android–taking the newest versions of the product, placing them online, and allowing consumers to purchase them directly,” says Rubin. “What we’ve learned is that there are more efficient ways of connecting consumers with the phones they’d like to purchase…easier ways.” Purchasing a Nexus One through Google, says Rubin, is a casual process. “No one’s breathing down your neck,” he says. “No one’s trying to upsell you.”
China Tries to Go Solar
As it moves rapidly to become the world’s leader in nuclear power, wind energy and photovoltaic solar panels, China is taking tentative steps to master another alternative energy industry: using mirrors to capture sunlight, produce steam and generate electricity.
So-called concentrating solar power uses hundreds of thousands of mirrors to turn water into steam. The steam turns a conventional turbine similar to those in coal-fired power plants. The technology, which is potentially cheaper than most types of renewable power, has captivated many engineers and financiers in the last two years, with an abrupt surge in new patents and plans for large power operations in Europe and the United States.
This year may be China’s turn. China is starting to build its own concentrating solar power plants, a technology more associated with California deserts than China’s countryside. And Chinese manufacturers are starting to think about exports, part of China’s effort to become the world’s main provider of alternative energy power equipment.
Yet concentrating solar power still faces formidable obstacles here, including government officials who are skeptical that the technology will be useful on a large scale in China.
Much of the country is cloudy or smoggy. Water is scarce. The sunniest places left for solar power are deserts deep in the interior, far from the energy-hungry coastal provinces that consume most of China’s electricity. Provinces deep in the interior have few skilled workers or engineers to maintain the automated gear that keeps mirrors focused on towers that transfer the heat from sunbeams into fluids.
Concentrating solar power “is not very suitable for China,” wrote Li Junfeng, a senior government energy policy maker, in a detailed e-mail reply to questions this week. Yet the private sector in China is racing to embrace the technology anyway. A California solar technology company and a Chinese power equipment manufacturer plan to sign a deal on Saturday for the construction of up to 2,000 megawatts of power plants using concentrating solar power over the next decade, executives from both companies said this week. That is equivalent to the output of a couple of nuclear power plants. They will start with a 92-megawatt plant in Yulin, a town in a semi-desert area of Shaanxi Province in central China. The Chinese equipment manufacturer, Penglai Electric, hopes to work with other Chinese manufacturers to drive production costs down precipitously, clearing the way for exports, although these would require further approval from the California licensor of the technology, eSolar.
Snow Leopard versus Windows 7
This is shaping up to be the autumn of new operating systems. The latest version of Mac OS X, Snow Leopard, ships to customers this Friday. Windows 7, the follow-up to the much-maligned Windows Vista, hits store shelves in late October. Neither operating system is going to drastically change the way you work.
Managing Your Files
Snow Leopard’s Finder and Windows 7’s Explorer have strikingly similar interfaces: Both have quick search fields in the upper-right corner, path bars (OS X’s is optional and can be switched on in the View menu), and sidebars giving you easy access to various common locations on your computer.
Windows 7 introduces a new feature to the mix: Libraries. A library is best defined as a way to view the contents of several folders all in one place. For example, the Pictures library pulls together the contents of the My Pictures and Public Pictures folders by default. You can add or change the folders tied to any particular library, of course.
Nothing in Snow Leopard directly compares with Windows’ libraries. The closest OS X feature is saved searches (known as Smart Folders), but a saved search pulls together files based on search criteria, not location. You can’t, for example, create a smart folder containing all photos from only two folders. On the other hand, Windows 7 libraries can’t be combined with saved search results.
Both Snow Leopard and Windows 7 allow a large icon view. Windows 7 supports icons up to 256-by-256 pixels. Snow Leopard one-ups Windows 7, though—the Finder can display icons up to a seemingly absurd 512-by-512 pixels (512-pixel icons were around in 10.5, but the Finder could not take advantage of them outside of Quick Look and Cover Flow view).
Quick Access
Some OS X apps can use the Dock’s pop-up menus to display application-specific information and provide easy access to frequently used commands. For example, if you right-click
Tunes’ Dock icon in Snow Leopard, you’ll get a menu that lets you see what’s playing, play or pause your music, assign a rating to the current song, and control other simple iTunes commands.
With Windows 7’s re-tooled taskbar, Microsoft introduces a similar feature called jump lists. Jump lists can not only provide access to common commands (Windows Media Player‘s jump list has a Play command, for example), they also let you “pin” items to a specific list. For example, you can pin commonly-used folders to the Windows Explorer jump list and important documents to the WordPad jump list.
Snow Leopard doesn’t have any features that directly compare to the jump list’s pinning feature; instead, Mac users can use stacks in the Dock to provide quick access to folders and files (drag any folder to the Dock to create a stack). Stacks get a refresh in Snow Leopard: You can now view unlimited items in a stack using Grid view (thanks to the addition of scrollbars), as well as drill down into folders without having to open any Finder windows. You can also drag and drop any file into the Dock for quick access…………



