Tutorial Online+Noticias RSS en tu PSP

Fuente: HOW-TO: Get RSS feeds on your PSP

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This how-to serves a few functions: to piggy-back off the excellent work already done by roto to sniff out and untether the browser feature inside the PlayStation Portable’s Wipeout Pure game, to serve as a step-by-step graphical walk-through for PSP owners who are unfamiliar with dabbling in the ways of DNS settings, and to provide another portal DNS server option for PSP users who don’t have need or desire to set up their own DNS. Our portal includes a handy link to the Bloglines web-based RSS reader service, to add in some RSS reading functionality to the PSP.

What you’ll need for this how-to:

* Sony PlayStation Portable
* Wipeout Pure PSP game
* A free Bloglines account. We won’t go over setting up this account — just head over to Bloglines if you don’t have an account already; it’s self-explanatory.


Let’s go!

Fire up your PSP and head on down to Settings, all the way to the left in the main menu. Go all the way down and select Network settings area:
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Select Infrastructure mode:
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Choose “New Connection” to, um, set up a new connection:
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Give a name to your connection. You can store up to 10 different network connections on the PSP, so as other portals spring up and/or if you set up your own, you can store them all and point to whichever one you fancy, plus keep your regular network settings stored. If one portal is down, you can head on over to another (share the bandwidth, share the love). We’ll call ours, cryptically, “Engadget portal”:
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Hit Enter to save the name for this connection, then press the right arrow button to continue. You’ll be prompted for your local network’s SSID. If you know the name of your network you can enter it, but in most cases you can just have the PSP scan for available networks and select the correct SSID. We’ll scan:

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We have two wireless networks in our vicinity, and the PSP finds them both. Being of sound mind, we choose the one with the strongest signal strength, hit X to select it, then the right arrow button to continue.

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Here’s where we’ll make the all-important DNS setting change that unchains the poor Wipeout Pure browser from endlessly phoning home to ingame.scea.com. In the Address Settings window, choose Custom.

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First you’ll see the “IP Address Setting” pane — this can remain set on the default choice: Automatic. Hit the right arrow button to move to the “DNS Setting” pane. Here you’ll select Manual:

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Hit X to select and modify the Primary DNS server address. The address of our portal server is 208.42.28.174 — make your changes in each of the four IP segments by using the up and down arrow keys to scroll through the list of numbers. You can leave Secondary DNS as is. Hit X to save the settings when you’re done. Big thanks to Hackaday editor Jason Striegel for setting up the DNS proxy!

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Hit the right arrow key again and you’ll see the “Proxy Server” settings pane, which can stay set on the default choice, “Do Not Use.” Hit the right arrow to continue. You’ll see a summary of the settings you chose under the “Setting List” header. Press the right arrow button again, then press X to save these settings. When the save is completed, you’ll have the option to test the connection. Go ahead and give yourself some piece of mind and do this.

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Following a successful connection test, the Network Settings pane will spit back your settings. The PSP has automagically detected the settings you didn’t fill in from your wireless router, which doles out IP address via DHCP like Hare Krishnas hand out pamphlets at airports, except much more useful. You’ll see the “Succeeded” flag next to “Internet Connection” and ye shall do the dance of joy. Still dancing? We’ll wait.

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Finished there, hotfoot? Hit the O key to back out of the Network Settings menu subtree and back out into the main plaza of the main menu. Throw in the Wipeout Pure game, stored on that bastion of standards — the UMD disc. Fire it up.

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From the main menu, scroll down to the Download option and select it. Once you do, you’ll be prompted to select which of your saved network connections you want to use to connect. Select whatever you’ve named our portal and hit X:

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You should see something approximating the view below (sans the Gmail link, which we tried to get going but the browser definitely balked at trying to enter a secure site). Ultimately, as other folks experimenting with this have mentioned, we found the browser to be a bit wonky. Sometimes connections were solid and relatively fast, whereas other times we could have written a short novella in the time it took to load even a simple page (luckily we had the good sense to spare the world from our literary onslaught). One persistent error consistently cropped up, which was that all elements of the page would seem to load except the background color, which would remain black, black, none more black, making plain text impossible to read. We don’t know why. Has anyone else seen this? Still, links left unstyled show up despite this wonky rendering, so the portal should remain usable regardless. The text box at the bottom of the page will take a standard URL as input so you can go anywhere from here. Below this (off the screen) is a textbox that will perform a Google search on whatever text you enter there.


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Hie on down to the Bloglines link by using the down key to traverse the links (you’ll see them highlight as you walk through them). Select it with the X key

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Hit the down arrow again to bring focus to the “Email:” login text box. When you hit X, the PSP keyboard entry API will open, allowing you to enter data into the text box. Enter your bloglines email login, then hit Enter. Hit the down key to select the password textbox; enter your password using the keyboard entry again and hit Enter. Arrow down to the Log In button and hit X to activate the button.

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This will log you into the Bloglines mobile site, which is specially formatted for portable devices. It suits the PSP screen rather well. You’ll see your list of feeds displayed; just use the up and down arrow keys to scroll through the list, and the X key to select whicever feed you’d like to view.

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The feed you selected should load in the PSP browser; pretty simple! Just use the arrow keys to scroll up and down and read your feed. At the top of the page is a handy set of navigation links; use the “Subscriptions” link to hike back out to your main list of feeds.

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To get back out to the portal home to access other links and/or use the URL bar to input any destination of your choice, just hit the “Start” button on the PSP. You’ll get a prompt to Continue, Goto Home Page, or Quit. Quit will exit the Wipeout Pure game (funny that we’re still technically inside a game, no?), and Goto Home Page will take you back to the Engadget portal. Should our portal ever be bandwidth throttled, you can set up other portals as network connections for redundancy when you need it.

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Given the wonkiness of this method, we’re not recommending anyone run their small business off their PSP browser connection or anything. Your mileage may vary — but it does expand the possibilities of the device, and can be useful as an extra portable newsreader or Flickr client. In a perfect world we wouldn’t have to jump through these hoops just to squeeze out a bit of functionality that’s already present but locked down in the device, but we don’t have to tell you that, do we?

Update

: There’s a way to vastly improve the performance of the PSP browser over what we saw above, which is simply to turn off the WLAN Power Save setting that ships On by default. Go to Settings > Power Save Settings and switch the WLAN Power Save to Off. You’ll ideally want to have your PSP plugged in the AC power for surfing sessions because this will eat the battery up much faster without the Power Save On, but we’re actually browsing relatively speedily now!

We added a link to del.icio.us/popular in the portal because the del.icio.us site works great on the PSP. If anyone wants to post up in the comments if they find sites that work particularly well in the PSP browser (well-formatted, e.g.), we’ll collate them into a separate del.icio.us account and post that to the portal, as well. Also, leaving comments on Flickr photos is a snap. Wheeee!


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Lo he puesto tal cual, ya que de momento no esta en castellano, si alguien se anima a traducirlo o crear uno en castellano [poraki] Tambien pongo la fuente, si igualmente pudiese molestar a los creadores del tutorial o a EOL borrad el post o avisad y se edita.

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+imagenes de xbox-scene.com:

PSP como control remoto wifi de XBMC [flipa]
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portal para PSP
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google en PSP
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Noticias RSS de xbox-scene en PSP
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xbox lowfi news
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xbox-scene en PSP
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gracias [ginyo]

nos sera muy util [beer]


saludos
tengo el wipeout y pongo todas las dns esas q rulan por ahi y nada. Si lo redirijo por proxi a mi ordenador va de puta madre(pero en red local claro) y desde la uni con esas dns roscas. QUE COÑO HAGO MAL oes q esas DNS estan caidas?

Por cierto el juego me engancha mucho mas q el ridge.
prueba esta ip 67.171.70.72
pfer1984 escribió:tengo el wipeout y pongo todas las dns esas q rulan por ahi y nada. Si lo redirijo por proxi a mi ordenador va de puta madre(pero en red local claro) y desde la uni con esas dns roscas. QUE COÑO HAGO MAL oes q esas DNS estan caidas?

Por cierto el juego me engancha mucho mas q el ridge.


Has mirado en el hilo original, por si esta caido el server, tambien habia otra: 67.171.70.72 y la segunda la dejas vacia.

PD: DOnde te has pillado tan rapido el wipeout? el domingo no sabias si pillarlo y hoy ya lo tienes [ginyo]

Otro hilo con info
Uo lo del control del XBMC es potente! q caña
me pagaron un trabajillo(lease modchip) y me pase por una tienda de madrid. si esa es ... y caro pero fue necesario.

Pues lo q os digo. Que rula de puta madre local. pero con esas DNS no y estoy mosca. Digo sera mi casa... pero no en la uni tp va. A ver si va a ser por q es la japo...o q lo tengo todo puesto en spanish... pero no deberia no se. cuando se pone a buscar en el proxi me pone la misma dire. yo q se.
anyway gracias por la ayudita.
EDITO
me sigue sin rular pero por local si saco esto. como podeis ver los acentos ni papa. Y alguna imagen q no carga. pero leerse se lee
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Que raro, como sea por ser la japo [mad] pero seguro que alguno lo habria comentado en el hilo original, en este hilo que fue en el que vi lo del tutorial si que le ha funcionado LINK podria ser que solo funcionase desde usa? ein?
nadie mas tiene el wipe pa decirme q una rula seguro?

ASIAS
pfer1984 escribió:nadie mas tiene el wipe pa decirme q una rula seguro?

ASIAS


A ver si alguien se anima a probar, sino a esperar que lleguen los de USA, asi se podran hacer mas pruebas tambien con las consolas USA a ver si pasa igual lo de los acentos.

PD: No hay manera de conectar con el MSN. [agggtt]
lo de las tildes es normal al ser un Wipeout americano que seguramente funcione con el set de carácteres usa.
creo q es un problema de unicodes... cambia los caracteres con acentos por kanjis japoneses. una movida que me da bastante miedo para el futuro.y yo sigo sin q rule en red WAN diooooooos....
no se si sere muy esceptico, pero yo creo que son simples pantallazos exos con el pc, y vistos en la psp,por que no se, que a estos del la pagina les vaya, y a vosotros no... hombre, ojala me equivoque,pero.... yo creo que realmente el navegador saldra con la version koreana, pero no se. es solo mi humilde opinion
si hubiera aparecido en un foro de una pagina cualquiera vale, pero en las paginas que ha aparecido, ten 100% seguro que son ciertas, xbox-scene por poner un ejemplo es una de las paginas con mas prestigio de toda la scene.
MR gmrgmr1989

1 no tengo tiempo ni ganas de joderme mi credibildad en elotrolado.

2 para saber si son verdaderas o no las fotos tienes dos metodos:

2.1 comprarte una psp, comprarte el wipeout, configurar un proxi, un servidor apache y saber darle a la X.

2.2 fijarte en la esquina superior derecha de las fotos. si tienen como un lacito azul son del navedador, si no no tiene porque.
(no claro todos hemos cogido el photoshop y nos hemos puesto de acuerdo para ponerlo... no me jjodas.) si quieres te enseño como son las opciones q salen cuando le das al start.va paso por ti no lo hago.
gmrgmr1989 :
Tio en vez de decir tonterias leete bien los post y los links que los foreros ponen por k veras k existe un video el cual prueba k las fotos no son fakes
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cree una conexion usando en vez de los dns de mi proveedor puse de dns primaria (67.171.70.72) y luego grabe mis datos...

abri el wipeout pure, fui a download y me salio la web donde se puede poner la dire y puse eol...
mira yo tengo una movida pongo esa dns y lo hago como en los foros y mi psp pasa de eso y se conecta directamente a la oficial. si lo hago en red local mediante proxi lo hace bien.

Asi q no se estoy pensando q fallen cosas como idiomas u WEP pero no se. YA estoy desesperado
si te sale la oficial... lo q te falla son las dns...
A mi se me queda la pantalla en azul, como si estuviese cargando con el logo del wipeout arriba a la izquierda. He probado con las dos DNS aver si esque estaban caidas, pero nada ¿Sabeis de alguna DNS que rule guay ahora mismo?
19 respuestas