Sweet Home 3D v3.3

Sweet Home 3D is a free interior design application that helps you placing your furniture on a house 2D plan, with a 3D preview. Sweet Home 3D comes with 50 pieces of furniture, but you may also import some additional objects in it. To get more objects, please visit this regularly updated page.

Sweet Home 3D provides a full help accessible from its Help > Sweet Home 3D Help menu.

What’s New in version 3.3:

Improved the precision of alignement lines.
Always used PNG format for exported textures to avoid loosing any detail.
Fixed a bug in OBJ export for models at 3DS format containing some undefined values.
Fixed a bug that prevented to create photos and videos at the two first quality levels when a sky texture was used.
Replaced JRE 6u24 by JRE 6u26 in Sweet Home 3D installers bundled with Java.
Other minor bugs fixes and enhancements.

Download (31.12MB)

QuickSharp 2.0.0.16666

QuickSharp is a minimalist C# IDE for Microsoft NET Framework. It includes a sophisticated code editor with code completion, syntax coloring and code-folding, built-in compile and run, and support for ASP.NET and SQL Server, MySQL and SQLite databases.

Features:
create source code with the built-in editor featuring syntax colouring, code-folding and Visual Studio-style docking windows,
get instant lookup of class and namespace members using Code Assist,
compile programs from within QuickSharp; warnings and errors appear in the output window for instant location within the editor,
build EXE and DLL files automatically; no need to configure the compiler target,
run programs directly from the editor and capture the output in QuickSharp’s Output window or run in a separate window for interactive use,
use ‘embedded’ file options to control compilation and runtime behaviour; run shell-based commands at all stages of the build process to perform related tasks,
perform simple file management tasks from the Workspace such as opening, renaming and deleting files and folders,
add additional build tool configurations, including Mono and older Microsoft compilers,
compile intermediate language and XML resource files from within QuickSharp using the built-in ilasm and resgen integration,
use Find in Files to search files in the Workspace,
use the Regular Expression Helper to develop regular expressions,
explore the .NET Framework with the Object Browser,
develop your own features and enhancements using QuickSharp’s plugin architecture.

QuickSharp includes all you need to write, compile and run programs for the Microsoft .NET platform using the C# programming language. It provides a simple but complete integrated development environment (IDE) for Microsoft Windows 7, Vista and XP.

QuickSharp works with Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5; if you’re a Windows 7 user you already have everything you need. XP and Vista users may need to download the latest version.

Download (2.62MB)

Lazio fights back from 2 down to win in Serie A

Lazio pulled off a stunning second-half comeback against lowly Cesena in Serie A, recovering from two goals down to win 3-2 despite playing for nearly an hour with 10 men on Thursday.

Adrian Mutu gave Cesena the lead then debutant Vincenzo Iaquinta fired home a spot kick following an incident which also saw Lazio defender Abdoulay Konko sent off.

However, Lazio surged back in the second half with three goals in 10 minutes, from Hernanes, Senad Lulic and Libor Kozak.

Lazio moves provisionally into third place, ahead of Udinese which faces second-placed AC Milan on Saturday. Cesena remains second from bottom, four points off safety.

Meanwhile, Siena beat Napoli 2-1 in the first leg of the Italian Cup semifinals. The second leg will be played on March 21.

Dave Grohl fighting for rock at the Grammys

When Dave Grohl started in the music business, Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars were tots; Rihanna and Adele weren't even born.

That makes Grohl and his Foo Fighters kind of the senior set as they face off against the new kids at the Grammys on Sunday for album of the year. It's one of the six nominations for the Foos, who tied Adele and Mars for the second-most nominations (behind Kanye West) and will be performers at the show.

"It feels great to be the guy with gray hair in his beard who is still invited to these things," said the 43-year-old frontman. "Twenty years ago, I never thought I'd even have a career in music this long."

Grohl considers the last year to be his best. The band had a top-selling tour and sold more than 663,000 copies of their album, "Wasting Light," which faces off against Adele's "21," Lady Gaga's "Born This Way," Bruno Mars' "Grenade" and Rihanna's "Loud" for album of the year.

Oh, and he had a brief cameo in "The Muppets" as a drummer for a Muppet cover band.

This year is starting off just as good. On a recent afternoon inside 606 Studio, the band's garage like headquarters, Grohl discussed his Grammy competition, previewed what viewers can expect from the band's Grammy performance and mused about being the rock band with the most nominations at this year's ceremony.

---
AP: The Foo Fighters have won six Grammys, and you're up for six more this year. What does it feel like to win one?

Grohl: When we won for best rock album for our third record, which we made in my basement, I was so proud - because we made it in my basement in a crappy makeshift studio that we put together ourselves. I stood there looking out at everybody in tuxedos and diamonds and fur coats, and I thought we were probably the only band that won a Grammy for an album made for free in a basement that year. I feel the exact same way about it this year for an album that was made in my garage.

AP: You were raving about Adele the last time I interviewed you, and now you're up against her for album of the year.

Grohl: I'm glad that we're with Adele in the same category. It means we've done something right. I think she gives us all hope. She's made an incredible record, and she's an incredibly talented artist, so maybe it is true that the cream actually rises to the top. There's a reason why that record is so (expletive) huge. It's good. It's inspiring when something legitimate gets recognized for what it is. It's such a cliche, but it's a huge achievement to be nominated.

AP: Tease me about what you've got planned for your Grammy performance. Will you be collaborating with anyone?

Grohl: Maybe. Ken Ehrlich, who produces the show, is no dummy. He's been doing it for 30 years. He's a very musical person, and he understands collaboration. He understands there has to be some common connection between the artists collaborating, but it has to be somewhat adventurous and unexpected. To be honest, how many (expletive) rock bands are on the show this year? Yeah, so they're not gonna put us with another rock band. Right now, there just aren't that many.

AP: How do you feel about the lack of rock in some of the bigger categories at the Grammys?

Grohl: I feel the same way about it as how I felt at this massive car show in Pomona last weekend that I entered my 1965 Ford Falcon van into. I've never entered a car show before, and I don't really know a lot about it, but we put the van into the competition. My friend Troy, who built the thing, said to me, "I think we're gonna win." I asked him, "Why's that?" He said, "Because there are no other vans here." I ended up winning first in class. It's kind of the same feeling.

AP: Tell me more about that feeling. It's kind of like you're the rock spokesman at the Grammys.

Grohl: I feel a little bit of responsibility and a lot of pride. I'm (expletive) proud to be in the (expletive) Foo Fighters. ... We're a real (expletive) band. If I were a kid in (expletive) Tulsa, Okla., who loves rock bands and plays with my rock band in the garage, and I turned on the Grammys and saw a rock band with choreographed dancers playing to computers, I'd be bummed until the Foo Fighters came on, and then I'd think, "Oh, good, humans that play instruments."

AP: You're nominated for six Grammys, so you'll probably win one. Do you have a speech prepared?

Grohl: No. I never plan what I'm going to say when I get up on stage. My father was a speechwriter, and my mother was a public speaking teacher, and one thing that I've learned in life is that you never want to read a speech. You just want to go up and give it. That always jinxes it, anyway. The last thing you want to do is walk out of there with a speech in your pocket that you didn't get to read. (Derrik J. Lang)

Maroon 5 to perform at 2012 Singapore GP

Get ready to bring on those Moves Like Jagger. The Singapore Grand Prix announced on Friday that multiple Grammy-award winning band, Maroon 5, will be performing at Asia's only street race during the race weekend of Sept 21-23.

The band will be headlining the Padang stage in Zone 4 on Saturday, Sept 22, at the Marina Bay Street Circuit. Entry to the concert is free with any purchase of the three-day event ticket.

Two thousand early-bird ticket holders can register online to get wristbands for access to the Saturday Fan Zone area. They can also register to stand a chance to win a pair of exclusive passes to Maroon 5's Meet and Greet session.

Details are at: www.singaporegp.sg
With the release of their third studio album, Hands All Over, fans can look forward to an adrenalin-charged show packed with Maroon 5's greatest hits, with frontman Adam Levine - also famous for being a coach on the television series The Voice - crooning their favourite hits.

Singapore GP will be announcing additional artistes in the coming months.

‘Ghost Rider’ Returns to Haunt Cinemas

Somewhere in the middle of “Ghost Rider: Spirit of Ven geance,” Nicolas Cage pees flames. You read that right: The actor, famous for his questionably zany acting choices, goes into cuckoo overdrive, and urinating fire is just another box to tick on his loony-role checklist.

It’s not necessarily a bad thing — at least Cage seems to be immersed in the ecstatically delirious title role. The film thrives on his blazing pool of insanity, even if the story, acting and overall cheesiness results in a mess of a movie.

Directing duo Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor (known to fans as Neveldine/Taylor), whose previous works include the equally frenetic “Crank” series, have little to count on other than the dive into lunacy taken by their leading man.

The story, for one, never takes form, and there’s little intrigue to be had within the central mystery. Something involving a demon-child and Johnny Blaze (Cage) trying to free himself of a curse barely provokes interest.

Cage has been quoted as saying there is a little bit of “The Da Vinci Code” mystery-solving in the script, but even by that novel’s loose standards and Tom Hanks’s hair, this sequel to the 2007 “Ghost Rider” falls short of a shrug. By the story’s end, the audience is hard-pressed to care about what demonic phenomenon does or does not occur.

Cage tries to infuse some personality into his alcoholic vagabond character Johnny Blaze, a former stunt-motorcyclist turned hellfire demon whose back-story is worthy of a Bruce Wayne-level of scrutiny.

This is, after all, a guy who made a bad deal with the devil for his dying father, the result being a still-dead father and a flaming skull for a head. But the story barely skips a beat before running off to the numerous action sequences.

The good and bad guys around Blaze don’t have much to offer either. There’s Fergus Riordan’s Danny, the child whose presence is the answer to all the questions hanging around the film (should you choose to indulge in a little elementary problem-solving). Riordan has little to do except switch between evil and nice-boy looks.

His mother, played by Italian singer-actress Violante Placido, has slightly more to do, but the script can’t decide whether to make her a tough sidekick or a damsel in distress.

The baddies — Ciaran Hinds as the devil and Johnny Whitworth as supervillain Blackout — are obviously talented, but they find no way to infuse any personality into their wooden characters, resulting in bad guys as interchangeable as the ones in the Rambo movies.

Respected English actor Idris Elba has some fun as Moreau, a French alcoholic priest and the film’s only character with enough traits to make up what might be called a “personality.”

Somewhere amid the sludge, Christopher Lambert has a small role as Methodius, a monk with a secret of his own and face tattoos that look like a wet Bible threw up on his face. The former “Highlander” actor seems to comprehend the puerile nature of his character, barely faking interest in trying to portray the monk with mysterious dignity.

This takes us back to the wild, wild Cage. Not since his feckless, effervescent turn in “The Wicker Man” remake has the actor looked more deranged in a role. Fortunately, what comes off as unintentional comedy in that film looks like blissful glee in “Spirit of Vengeance” (though admittedly there are some moments where Cage simply looks like an addict going cold turkey). The best thing that can be said about Cage’s performance is that there will be moments when you question whether what just transpired on screen was done with special effects, or if it was simply Cage’s really letting loose.

In the end, “Spirit of Vengeance” survives solely as a kind of cinematic freak show, with Cage as the main attraction. Everything else is utterly disposable. In the end I laughed at — or along with ­— Cage, providing enough entertainment to keep me awake. Let us just hope, for flaming-skull’s sake, that Cage is in on the joke.

If he isn’t, then Lord only knows how magnificent that “Drive Angry” sequel is going to be.

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance
Directed by Neveldine/Taylor
Starring Nicolas Cage, Ciaran Hinds, Violante Placido, Johnny Whitworth, Fergus Riordan and Idris Elba
95 minutes
English with Indonesian subtitles

Was There A UFO in South Carolina?

Some residents of South Carolina received an initially terrifying awakening early Monday morning when their sky flashed bright blue and a large object was seen plummeting from the sky.

The unidentified flying object caught around Greenville county exploded in a few brief seconds causing an alarming boom that shook homes in several cities.
Over 30 emergency 911 calls were placed to at least one local police station while a number of fire fighters were dispatched before its mystery was solved.

'It sounds like a typical bolide,' Dr Charles St Lucas of the Roper Mountain Science Center told Fox4 of what he believes was a meteor, albeit early of their next expected shower in late April.

'This one broke apart into three or four different pieces, glowed a bright blue white,' he said calling its spontaneity, 'delightful.' With the sighting shortly before 2am, most residents didn't take it as coolly.

'I thought the aliens were coming,' one resident Cindie Stubbs told Fox4 with nervous excitement after witnessing the flash herself from above her home.

'I saw this big bright light that made the sand kind of almost sparkle it was so bright,' she said.

Bolides, according to the American Meteor Society, are a special type of fireball or astoundingly bright meteor. They are known for exploding before their landfall with a bright flash, similar to the blue one seen around Greenville.

Dr St Lucas told GoUpState.com that the blue coloring indicates that it was composed of copper or copper chloride. Being naturally occurring elements, it most likely wasn't falling 'space junk,' he reasons.

Injuries and damage from the sighting have not been reported.

Archive