|
This page is for posting personal ads looking to trade scenes. All transactions are the responsibility of the parties involved. Everyone dealing here should be aware that providing an adult tape to a minor is likely illegal, and could result in prosecution. Also, dealing copies of commercial tapes may be in violation of the copyright laws. The Moderator will make no attempt to police this board.
|
|
Friday March 24 02:30:39 2006 Re: Discussion Page Post |
"Can anyone out there give examples of damsels getting the treatment while they are dressed quite nicely. (Dress,heels,hose,etc). I always find that this makes a scene even more likeable." The Major friends with the guy whom made Brainman and has some clips off him. All the gals, and there are 4 of them, dressed as requested |
Jay L |
Friday March 24 02:33:40 2006 Re: Discussion Page Post |
> All the gals, and there are 4 of them, dressed as requested
Correction, there 5 dressed as requested in "Brainman" |
Jay L |
Friday March 24 06:52:49 2006 Re:Alexis Laree |
I'll post the scenes for you on the site if you wish.
Just send me an email. |
Major John |
silent_night_022003@yahoo.com |
Friday March 24 10:34:40 2006 Re: Discussion Page Post |
Jay L wrote:
The Major friends with the guy whom made Brainman and has some clips off him. All the gals, and there are 4 of them, dressed as requested Yes, this was QUITE interesting - an independant film which aired on a NYC cable access channel exactly ONCE in 1995, before the 'suits' pulled it as 'questionable' - lol! I'll run a quick trailer of these cuties Monday BrainMan and I are currently working on the original footage (19hrs!) of what may turn out to be the best mainstream bondage production in years - stand by .... |
Major John |
Friday March 24 13:14:31 2006 They Raise Them Tough in St Louis, US |
Have to feature a St Louis US boy on this site. ;)
X and his neighbours will love this, as he took a good round of "Fist-gags" out of their favourite person, Eric Boulton. problem being, didn't get tape going to catch this one full, so no realmedia. They got it at that Scrap-site, but it a Windows one at 6.2mb Perhaps too large for emailing? |
Jay L |
Friday March 24 13:17:36 2006 Days Of Our Lives (moved from The Discussion Page) |
Someone mentioned that Merlena gets hangagged on Thursdays show. I was unable to record this, did anyone record this showing and if so have caps? Thanks... |
ME |
Friday March 24 17:42:58 2006 Re: A couple of things. |
Chas wrote:
> Could you clue me on on doing this? I assume you mean if > you have HDTV from cable or from a satellite dish. But > can you get to the decoded digital content or do you have > to let the box do the decoding then capture the analog > output with a PC video capture card? With HDTV, the video isn’t really decoded - more just copied from one medium to another (antenna to hard drive or tv). You receive a MPEG2 stream and then record (save it would probably be more accurate) or display it. And you can do it either way – although most people just copy the video stream (it never becomes “analog” like standard tv) since it is a lot easier and you don’t lose quality in the conversion. I do have to go on a bit of a rant before I list some options though - there is a big problem with hi-def video that most people aren’t aware of. Right now, you can record anything to a vcr, copy the vcr tape, skip through commercials on ff, rewind through a recording to see a scene again, watch your vcr recording any time you want and play the tape in pretty much any vcr. Hollywood hates the fact that you can do these things, and, as a result, have been trying to sponsor legislation that prevents you from doing so. It goes by a couple names – broadcast flag, analog hole legislation, etc, but the problem is that the vast majority of hdtv devices sold in the usa right now fully support these restrictions and are just waiting for someone at the movie studio to turn these “features” on. What I’m trying to say here is that if you buy a hdtv device now, it might be completely worthless in a year or two (or tomorrow) for everything except for displaying HDTV video onto a computer screen. If these “features” are turned on, they will effectively kill didcapping of HiDef content, so research before you buy. You want to find a device that will IGNORE THE BROADCAST FLAG and not prevent you from doing the stuff that you can do right now. Keep in mind that analog broadcasting is scheduled to stop in a few years. Hollywood has had their legislation slapped down several times, but even though they have been defeated in the past, the mpaa and their ilk are trying to stick similar shit in riders, and, well, you’ve seen what has passed as a rider. Here are a couple of options. 1. Some HDTV tuners (tuner as in high def cable box) have a firewire output or even support writing to a hard drive on the local computer. I think Comcast actually had a couple models that did something like this, but I’m pretty sure they are rare, still, check the back of your hdtv receiver and see if you have firewire. You can buy a third party one - something like an Elgato EveTV 500 would work, although it is a bit on the pricey end. I heard its software package was really nice though. Like I said above, this isn’t as much “decoding” as it is just copying the stream from the antenna to a hard drive. Probably the most commonly used because it is the easiest. 2. Get a HDTV “capture” card. Preferably one that ignores the broadcast flag. The following one does. http://www.pchdtv.com/hd_3000_right_down.html At $170, it isn't cheap (well, used to be $300, so I suppose it is cheaper now) and doesn’t have windows drivers, so you’ll have to suffer through the hell of setting up mythtv (a program which turns a computer into something like a tivo, although it was a pain in the ass to set up with this card for a friend about a year and a half ago) The HDTV capture card that you buy from compusa today should work as well, but might not in the future. 3. If you have a new (or hacked) tivo, you can dump stuff over the network from it, although Tivo can and will prevent you from recording a show, skipping through commercials and even automatically delete saved programs after a certain time if requested to do so by the networks. People discovered this when someone accidentally flipped a switch at the local cable channel and prevented people from recording the Simpsons and some other shows a couple of months ago. See this pic (and the third one at the bottom) http://polyphony.org/tivo/IMG_2676.jpg Tivo’s response to this is “Please do not contact TiVo Customer Support regarding copy protection related issues”, which makes it pretty clear they will tell you to piss off if you complain (oh, and by the way, if you’re locked into a contract with them, you keep on paying, even if you can’t actually do the stuff that they promised that you could when you signed up for the contract, cool, eh?) 4. You can always grab the analog copy of the HDTV signal, there are a few capture cards that will let you input component video, but they tend to be pricey. HDTV works perfectly with component btw, I know a lot of people think HDTV can only be carried over DVI or HDMI, but that isn’t true. Once it hits analog, there really isn’t anything that they can do to prevent you from recording the stream, so this will probably see a lot more activity in the future. Actually, you can grab the digital signal here too. There are a couple devices (cost $$$) that strip out any copy protection commands from a DVI connector - (Basically like those boxes that rip out macrovision from whatever source so you can get a clean vhs copy of it.) Of course, then you need something that can record from a DVI input. Rare and expensive. In addition to a pricey card or tuner box, you will need a pretty decent machine. The myth folks recommend a 3.2 p4 with HT, and compressing HDTV video takes bloody forever. Resizing to 960x, deinterlacing, using some other virtualdub filters and compressing ~40 minutes of hdtv video with divx takes about 28 HOURS on my athlon 2400xp system. Needless to say, it is much easier to work with on my 4400+ dual core system. You’ll also need a big hard drive - hdtv recording takes about 7-8 gigs per hour. Needless to say, taking forever to compress and using a lot of disk space to record means that you’ll be buying hard drives by the wheelbarrow ;) If you want to watch it, you’ll also need a pretty decent machine. A 2400xp can barely watch a 1080i transport stream if it is running windows. There are, shall we say, "alternate sources" (albeit legally questionable ones) for this stuff so you don't have to do it yourself if you don't want to. A pretty common file format is 700mb, 1/2 of 1080i resolution with ac3 sound. I’ve included 2 frames from 24. The first one is a 350mb episode rip, the second 700, which is at a higher resolution than DVD. That said, even standard tv can look good, it is just that the majority of us have shitty tuners running shitty software. I'm not blaming anyone or being critical, just saying that a lot of people don't use the cable signal to its full potential. If you use something like dscaler, you can get some pretty good results. They don't have any NTSC screenshots, but they have a couple of PAL ones. Pretty amazing stuff. I’m sure nobody would complain about caps if they all looked like that.1 http://deinterlace.sourceforge.net/screenshots/addl_screenshots.htm This won’t get you anything near hd quality, of course, but it will drastically improve the quality of caps (choosing a good video codec would also help). |
http://www.slumberville.com/asbestosfilter/temp/350.JPG |
http://www.slumberville.com/asbestosfilter/temp/700.JPG |
AsbestosFilter |
AsbestosFilter@gmail.com |
Friday March 24 18:20:29 2006 Request |
I know I capped this, but it seems to have dissapeared from my hard drive. Can anyone send it back to me?
Record number: 11659 Title: Desperate Housewives Medium: TV Series Actress: Sharon Lawrence Description: Episode: "The Ladies Who Lunch" (1.16) Around the beginning of the episode, Maisy Gibbons is arrested in her house and handcuffed behind. Outside she runs away but falls on the grass. Then is entered in the cop's car. |
AsbestosFilter |
AsbestosFilter@gmail.com |
Friday March 24 20:14:40 2006 Re: THE UNIT (moved from The Discussion Page) |
(unsigned poster) wrote:
> The Unit scene was an unexpected classic. Anyone got caps? |
John |
Friday March 24 21:48:26 2006 Re: Discussion Page Post |
Major John wrote:
> BrainMan and I are currently working on the original > footage This is a fun one, worth the price of admission Hoping Brainman will produce more! |
Jay L |
Friday March 24 22:09:12 2006 Re: THE UNIT (moved from The Discussion Page) |
John wrote:
> Anyone got caps? Look up |
AsbestosFilter |
|