Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Recent server maintenance

Hello everyone!

In fact, I posted a message in the interview, but it is not saved (because of hardware problems we've had in recent times with the server).

In short, there have been some changes as follows:

- The change of equipment (new record)

- Tools new operating system and management

- A more stable environment and hope

I have yet to work on a remote system backuping (process must be backuping local stable and function well).

There was also a problem with the last backup of the wiki, it must be redone some changes (March 15 to 18). I soon updated with the latest changes. Thus, the wiki is not editable at the moment (except for officials).

Thank you for your patience and understanding!

Morris


Forum group icons

Hello everyone!

I am very happy to announce that we now have new icons ranging forum DCW relevant! It's been a while since I do not want to do something for DCW (see the topic: www.detectiveconanworld.com/forum/topic/801-looking-for-ideas-and-talent). Finally, I went ahead and did something nice and simple. The first version of something that could evolve in the future.

At least it will be a nice upgrade from what we have now!

Here's the order:

General Manager: admin.png

Musharraf: moderator.png

Monitor (authentication members): observer.png

Eyewitness (normal user): eyewitness.png

Protagonist (more than 100 posts) protagonist.png

Agent (500 + posts) officer.png

Inspector (2000 posts): inspector.png

Detective (10,000 + posts) detective.png

Secret Agent (donors) secretagent.png

Black Organization (forbidden): blackorg.png

About! : D Comments welcome, as always!

Thank you.


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Classic Detective Fiction - Who Did it?

lassic detective stories are now just that, classics. They opened the door for writers with vivid imaginations and well grouped wordings to fantasize a world of crime and crime solving. The early writers composed their stories in such similar detail that one could easily compare one story from one author with that of another in the same genre. Many stories exist, but only a few are deemed notable by critics.

The authors of many of what are now considered classic detective fiction genre wrote by a certain set of rules. These rules were occasionally broken and bent but the storyline never strayed far from the original rules that were set in place.
Many call these types of stories "Who Done Its" but they can be classified under the name of 'classic detective fiction'. The story follows a general set of rules. These rules were originally published by Ronald Knox to give the writer a clear set of boundaries when writing detective fiction. Written in the heyday of classic detective fiction, the rules are as follows:

From Fr. Ronald Knox's famous The Ten Commandments List for Detective Novelists
· The criminal must be someone mentioned in the early part of the story, but must not be anyone whose thoughts the reader has been allowed to follow.
· All supernatural or preternatural agencies are ruled out as a matter of course.
· Not more than one secret room or passage is allowable.
· No hitherto undiscovered poisons may be used, nor any appliance which will need a long scientific explanation at the end.
· No Chinaman must figure in the story.
· No accident must ever help the detective, nor must he ever have an unaccountable intuition which proves to be right.
· The detective must not himself commit the crime.
· The detective must not light on any clues which are not instantly produced for the inspection of the reader.
· The stupid friend of the detective, the Watson, must not conceal any thoughts which pass through his mind; his intelligence must be slightly, but very slightly, below that of the average reader.
· Twin brothers and doubles generally, must not appear unless we have been duly prepared for them.
If these rules were followed completely, it would be difficult to constantly generate new plots and stories. One must offer variety to the reader; variety of the plot and storyline as well as of the characters and instances. If Sherlock Holmes were a writer, how would he have solved this catastrophe? "Elementary, my dear Watson". That is how. He would develop an elaborate tale and, no matter the circumstances, he would weave the tale effortlessly around the reader just like his creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Doyle cleared the way for other writers to become more spontaneous in their writing while still being somewhat focused on the rules. His elaborate bending of those rules gained him the popularity among readers that he so deserved. Would Sherlock Holmes have been as interesting if he had never stumbled upon a crime? Of course not.
Chris Haycock is an information publisher, one of whose many hobbies includes crime fiction. Early detective fiction in particular. A particular favourite is Sherlock Holmes. If you would like to know more about Sherlock Holmes and an excellent offer, why not go now to

The Return of Arthur Conan Doyle - A Spiritual Journey Part 1

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is best known as the creator of master consulting detective Sherlock Holmes. However, although the name Sherlock Holmes has entered into wide public awareness over the last century and more, the same cannot be said for Conan Doyle himself; or his direct connection with his renowned fictional character Holmes (and his trusted aide, Dr Watson) and the fact that he wrote a total of 56 Sherlock Holmes short stories and novels beginning with A Study in Scarlet, first published in Beeton's Christmas Annual of 1887. All these stories appeared in the Strand magazine in serialised form from 1891 to 1927, many illustrated by Sidney Paget's famous drawings.
The name of Sherlock Holmes has recently been boosted in the public psyche, particularly within the younger generation, with the two Guy Ritchie-directed films, Sherlock Holmes (2009) and Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011), with Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law in the lead roles of Holmes and Watson. There has also been a modern interpretation of the investigative duo with the BBC Television series Sherlock, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman. Series 1 was televised in 2010 and the second series in 2012, with filming of a third currently under way.
So what of the great man himself, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle? There have been several excellent biographies written about him, and there are sure to be more to follow now that his personal archive of correspondence, diaries and original manuscripts has been released by his Estate. The first biography to use this newly available material was The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes - The Life and Times of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (2007) by Andrew Lycett.

Other significant developments in recent years, helping to promote the Conan Doyle legacy, have included the sale of 3,000 Conan Doyle papers and other memorabilia at a Christies auction sale in London in 2004, one item purchased by psychic medium Patrick McNamara leading to the publication of his book, Conan Doyle's Wallet - The Secrets Within, in 2008. The year 2011 saw the publication of Conan Doyle's previously unpublished first novel, The Narrative of John Smith, from an untitled manuscript acquired by the British Library at the same sale.
First and foremost Conan Doyle was a polymath, a qualified medical doctor, with one of the sharpest, critical thinking minds of his or any other era, a mind scientifically honed by his medical training at Edinburgh University - in the city where he was born on 22 May 1859 - under the watchful guidance and tutelage of his mentor Dr Joseph Bell. The clinical methodologies used by Bell were to become the major inspiration in the formation of the Sherlock Holmes character, and Bell's angular facial features, his "eagle face", influenced the development of Holmes's outward appearance as drawn by Sidney Paget and others.
The area of Conan Doyle's life which has been most markedly misunderstood and misinterpreted, was his advocacy of Spiritualism and what he called "the psychic question". Conventional wisdom almost universally appears to state that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle resorted to Spiritualism as a direct result of losing his son Kingsley and brother Innes during the First World War, the implication being that they were both killed in action. On closer examination we find that this consensus is fundamentally flawed on a number of counts.
Although Kingsley had been wounded in the war on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, July 1 1916, he was not severely hurt, and after hospital treatment to a neck wound was able to return to his unit a couple of months later. His death occurred unexpectedly on October 28 1918, just as the war was drawing to a close, from pneumonia brought on by the Spanish flu pandemic raging at the time. He was just twenty five.
Similarly, his brother Innes also succumbed to the deadly Spanish Flu epidemic, on February 19 1919, while helping to restore food supplies and other services in Belgium. Innes also died at a relatively young age, being only forty five at the time of his passing.
Those two devastating blows within a period of only a few short months would be a shock to anyone's system, and it is perhaps unsurprising that these events are widely assumed to be the trigger points for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's immersion into Spiritualism, to provide solace as he grieved their loss. It sounds entirely plausible that this would be the case. There is only one problem. It simply isn't true.
Conan Doyle's eventual advocacy of Spiritualism took place in the form of an article in Light magazine on November 4 1916, fully two years prior to his son Kingsley's death. This explicit proclamation of his acceptance of the reality of Spiritualism came after three decades of painstaking, dedicated research into "the psychic question" as he referred to it, having initially been a skeptic. The start of his scientific investigation into Spiritualism began in the mid-1880's, around the time that the character of Sherlock Holmes was taking shape in his impressive mind.
A major influence in his commitment to get to the truth was his friendship with eminent scientist of the day, Sir Oliver Lodge, whose son Raymond was killed in action in Flanders in 1915. A confirmed Spiritualist in his own right, Lodge had written a book, Raymond or Life and Death, published in 1916, describing his communications with his dead son.
The inclusion of his narrative in Light magazine in 1916 was followed by two books, The New Revelation (1918) and The Vital Message (1919), the publication of which marked his commitment to take on a mission for the remainder of his life to become an advocate for Spiritualism and to get the message out to as many people as possible. He travelled extensively, both in the UK and overseas, talking to packed audiences.
He published his two-volume History of Spiritualism in 1926, and the following year was filmed in a Fox newsreel interview in his garden at his home, Windlesham, Crowborough in East Sussex. The first half of the talk focuses on how his character Sherlock Holmes came about, before he moves on to his work on Spiritualism, much more important in his view.
The constant strain of travelling, writing and giving lectures eventually took its toll on his health, and he passed away at his East Sussex home on 7 July 1930, aged only 71. The man who had achieved so much during his lifetime was now dead - or was he?
Part 2 to follow...
Do any of us know what twists and turns life is going to lead us, much of what starts to have meaning only making sense with the benefit of hindsight? Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (ACD) certainly had a major impact on my life's direction when I started taking a major interest in his life and works around ten years ago. Starting off with a desire to "set the record straight" about what had been written about him regarding his advocacy of Spiritualism and the "psychic question" during the latter part of his life, my initial research soon showed demonstrated that much of the accepted wisdom about this aspect of his life was erroneous, and it is possible that much of this obfuscation of the real facts about this area of his work was done deliberately. However, little was I to know at the time (around 2007) that this interest of mine would lead to the publication of what has now become 'The View' series of books - 'The View' (2009), 'The View Beyond' (2011) and 'The Cathar View' (2012) - with myself as Editor, and with over 25 contributors to each book writing on ACD, Sir Francis Bacon and the Cathars respectively. The unfolding synchronicity has been remarkable, leading me into the White Eagle Lodge, the Francis Bacon Society and regular visits to 'Cathar Country' in SW France. This, the first of a series of articles, is a call to you to pay attention to synchronicities which happen in your own lives. They may lead you, like in my own case, in directions which you couldn't even begin to imagine. If you dare...

Conan Doyle - The Hound of the Baskervilles

My neighborhood bookstore was touting a Sherlock Holmes detective story, and I wondered why? "Babyboomers don't read Sherlock Holmes stuff anymore," I thought.
With some hesitation I purchased The Hound of the Baskervilles and read it over the weekend. The novelette is a detection story about a spectral hound that has terrorized the country side. It turns out that the ghostly hound wasn't ghostly at all but real, a half-starved dog so kept by a convict.
Before long, I realized why I hadn't read Conan Doyle in such a long time. First, Sherlock's cruelty toward Watson is tasteless; not to say rude to the reader. But on the other hand one cannot help thinking that the ill treatment may be due to Watson's obsequious nature. Yet arrogance and cruelty in any shape is repulsive to me.
Second, Holmes thinks of Watson as a dunce, a vehicle for the detective's genius, and he isn't reluctant to say it:
It may be that you are not yourself luminous, but you are a conductor of light. Some people without possessing genius have a remarkable power of stimulating it. I confess, my dear fellow, that I am very much in your debt.
If the author intended for us --the audience-to hate his main character Sherlock Holmes, then he did achieve his goal, for what can be more detestable than a character that denigrates another while elevating himself in such an obvious manner.Third, oh yes--let's not ignore Holmes' props: clay pipe and violin. After a while one get bored with such trivialities, and the characters inevitably becomes a cartoon.
The novel lacks substance; in that, for two thirds of the book Holmes is absent, leaving all the leg work and sleuthing to the amiable Watson. Readers are interested in Holmes' mind, not in Watson's, since we have been conditioned to think that Watson is an intellectual midget.
Anyway, were it not for the well balanced sentences, this detection story -a horror story, though a mild one by today's standards- would not have merited to be revived. What I admire in Conan Doyle is his mastery of English syntax and his employment of rhetorical tools.
Alliteration:
Bronzing bracken and mottled bramble gleamed in the light of the sinking sun.
Negative reversal and alliteration:
Never in the delirious dream of a disordered brain could anything more savage, more appalling, more hellish, be conceived than that dark form and savage face which broke upon us out the wall of fog.
Concretization of the abstract:
There were pride, valor and strength in his thick brows, sensitive nostrils, and his large hazel eyes.
Notice how, in the above example, the abstract nouns 'pride,' 'valor,' and 'strength' are anchored in the reader's mind by the qualified concrete nouns 'brows' and 'nostrils.'
All the above techniques coupled with the lavish display of ancient family lore will continue to delight readers for many generations to come. Or, shall we say, the sins of the fathers will be visited on the sons, as it was in the story of the clan of the Baskervilles.
Retired. Former investment banker, Columbia University-educated, Vietnam Vet (67-68).

Sherlock Holmes and Detective Fiction

Before the world was treated to the many 'flavors' presented by motion pictures, people had other brilliant ideas to entertain themselves. They exercised their imaginations through reading all sorts of books and related forms of written literature.
Detective fiction was one genre which had a strong following ever since its informal debut many years ago. Children and adults alike would stay up all night reading, captivated by the thrill and suspense associated with detective books. The excitement usually clings to a reader even if he or she isn't actually reading the story; oftentimes people would not hesitate to pick up a detective book and finish it just to know how the story ends.
What gives detective books its flair? Simply put, they give the readers a good mental image of the actual scene and its events, while having them think at the same time. The unpredictability of good detective fiction has always been a quality that readers keep coming back for.
Stories which are classified as detective fiction usually start off with a description of a particular crime or mystery. As the reader turns the pages of the detective book he or she will be led to many bizarre or uncommon circumstances. This places more emphasis on the need to find a solution or and explanation to why the introduced event happened. The protagonist is usually a detective whose degree of experience can vary. A "foil", or an accident-prone/less competent male or female is usually introduced as the detective's assistant. Together, these key characters would decipher all sorts of clues, analyze situations, and piece them all together.
This process of collecting data takes up most of the plot. It is up to the creativity of the author to keep the reader hooked to the logical path of clues. A twist is usually added here and there to serve as distractions in a good number of ways. They can divert the reader's attention away from critical details. Better yet, they can lead the reader to think that they have it all figured out, until another logical twist is introduced, much to their surprise. Through it all, the detective feels all sorts of emotions and tries all sorts of methods to figure things out. Deductive reasoning is one very common method used by protagonists in many detective books.
The solution of the crime usually serves as the ultimate climax of the detective fiction stories. Here, the foil's more conventional level of intelligence is used by the author to explain the elaborate solution to the crime in words the reader would understand easier. The whole experience of reading a detective fiction story is truly breathtaking.
Edgar Allan Poe is credited to author the very first detective fiction story in 1841. Entitled "The Murders in the Rue Morgue", it starred C. Auguste Dupin, the very first detective. The fame of this short story eventually led to two 'sequels' which featured the same detective. One of these stories, "The Mystery or Marie Roget", is intriguing for expressing Poe's fictionalized point of view regarding a real-life crime, the murder of Mary Cecilia Rogers.
More importantly, that detective fiction story served as inspiration for many authors to create and innovate in the genre. One of these authors could have been a certain Scottish doctor and writer, whose innovative skills with the pen have earned him knighthood in the United Kingdom. In other words, one of these authors could have been Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, revolutionary author of the Sherlock Holmes stories.
Ask a person you know to tell you the first word he thinks about when you say 'Sherlock Holmes', and expect him to say 'detective', or something close to that. Sherlock Holmes stands out among the many various protagonists in the genre as being the most famous detective. His antics in every story that Conan Doyle wrote about him demonstrate his sheer brilliance in data gathering and analysis. This character, often pictured as a sophisticated gentleman wearing a deerstalker cap while smoking a pipe, is also depicted as a master of disguise. The depth of his character is seen in his well-elaborated emotions throughout every detective fiction story he is featured in. To him, life needed stronger thrills, and this led to his resistance to feel love, which he believed was a hindrance beneath his concerns.
Sherlock Holmes is known for the line, "Elementary, my dear Watson". Many will be surprised to learn that this line was never directly uttered by Holmes. However, he does refer to less-insightful attempts in information analysis as "Elementary", and he frequently refers to his confidante, Dr. John H. Watson, as "my dear Watson".

Probably The Most Popular Detective In The World?

The earlier forms of detective fiction often influence the writers of the same or similar genres in the present. The question is how can such writers ever hope to create a more popular character than that of the famous Sherlock Holmes? Could this really be such an impossible feat? The possible is not possible unless one makes it so. Therefore, it is not completely impossible to create such a world renowned character; it just has not been accomplished as of yet.

There are several good detective fiction stories circulating currently but the fact is that none of those characters are quite as fascinating to the public as the character of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional detective stories played out by one Sherlock Holmes. Although this character was a simple man of objective science, he was also just a man. He could be insolent, conceited, and even bizarre while still being humble and even somewhat normal at times. The image that was painted in the minds of the readers by Doyle was that of a slightly atypical male human being that would commit slightly atypical, yet still human, actions. He was a bit unconventional; a bit on the unusual side as we would politely put it today. This is possibly what drew so many followers of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fantastical tales. But, is Holmes still as popular today as he was one hundred years ago?

If one were to poll the general public and ask them to name a famous detective in literature the most common name that would be given would still be that of Sherlock Holmes. Is this simply because the name is so unusual or is this because the character has welded himself into the mind of the reader forever? Unfortunately, there is no answer to that question; the reader must decide that for him or herself. But, take into consideration that Sherlock Holmes has existed for well over a century. How many characters are still discussed in detail long after the pen has left the paper? There are very few that have earned such a privilege. The classic detective fiction era, therefore, will probably be a constant reminder as well as a basis for more modern detective fiction for many years to come.
In one sense, that makes Sherlock Holmes somewhat of an icon. He is the epitome of the fictional detective stories of the classic era and will be constantly referred to for new ideas and reference when creating a new character. The hope of the writer is that one day an at least equal character will arise from the pages to take on the crime solving of the future. This would preferably be a character with an equivalent amount of gusto and overall emphasis for crime solving that Sherlock Holmes possessed. A character that is human and commits acts of the human; a character with interesting thoughts and feelings who is able to take the reader on an extraordinary journey just by opening a book is the one that will most definitely be able to capture such an esteemed resonance in the world of literature.

Sherlock Holmes - Hollywood Detective Movies Top Sleuth

The fictional character Sherlock Holmes, having first appeared in publication in 1887, is a London-based detective created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Easily the most recognized fictional detective, Holmes is known for his intelligent, analytical, and deductive capabilities. Assisting Holmes with his investigations is his good friend Dr. John H. Watson.
The character of Sherlock Holmes was the central figure in many of the most enjoyable detective movies of the 1930s and the 1940s. My favorite actor playing the role of Holmes was Basil Rathbone, with Nigel Bruce in the role of Dr. Watson. The two starred together in a series of films that ran from 1939-1946. However, this famous detective has been around on the movie screen since the 1916 silent film Sherlock Holmes, starring actor William Gillette. Acting legend John Barrymore also played the title role in the 9 reel silent film of the same name produced in 1922.
In 1929, the first in the movie series to be filmed with sound was titled The Return of Sherlock Holmes. The filmed featured actor Clive Brook as the detective and although this film was not very popular it did provide the origin of Holmes trademark phrase "Elementary my dear Watson". However, the phrase itself was never used in the written stories of Arthur Conan Doyle.
Holmes arch nemesis is the character of Professor James Moriarty, who can only be described as a criminal mastermind and super villain, was introduced in Conan Doyle's tale The Final Problem. It was the original intention of this story to kill off the famous detective. Conan Doyle felt that his Sherlock Holmes stories were a distraction to his writing of more worthwhile literary efforts. Holmes was to meet his end during a fight with Professor Moriarty over the Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland. As it turned out, Holmes great legion of fans would not hear of his demise and demanded more.
In total, Conan Doyle penned four novels and fifty-six short stories that featured the master sleuth. The movie industry would often combine several of the short stories when producing the Sherlock Holmes series of films. Only one, The Hound of the Baskervilles, can be said to closely follow the authors original story. The film was an unexpected hit for Twentieth Century Fox and they immediately followed with The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. The rest as they say is "elementary".
For mystery and crime film fans, the Sherlock Holmes detective movies provide a lot brain food. The tight storylines, combined with Holmes' intensive use of logical thinking and deductive reasoning, make the character unforgettable and the films a leading candidate for the best Hollywood detective movies of all-time.

The Top Three Detective Mystery Writers Of All Time!

This is a must read article for those who are new to detective mystery books and looking for somewhere to start. Here I list the three great giants of this genre and why they deserve their spot.
Arthur Conan Doyle
Arthur Conan Doyle must top any list of mystery authors. His Sherlock Holmes, though created in the Victorian era, is still a household name, an icon for all subsequent fictional heroes in this genre. Aided by his bumbling sidekick Dr Watson, from his famous London apartment Holmes solves innumerable mysterious dilemmas brought to him by desperate suppliants, from Government ministers to humble damsels in distress, and time and time again he foils the plots of his archenemy, the criminal mastermind, Moriarty. The brooding intellectual genius of Holmes, the unfailing solver of all mysteries, is made more humane by his inept violin-playing, his harmless drug-addiction and the honest common-sense complementarity and physicality of his Watson companion.
Doyle himself was born into an Irish Catholic Edinburgh family in 1859; he attributed much of his love of literature to the fantastic stories told to him when young by his mother Mary; later he even believed in the actual existence of fairies and other such imaginary beings. He qualified as a doctor and the logical order and method of Holmes in solving his cases came in no small part from Doyle's admiration of one of his professors in medical college, just as his bumbling Watson came from his actual experience of some medical colleagues. But in fact from an early age his real talent lay in imaginative writing. So, though his service as a doctor in the Boer war earned him a knighthood, he soon abandoned medicine for literary pursuits. Initially at least, he saw his Holmes novels and short stories as pot boilers for his more serious novels and poems. The latter were in many ways the complete opposite of the detective works, they reflected more his love of the supernatural, the esoteric and the exotic. It was, however, the Holmes works that the public craved. Those works made Doyle a very rich man, won him international fame, and guaranteed his enduring legacy. For he had created a rich new genre of detective mystery writing which Agatha Christie and others have carried on successfully into our own era.
Agatha Christie
Agatha Christie carried on Doyle's legacy but in a more varied and modern style. Her main detective, Poirot, also relies on order and logical method to solve the invariably complex cases foisted on him by desperate clients, and he has a Watson-like companion and narrator, the redoubtable Hastings. But Christie, though still quintessentially British, moves beyond the insularity of Doyle to encompass the wider world, as her titles make clear: Murder on the Orient Express; Death on the Nile, They came to Baghdad. Yet in her other great sleuth, Miss Marple, and aged spinster from a small English village, she not only changes the gender of the traditional detective hero, but also seems to become totally parochial. I say seems for her thesis is that all the world is embodied in the local. And it is the universal applicability of her works that make them so popular, that and the unmatched ingenuity of her plots, which keeps us guessing to the end. It's this, and the continuing world-wide popularity of the genre, that has enabled her to sell 2 billion copies of her works world-wide, translated into 45 languages, second only in sales to the Bible and Shakespeare.
Raymond Chandler
If Doyle and Christie are very British, Chandler is very American and carried the genre to that continent, and to its world of Hollywood movies, with crucial variations. He might be said to be the founder of the American hard-boiled detective of Film Noir and Pulp Fiction fame. He evolved this style from reading pulp fiction stories while unemployed during the great depression. He was drawn to it because he found it forceful and honest, if somewhat crude. Certainly, Philip Marlow, his slightly dark and downbeat private eye, played in the films by Humphrey Bogart, is far from the sophisticated world of Holmes or Poirot. But he is very American and very democratic, consorting with the lowlife as well as the society dames. In this mode Chandler's novels The Big Sleep, Farewell my Lovely, and The Long Goodbye, are seen as having some merit as modern American literature in its infancy. And through the movies, he helped write the screenplay for the classic Double Indemnity and even collaborated with Hitchcock in Strangers on a Train, he brought the genre to an even wider audience. This is why, before his death in 1959, he became president of the mystery detective association of America, he had become its exemplar par excellence.
To conclude the above writers could be called the three great giants of the Mystery genre but they're certainly not the only writers of merit. Daphne Du Maurier and Joseph Conrad to name but a few are also worthy of exploration. I hope you find the same satisfaction in reading their works that I have.

Monday, July 14, 2014

Film 17: Private Eye in the sea off

With the latest Shonen Sunday is the latest news about the new movie. We have now more than ever information about this topic, so I'll start this new topic here.

The title of the film is a private detective in the sea below, the premiere April 20, 2013, and will be held on a boat, via Anime News Network:

The film takes place in the state of the art Aegis ship full cooperation of the Ministry of Defense and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Forces with. Ran the risk of heroin, and Conan have to face off against a dangerous criminal.


Published image

Image: http://www.manga-new...Detective-Conan

Chrome prevent people from access to DCW

* Posted this on Facebook, the thought may not be a bad idea to publish here too *

A witness says that Google Chrome DCW is blocked in the browser. Morris contacted and said that announcement and flaming Chrome is what you will see and try to eliminate it. Until then, I personally recommend installing Google Chrome Extensions one of Adblock (I recommend Adblock Plus), so when you browse the site, you do not have to download the ad in question, which concerned DCW OK to reach Morris to issue any regulations.

You can ignore the warning, click on "Advanced" and click on the "Continue at your own risk and danger." Some people do not have Adblock Plus to just go to the site anyway, and they have no problems, but I recommend you use something like Adblock Plus.

Thank you for your patience.

And maintenance of the forum and wiki

Hello all,

After recent events, with warnings the site and all that, and I'm taking a series of control codes and update. Eventually you will be updated Forum wiki to the latest version (although it may take some time). I will update this post as soon as the date and time of the update to be determined. Please note that during the development and testing of the new version of the wiki, it can sometimes become unavailable because this version is built on top of another version of PHP (programming language any script is usually used for the development of the network). Because of this, I have to switch between different versions of the tests and make necessary adjustments. I apologize for the inconvenience. It should not be difficult for the next update, due to the differences in the versions of PHP should not be such a big impact in the future.

Thank you for your patience! We hope everything will DCW much stronger and better! :)

Thank you for your support and good day!
Morris

Forum and wiki for updates / upgrades!

After work, I'm very happy to announce that the forum and wiki platforms have been updated to the latest version and most stable them! I also made some changes here and there to fix some things and update others (such as leather, additions and more). Here's a quick summary of this global change:
  • Forum has been updated to the latest version of the platform forum.
  • Forum is now a safer, more stable and contains many new improvements and / or changes pretty.
  • With the new version, and now there is also a code for a single user (for normalization and mental health) instead of having each avatar and profile picture as it was before. Note that the system has automatic conversion and become either the default your profile picture in a smaller size so that it can also be used as an avatar or gods. If you do not like your new personal or conversion, do not hesitate to change (which can easily be done in the Control Panel).
  • The donors do not see ads in the forum.
  • Forum is now the largest (and you can change the size) to accommodate larger screens (which are more common today).
  • Thread has been simplified model to allow easier updates in the future. Please note that the skin may change slightly Forum in the future.
  • The wiki has been updated to the latest version of MediaWiki (the wiki platform).
  • Updated (and sometimes re-encoding) some extensions for compatibility with the new version.
  • Add multiple download a new plugin that lets you drag and drop files to edit a page to load multiple images at once. There is also a new icon on the editing tools to identify the files as an alternative option (standard).
  • We note that some of the features and accessories a little more strict with this new version. For example:
    • If you use quotes, and "/> <References" label is now mandatory at the end of the page (under the References section ====) or an error occurs. Before the upgrade, are simply ignored these quotations. So if you ever see a red warning in reference to this subject in a few pages, all you have to do is add a tag at the end /> <references.
    • Most (if not all) non-traditional HTML tags used in the wiki (as Appendix "<tabs>" I put the legs to show words or names or label <dcmap>, etc.) or custom and not display properly if there is no empty space in front of them (due to the new wiki strange behavior with the latest version - I do not know if it was an error or a real solution MediaWiki / function), for example, the names of the section, it is necessary to be as follows:
    •   Random text in the description section symbols.  <tabs>  The <Tab  ...  </ Tab>  </ You are here>  

      Instead of:

        Random text in the description section symbols.    <tabs>  The <Tab  ...  </ Tab>  </ You are here>  

      Basically, if left blank, the wiki does not begin a new paragraph break "<tabs>" Merge into <p> and labels, and will be dealt with "<tabs>" sign in plain text instead of HTML ... labels and I think that this could be the labels MediaWiki safety limit behavior analysis (to avoid injections, perhaps?). For example, I updated: http://www.detective...wa # names properly (simply by removing the blank line above the table).

  • Some extensions have been changed or updated by Google Maps or suppressed because they are outdated (there is nothing you need to know about I think, working mostly in the background) ...
  • The news is now showing a small window hovering number of appointments to see the current reference without having to pass the page.
  • Has been updated date / amendments (with slightly different styles, as is the case in Wikipedia).

If you find any problems in the main forum or wiki, please do not hesitate to report them to the ideas and comments section.

Thank you!

I hope you enjoy the new changes! :)

I also hope that this will bring more stability and security on the site in general!

Fun! ~

Morris


Garnet Crow in June

Garnet Crow, the band behind the different opening and closing songs in Detective Conan, broke out in June. More details can be found here: http://www.animenews...plit-up-in-june

A little sad to hear, Garnet Crow, was amazing, and will miss' em, especially Detective Conan openings tend to be flat in recent ...


Finance + DCW help :)

Hello all,
It is a message that you want to do for a long time, but have not had time to do. I was also on vacation for a period of time and returned at the end of this week. The purpose of this article is to provide some "behind the scenes" of DCW and be open as much as possible about the financial affairs and network servers. In a sense, I would like to educate the community about the resources and money that it takes to keep the DCW and run every day. I do not know if you remember all the events of January of this year, when the site has had some major problems, I had to make a lot of changes and improvements () to replace (a better, safer and stronger)? Otherwise, see posts here: http://www.detective...ki-maintenance/ and http://www.detective...upgradeupdates/
In addition to software updates at this time, I also updated the resources used by the DCW (mainly due to the increase in visitor traffic to the site). I am currently a third party service to periodically check, detect and prevent attacks, and exploits the possibilities as they arise.
The bill came to about $ 150 a month for the Web server and a separate database + about $ 10 a month for a security service and I just mentioned. This is a very significant amount of money in the end (about 1,900 dollars a year out of my pocket ..). And $ 150 per month, I think, at this stage, it can probably pay a little more to achieve our dream of having a dedicated server that we can use and benefit from the resources of wisdom completely any (or almost no) restrictions (ie, more bandwidth, more memory , and more CPU). We should note at least $ 200 for a decent good server.
That's why I was hoping this post will let you know more about the situation and the priorities that could possibly help achieve our goal of stability and dedication to help build the first Detective Conan resource web server! I want to thank all who have donated so far! It is very impressive to you, and I am very grateful for the help! :) It really helps to pay the bills each month. If you do moderately donations in a month and how much help I would say represents about 5% of the monthly fee. In the long run, it would be surprising if the server can be done with self-effort and all the help!
Even a little, is appreciated any help! Even $ 1 would be great! : D Thank you!
Some of the benefits of becoming a donor:
- Member of the forum group "donors" (if you want). Through it, and let others know of your support and dedication to DCW
- Forum more ads
- Personal data page can be customized somewhat
- More messages are allowed in your inbox
- If you have ideas or suggestions, please let me know. :)
Thank you for your contributions and continued support! Always appreciated! :)

Film 18: Dimensions Sniper

According to the latest issue of Shounen Sunday and will be called the film 18 異 次元 の 狙撃 手 - Ijigen not Sunaipā (Dimensions sniper). Submitted to Shuichi Akai and Masumi walk, as shown on the poster below.

6mcu.jpg

(Picture: 米 花 学园)

Some of the information http://www.manga-new...Detective-Conan:

Detective Conan movie 18: No Ijigen sniper.

"A Akai Shuichi is the target of a sniper and Masumi Sera fire. Tokyo is a panic, and arrested citizens in an exchange of fire from a sniper. Know anything about them. Attacked Why? Akai alive this? Judy starling and Subaru Okiya is also the same thing. Is Conan be able to find and arrest the guilty? "

Will be updated more information on this subject as it becomes available.


Under Wiki

Hello all,

Just to let you know that I am aware that the wiki is currently down. I will do my best to recover.

Looks like it could be a hardware problem with the server. Turning the database and wiki (and perhaps because it has become extremely huge traffic + is very large, and there was a failure to read / write). Working with support to see what we can do and what are the options available to us. Adding insult to injury, it seems that because of this problem (in part), and the system automatically backuping I have created the database does not have enough work as planned and the last (manual) backup December 11, 2013. Believe me when I say that I am very disappointed with this situation. I really thought everything was under control at this stage and performed backups should also be done ... and I hope there is always a way to recover the database and we will do everything we can do about it, but it would be 100% honest with you and he will know that the scenario the worst case would be back again to December 11 ... I'm so sorry. I consider another update server. It seems that traffic is increasing and more and more of the solids in some cases to follow ..

In any case, I will let you know as soon as information is received.

Thanks for your understanding!

Morris


Recent server maintenance

Hello everyone!

In fact, I posted a message in the interview, but it is not saved (because of hardware problems we've had in recent times with the server).

In short, there have been some changes as follows:

- The change of equipment (new record)

- Tools new operating system and management

- A more stable environment and hope

I have yet to work on a remote system backuping (process must be backuping local stable and function well).

There was also a problem with the last backup of the wiki, it must be redone some changes (March 15 to 18). I soon updated with the latest changes. Thus, the wiki is not editable at the moment (except for officials).

Thank you for your patience and understanding!

Morris


Forum group icons

Hello everyone!

I am very happy to announce that we now have new icons ranging forum DCW relevant! It's been a while since I do not want to do something for DCW (see the topic: www.detectiveconanworld.com/forum/topic/801-looking-for-ideas-and-talent). Finally, I went ahead and did something nice and simple. The first version of something that could evolve in the future.

At least it will be a nice upgrade from what we have now!

Here's the order:

General Manager: admin.png

Musharraf: moderator.png

Monitor (authentication members): observer.png

Eyewitness (normal user): eyewitness.png

Protagonist (more than 100 posts) protagonist.png

Agent (500 + posts) officer.png

Inspector (2000 posts): inspector.png

Detective (10,000 + posts) detective.png

Secret Agent (donors) secretagent.png

Black Organization (forbidden): blackorg.png

About! : D Comments welcome, as always!

Thank you.