The Eagle and Child (or Bird & Babe as we call it) is a bit rubbish now and I'm sorry to say - always full of American tourists(!) which keeps the locals out...
The University/Pitt Rivers museum (they are in the same building) are definitely worth a look - and I can't believe that no-one has mentioned the Ashmolean, which has just been re-done and is an astounding museum - world class really.
Thanks to the person who mentioned the Steampunk exhibition - I'm going to have to go and check that out myself!
The M series is a rebadge of the 1st-gen X-25M and the V uses the crappy JMicron controller (albeit slightly modified to prevent some of the worse problems seen with that)
Probably the best Kingston to consider is the V+ (not very imaginative with their names are they?) which uses the superior Samsung controller - basically the same as the Corsair P-series, OCZ Summit Series and Samsung’s own PM series.
The other (better in my IMO) option are the SSDs using the Indilinx controller, such as the Patriot Torqx, OCZ Vertex and G.Skill Falcon series - these do support TRIM and Indilinx will support with future firmware updates. As far as I know Kingston does not offer their own version of this, maybe due to its close relationship with Intel in the SSD market?
This is true, it was a fantastic console and such a shame it didn't last the race. I remember playing Phantasy Star Online over the 56k modem before the term MMO even existed. And I still would rather play that than WoW. With Soul Calibur, Jet Set Radio, Power Stone, Crazy Taxi and of course Shenmue it seems that the Dreamcast proved that quality games is not enough to survive in this particular market. RIP!
Err... I think you missed the context of this one.
He's probably referring to the fact that people (from Aristotle) assumed that it was obvious heavier objects would fall proportionately faster than lighter ones until someone actually did it - cf Galileo's famous experiment on the tower of Pisa.
This point that 'obvious' facts are only obvious until someone actual bothers to go and look is well-made imo.
Yes in fact here's the list of the requirements nVidia insisted on for all the sites that got to take a first look at this early sample, which is why you'll notice they all review the same games and why none of them mention power, noise etc...
is clearly to go back to using cartridges! Seriously, with the advances in solid-state storage why aren't console manufacturers looking at the original alternative?
I can imagine the initial cost would be higher than burning DVD after DVD but in return you'd get (relatively) damage-proof games as well as greatly reduced loading times in-game.
Which is what I thought too, much to my chagrin as although I like firefox, I'd rather have been using opera but couldn't force myself to because of all the ads!
Then I found this, and all my problems went away... http://www.fanboy.co.nz/adblock/opera/
Funnily enough a gaming performance review found not that much difference in running Crysis on i7 (http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2008/11/03/intel-core-i7-920-945-965-review/4) and in fact worse performance for the brand-new Far Cry 2 (http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2008/11/03/intel-core-i7-920-945-965-review/5).
It remains to be seen whether or not other new games show a similar effect or not...
Itself taken (with acknowledgement) from Arthur Kantrowitz - "You'll have the result ten years after you've stopped laughing"
http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/CLARK1.HTM - great talk on this very topic by the great man himself from 1979
The Eagle and Child (or Bird & Babe as we call it) is a bit rubbish now and I'm sorry to say - always full of American tourists(!) which keeps the locals out...
The University/Pitt Rivers museum (they are in the same building) are definitely worth a look - and I can't believe that no-one has mentioned the Ashmolean, which has just been re-done and is an astounding museum - world class really.
Thanks to the person who mentioned the Steampunk exhibition - I'm going to have to go and check that out myself!
The M series is a rebadge of the 1st-gen X-25M and the V uses the crappy JMicron controller (albeit slightly modified to prevent some of the worse problems seen with that)
Probably the best Kingston to consider is the V+ (not very imaginative with their names are they?) which uses the superior Samsung controller - basically the same as the Corsair P-series, OCZ Summit Series and Samsung’s own PM series.
The other (better in my IMO) option are the SSDs using the Indilinx controller, such as the Patriot Torqx, OCZ Vertex and G.Skill Falcon series - these do support TRIM and Indilinx will support with future firmware updates. As far as I know Kingston does not offer their own version of this, maybe due to its close relationship with Intel in the SSD market?
This is true, it was a fantastic console and such a shame it didn't last the race. I remember playing Phantasy Star Online over the 56k modem before the term MMO even existed. And I still would rather play that than WoW. With Soul Calibur, Jet Set Radio, Power Stone, Crazy Taxi and of course Shenmue it seems that the Dreamcast proved that quality games is not enough to survive in this particular market. RIP!
Err... I think you missed the context of this one. He's probably referring to the fact that people (from Aristotle) assumed that it was obvious heavier objects would fall proportionately faster than lighter ones until someone actually did it - cf Galileo's famous experiment on the tower of Pisa. This point that 'obvious' facts are only obvious until someone actual bothers to go and look is well-made imo.
Top 5 Games benchmarks only
Plus one other title of their choosing
No other benchmarks period
No acoustic measurements
No power measurements
No PhysX testing or benchmarks
This is as stated by one of those sites that got a sneak peek
is clearly to go back to using cartridges! Seriously, with the advances in solid-state storage why aren't console manufacturers looking at the original alternative? I can imagine the initial cost would be higher than burning DVD after DVD but in return you'd get (relatively) damage-proof games as well as greatly reduced loading times in-game.
Because when dealing with the RIAA, you're going to get fucked in the ass..
Which is what I thought too, much to my chagrin as although I like firefox, I'd rather have been using opera but couldn't force myself to because of all the ads! Then I found this, and all my problems went away... http://www.fanboy.co.nz/adblock/opera/
Funnily enough a gaming performance review found not that much difference in running Crysis on i7 (http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2008/11/03/intel-core-i7-920-945-965-review/4) and in fact worse performance for the brand-new Far Cry 2 (http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2008/11/03/intel-core-i7-920-945-965-review/5). It remains to be seen whether or not other new games show a similar effect or not...
If you have GBA games, I wouldn't get one of these (since it doesn't have a GBA slot any more - that's how they got it slimmer)
Itself taken (with acknowledgement) from Arthur Kantrowitz - "You'll have the result ten years after you've stopped laughing" http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/CLARK1.HTM - great talk on this very topic by the great man himself from 1979