Exactly. Intel has made a fortune by marketing their chips solely on MhZ and probably 99/100 people consider, this to be a measure of speed. It's really difficult to look at any numbers and determine speed, since so much depends on the efficiency of the instruction set and quality of compilers used by high-level languages. In the end I think the best measure of speed, is probably MIPS (millions of instructions/second)...
You'll be waiting quite a while for a system that will only be a modest improvement over the Dreamcast due to the graphic limitations of most television sets.
Dreamcast has already solidified itself as the #1 or #2 next gen system. The "real" fight is going to be Nintendo vs. PS2 next Christmas. Buy the wrong system and you're stuck.
So many developers are already developing DC games, the PS2 won't make a significant dent in DC marketshare.
The writer/producer whatever, "always intended for the movie to be a trilogy, this could be two prequels, a prequel and a sequel, or two sequels." How exactly does this work. Does he actually mean that he always wanted to make three if the movie was successful and he was paid enough money?
Let's not forget, stealing is theft.
This is called "Milking" the cash cow before she dies.
Always keep the asian language versions several behind the latest release.
Exactly. Intel has made a fortune by marketing their chips solely on MhZ and probably 99/100 people consider, this to be a measure of speed. It's really difficult to look at any numbers and determine speed, since so much depends on the efficiency of the instruction set and quality of compilers used by high-level languages. In the end I think the best measure of speed, is probably MIPS (millions of instructions/second)...
You'll be waiting quite a while for a system that will only be a modest improvement over the Dreamcast due to the graphic limitations of most television sets.
Dreamcast has already solidified itself as the #1 or #2 next gen system. The "real" fight is going to be Nintendo vs. PS2 next Christmas. Buy the wrong system and you're stuck.
So many developers are already developing DC games, the PS2 won't make a significant dent in DC marketshare.
The writer/producer whatever, "always intended for the movie to be a trilogy, this could be two prequels, a prequel and a sequel, or two sequels." How exactly does this work. Does he actually mean that he always wanted to make three if the movie was successful and he was paid enough money?