That's how a search provider like Google would do it but AOL knows which of its IPs correspond to which users so they can tie the results to the accounts which is much more accurate than cookies (which get deleted quite often or maybe even disabled completely).
Well yes but honestly anyone who cares about homebrew probably noticed that the higher the firmware version the more difficult playing homebrew becomes so they bought their PSPs as soon as possible.
However, the question is this - is it more efficient to burn the gasoline/fuel to create the electricity to use the electricity to run the cars, or to just continue refining internal combustion engines.
Well, I certainly don't want those nuclear reactors to get built into vehicles that crash by the thousand every day. And mounting a 50 metre windmill on a car strikes me as impractical when you're going through a tunnel.
Not that it matters since all PAL TVs can display NTSC just fine. I'm guessing it's because Nintendo of Europe complained as they offer the shittiest service of all three major regions by delaying all games for months and charging 50% extra. If Europeans were free to import games NoE's sales would drop significantly because it's not only faster to import, it's cheaper than buying local even with shipping and customs added. Granted, non-English speaking people might not do that but the entire UK speaks English and large parts of the rest of Europe have learned English in school and could probably understand an import game. I mean, hell, I play japanese games with little trouble and I can't even read their alphabet!
Perfect Dark Zero. 75€. Granted, that's the limited edition, the MS titles I see listed on Amazon vary between 60 and 65€ MSRP (the latter of which is still a price hike) while EA and Ubisoft demand 70€ per game.
Information about that is conflicting, I'd guess if you're in America you're free to import what you want but if you're in Europe you're screwed, as always.
Don't you mean a tubeload of cash?
Yes but obviously the fashion isn't free.
Find a list of every elite private school, country club, social club or credit union with restricted membership and try them all.
Okay, I'll just type those into AOL search and... Wait. HEY!
That's how a search provider like Google would do it but AOL knows which of its IPs correspond to which users so they can tie the results to the accounts which is much more accurate than cookies (which get deleted quite often or maybe even disabled completely).
Well yes but honestly anyone who cares about homebrew probably noticed that the higher the firmware version the more difficult playing homebrew becomes so they bought their PSPs as soon as possible.
Just order it from eBay then or get an adult to buy it for you.
At that point you can just mount a battery and LCD on your PS1.
Of course, considering that the Germans used the exact same strategy in WW1 they should have seen that coming.
Yes but that's the Wii, not the PS3.
To me 3800 is like 39.95, a neglectible difference introduced for better marketing.
They're for sale, which suggests that they (unlike some laptops) don't blow up.
So is sulphuric acid.
It gets worse than that.
At that capacity it's going to be a big bang, lotsa smoke and flying debries. Fun for the whole family!
However, the question is this - is it more efficient to burn the gasoline/fuel to create the electricity to use the electricity to run the cars, or to just continue refining internal combustion engines.
Well, I certainly don't want those nuclear reactors to get built into vehicles that crash by the thousand every day. And mounting a 50 metre windmill on a car strikes me as impractical when you're going through a tunnel.
I think he's talking about "100 octane electicity".
Ah ok, the commercial games use dlls AFAIK.
Are you sure that it's an SDL derivative and not just using SDL? There are quite a few commercial games using SDL that aren't opensource either.
Not that it matters since all PAL TVs can display NTSC just fine. I'm guessing it's because Nintendo of Europe complained as they offer the shittiest service of all three major regions by delaying all games for months and charging 50% extra. If Europeans were free to import games NoE's sales would drop significantly because it's not only faster to import, it's cheaper than buying local even with shipping and customs added. Granted, non-English speaking people might not do that but the entire UK speaks English and large parts of the rest of Europe have learned English in school and could probably understand an import game. I mean, hell, I play japanese games with little trouble and I can't even read their alphabet!
Welcome to capitalism where everything has a value if someone is willing to pay for it, no matter how unproductive or insane it is.
Now where's the torrent?
RTFA, it says games normally go for 6800 Yen.
A million? The last figures I read said 500k with 400k of them in the US, 100k in Japan.
No, both consoles use a 1USD=100JPY rate for their US pricing, the Wii costs 25000 JPY, each controller 4000 JPY and each Nunchuk 2000 JPY.
Perfect Dark Zero. 75€. Granted, that's the limited edition, the MS titles I see listed on Amazon vary between 60 and 65€ MSRP (the latter of which is still a price hike) while EA and Ubisoft demand 70€ per game.
Information about that is conflicting, I'd guess if you're in America you're free to import what you want but if you're in Europe you're screwed, as always.