AriKagura
Ari Kagura
AriKagura

My favorite names for cars are:

@Bryan Levangie: If you're on a PC (or just don't like Garageband on Mac), you can also use Audacity, which is free and open source:

@MissAshley42: There are a lot of civilian businesses and contractors on military bases, such as fast food chains, car rentals, and (oddly enough) video game stores. Like the previous post, they're kind of like big military towns. I know the officers' housing just looks like any ordinary civilian neighborhood.

@TimeNeverRests (PS1): Nope, they are not, unless you tell it to do that (eg from 320kbps MP3 to 128kbps AAC). Otherwise, they remain as MP3 format, WAV, AIFF, or whatever supported format.

@TimeNeverRests (PS1): Okay, I understand now. That could be a simpler for the older iPods that works like a harddrive. For newer idevices, you would need some kind of special software to interact with it. Well, I can't use an Android, Blackberry, or Zune as a comparison since I've never used one but I'm pretty sure

@TimeNeverRests (PS1): I must be living under a rock but I'm pretty sure iTunes has supported MP3's since the beginning.

I have noticed something big, besides the grayish UI... I noticed that my iPhone doesn't hang on itself whenever I sync it. I'm using this on Windows 7 64-bit so I'm not sure how different it is on Mac. Anyway, whatever Apple did to fix that hanging issue, it must have worked.

I tried this on my 3GS and it's actually pretty smooth for the most part. I do like the tap-to-move control scheme instead of the pseudo-joystick that most iPhone games utilize.

@hibikir: I suppose it could work that way, but almost always, those same colored buttons displayed on the screen also have the name of the button on it (eg "Green A" for A-button, "Blue X" for X-button, etc). For me, I tend to remember the letters ...

I'm all for consolidation of devices! Heck, I use my iPhone as an iPod, a GPS, a note-taker, a voice-recorder, a wannabe-PSP, and well ... a phone!

@WarlordPayne: Personally, I kind of like the grey tones. Though, if they were to re-introduce the colors back into the controller, it should be more subtle, like the buttons on the PS3 controller, instead of looking like M&Ms or Skittles or something. On the PS controller, only the names of the buttons were colored

I played a bit of Song Summoner on my iPhone when it was on sale:

@diw321: I know the Subaru cars are more common in dirt-rally games, like the DiRT series. But in games about street races, you don't see them too often.

It's good to know that these options exist for the Do-It-Yourselfer. I tend to rely on these myself when the warranty goes dead on some of my i-Stuff. They tend to be quite good for the most part.

@chickdigger802: I would guess the Camaro, Challenger or Charger, and the Impreza. For the police, you have the E7 and Crown Victorias. Basically, any car that you're more likely to see when you drive to work. Assuming you live in a moderately average populated American town.

It's scary to know that this guy is a Wide-Receiver. I mean, maybe this guy receives more than just the ball.

@hot_heart: I'm pretty sure someone might mod out a Ferrari car for the PC version. Sure it won't be legit as far as licensing goes, but most kinds, if not all, of street racing isn't really legit anyway.

@syaieya: This is how I see it— as a Racer, you might opt for a more breezy feel when you're cruising down the freeway at 200+ mph. You wouldn't care less if your car flips over and your skull is crushed. Though, this is assuming that you know how to drive at such an insane speed and not crash.

@Wafflemao: Don't feel too bad— I don't know much about cars aside from what I see from pictures.

Charger SRT8? Kind of makes me feel like home, I suppose.