I'd say the safest thing here is:
I'd say the safest thing here is:
Seems I misunderstood what you posted ^_^ Yeah, tabs that sit around can be more likely to start being pretty memory inefficient.
As the internet evolves, the content of each of your tabs is going to be much different. It's not a problem of "new tabs" vs "old tabs". It's a problem of the internet standards being a much different set of creatures than they were when tabs first came around.
I used to commute by bike. I would ride late at night, and in an area that occasionally had snow. Conditions were pretty bad, and light were absolutely necessary. One of the WORST situations to be in was when I was stopped. Sometimes I was stopped for long durations of time due to bad conditions. If the light goes off…
Apparently you're one of the people who doesn't care. Big deal, Jeremy.
OMG. DAY 1.
I bought one just to be able to play Final Fantasy games. That's it. It was a great investment, though, as I waited until the price on the system dropped and the Final Fantasy games were all mostly reduced price Playstation hits. But, I suppose I missed a lot coming late to the game and trying to stay true to my…
hahaha
I think Sir Mix-a-lot would recognize exactly how different Coulton's song is. Really man, he wrote a new song to embody the lyrics Sir Mix-a-Lot wrote. Why can't people see this? It's ONLY the same song in words!
The unified hardware argument is going to be pretty much moot. The major devices will be the ones that companies develop for. A handful of them will emerge, and the games that run on them will look great. Development tools are becoming more agile, and the hardware is much more similar than people like to say it is.
As Threepwood himself might say:
This has happened to me lately. Large chunks of time to play video games, and I don't end up playing. Life just presents a lot of responsibility, but also a lot of other really interesting things to look into.
The next generation of games is not really solidified yet, so basing your argument on a casual game that's a couple years old doesn't help at all.
Wow, this is almost EXACTLY how it happened for me. Though my parents made me practice the piano as part of the deal when they bought the game. AND my copy was eventually stolen/lost. So I'd LOVE to see it come onto the virtual console. I'd probably buy a Wii U just to support the game.
Yeah, that wouldn't be too bad if done well.
^_^ Well, the discussion here isn't even about the Mac OS you refer to. It's really about iOS as a gaming platform, and how that platform will be used in the livingroom. And last I checked, some pretty major publishers have been starting to push iOS launches lately. So while it doesn't compete with PC gaming directly,…
I actually have to agree with Gabe, but not because Apple is actively competing. But because they have incredible potential for it.
I don't mind a touch device in front of me, on my desk surface, but I hate using vertical displays as touch screens. I like my monitors to be at eye level and at a comfortable distance away from me, and that makes touch interfaces pretty pointless.
When you think about what you've written here, its actually a bit discriminatory.
Technically, there was the Panasonic Q, which created a lot of confusion for some people. Maybe your friend saw one of those?