If all three of those news networks are owned by the same parent company, then sure. It's still windows -> microsoft, 360 -> microsoft, xbone -> microsoft.
If all three of those news networks are owned by the same parent company, then sure. It's still windows -> microsoft, 360 -> microsoft, xbone -> microsoft.
I vote 770
Perhaps the name is misleading, but does MSI Afterburner only work with MSI GPU's? If so, that's a no-go for me, since MSI is one of the brands I tend to avoid.
It sounds like he's jumping to completely arbitrary conclusions based on one very thin corroboration. Is it just me, or does anybody else find his logic a little flawed?
I imagine it offers a significant performance boost, but only if you'd otherwise be recording with a CPU-based program like Fraps (which I do). If you already have a hardware box, it doesn't really change anything. If you're not recording anyway, this doesn't change anything (and actually incurs about a 10%…
Yeh, it's a very subjective matter. I can't stand console games' level of pixellation, but that's because I've been used to 1080p with added anti-aliasing for a long time already. Anything else just makes it hard to see anything at a distance.
Interesting view, but I disagree with that a contained meeting with two strangers could be considered art. I've always thought of art to be concerned with artifacts, however fleeting. It should be observable, though its effects can be very internalized (and often that's the whole idea), and to some degree…
Those would be supported display formats. That doesn't mean the source image is rendered at that at all. It's pretty rare to find a current-gen console game that renders at 1080p @ 60fps. I think GT5 was one of the exceptions.
The Michael spot is private for me. Here's a link to another HD one:
My handle has changed over time. Back in the day I basically asked myself one question: "What are two things that you like?"
Lester's missions give you clear indicators of stocks to either avoid or go for. I doubled my money with Franklin after one of those missions. I'm not sure it's possible, but if you can save the assassinations until you finish the rest of the story, you can get very rich very quickly.
Agreed, it's absolutely two people doing wrong, and causing more harm then each of them most likely know.
Let me put it another way. The consequences of vigilantism are often undefined. Hypothetically, let's say a family member uses the computer to download this. They open it, and the computer is irreparably damaged.
And that's a very dangerous sentiment.
If course not, but theft has a clear legal consequence which has been voted on and is an accepted part of society. Anything else would be vigilantism, which I don't condone either. There is still such a thing as privacy, and you can't simply decide to hurt people because they've done something wrong.
Depending on what the malware does, absolutely. Should they get annoyed because they did something stupid? Yes. Should they have their personal information data-mined and/or corrupted? No.
Personally it's very telling for me that I relate to this very heavily, but feel like I am completely unable to meaningfully share or comment on it. I've literally just cancelled about five fully formed replies (some of them on the article, others to other people's replies)
You're right. I didn't catch on to the fact it was a minigame. I'm still amazed it actually exists, though.
I had to go look up Mortal Kombat because it just sounded too ridiculous to be true. It is too ridiculous to be true, but it's still real. Shocking...
Rovio promises big things from its first racing game. There'll be upgradeable cars, stunt tracks, "fun and surprising" game modes, in case you were expecting "boring and predictable" to ever appear in official marketing communication.