@WildTangent01: you could try telling that my amd X4 phenom II oc'd to 3.4 GHz, 4 GB DDR3 RAM, ati 5750 rig.
@WildTangent01: you could try telling that my amd X4 phenom II oc'd to 3.4 GHz, 4 GB DDR3 RAM, ati 5750 rig.
i'm pretty sure she can, as can the millions of other gamers around the world who can only afford to have one console or gaming rig.
@Jackski: you also don't have to upgrade every 3 months.
@Donutt007: "sometime" always does. that just wasn't funny.
@MC Double Def DP: google doesn't have any answers (except for google answers, but no one really uses that), but it's pretty good at asking everyone for me.
@The-Real-Napsta: this right here.
@Yertle8:
edit: i misread which app store this was pulled from.
@chucklebuck: the RC is freely available.
@chucklebuck: without knowing your application needs, you could try chromeOS. it is meant to be very lightweight.
@KichiGuy: i get the main difference that you mention, but the article touts this whole use/proficiency thing as some new thing.
how has nobody commented on the fact that the use skill/gain proficiency is already at the core of elder scrolls games?
@SexeiAlexy: that's actually a strategy employed by many to do low-level runs of the elder scrolls games. it's pretty easy to beat oblivion or morrowind without going past level 2.
@GamingTheory: i can only assume that is being asked because the article that is linked right when he says "is more like that found in Fallout 3" doesn't explain this?
@Fernando Jorge: your reasoning points to possible poor implementation by the game and you playing it wrong, not a poor system, per se.
@Donutt007: because, as we all know, that refutes the work he's done. so, let's just move along, turns out the ps3 isn't hacked, after all.
@Zanafer: been there, jtag'd that.
@samssf: some of my questions have naturally taken me to message boards and forums, but i've never thought to specifically filter for them.
@philosopher_dog: that string couldn't possibly give you health benefit results.
@Ashutosh: why would they? sure, we have antivirus programs, but for spyware and whatnot, they're just called malware programs or spyware programs as far as i know. seems counter-intuitive, but i've heard anyone ask about an antispyware program.