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thijs-casper-de-jong

Going to give this a try. The 1.x version of VLC is my 'backup' player, though. Only when the KMPlayer can't play a file, I use VLC.

A TV isn't capable of 'sensing' splitscreen gaming going on, as it still gets only a single video stream. Butaneko gave me the answer I was looking for: games must support it individually, and currently there's only a very limited range that does.

That's all I needed, thanks!

Great innovation. However, I doubt how many games will support this feature. Does anyone know if it's supported natively?

Interesting read. All I know is that I'm going to download the consumer preview the second it becomes available.

It's theoretically possible to make something unhackable. However, I agree that it's not in practice. I'll never say otherwise, and that also was not my point.

"[...] and venting of >radioactive< material to the water [...]"

It doesn't go for all platforms.

Please, forget EVERYTHING you know about Windows Mobile. I've had Windows Mobile, and currently user Windows Phone, and there are NO similarities other than the name, the fact that it's a Microsoft product, etc.

Nice find. Promoting you to share with the world :)

I found this to be one of Colbert's least interesting interviews in a long while. As an European I find his show pretty funny, but he can do better than this.

I very much doubt it. We can all agree that this is a render - not a photo of a prototype or anything. Also, judging by the fact they haven't made any announcements, I think we can safely say it'll be a while before this (or any BB10 phone) will be available.

The Circle of Fifths would be so much more interesting if Tolkien wrote it.

I've got a Samsung Omnia 7 - which has a slim, full aluminum body - yet I bought a leather flip-case for it.

I don't like password manages either. If their database gets decrypted, shit's still going down.

I didn't mean colors, I meant composition. If something is visible on the EVF, it's gonna be on the photo. If it's not on the EFV, it is not on the photo.

You get to see exactly what the sensor picks up. Using an optical viewfinder, there's a slight difference because of the way the light is redirected.

I also would like to test the different iPhone and Android models stack up. Also, I'm curious to see if Windows Phone has this feature as well. I think they might've implemented it, but I'm not entirely sure.

The two first people to undergo this (experimental) treatment were both diagnosed as incurably blind. So the fact that their sight improved significantly is actually quite a big thing.

No, the thing that happened is much more sensational than the article makes it seem.