Archive for the ‘playstation 2’ Category
Thursday, November 13th, 2008
Despite a worsening economy, all three current-generation video game consoles had better U.S. sales in October than they did a year ago, according to the latest figures from The NPD Group.
And both Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Nintendo’s Wii sold more units in October, a four-week reporting period, than in September, a five-week period. Wowwee!
Also the worst of the economic bad news had yet to hit in September.
Sony, however, saw month-over-month PlayStation 3 sales decline, while sales of its previous generation (and less expensive) PlayStation 2 remained strong. Also, the Ṕ saw the strongest year-over-year sales increase in October.
Nintendo was again the market leader, even though Microsoft cut prices on its Xbox 360 line in September, making its low-end model the least-expensive console on the market.
More at The Seattle Times.
(Can you blame them for that seemingly pro-MS plug …)
Tags: microsoft, nintendo, npd group, playstation 2, playstation 3, sony, video game console, wii, xbox 360
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Original post by nafiz
Posted in playstation 3, playstation 2, video game console, September, October, npd group, sales, sony, xbox 360, Video Games & Gaming, nintendo, wii, Microsoft | No Comments »
Monday, October 20th, 2008
Filed under: Wearables
For shame. We know good and well engineers can concoct energy-generating garb that actually looks good enough to wear, but evidently those fashion-minded gurus weren’t hired for this project. Granted, we have all ideas the image you′re quizzically staring at above is NTT’s first go at a pair of power-packing sandals, but there’s clearly a good ways to go before these things are cute / safe enough to wear on the streets. Might we suggest shoving all that hardware inside of something? The “all hanging out” look just isn’t working here.
[Via TokyoMango, image courtesy of AFP / Getty]
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in October, September, Instructables, Photography, Sport, video game console, playstation 3, japan, households, npd group, playstation 2, Green | No Comments »
Wednesday, October 8th, 2008
Filed under: Transportation
With an electric MINI Cooper just around the bend, a Twin Drive hybrid Volkswagen landing in 2010 and Chevrolet’s Volt rolling into showrooms in a matter of months, Audi’s ten-year plan is looking a little awkward. Though we’ve yet to hear that it’s actually speeding things up, Peter Schwarzenbauer, who sits on the management board at Ingolstadt, recently confirmed that the company would be offering “a pure electric car″ sometime in the future. Additionally, rumors of it being based on the A1 were dashed, opening the door for speculation that it will instead be built around the VW Up! (Lupo) concept. Here’s hoping we find our prior to 2018.
[Via Autoblog]
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in Instructables, October, Photography, Sport, hardhack, September, video game console, instrument, ps2, playstation 2, playstation 3, Green | No Comments »
Thursday, September 25th, 2008
Filed under: Transportation
What else can we say? Chrysler’s new electric vehicles that were introduced yesterday just got a lot more real thanks to a stable of videos showing ‘em off. To be honest, we’re not too jazzed about the whisper quiet Chrysler minivan or the otherwise plain Jeep Wrangler, but that Dodge EV — mmm, now that’s a fine piece of engineering. Tap the read link and mash play if you’re thirsty for more.
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in paypal, how stuff works, venjuvo.com, households, playstation 2, npd group, gazelle.com, debian, please refer, message temporarily, defer defer, deferred please, Remake, video | No Comments »
Wednesday, September 24th, 2008
Filed under: Transportation
Seeing that General Motors left a gaping hole of opportunity for other automakers to produce a new EV by 2010 that isn’t uglier than sin itself, it’s no real shock to see Chrysler champing at the bit. Just this week, the company has introduced a trio of advanced electric-drive vehicle prototypes (simply coined Chrysler EV, Jeep EV and Dodge EV for now), one of which will mysteriously surface in 2010 for consumers in North America. Feel free to hit the read link for the entire hope-filled press release and the gallery of images, but if we’ve learned anything of late about those succulent concept shots, it’s to not believe them (at all).
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in venjuvo.com, paypal, households, npd group, playstation 2, how stuff works, gazelle.com, defer defer, please refer, deferred please, Remake, debian, message temporarily | No Comments »
Thursday, September 11th, 2008
Filed under: Laptops
AT&T has freely supported Panasonic’s WWAN-enabled Toughbook 19 / 30 on its mobile broadband network for nearly a year now, and for those worried that the two may break things off when Gobi entered the picture can finally breathe a sigh of relief. Qualcomm’s hybrid-3G technology (which goes from EV-DO to HSPA with the flip of a software switch), has just been certified for use on the carrier’s nationwide network, and sure enough, Panny has decided to offer it on “all” new Toughbook machines. Gobified Toughbooks should be on store shelves this October, though we’re not sure just how costly the option will be.
Read - AT&T certifies Gobi technology
Read - Panasonic offers Gobi on Toughbooks
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in October, September, video game console, Instructables, Photography, Embody Chair, hardhack, Sport, playstation 3, playstation 2, AlzheimersDisease, drum controller, Videos, how stuff works, paypal, npd group, households, venjuvo.com, Internet | No Comments »
Monday, September 8th, 2008
While everyone is expecting Apple to announce a complete overhaul of the iPod lineup tomorrow, Microsoft is making headlines today by announcing that its next generation of Zune digital music players is on the way with more storage, redesigned software, and some attractive features missing from the current lineup.
The new Zunes will come in larger versions, with the hard drive based player sporting a 120GB drive under the hood and the new flash-based player coming with up to 16GB of internal storage. The Zune software reportedly received an overhaul to make it easier to browse, add support for audio books from Audible, and comes with a few games. Most notably among the new features, Zune owners will be able to download music from the Zune music store using the device’s built-in Wi-Fi.
No word officially on when the new Zunes will be available for purchase, but a number of retailers leaked information on the new devices last week. The 120GB player will retail for $249, the 16GB player for $199, and the 8GB player for $149.
[via CNet]

Original post by Alan Henry
Posted in playstation 2, npd group, households, mp3_digital_audio | No Comments »
Saturday, September 6th, 2008
dari☎ writes with news that Mozilla has released the second alpha build for Firefox 3.1, codenamed “Shiretoko.” The new build includes “support for the HTML 5 <video> element” and the ability to “drag and drop tabs between browser windows.” ComputerWorld is running a related story about benchmarks shown by Mozilla′s Brendan Eich which indicate that Firefox 3.1 will run Javascript faster than Chrome.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by Soulskill
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008
Martin writes “Mozilla Labs have released a prototype version of the Firefox add-on Ubiquity. It is basically Launchy (the application launcher) for Firefox with the difference that Ubiquity makes use of web APIs and the Firefox browser. The official website contains examples, a command list, information about creating your own commands and of course the Ubiquity extension that is compatible with Firefox 3.x. Ubiquity can pull and send data to various services like Twitter, display, find and embed Google Maps, perform searches, write emails, add entries to the calendar, digg stories and more.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
monkeymonkey writes “Mozilla has integrated tracing optimization into SpiderMonkey, the JavaScript interpreter in Firefox. This improvement has boosted JavaScript performance by a factor of 20 to 40 in certain contexts. Ars Technica interviewed Mozilla CTO Brendan Eich (the original creator of JavaScript) and Mozilla’s vice president of engineering, Mike Shaver. They say that tracing optimization will ‘take JavaScript performance into the next tier’ and ‘get people thinking about JavaScript as a more general-purpose language.’ The eventual goal is to make JavaScript run as fast as C code. Ars reports: ‘Mozilla is leveraging an impressive new optimization technique to bring a big performance boost to the Firefox JavaScript engine. …They aim to improve execution speed so that it is comparable to that of native code. This will redefine the boundaries of client-side performance and enable the development of a whole new generation of more computationally-intensive web applications.’ Mozilla has also published a video that demonstrates the performance difference.” An anonymous reader contributes links the blogs of Eich and Shaver, where they have some further benchmarks.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by Soulskill
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
ruphus13 writes “Firefox has been pushing version 3.0 very aggressively, and firmly believes that it is a solid product. The Download Day was just one of their ways to drum up user support for the new release. Now, Firefox is going to ‘gently nudge’ users of Firefox 2.0 to upgrade. Some users may have been waiting for their add-ons to get upgraded, but now Mozilla is planning to apply a little nudge. Sometime within the next week, people using Firefox 2.0.0.16 will see a request to upgrade and though you′ll have the option to decline, it’s likely Firefox will ask again anyway. Users will most likely be offered a second chance to upgrade after several weeks. (Mozilla will stop supporting version 2 in December.) It will be interesting to see if this speeds up the rate of upgrade by users, as well as upgrades of the add-ons.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
BobB-nw points out the ever more raucous debate over the way Firefox 3 handles self-signed certificates. The scary browser warnings have affected a number of legitimate sites (such as Google AdWords and LinkedIn) that didn’t renew certs in time. Lauren Weinstein loudly called attention to the problem early in July. “If you visit a website with either an expired or a self-signed SSL certificate, Firefox 3 will not show that page at all. Instead it will display an error message… To get past this error page, users have to go through four different steps before they can access the website, which from a usability standpoint is far from ideal. This way of handling websites with expired or self-signed SSL certificates is bound to scare away a lot of inexperienced users, no matter how legitimate the website is.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 20th, 2008
least_weasel writes “An article on Ars Technica reveals Mozilla’s intention to create and release a plugin for Internet Explorer that would allow the often-criticized IE to utilize some of the cooler code rendering developed for Firefox. The current WIP focuses on rendering using HTML5 standards, but the plans seem to be more ambitious than just fixing this one small piece of IE. The article covers some of the plans, hurdles, and potential benefits. It also spills the beans on the code name for the project: Screaming Monkey.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by timothy
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 6th, 2008
Barence writes “Mozilla has unveiled a spectacular new concept browser, dubbed Aurora. The bleeding-edge browser is part of a new Mozilla Labs initiative, in which the open-source foundation is encouraging people to contribute ideas and designs for the browser of the future. The Aurora browser demonstration shows a highly advanced way of collaborating data gathered on the web, and represents a spectacular introduction to the new Mozilla Labs, which much like Google Labs looks to become a home for offbeat projects which would otherwise probably never see the light of day. More details, and a video demonstration, are on the Mozilla Labs site.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »
Monday, August 4th, 2008
Chandon Seldon writes “The issue of digital certificates for SSL and the policies surrounding them comes up repeatedly. I’ve written an article criticizing the behavior in Firefox 3, which includes a serious comparison of the current Mozilla policy &mdash restricting encrypted HTTP to paying customers &mdash to a violation of net neutrality.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson
Posted in playstation 2 | No Comments »