
Shuttle introduced its $199 KPC Linux PC at CES on Tuesday. It'll have an Intel Celeron processor, a 945GC chipset, 512MB of memory and either a 60GB or 80GB hard drive. What it won't have: an optical drive or a PCI Express slot. Despite that, it's a pretty good-looking box, and comes in red, blue, white, and black, each with a different icon stamped on the front.

CCG writes - "Overall, this is a very good game. I enjoyed most of my time playing Don’t Stop, Girlypop!, even through its imperfections. I think it’s alright for the price, and would be worth playing if you enjoy other movement shooters like ULTRAKILL or other Quake-like games."
After more than two years in development, Teardown's hotly anticipated multiplayer will finally arrive in March. It's no tacked-on affair either, with developer Tuxedo Labs bringing a full suite of options to play with pals in its chaotic destruction sim.
"Playground Productions, a children’s and family entertainment company, along with creative-first indie publisher and developer Mega Cat Studios, are thrilled to announce that Backyard Baseball will arrive on PC, Mac, and modern consoles on July 9, 2026." - Playground Productions.
For educational institutions, that is. Hopefully this will raise the number of game programers we get to see in the future, and will end Microshaft's monopoly in the classroom and if possible in corporate environments.
So...you need to buy the keyboard, mouse, monitor, and speakers? That'll run you up to probably $350 for really cheap version of each of those 4 components. Dunno, I'm half speaking out of my ass, but it's stuff worth bringing up since the cheapest on the Dell line are around $400.
keyboard, mouse, monitor, and speakers $350?
You're outta your mind. You can get a nice 17in monitor for under $200 and a nice keyboard $20, mouse $10 and Speakers $15
Where the hell do you live? And you could buy most of that stuff from biglots for under $10 each.