I believe there is a 10% restocking fee.
Kin could have been moderately successful if the data plan wasn't $30. Something more reasonable like $15 a month could have prevented the Kin from dying.
What's wrong with Bad Company 2's DRM? It seems very lenient to me. It lets you activate online and not have to have the disc in the drive to play. You also get 10 activations before having to request more which is more than most people need.
I don't remember BioShock 2's DRM but I don't remember it bothering me.
I'm building a new computer for college right now. Gonna need the extra processing power.
Core i7-930, HD 5870, 6GB DDR3, ASUS X58 mobo, Corsair 750W, 1TB Samsung F3, Lian-Li PC-9F.
That's pretty high end as far as I'm concerned, and it's "only" around $1,000.
What I'm saying is that many people will use this service on lower resolution displays such as those in netbooks or smaller HDTVs. If you have a 1080p HDTV or monitor, then OnLive probably wouldn't be of much use as you likely have a decent gaming setup.
Native resolution of OnLive is 1280x720. I don't think it's really fair to blow the pictures up from 720p to 1080p and compare them with native 1080p PC screens.
The OnLive service may be a good solution for those who want to game on netbooks. First year is free at the moment.
The Droid X is my next phone. The quality control issues with the iPhone 4 are ridiculous. Looks like it was rushed to market.
You have to take into account the fact that the 3DS is outputting in 3D which takes extra processing power.
Valve didn't develop the PS3 version of The Orange Box--EA did. I'm not sure if Valve is even developing the PS3 version of Portal 2 because, as far as I know, they have no PS3 developers.
The word hack originated at MIT and meant a clever practical joke or solution to a problem. Hacking doesn't even have to deal with computers.
There's also the custom map that a designer at Bethesda made for Portal.
Nothing is 100% secure.
There's also Eyefinity which is 5760x1200. :D
I'd be surprised if the PC version didn't hit 1080p. :/
Is it true that the game world is exactly the same as the first game?
That would be pretty ridiculous.
That's what happened with the Xbox 360. The games were in stores but the consoles were not.
Well, in my opinion, you shouldn't even have a review out before ten days.
MMOs are huge and take a long time to play. I think GameSpot takes a month or longer to play their MMOs. Their review for Star Trek Online came one or two months after the game released.
I say $170, out in mid-2011.
Good thing they're running a beta.
Sennheiser, Shure, Audio-Technica