Gadgetism.org > Next-gen console smackdown part XVIIIII
[Freyburg.com] I've been wavering in possible game machine purchases, since the Xbox 360 will probably have the best first person shooters of the bunch, but the PS3, should it ever actually be released, will have Metal Gear Solid 4. Then there's the Nintendo Revolution, which promises to have an innovative controller and be a lot cheaper than the other two systems, but which doesn't have the extra "yahyahgottahaveit" factor I need to push me over the edge to an actual purchase.
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[Techdigestuk.typepad.com] Tech Digest: January 2006: If Sony hadn't been able to crow about the monster success of the PSP, the potential of the PS3 and its superb HD story (from camcorders to top-end TVs) there would have been very little to talk about. Even the much trumpeted Sony Ericsson Walkman phone turned out to be a slight rejig of a model launched last year.
[Rssupdates.com] Navigation:: This PMP sports Windows CE 5.0 and features a 3.5-inch, 320x 240 LCD touchscreen, 400MHz Samsung 2440 processor, Bluetooth 2.0, 64MB RAM and 128MB flash with MiniSD expansion, anMP3 and (unspecified) video player and even DMB television and DAB radio support for kicks. No word on pricing oravailability but considering that DMB is pretty much limited commercially to South Korea and soon,Germany, it's not like we'll be seeing these in the US...
[Feeds.dualboot.net] dualboot.net feeds: You wouldn't think the competition to sell cheap computers would get so heated, but Intel has just come outswinging to announce its entry into the sub-$300 PC category, with Vice Presidentand General Manager of the Channel Platforms Group Bill Siu seemingly taking more shots at the MIT Media Lab's HundredDollar PC than providing details of his own company's offerings at last week's Intel Solutions Summit, Siu showed offone example of Intel's planned lineup of barebones machines for developing nations (with India and Latin Americamentioned as specific markets), claiming that unlike other low cost PC initiatives, the Intel machines provide userswith access to the huge library of existing Windows software. What this fails to take into account, however, is thatfolks in the market for super-cheap computing probably don't have the resources to buy the "latest andgreatest"
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