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ManifestedISO

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Posts posted by ManifestedISO

  1. 1) For all intents and purposes they're an average PC in a custom (parts not replaceable) box.  Thus they're not easy to fix and sure to be technologically stomped by the PC in just a year or two.

     

    Thankfully, it is not average. The GPU of the PS4 will have access to the 8GB of system memory--the super-fast GDDR5 RAM--at the same time as the PS4's CPU, unlike the same components in a PC. The RAM in your PC is slower DDR3, unavailable to your GPU, which itself has only 2GB of VRAM. The potential for future-proofing the console's performance is very exciting. And it will be upgradeable, at least the hard drive, possibly with a sizzlingly-quick solid-state drive.

     

    From the article:

     

    Normally, a GPU is used to execute graphics commands rendering what we see on our screen, while compute commands, that normally simulate the world around us, drive the artificial intelligence and prompt the software to react to our actions, are handled by the CPU. The GPU of the PS4 has been optimized to break that barrier, thanks to the shared memory pool and to a secondary bus that allows it to read and write directly from and to the system memory. The number of compute commands that the architecture can queue has also been dramatically increased (to 64) in order to run a relatively large number of small programs simultaneously or almost (fine-grain).

     

    In layman terms, what this means is that the GPU can directly support the CPU in performing compute tasks when there are free resources that would normally remain unused in a traditional system with separate CPU and GPU memory. If you have a PC and you like to benchmark your video memory usage while you game, you probably noticed that there are plenty times in which way less than 100% of the available resources are being used, and this system makes sure that those resources are put to good use, while still handling the graphics commands at the same time (asynchronous).

     

    I can't stress enough, the value for money the PS4 has suddenly come to offer. It is, simultaneously, the most powerful and least expensive gaming platform ever.

    Dammit I burned my burritos writing this post.  

    • Like 1
  2. Spend less time asking what game we're getting, start hoping and trusting that we get a game at all. The Pebblewatch Kickstarter just shipped to Best Buy instead of backers first; the Ouya game console sold out on Amazon without first shipping to Kickstarter backers, and the Double Fine Kickstarter game just ran out of money ($3mil) and will now dump half a game onto Steam's early release program for full price until that pays for the second half to be released as a "free" update. 

     

    I'll be delighted to get a Project Eternity game of any kind.  

  3. I remember the years before Ubisoft. French games weren't often very good but they were certainly different than those from other countries. Now they've got Ubi, which is EA with a funny moustache wearing a mime outfit, and much like EA the thing they do most often is show their customers the finger.

     

    How, exactly. Show me some evidence for willful corporate malfeasance.  

  4. Today - not for the first  time - I questioned the heritage, and intelligence of the persons responsible for the default formatting settings in Open Office. I further ventured to suggest that the man who set the indents in particular was a wart-flavoured newt rapist.

     

    If I only I were this creative when not furious.

     

    EDIT:

     

    If you offer me a button to turn a line into bullet points, AND I PRESS THE BUTTON  then that is what should ****ing happen you colon-less freaks!

     

     

    Most all of the OO devs left the project to start Libre Office. I have it on my machine, but I cannot say whether there are now colons where you expect them. 

     

    Edit: woops, I see your thread, now. 

    • Like 1
  5. Anyhoo, everyone's favourite gaming executive, Don 'Deal With It' Mattrick is leaving M$ and going to Zynga. Don used to work at EA. If I worked at Zynga and was told that the new CEO was ex-EA and M$ I'd feel like a Turkic nomad who'd just heard the news that Ghenghis Khan was hiding over the next hill.

     

    http://www.joystiq.com/2013/07/01/don-mattrick-named-zynga-s-new-ceo/

     

    Edit: I don't know if his masterful handling of the XBoxOne debacle had something to do with this. But it should have.

     

     

    Evidently, "Deal With It" knows exactly how to deal with it. Just another reason I'm happy to jump ship to Sony this year. 

  6.  

    ^^ Dude!! Spoiler Alert! Aww, damn ... oh well, at least it wasn't Red Bull.

     

    Sorry, man. They were already showing the highlights here about two hours ago. Thought it wasn't sensitive. :(

     

     

    No, it's my fault anyway, sorry.  :blush:     

  7. Not so much what I did today, as who I saw. Saw again, at random. She might be an angel in real life, though I've never seen her face.
     
    An ultra-rare being with a black Arai helmet, a green ZX-10, and hips better-defined than a 458 Italia's. The first time I saw her, was at Chevron on Birmingham, topping off at dusk in full gear: jacket, gloves, boots, and that Arai, visor down. She left the station and I swooned. Dude, only military and thrill-junkies ride sportbikes (mine is a CBR), and here was this trim, 105lb female taking off with all the grace that only total control brings. Today I drove the cage home, and there she was again, turning off of Marron onto Monroe, still lithe and lovely. Just the third time I've seen her in three years. I know, pics, or she's not real, but that bike has 160 horsepower ... she is impossible to capture on film.

     

     

     

     

    2008_ZX10R_Green_Static_zps5390acdb.jpg

     

    Girls ride these, too! Maybe only one in the whole world.

     

     

    • Like 1
  8. Tombraider went and did away with all that in subsequent installments and the game took a nosedive, but that doesn't take anything away from the original.

     

     

    Ha, I was there, too. Maybe not a nosedive, just no direction at all. Not better, not worse, only the same traversal/discovery pattern. I still enjoy Lara's adventures from then and now, however. You might be right that it was Fallout, anyway. I didn't mean to imply that Inquisition looks like a traversal-type exploration, nor that it's patently obvious. But when marketing tells me that, unlike DA:O and DA2, the Inquisitor player character will get to "explore much more," I believe it. Maybe I just want to, too much.  

  9. Nice, nice! Bryce Canyon would be the most amazing geology in the West if it weren't for that other big hole sorta nearby.  :geek: Well, and Yosemite. And those deep underground caverns in New Mexico, with the gigantic crystals. Actually, Yellowstone, too. And Death Valley. Man, it's beautiful out here. 

    • Like 1
  10.  

    Still require Origin? if so than thanks but no

    Very likely.

     

     

    EA has heard our cries and is doing something about it.

     

    Making EA games better is the core that Origin needs to embrace and expand on, Wilson believes. "What you're going to see from us is to have a real focus on that, and a focus on getting that right and getting that better, and getting it done for PC. Then figuring out in the context of other platforms, what does that mean?" Wilson asked. "You don't want a service that competes with other platforms like Microsoft or Sony or iOS. You don't want a competitive service to them, what you want is a complementary service that enhances your game experience irrespective of where you made the transaction. That's the shift you're going to see from us."

  11. A must-have, no doubt. I'm convinced graphical fidelity will be nearly identical on a 7850 PC and PS4, at launch of DA:I ... so I'm opting for the wireless controller version on the bigger screen. 

     

    Speaking of fidelity, I may have a crush on the interviewer in this E3 back-and-forth with Bioware's Jessica Merizan. :geek: Not many specifics about Inquisition, unless you follow her advice and go read the third book in the Dragon Age saga, which I have not. 

  12. MERPS ... Middle-earth Role Playing System. Wasn't my first, but might have been my favorite. Top Secret, I think it was called ... a spy RPG. GURPS ... Generic Universe. Didn't play that too much. AD&D was the main platform.  :geek: The Forgotten Realms were well and truly remembered. 

  13. My brains are depleted after stumbling over the syntax in that peer review article rant.  :blink: That level of indignation reads like a rejection letter. A rebuttal to a breakup. And the most "exciting period" in science is decidedly every new day we're here to see it. 

     

    The most interesting part of the OP article was the "milliseconds" reaction time for feelings to manifest. I feel, faster than I think. Which likely means Rodin mislabeled his work. That sculptured Thinker isn't thinking, it's feeling, and then deciding how to interpret it. Hmmm ...   

  14.  

    So I preordered both consoles...

    I wish I had a thousand dollars.

     

     

    You don't have to come up with a thousand dollars until November.  :sweat: Pre-orders are just promises to buy later. I can only promise for one console. 

     

    The potential for a quick ebay sale later this year is good, I think, but I will also say that Amazon has four different guaranteed-launch-day-delivery PS4 bundles, available for the last ten days, all of which still listed in the top ten biggest sellers in video games, with Day One Xbox One also still available. In other words, it's relatively easy to reserve a new console right now, despite the fact pre-order totals for both consoles peaked at 2500 units per minute June 10-14. Also Gamestop told its managers to accept an unlimited amount of PS4 pre-orders for an indefinite amount of time, for now. I'm just saying, don't gamble on multiple pre-orders unless you can.

     

    Edit: Or not. You can always cancel it the day before it ships.   

  15. I have read your arguments carefully, and find you to be diligent.  o:)

     

    Maybe I took a different survey, but country of origin wouldn't matter. There are no accurate or inaccurate results from a subjective questionnaire about decision-making. Particularly when we don't know what relevance, if any, the data will have upon the greater thesis. You never know, double-blind, this could be a purely free-form experiment in psychology that has nothing whatever to do with video games and reviews.  :blink: I kinda hope there is a psychiatric professor behind this--then maybe what's-his-name might get help and stop practically shouting his transference neurosis, cripes.

     

     

    • Like 1
  16. The prize of my blu-ray TV collection so far, Star Trek: The Next Generation. Gradually finishing Season 3 now, until late next month when Season 4 comes out. CBS Digital has taken great pains to restore the series, frame by frame from the original 35mm. The fidelity is just ... it brings a tear to my eye. All new CG planets, digital FX, 7.1 DTS ... *sniff*  :geek:

     

    Unrelated but equally endearing, Lucy Liu makes Elementary worthwhile, all on her own IMO. She has a natural stoic depth making up for Watson's kind of reticent dialogue. And I half-expect O-Ren Ishii to come out at any moment.  :thumbsup:   

    • Like 1
  17. Seems like it has been constant mis-management of their license by the D&D owners. They had the opportunity to own the CRPG market and reap in significant rewards. Instead they've botched it, time after time. As a result, game developers have steered away and developed their own IP, which now repeatedly tromps the D&D CRPG market.

     

    So I'll never get to play a Dragonlance game ... son of a gully dwarf.  ;(

     

    I won't give up hope. I'll just have to win Powerball and start my own studio. 

    • Like 1
  18.  

    Next-gen consoles are stupid cheap, for what you get. This is truly the apex in the history of price-to-performance.

    The hardware isn't the only important factor here. By the time their library has grown to something semi interesting, their hardware will be pretty much outdated. And right now...well...it's like this and this VS. this and this. The only thing that has given the consoles such a long lifespan are the exclusive games, otherwise they would have long been in the dead book by now. With all that said, I still wouldn't mind having a PS4 once some good games are out for it.

     

     

     

    The dead book. I like it. It's where the movie, Children of Men, should stay and never come out. :)

     

    Comparing new game availability versus old, or just depth of library ... Sony said they plan to allow PS4 players to stream a library of PS, PS2, and PS3 games to the new console. I find that very convenient, as long as I can download and store each game, available for offline play. Talking to you, The Last of Us. And the number of surprisingly good indie titles coming up, make the platform equal in appeal to my PC.  

     

    I think direct comparison is plausible now, what with shared x86 going around. Customization changes comparison, but so does a driver update. Whatever the experience is post-pipeline should be able to be measured, objectively enough to satisfy my hardware nerd jones. :) All I'm saying, is that it's a great time to be an enthusiast. Viable, durable, powerful choices are available.   

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