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Comment: FM service is a Bliss (Score 1) 108

by prolene (#36703438) Attached to: Why UK FM Needn't Be Killed For Broadband
You cannot compare FM Radio's free Music service over Paid Broadband. FM Radio is still a bliss for countries where electricity outages takes place regularly, although this does not seem to be a reason in UK, but i doubt it and those who listen to FM would fight this till the end. Those who are planning this seem not to have heard FM radio and therefore they do not know how much joy it gives. This also can be a step to compel people to pay for Music instead of listening it free, which i do alot.

Comment: In your own words! (Score 2, Informative) 766

by prolene (#31212918) Attached to: Which Linux For Non-Techie Windows Users?
You wrote: "Having at last" Means a lot of work before you got it working, only satisfactorily, for your own self. It would be same for each person you deploy for. Unfortunately the lesson is only learned after you have tried for yourself. In the end it gets clear that Linux is not ready for non-techies.
Graphics

A History of 3D Cards From Voodoo To GeForce 320

Posted by kdawson
from the long-and-winding-road dept.
Ant sends us to Maximum PC for an account of the history and current state of 3D video cards (single print page). "Try to imagine where 3D gaming would be today if not for the graphics processing unit, or GPU. Without it, you wouldn't be [trudging] through the jungles of Crysis in all its visual splendor, nor would you be fending off endless hordes of fast-moving zombies at high resolutions. For that to happen, it takes a highly specialized chip designed for parallel processing to pull off the kinds of games you see today... Going forward, GPU makers will try to extend the reliance on videocards to also include physics processing, video encoding/decoding, and other tasks that [were] once handled by the CPU. It's pretty amazing when you think about how far graphics technology has come. To help you do that, we're going to take a look back at every major GPU release since the infancy of 3D graphics. Join us as we travel back in time and relive releases like 3dfx's Voodoo3 and S3's ViRGE lineup. This is one nostalgic ride you don't want to miss!"
Google

Google Earth As a Game Engine For Ship Simulation 84

Posted by Soulskill
from the all-i-ask-is-a-tall-e-ship dept.
dinther writes "Yesterday the program Ships was released. Ships is significant because it is the first serious application that uses Google Earth as a game engine. In Ships, you take control of a selection of ships and drive them around the world (if you have that much time). Building games around Google Earth is now viable, thanks to its ever-increasing level of detail. From a technical standpoint, the Google Earth browser plugin has proven to be quite a capable platform to work with. Further tech details about the application are available as well."
Graphics

Five Nvidia CUDA-Enabled Apps Tested 134

Posted by ScuttleMonkey
from the need-for-speed dept.
crazipper writes "Much fuss has been made about Nvidia's CUDA technology and its general-purpose computing potential. Now, in 2009, a steady stream of launches from third-party software developers sees CUDA gaining traction at the mainstream. Tom's Hardware takes five of the most interesting desktop apps with CUDA support and compares the speed-up yielded by a pair of mainstream GPUs versus a CPU-only. Not surprisingly, depending on the workload you throw at your GPU, you'll see results ranging from average to downright impressive."

Comment: Re:Surprise? (Score 1) 724

by prolene (#27391015) Attached to: Reliability of Computer Memory?
Agreed. That old practice of formatting and reinstalling after some time is not sane now. Programs like ccleaner and Windows 2000 and later have made huge improvements over uptimes and stable intsallations. As far as memory, it may not be the culprit. The mobo can be the problem, even drivers for the mobo under Windows.

Comment: Where did they found this ter'angreal? (Score 1) 217

by prolene (#25740215) Attached to: Multiple Upcoming Games, Movies Based On Jordan's <em>Wheel of Time</em>
I gather it was past the darkness, mist and powerful keepers. I am not mixing up this with Thief. Both have an unreal connection. Oh wait unreal was also a game engine. Maybe now i am getting somewhere. Maybe i will get my hands on a copy when its out for taking!!!

Comment: It was just too slow for me. (Score 0, Informative) 396

by Anonymous Coward (#25342947) Attached to: Open Office Plans To Party Like It's Version 3.0

I tried it back in 2004, and the thing that struck me most about it (besides the fact that it was free) was the speed. It took FOREVER to open and save. I was in a phase when I was trying to move over to as much open source software as possible to save money, but OpenOffice just ended up frustrating me. Also, I recall fighting against the program to do simple things in spreadsheets.

I use and love Gnumeric now for spreadsheets, but I resolved that I'd rather pay for MSOffice. It isn't perfect, but I was willing to pay.

I was always so confused about it too, because my initial exposure to open source taught me to expect this kind of software to, as a rule, always be leaner, smaller, cleaner and faster than "bloated" MS products, but I walked away from OO feeling IT was more bloated.

I'm not tense, just terribly, terribly alert!

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