Fallout 3

Posted by: Tom  :  Category: Video Games

Fallout 3

Amazon.com
The third game in the Fallout series, Fallout 3 is a singleplayer action role-playing game (RPG) set in a post-apocalyptic Washington DC. Combining the horrific insanity of the Cold War era theory of mutually assured destruction gone terribly wrong, with the kitschy naivety of American 1950s nuclear propaganda, Fallout 3 will satisfy both players familiar with the popular first two games in its series as well as those coming to the franchise for the first time.The Cold Wa (more…)

Grand Theft Auto IV

Posted by: Tom  :  Category: Video Games

Grand Theft Auto IV

Amazon.com
What does the American Dream mean today?For Niko Bellic, fresh off the boat from Europe, it is the hope he can escape his past. For his cousin, Roman, it is the vision that together they can find fortune in Liberty City, gateway to the land of opportunity. As they slip into debt and are dragged into a criminal underworld by a series of shysters, thieves and sociopaths, they discover that the reality is very different from the dream in a city that worships money and statu (more…)

Gran Turismo 5 Prologue

Posted by: Tom  :  Category: Video Games

Gran Turismo 5 Prologue

Amazon.com
The award-winning Gran Turismo franchise returns with its 5th installment, Gran Turismo 5 Prologue, exclusively for PlayStation 3. With its signature realism and unrivaled physics, this highly anticipated precursor to Gran Turismo 5 continues to blur the line between simulation and reality.”Prologue” is defined as an introductory or preceding event or development, and true to every letter, Gran Turismo 5: Prologue treats both long-time fans of the Gran Turismo franchise a (more…)

This game is VERY realistic.  The physics are great and you really feel like you are driving a car around a racetrack.   The rendered car models are superb.   They are like works of art.

It’s almost as if you can reach out and touch the cars since they seem so real.

Windows 7 to Introduce Faster Graphics

Posted by: Tom  :  Category: Microsoft, Operating Systems, PC Hardware, Software, Software Business, Video Games, Windows, consumer, technology

circuit board

Windows 7 is going to be the first Windows OS to treat the GPU more as an equal to the CPU, according to Nvidia product manager Chris Daniel.  He also says that with Windows 7, Microsoft is “really opening up the immense parallel computing horsepower of the GPU natively right in the operating system.”

This is obviously great news for graphics ungry users like engineers and digital artists.  We already know that this will be great for gamers.

Windows 7 introduces a new API called DirectX Compute, which enables the system to fully use the parallel processing in modern graphics cards from Nvidia, ATI, and others.

In ye olden days of PC lore, when computer processors didn’t include the math coprocessor for cost purposes, anything requiring floating point math calculation took FOREVER to complete.  I know this because I had an old Packard Bell 486SX laptop with the old CPU which did not have the coprocessor built in.  A 486DX would have had the floating point instructions built into the main CPU.

I had a 3D architectural program that would let you build houses and rooms in 2D, then it would render them in 3D for a walkthrough.  The 3D rendering required floating point math, and it took a long time to render on the non floating point CPU.  This old laptop did, however, have a spot for a math coprocessor.  I purchased and installed it, and the 3D rendering phase of that program took off.   Not long after that, math coprocessing instructions were built into the main CPU as a standard feature.  This was before the days of these 3D graphics cards with their unreal floating point performance.  These cards’ instructions are utilized by many games’ routines which are specifically built for accessing these features.  In DOS and some older Windows versions like Windows 95, the games (like DOOM) would basically create their own operating environment which the OS would shell out to, in order to have access to 32 bit and graphics functions.  Later on, Microsoft introduced the DirectX API for direct access to the graphics features via the OS itself.  Now it seems that they are taking it one step further.  I am not totally clear on how the games, which are essentially Windows apps, could access the graphics features via regular DirectX, but regular apps require this new API?  I probably am missing a step somewhere in there.   I’m sure that there are new GPU features that they allow access to, or improve the access.  Maybe this new API merely makes it easier to access for regular (non games) applications programmers.  I really do not know at this time.  I have not studied the API.

Chris Daniel further claims that Directx Compute will “enable use of advanced technologies like SLI-based, multi-GPU gaming, 3D Vision, and PhysX real-time physics.”  So, this will bring parallel computing to the masses.

Well, that’s great news for graphics hungry Windows users who have top shelf graphics hardware.  I guess that that $6000 Alienware gaming laptop is again calling my name.

Microsoft pulls a Wii with Project Natal

Posted by: Tom  :  Category: Game Consoles, Microsoft, Video Games, technology

Well, it turns out that Microsoft has created a way to make the XBOX become interactive ala the Nintendo Wii, without controllers.  The add on can read a player’s hand/arm/leg/body movements for game control.  Wow.

I saw a demo played on Jimmy Fallon and it really looks cool.  It looks hard to play the ball game they were playing, but the driving game looks pretty nice.  I’m assuming that if you run in place that the on screen character runs forward, because it wouldn’t be good to have to run into your TV in order to keep the guy moving in the right direction.

It is called Project Natal.

I have a Wii, but this looks way nicer since you don’t have to hold a remote or press buttons.  I would have to learn more about how you control other more subtle things before buying one though.  I had my heart set on the PS3 because I need a BluRay player and figured I’d kill 2 birds with one stone.  Now Microsoft has to complicate matters.  The exquisite agony of choice…

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