June, 2011

Categories: Gaming    Tags: , ,
zelda-3ds-review-3

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D is Nintendo’s attempt to bolster a Nintendo 3DS software line-up seemingly running out of steam, but does a 13 year old N64 adventure really have what it takes to impress modern players?

Grab your sword and shield and join us in our The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D review as we prepare to find out.

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Categories: Mobile Phones    Tags: , ,

Sony Ericsson has outed a brand new Walkman phone. The Sony Ericsson Mix Walkman was revealed on Facebook and comes with some rather eccentric features including a karaoke function that will let you switch out the vocals on any song for your dulcet tones.

The other intriguing feature of the Sony Ericsson Mix Walkman is called Zappin and promises to give you a preview of the next song’s chorus to let you decide whether you want to jump to it. Read on for more details and all the specs you need…

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Xperia Play, Galaxy Tab 10.1 benchmarks, AR Drone upgrades: US UpdateBoom goes the dynamite. Now that we’ve wrapped up the major E3 press conferences and delivered hoards of gaming news, it’s time to slow things down and return with a fresh edition of the US Update. We’ve got all the heavy hitters on tap this morning, let’s begin.

The Xperia Play Experience Pack has just been announced by Sony Ericsson at E3. The pack includes the DK300 multimedia dock, a pocket USB cable, a music cable to connect the dock to your audio system and three games from Gameloft.

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Next wave of Panasonic TVs will sport Cortex A9 dual-core 1.4 GHz processorsPrepare yourself for future of Panasonic Smart TVs powered by the blazing fast Cortex-A9 processor. By way of a press release this afternoon, Panasonic stepped up to the plate to deliver the shocking news — the 1.4 GHz dual-core Cortex-A9 processor will power its TVs, making it the fastest TV system LSI known to man.

Speed is one thing, but high-performance 3D graphics in full HD is what counts. The Cortex-A9 is no slouch in that department, capable of delivering up all the tasty digital goods your heart desires alongside a wide array of audio and video codec support.

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Categories: Secrets Of    Tags: , , ,
wii-suspects

The Nintendo Wii U controller is big. But just how huge are we talking? We whipped out a ruler and lined it up against rival gamepads to find out. Click to see how the suspects stack up, along with some other intriguing comparisons.

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Parrot AR Drone lands Android support, international competition incoming!Last year we had the privilege of putting the Parrot AR Drone through its paces, pairing the unmanned flying machine with our iPod touch. This year at E3 Parrot has some exciting news — the AR Drone is now compatible with Android, Symbian and bada.

Like an episode of Looney Tunes, that’s not all folks. For the developers in attendance, Parrot has released a SDK to develop new applications for AR Drone across iOS, Android, bada and Symbian. In addition, Parrot announced AR Race, a race game which supports one to four pilots.

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 benchmarked, edges out Motorola XoomThe thinnest 10.1 tablet on the planet has just been treated to both Quadrant and AnTutu Benchmarks. Surprisingly, despite its killer design, the slate failed to match the Quadrant scores of its prototype unit, dropping from 2,000 to 1,500.

The 1 GHz dual-core Tegra 2 processor inside the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 scores marginally better than its predecessor, the Motorola Xoom. In the AnTutu Benchmark, the Galaxy Tab 10.1 scored a 3,729 — edging out both the Motorola Xoom and LG Optimus 2x. Considering all three devices sport the same chipset, this was a bit of a surprise.

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Norton: Android security threats just beginningThe threat to our mobile existence, or at least in the case of Android, is on the rise. At least according to a report from Norton, makers of Norton Anti-virus.

The company believes Android is an attractive target because of the following pre-requisites: “it’s open, ubiquitous and monetizable”. The Android malware threat will be experienced in several ways: premium billing rates, spyware, search engine poisoning, adware and pay-per installs.

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