Sony PlayStation Phone
The PlayStation Phone, the device you see is headed into the market soon, likely boasting Android 3.0 (aka Gingerbread), along with a custom Sony Marketplace which will allow you to purchase and download games designed for the new platform. The device snapped up top (and in our gallery below) is sporting a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM8655 (a chip similar to the one found in the G2, but 200MHz faster), 512MB of RAM, 1GB of ROM, and the screen is in the range of 3.7 to 4.1 inches. Looking almost identical to the mockup we hit you with this summer, the handset does indeed have a long touchpad in the center which is apparently multitouch, and you can see in the photos that it's still bearing those familiar PlayStation shoulder buttons. For Sony buffs, you'll be interested to know that there's no Memory Stick slot here, but there is support for microSD cards.
Original article (more image)
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A rare optical phenomenon - Ice Rainbow
Treasure at the bottom of the Icebow: A view of the sunlight refracting through ice crystals in the clouds.
A motorist nearly crashed as he was blinded by the brilliant white light of an optical phenomenon known as an ice rainbow.
Keen photographer Reyaz Limalia, spotted the rare sight while driving near Birdlip, Gloucestershire and stopped the car to take a picture, although not before he nearly crashed into another vehicle coming in the other direction, due to the radiant light reflecting on his windscreen.
Known to weather officials call a '22 degrees halo' because of its circular formation of 22° around the sun, Rayez is one of the only few to have captured one of these rare sights on camera.
The optical phenomenon is an an ice-halo formed by plate shaped ice crystals in atmospheric clouds, characterized by thin, wisplike strands leading to their main clump, known as Cirrus.
The only time it can be seen is when the sun is very high in the sky, 58 degrees or more above the horizon, and its light passes through the high-altitude cirrus clouds. It is the sun's altitude that determines the visibility of the halo.
Also, the ice crystals in the cloud must be hexagonal in shape with their thick plates being parallel to the ground.
The halo is formed by sunlight entering horizontally-oriented flat hexagon ice crystals through a vertical side face and leaving through the near horizontal bottom face.
The 90° inclination between the ray entrance and exit faces produce the well-separated spectral colours.
The arc has a considerable angular extent and is thus rarely complete. When only fragments of cirrus cloud are in the appropriate sky/sun position they can appear to shine with spectral colors.
Source from www.dailymail.co.uk
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A motorist nearly crashed as he was blinded by the brilliant white light of an optical phenomenon known as an ice rainbow.
Keen photographer Reyaz Limalia, spotted the rare sight while driving near Birdlip, Gloucestershire and stopped the car to take a picture, although not before he nearly crashed into another vehicle coming in the other direction, due to the radiant light reflecting on his windscreen.
Known to weather officials call a '22 degrees halo' because of its circular formation of 22° around the sun, Rayez is one of the only few to have captured one of these rare sights on camera.
The optical phenomenon is an an ice-halo formed by plate shaped ice crystals in atmospheric clouds, characterized by thin, wisplike strands leading to their main clump, known as Cirrus.
The only time it can be seen is when the sun is very high in the sky, 58 degrees or more above the horizon, and its light passes through the high-altitude cirrus clouds. It is the sun's altitude that determines the visibility of the halo.
Also, the ice crystals in the cloud must be hexagonal in shape with their thick plates being parallel to the ground.
The halo is formed by sunlight entering horizontally-oriented flat hexagon ice crystals through a vertical side face and leaving through the near horizontal bottom face.
The 90° inclination between the ray entrance and exit faces produce the well-separated spectral colours.
The arc has a considerable angular extent and is thus rarely complete. When only fragments of cirrus cloud are in the appropriate sky/sun position they can appear to shine with spectral colors.
Source from www.dailymail.co.uk
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Season's Beatings 5: Redemption - SSFIV Grand Finals
GamerBee (Adon) vs Momochi (Ken/Akuma) in Season's Beatings 5: Redemption - Super Street Fighter IV Grand Finals!
More videos of Season's Beatings: Redemption
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Part 1
Part 2
Part 2
More videos of Season's Beatings: Redemption
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Super Street Fighter IV 3D's Touch Controls
Introducing Super Street Fighter IV shortcut panels for Nintendo 3DS. If you played the Street Fighter iPhone edition, I believe it's similar like its assist mode, which you can perform a move by combining the SP button and direction keypad, as well as performing Ultra Combo with just one tap on the appointed button.
The 3D adaptation of Super SFIV uses the touch screen for easy access to moves. You can program four panels on the touch screen to correspond to individual moves.
The game appears to be pretty flexible in what you can assign to the panels. Examples mentioned at the official site include Ultra Combos, throws, Focus Attacks and standard special moves like Chun-Li's Spinning Bird Kick. You'll also be able to assign a simultaneous press of all three punch or kick buttons, which should come in handy given the 3DS button layout.
- andriasang.com
Official Site
Jace Hall's Epic Street Fighter Music Video
Jace Hall from The Jace Hall Show, one of his many Hollywood or game production credits, or one of his other epic music videos. Not much people I know other than Justin Wong ^_^
Original post from from www.capcom-unity.com
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Original post from from www.capcom-unity.com
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