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Wednesday, 30 April 2008 |
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Fanatec today introduced the Porsche 911 Turbo Racing Wheel (MSRP: $349.99) for PC and Sony PlayStation 3 (PS3).
Licensed by Porsche Lizenz- und Handelsgesellschaft mbH, the Fanatec Porsche 911 Turbo Racing Wheel offers gamers latency free wireless USB technology (wheel and pedals), three force feedback motors and smooth belt drive, both of which help to deliver sensational realism, 6+1 speed H-pattern gear stick with realistic shifting feel, and authentic wireless pedals with realistic clutch pedal (with declining resistance) and brake with soft-stop. The wheel itself is covered with fine, automotive grade leather.
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Thursday, 24 April 2008 |
 Super Talent today announced immediate availability of the popular Project X in a new DDR3-2000 2GB (2x 1GB) kit. Project X kit is built with the fastest available, carefully screened DRAM chips, and is hand tested as a matched pair on a dual channel Asus Striker II Extreme motherboard. Project X represents the most advanced DDR3 memory available. It is developed in Super Talent’s Silicon Valley Engineering Labs to deliver the highest attainable DDR3 memory performance. Project X memory combines blistering fast clock speeds with aggressively tuned latencies. Super Talent Project X employs an extreme cooling solution that offers double the surface area and 106% more aluminum mass than standard heat spreaders. With Super Talent’s special thermal adhesive, this cooling solution provides superior heat dissipation those results in a cooler, faster memory device.
Super Talent Project X memory is designed, built and tested in Super Talent’s San Jose, California headquarters, and is backed with a lifetime warranty. The W2000UX2GP kit will begin shipping today at street prices under $400.
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Thursday, 24 April 2008 |
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Children will love the cute Disney character Stitch CD/radio player from Runat, Japan .The CD player is packed at the mouth with a display at the neck for AM/FM radio tuning. Maximum output is 0.6 W × 2ch and the speakers are placed in the ears. The player is powered either by AC or 8xAA batteries. |
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Wednesday, 23 April 2008 |
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It’s time to take the plunge into all those 3d games that you have stacked up over the years. The Zalman 3D monitor doesn’t need specially written games to produce to the 3D effect and can work with any existing game. The monitor works by transposing two slightly different images on a screen at once. Filters in the front of the display and a lightweight pair of polarised glasses (not the tacky blue and red ones) makes sure that only one of the two different images is viewed by each eye. When you remove the glasses you get a great 2D 22 inch monitor with a 1000:1 Contrast ratio. At £390 it might just burn a hole in the pocket. [ via ] |
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