Posts Tagged Pdp

Wii B.O.S.S. Controller Adds A Little Nostalgia/Adds A Little Bulk To The Wiimote

Posted by on Monday, 21 December, 2009

Wii B.O.S.S. Controller (Image courtesy Amazon)
By Andrew Liszewski

I can’t say I’ve ever been that thrilled with using the Wiimote on its side as a ‘classic’ NES controller, but it’s a cheaper solution that shelling out for Nintendo’s genuine Wii Classic Controller. However, for a mere $10 the B.O.S.S. from PDP will turn your Wiimote into something vaguely reminiscent of an SNES controller, making playing titles like the New Super Mario Bros. Wii a bit more enjoyable.

The name B.O.S.S. stands for ‘Big Oversized Super Shell’ and that’s essentially all it is; a plastic shell that you cram your Wiimote into, theoretically providing a better gaming experience. Unfortunately though Ars Technica wasn’t sold on the idea. Not only did they find the B.O.S.S. to be considerably larger than the SNES controller we all know and love, but the Wiimote sticks out of the back, making it really uncomfortable to hold. And even though it costs a mere $9.99 from Amazon, Ars feels you just suck it up and get used to using a sideways Wiimote instead. Oh well.

[ Wii B.O.S.S. ] VIA [ Ars Technica ]



Space Invaders Under the Influence

Posted by on Thursday, 16 July, 2009

In his third guest installment, the illustrious tech writer Steven Levy explains what it’s like to play arcade Space Invaders while totally shitfaced.

When game historians recall the late ’70s wave of video arcade games, they will correctly identify the major time-wasters, which include Asteroids, Breakout, Missile Defense Command and Space Invaders. (Pong was sort of a brain-damaged predecessor.) But the way it really was, at least in a certain central New Jersey bar, the correct way to describe the arcade video game craze was this way: Space Invaders. Period.

It was like the Beatles of video games. Maybe Space Invaders wasn’t such big news to canonical hackers like those MIT Wizards who played Spacewar on a PDP-1 back in the sixties, but to people for whom computers still meant giant data-processing machines the game was a revelation, something totally different from the physical engagement of a pinball machine, yet icily futuristic. There was also the fact that these weird machines would just appear in a bar one day, without explanation. You’d go out for drinks and there in a dark corner was the future, standing head high in a cheesy enclosure with the monitor just below eye level.

I was hooked, of course, compelled to endure the humiliating learning curve where your laser cannon gets immolated by the relentlessly advancing rows of bug-like creatures. Without access to hints or cheat sheets-no, you couldn’t Google stuff back then-you had to figure out strategy on your own. (Or hang around until someone really good played it, so you could learn his tricks.)

One key aspect of Space Invaders circa 1979: You played it in a bar. This affected game play, strategy and your liver. After playing it for a while, you got into a groove and could ditch your normal thought processes to become an alien-killing machine. Instead of the soundtrack of dread, the cardiac thumping that accompanied the advancing horde would energize you like a Led Zeppelin anthem, as you’d scoot behind the bunkers, wipe out rows of invaders and finally, in the frantic final stages, go into a ruthless, pixel-shredding melee mode. (Not that you knew what a pixel was.) But this Ender-like zone you were entering was counterbalanced by the fact that longer you were in the bar, the drunker you got.

You have to remember that this was new. Space Invaders was the population’s first chance to develop the computer-game chops that are now second nature to a four-year-old. Believe it or not, the heart-stopping mix of bloodlust and panic that sprang up when the “mystery ship” with all its bonus points boogalooed across the top of the screen was a novel experience. (I was about to say that the mystery ship “randomly” appeared but after you played it a long time, you learned exactly when this would happen. Space Invaders might have been a twitchfest, but it was a puzzle as well.)

Should I expound upon the concept that the unforgiving menace of the space aliens tapped subconscious Cold War fears? Nah.

Later on, of course, reasonably faithful simulations of the original appeared first on the Atari 2600 and later on computer software. And now you can play it online, free. But that doesn’t do justice to the original context—where you had one foot in the strange new world of digital simulation and the other foot in beer-soaked sawdust. You just can’t, in this day and age, replicate the feeling when the last murderous wave finally wipes you out and you know that it’s going to cost you another quarter to fight them back.

Steven Levy is a senior writer for Wired, most recently writing about Google’s ad business and the secret of the CIA sculpture. He’s written six books, including Hackers, Artificial Life and The Perfect Thing, about the iPod. In 1979, he had just left his first real job, at a regional magazine called New Jersey Monthly, to become a freelance writer, and had yet to touch a computer.

Gizmodo ’79 is a week-long celebration of gadgets and geekdom 30 years ago, as the analog age gave way to the digital, and most of our favorite toys were just being born.


Review: DS Lite Transformers kit from PDP

Posted by on Wednesday, 15 July, 2009

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Short Version: Friends, this is the nerdiest and coolest Nintendo DS Lite case that a Transformers fan could ask for. What kid (12-year-old or 35-year-old) wouldn’t want their DS to look like Bumblebee or Megatron? Do you see the stylus that each set comes with? Pick one up for your kid or yourself. They’re only $20.

Long Version: I’m not entirely sure what to tell you in the long version of this review, but I’ll give it a shot.

The case is made of a rubber material ensuring any bumps on the top case are absorbed by Bumblebee’s armor. The bottom case includes a slide-out game cartridge drawer made of a heavier plastic so you’re covered where it matters most. But the hinge can be vulnerable to scratches or a drop.

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My particular review unit was the Bumblebee kit that includes the portly stylus. The DS Lite recognizes it as if it was any other stylus, but it’s a little too big for my tastes. If I could hook it onto the case itself for transport than I might feel differently.

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Again, for only $20 (the stylus or case alone retails for $13) the Transformers themed case from PDP is a welcome addition to my Transformers collection. The stylus is big, sure, but it looks cool and I never really just carry my DS Lite anywhere.

Product Page [PDP]



PDP shipping Transformers Nintendo DS cases this week

Posted by on Tuesday, 23 June, 2009

pdptrans

In honor of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, PDP will begin shipping Autobot and Decepticon Nintendo DS cases this week. You can pick between a Bumblebee or a Megatron case with plus a matching stylus. The bundle costs $20, but you can purchase either for $13/each.



5 Brands You Can Trust When Buying an HDTV

Posted by on Sunday, 7 June, 2009

There’s a dizzying range of new TVs out there. So who holds the greatest TVs? Having looked at the operation of various makers over the past six months, here’s a list of the companies that you can rely when buying a new TV.

5. Panasonic
Panasonic one of the leading lights in the TV line, but the rivalry at the top is becoming harder all the time. Still, Panasonic’s icon for raising stylish, big-screen HDTVs stays intact – the TH-42PZ85 and TH-50PZ81 Viera models are two of its greatest.

Of course, Panasonic could balance on its honours. Its Viera models are already loved for their video quality, burnished up by its V-real 3 Pro and Intelligent Frame Creation technologies. But if the Z1 neo-PDP HDTV presented at CES is any indication, Panasonic’s plasmas are only going to get improved.

4. Sony
Same as a Stella Artois, theregular Sony Bravia is reassuringly pricy. In the actual generation, HDTVs like the Sony Bravia KDL-32V4000, KDL-37V4000 and whopping superb KDL-55X4500 have taken rave evaluations. And Sony isn’t about to end boosting the technology envelope.

Sony was the initial TV manufacturer to introduce 200Hz processing and it’s already leading the charge into commercial OLED displays with the high-priced 11-inch XEL-1 TV. Sony newly announced its 2009 Bravia line-up, which has Bravia Engine 3 image treating, DLNA-friendly media streaming and Internet connectivity.

3. Samsung
Samsung is the UK’s biggest-selling Television manufacturer. Its HDTVs like the LE40LB651 and LE46A786 are competitively priced, specific and cleverly-designed with a ‘Touch of Colour’.

What does the next generation keep? Samsung has invested heavily in LED technology and it programs to imitate Sony into commercialising OLED. Like other manufacturing businesses, it also wishes that original, leaner designs, 200Hz refresh rates and its Internet@TV feature (I.e. Internet widgets) will influence purchasers into TV improvements.

2. Philips
Philips might release fewer HDTVs than Samsung, but it keeps an delectable heart to quality. The 32PFL9613D and 42PFL9903D models might be pricey, but they’re beautifully-designed, featuring 100Hz photo forming and Perfect Pixel HD for fantastically clear, clear figures.

You could argue that Philips is too ‘experimental’ for its own good. Ambilight is an interesting feature, but Philips took it too far with the disturbing lightframe surround on its Aurea models. In full terms of design, it will be amusing to look where Philips gets to with its 3DTV technology – its prototype autostereoscopic sets could present 3D photos without telling the viewer to use 3D glasses.

1. Pioneer
It should come as no surprise that Pioneer grabs the lead spot in this list. You’ll be struggling to get a poor critique of high-end plasmas like the Kuro KRP-500A and the PDP-LX5090. The figure quality is incredibly delectable and the low, near inky-blacks make LCD backlighting to shame.

Despite its pricey business model and class-leading PDP technology, Pioneer posted a big loss of $1.44 billion the previous year. Consequently, its TV line is no longer viable and it will give up it by March 2010 to focus on automobile electronics, navigation and audio A/V products.

We can recommend you Samsung LN40B650 but if Samsung LN40B650 doesn’t suits your needs consider Samsung PN58B550.