WOW! it’s been a while! I’ve been really busy lately, but not too busy for tech! Recently I acquired the latest Phenom quad core, used and tested numerous free pieces of software and continued in my preparation for the Great Linux Challenge! Look forward to new information on all these topics as well as my awesome “Everyday Man’s Tech Christmas gift guide.”
Archive for the 'Technology' Category
I’m Baaaaaaaaacccck!
KITT for your Car!

On June 24th 2008 Mio announced it’s Knight Rider GPS system. Simultaneously, I punched my friend in the
face out of pure glee. Now thats what I’m talking about! For as long as I can remember, I have always wanted the KITT system to be a reality. I even went as far as to name my first car (a 91 Acura Integra) after KITT. In theory, making a KITT system never really seemed that difficult to me. I mean come on, we have fu*king dancing Honda robots but no KITT system? Well now that dream is a reality, well sort of. This iteration is basically the normal Mio Gps but with the lights, sounds and voice of KITT. Yes, you heard right, our very own Mr. Feeny (William Daniels) will give you turn by turn directions Knight Rider Style! What more could you ask for? A low price you may say? Well not to worry, Mio has it covered. The expected price when it hits the stores in August is supposed to be around a meager $270.
On June 16th AMD debuted its new “Cinema 2.0″ technology which is part of AMD’s upcoming “RV770” (codenamed teraFLOPS) platform of graphics chips. The debut, per usual, was accompanied by a shiny interactive demo displaying exactly what the chip could supposedly do.

“With Cinema 2.0 you won’t just play movies, you’ll play in them. Imagine the ability to look around the environments in a sci-fi movie, put yourself in the driver’s seat in a race scene, duck behind things and pop up to see what’s going on in an intense firefight — all of these things are possible with Cinema 2.0,” said Charlie Boswell, director, Digital Media & Entertainment, AMD. “The challenge for any director has always been taking a wonderful vision in the canvas of the mind and translating that to film for the audience to see. Cinema 2.0 breaks down the time and cost barriers of getting a scene or shot that’s ‘just right’, and what’s better, allows audiences to dive deeper into the experience to explore every part of that director’s vision.”
Hot Hardware
As a self admitted AMD fanboy, I really hope this “Cinema 2.0″ stuff is true. Yet in my over 18 years as a gamer I have heard the terms cinematic, photo realistic and true-to-life thrown around more times than “flip-flopper” was thrown around in the last presidential election. Pretty much all I have to say to this is, “a technical demo is one thing but what I actually end up playing time and time again is a whole different situation.”
When it comes to games and graphics, “Show me the money!”