Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Posted by admin at 31 March 2010

Category: Technology

One day I wonder to search to the internet something that I can use or can be put to my computer. Then I’ve tried to click some links that I see, then when I’ve clicked one of the links there. I saw a web site that has a production music, jeux and mac games, I was so happy when I saw that web site. Those are fit to my lap top, I really find it very good.

Posted by admin at 26 January 2010

Category: Computer, Memory, Technology

I love fast computers and lop tops, now a day’s there is someone who wants to use slow computers? I think it is none. I love to play to my computer; computer games entertain me very well. I love to play three dimensional games a heavy game, and it needs a lot of computer speed. One of the requirements of this game is the computer memory, your processor and also your video card. Now a day’s upgrading your computer is very easy because there are a lot of stores who can sell this item. Like in the three item what I’ve said, the cheapest is the memory. Upgrading your computer memory is very easy, easy to detach and easy to install. Higher memory to a computer can maximize your computer speed or add a computer speed, not only on the game speed but also the entire computer speed. One day I wanted to buy a computer memory, upgrade my computer in other words. I decided to find some store who can sell this in the internet. There are so many computer stores there, but one of those is the best for me. I saw that many choice and also the prices such as Computer Memory Prices, Computer Memory Upgrade Price and Best Computer Memory Prices. There are too many computer memory there that you can choose and for real affordable price.

Posted by admin at 25 August 2009

Category: Games, Technology

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For those who fret that their hard earned money might be wasted on a dud computer game, help could soon be at hand. A new breed of game aims to suit everyone by adapting to an individual’s playing style.

Computer games have had an element of adaptability for decades, says julian Togelius at the IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark. “If you play well the game gets harder and if you are lousy it might get easier,” he says. Togelius and colleague Georgios Yannakis want to take this adaptability one step further by creating games that “learn” to identify whether an individual is a fun-junkie or a challenge-seeker, and then tailor later sections to suit these tastes. Two people might ultimately play very different versions of the game – but both should be satisfied by the experience.

To investigate the idea, the researchers altered the game Super Mario Bros, varying parameters such as the number and type of enemies and the size of gaps between platforms in response to how the players fared. The game also records a player’s moves, including how often they run and jump, and the time spent standing still.

Volunteers then played two slightly different versions of the game and were quizzed about which Version they found more challenging or predictable, fun or frustrating. The researchers used algorithms to identify which particular suite of parameters is associated with different gaming experiences.

Posted by admin at 21 April 2009

Category: Technology

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How can image sensors – the most complicated and expensive part of a digital camera – be made cheaper and less complex? Easy: take the lid off a memory chip and use that instead. As simple as it sounds, that pretty much sums up a device being developed by a team led by Edoardo Charbon, an engineer at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic Institute (EPFL) in Lausanne. In a paper presented at an imaging conference in Kyoto, Japan, this week, the team say that their socalled “gigavision” sensor will pave the way for cellphones and other inexpensive gadgets that take richer, more pleasing pictures than today’s devices. Crucially, Charbon says the device performs better in both very bright light and dim light conditions which regular digital cameras struggle to cope with.

While Charbon’s idea is new and has a patent pending, the principle behind it is not. It has long been known that memory chips are extremely sensitive to light : remove their black plastic packages to let in light, and the onrush of photons energises electrons, creating a current in each memory cell that overwhelms the tiny stored charge that might have represented digital information. “Light simply destroys the information,” says Martin Vetterli, a member of the EPFL team.