This is like need for speed on roids
A few weeks ago, Computer Choppers teased us with an image of the shell of it’s 24k Gold PS3. At that time nothing was known except that it was a PS3 Slim dipped in 24k gold. Today, Computer Choppers has released it’s 24k Gold PS3 to the world and been kind enough to supply us with some information.
The 24k gold PS3’s are now available and can be ordered like any of their other products. Units start at $4,999, come with 2 24k gold controllers, and a 1 year warranty(just in case). Customers who purchase one of these can get custom logos in chrome, black chrome, 24kt gold, white gold, rose gold, or platinum.
If customers would like to take things a step further and make theirs a little more unique, they will be allowed to create a PS3 logo with diamonds or almost any exotic material. No word on how much extra that will cost you, but I’m sure it will.
There is a “jeweled” limited edition PS3 on the way for those seeking something more extravagant and limited. Computer Choppers told us, “The limited edition model will be released in the coming weeks, unfortunately not in time for the Christmas holiday.” By limited there will only be a few of these “jeweled” PS3s made.
We believe these will be the five 24kt Gold & Diamonds PS3 slims we were told about a few weeks back. We’ll let you know when those come around. Those will probably be a bit more pricey, but for those who can’t afford those, the $5000 model is perfect for you!
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Start-Up Promises More Game Realism
Engineers Say Technology Will Speed Production of Film-Like 3-D Images
A start-up founded by former Apple Inc. engineers said it has developed technology that could bring film-like realism to computer games and change the way movie makers and other design professionals work.
The San Francisco company, Caustic Graphics Inc., plans to exploit a technique called ray-tracing that generates extremely accurate three-dimensional images. Ray-tracing is a mainstay of Hollywood studios, but remains out of reach for most PC users. A single image can take hours to generate; rendering a film can take months on hundreds of server systems.
Computer games and other PC software typically rely on a technology called rasterization. Though the results keep getting more realistic, developing an interactive form of ray-tracing has been a longtime quest in the computer industry.
Caustic, whose name refers to light rays reflecting off a curved object, says it is close to achieving that goal. The company says its software and chips allow graphics chips to carry out ray-tracing calculations at a 20-fold speed-up compared with existing PC hardware. It said it expects to deliver chips by early 2010 that will be about 200 times faster.
In a demonstration, Caustic executives manipulated a photo-quality image of a sports car, removing components and changing lighting and background settings to change reflections on the vehicle’s surface.
“It’s the first honest acceleration of ray-tracing I’ve seen,” said Jon Peddie, a market researcher in Tiburon, Calif., who specializes in graphics technology.
Caustic faces many challenges. They include larger competitors and the need to persuade PC users to buy a second add-in card containing its chips, in addition to conventional graphics accelerators.
Caustic is largely the brainchild of James McCombe, a 26-year-old native of Northern Ireland who worked on graphics technology used in Apple’s iPhone and iPod. He left in 2006 with two other Apple engineers to form Caustic, a closely held company that employs 35 people and has raised \$11 million.
Mr. McCombe said graphics chips have hundreds of specialized calculating engines that are particularly good at rasterization, which converts three-dimensional models into pixels on a computer screen. Ray-tracing, by contrast, emulates the ways light rays bounce off objects in a scene. Graphics chips can’t easily handle those complex calculations, which require extensive communication between processors. Caustic has developed ways to keep data flowing to them efficiently, Mr. McCombe said.
Armed with the technology, Caustic executives say, designers who now work with the software equivalent of stick figures could manipulate realistic designs — without having to stop to render their images periodically. “This would really represent a breakthrough for us,” said Ron Frankel, president of Proof Inc., which develops “pre-visualizations” to show film directors and designers how movie scenes might be shot.
The company hopes to initially target architects, engineers and animators, and later entertainment applications on PCs and gaming consoles. Mr. McCombe expects accelerator cards using its chips to cost about the same as existing graphics accelerators, adding that its circuitry eventually could be combined with graphics chips. High-end graphics cards typically cost several hundred dollars.
But exploiting Caustic’s chips will require modifications to existing ray-tracing programs. Other companies, meanwhile, are finding ways to do ray-tracing using the microprocessors in PCs, rather than graphics chips. One is Bunkspeed Inc., which has a program called HyperShot that can make photo-quality images from three-dimensional computer models.
Philip Lunn, Bunkspeed’s chief executive, says that Caustic also faces potential competition from larger chip makers that include Intel Corp. and Nvidia Corp. The latter is collaborating with Mental Images GmbH, a software maker Nvidia acquired in 2007, to accelerate ray-tracing using graphics chips.
Mr. McCombe “is one of the smartest people in the business,” says Rolf Herken, Mental Images’ chief executive and chief technology officer. But “whether Caustic will have an impact on the design of future chips, that is an open question,” he added.
Write to Don Clark at don.clark@wsj.com
Adrianne Curry announced to Planet Twitter on December 6 that she planned to spend the afternoon playing World of Warcraft – naked and stoned. And, indeed, she did.
Adrianne Curry doesn’t mind sharing her peccadilloes with the world. A most recent case was December 6, when she tweeted her Sunday plans of getting high and playing video games in her birthday suit. The festivities followed her morning kickboxing workout.
“Jumping into shower,” the America’s Next Top Model winner wrote. “Going to spend my afternoon playing World of Warcraft butt naked and stoned. Perfect Sunday!”
To quell doubt, she snapped a picture and posted it on Twitter with the caption “Me… naked… playing World of Warcraft.”
Well, who’s to stop her? Aside from her own presence in the world as a modeling superpower, she’s married to none other than Christopher Knight, nee Peter Brady. And it was reportedly her husband’s joking around about Curry’s breast asymmetry – nicknaming her “One Hung Low” – that inspired plastic surgery to align her breasts.
“When you have a nice C-cup on one side and a very small boob on the other, it’s not cute,” Curry told Entertainment Tonight in 2006. “Especially when the other boob starts to sag because that’s the natural process of life.”
To fix the ordeal, she enlisted Beverly Hills surgeon Dr. Frank Ryan to reconstruct the area. He deliberately installed a mismatched pair of implants to even out the mounds.
“They’d go in with an implant, they’d sit me up while I was sleeping and look, and go, ‘It’s still not big enough to match the other,’ lay me back down, take it out, put a bigger one in, sit me up again and say, ‘Still not big enough,’ and kept going in and out to match me up,” she said.
Finally they got her straightened out. Curry indeed posted a nude photo of herself on Twitter this past week – but she is sitting in a way that obscures any real nudity. Try as you might, you can’t see much bareness. Even still, nothing above her waist seems to hang low.
Christmas is almost here and that means the NY Times has released a brand new list of the top 10 video games you shouldn’t buy for kids! Obviously you and I take this as a “run out and buy” list and, to give credit where credit is due, it is a pretty damn good list:
•Assassin’s Creed II
•Borderlands
•Brutal Legend
•Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2
•Dead Space: Extraction
•Dragon Age: Origins
•Grand Theft Auto IV: The Ballad of Gay Tony
•Demon’s Souls
•Left 4 Dead 2
A lot of this season’s most talked-about games include ones with excessive violence, negative role models, extreme gore, sociopathic behavior and other things that have been proven to have a negative effect on children.
