Video-Card Maker Gets Into PC Gaming, Brings Along Concierge

 

Phobos3

Launching a high-end gaming PC system in the middle of the worst economic period in the last 25 years doesn’t seem like a smart move. But the people in charge of video card-maker BFG Technologies are trying to beat the odds by offering an interesting value incentive we hadn’t heard of before.

They’re offering a personal concierge service for the system. Massage anyone?

It’s true (but not the massage). BFG’s new Phobos system is set up at your house by an expert technician, and he or she can transfer files, clean out your old rig, and probably even fluff the pillows. The system comes with a full warranty for a year and the concierge visits the baby twice during that time. It also has 24/7 tech support.

Phobos1As for system itself, it is nice and large but not anything that would blow your mind. It’s packed with a 3.2GHz Core i7 965 Extreme Edition processors (X58 chipset), double NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295 GPUs, and two slot-loading optical drives, including a Blu-ray. It also has a built-in iPod dock (that’s new), firewire and eSATA (duh), four Western Digital VelociRaptor 300GB hard drives and CoolIt’s Domino system liquid cooling. 

As for the gaming intimidation factor, the separate power source LCD panel is probably the one thing about the chassis that’s most notable. It runs on Linux and displays all of the relevant system benchmarks. 

The Phobos system is available starting on the 19th of this month, at $3000 all the way to the Elite $8000. There’s no word on whether the concierge will leave a mint on top of the case.

Phobos2





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Nvidia Launches 3D Kit For Gaming

Nvision_3d_stero_3538_2

LAS VEGAS — 3D technology is coming to the video gaming industry for real with Nvidia’s launch of a new accessory kit that will automatically transform more than 300 existing games into 3D experiences for users with PCs that have the company’s graphic cards.

Nvidia’s kit includes a pair of black 3D glasses, an infra-red emitter cables that will retail together for $200.

The kit doesn’t work with all HDTVs. It is compatible currently with the new Samsung and ViewSonic 120 Hz LCD monitors, Mitsubishi DLP HDTVs and DepthQ HD 3D projector by Lightspeed.

Nvidia’s 3D glasses still have the dorky feel to them though the company says they are modeled after modern sunglasses. The glasses are not tethered and offer up to 20 feet of wireless video viewing.

The USB-based emitter transmits data directly to the shutter glasses
and has a 3D adjustment dial so users can adjust the depth in the game.

3D Technology is all the rage at CES this year. Panasonic is showing
a full-HD 3D Plasma TV home theater system, while Samsung and Sony are
offering concept 3D TV sets.

Nvidia’s 3D gaming accessory kit is the closest thing to reality
that consumers can get right away– though it works only with the
company’s GeForce graphic cards.

Game manufacturers don’t have to do anything specifically to make
their games compatible with the 3D kit. The processing for 3D is
done by the GeForce graphics cards, says a company executive. 





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Teaser Trailer Released For New Street Fighter Movie

pobject width=”480″ height=”295″param name=”movie” value=”http://www.youtube.com/v/D3Kvteht2rchl=enfs=1″/paramparam name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true”/paramparam name=”allowscriptaccess” value=”always”/paramembed src=”http://www.youtube.com/v/D3Kvteht2rchl=enfs=1″ type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowscriptaccess=”always” allowfullscreen=”true” width=”480″ height=”295″/embed/object/p pThe less said about the 1994 game-to-film adaptation of Street Fighter the better, and fans can be forgiven for wanting a decent remake of the most successful fighting game franchise of all time./p pWell, director Andrzej Bartkowiak (Cradle 2 The Grave, Doom, Romeo Must Die) is having another pop next year with Street Fighter: The Legend Of Chun-Li and thankfully there are no muscles from Brussels anywhere to be seen. /p pbr / /pimg width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’http://feeds.uk.gizmodo.com/c/552/f/9581/s/2a8b44b/mf.gif’ border=’0’/div class=’mf-viral’table border=’0’trtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2.html?title=Teaser Trailer Released For New Street Fighter Movielink=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/31/teaser_trailer_released_for_ne.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/emailthis2.gif” border=”0″ //a/tdtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark.cfm?title=Teaser Trailer Released For New Street Fighter Movielink=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/31/teaser_trailer_released_for_ne.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif” border=”0″ //a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a href=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27588739478/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/44610635/a2.htm”img src=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27588739478/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/44610635/a2.img” border=”0″//a

‘Shooting Clock’ Aims To Train Gaming Muscles

pspan class=”mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image” style=”display: inline;”img alt=”ShootingClock.jpg” src=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/ShootingClock.jpg” width=”395″ height=”237″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //span/p pWe’re not sure whether this is utterly ridiculous or whether it might actually work, but if you want to train your ‘gaming muscles’ and aren’t giving your fingers enough of a workout already by mashing the keys on a console controller, the Shooting Watch is here to help./p pbr / /pimg width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’http://feeds.uk.gizmodo.com/c/552/f/9581/s/2a6b2b4/mf.gif’ border=’0’/div class=’mf-viral’table border=’0’trtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2.html?title=’Shooting Clock’ Aims To Train Gaming Muscleslink=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/30/shooting_clock_aims_to_train_g.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/emailthis2.gif” border=”0″ //a/tdtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark.cfm?title=’Shooting Clock’ Aims To Train Gaming Muscleslink=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/30/shooting_clock_aims_to_train_g.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif” border=”0″ //a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a href=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27588695841/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/44479156/a2.htm”img src=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27588695841/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/44479156/a2.img” border=”0″//a

Video-on-Demand Coming to Wii in 2009

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In a move widely anticipated ever since the XBox expanded its service with Netflix, Nintendo announced over the Christmas holiday that it is adding a video-on-demand option to its popular Wii console.

Video-on-demand is one of the most competitive areas in consumer electronics with more and more companies showing a willingness to infuse their main course offering (be it a Blu-ray player or a gaming system) with a bit of saucy video content.

Currently, there are plenty of options for the person who wants video quick and easy. There are specialized set-top boxes for internet services (like Roku’s Netflix Box), improved offerings from satellite providers, all-in-one video services (like the Vudu, or even Apple TV), and the strong pull of internet video like YouTube and Hulu.

Mix them all up and you have a huge royal rumble showdown that is either destined to get ugly, or might get big enough to accommodate everyone. With the appetite shown by consumers in the last year for all these services, we’re betting on the latter for now.

Over the last year, several rumors placed Nintendo near a VOD announcement. If you’ve followed Chris Kohler’s coverage on Game|Life, you know that Nintendo of America CEO Reggie Fils-Aimes had previously knocked off related rumors surrounding HD content on the Wii, but video was never completely dismissed.

It seems like Nintendo finally felt it was the right time to use their huge reach in the living room to make their mark in this space.

Here’s the gist of the announcement:

  • Nintendo will partner with Japanese advertising giant Dentsu to
    create the service, which will offer videos through the Internet.
  • Nintendo will start offering VOD in Japan in 2009 during a trial period at first, then it will expand to other countries.
  • VOD options means it’s highly likely that a large storage
    accessory will be announced soon. Currently, the Wii offers 512 MB of
    internal flash memory storage, plus up to 2 GB-4 GB in an external SD
    card. That’s fine if you want to order up a few 23-minute TV shows, but
    something much larger will be needed for movies.
  • The two companies will develop original programming for the Wii,
    which will be made available through the net. The company is
    considering developing videos for free but some (or many?) will be
    available for an as-yet-undisclosed fee.

But perhaps the most important part of the announcement was the
mention of a prominent stat: 40% of the 35 million Wii consoles already
sold are linked to the internet.

With that level of popularity, the Nintendo Wii has a chance, if it
does this well, to obliterate the VOD numbers of its rivals.

Still, the mention of creating ‘original programming’ might throw a wrench into our plans of the global royal rumble. Nintendo might not intend to compete with the type of content offered by the XBox or a TiVo, since they often like to create their own market categories that are more family friendly than others, as well as more creative than aggregative. But that’s something we’ll have to see down the line.





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The Only 10 Games Your iPhone Needs

There are loads of games in the App Store for the iPhone/iPod Touch, but if you want to save money and space, which are the true essentials? Here are our 10 must-haves.

While there are enough good games in the App Store to fill up multiple pages on your iPhone or iPod Touch, you don’t need that many, nor do you need to spend that much money. If you focus on filling certain genres with single games and not doubling up on multiples, you can make yourself the ultimate “games page” of apps. Here’s the list.

Touchgrind: This skateboarding game was designed from the ground up for the multi-touch iPhone platform, and it shows. The completely unique control method of using your fingers as legs on a skateboard immediately makes sense and is totally addicting. As you get better, the new skateboards that are unlocked with high scores continually feel just within your grasp. $4.99

Galcon: Galcon is a space-based strategy game that delivers super-short games, which is perfect for the iPhone. Rather than getting dragged into games you won’t finish, Galcon lets you play a bunch of one or two minute games. You can refine your strategy with each game, and every time you lose it’s just too easy to try again. Lite: Free; Pro: $4.99

Fieldrunners: Many call this the best game in the App Store, and it’s tough to argue with them. A tower defense game with a super-high degree of polish, this is the definition of addicting. Basically, you want to set up weapons to stop soldiers for storming your towers. You earn more cash for more weapons for every guy you stop, and you lose health for every guy who gets through. And then you can’t. Stop. Playing it. $4.99

Line Rider iRide: You’ve probably played Line Rider on the internet in some form or another: you draw a bunch of lines, then a little man on a sled gets tossed down your makeshift track. The controls are simple and work great on a touchscreen, and you can play in short bursts, saving your maps for later. It’s intuitive enough that there’s virtually no learning curve, but you can spend countless hours working on your masterpiece of sledding physics. $2.99

Uno: You know Uno, you love Uno. But here’s a version that involves no pesky shuffling. If you’re more of a poker fan you probably went for Texas Hold ‘Em, which is cool, but if you ask me, Uno is a much more fun card game. After all, what fun is poker when you’re gambling with pretend money? $5.99

Rolando: This is a wonderful, cartoonish platformer that uses simple controls that are easy to learn but are used in increasingly complicated and challenging ways as the game progresses. You control a series of little balls—Rolandos—by tilting your iPhone and swiping up to jump. But you can control many of them at once, and there are also obstacles and switches you can manipulate. It’s got a high degree of polish and will suck you in from the first level. $9.99

Crash Bandicoot Nitro Kart 3D: This is our favorite racing game, despite not being fully sold on the accelerometer controls of iPhone racing games. But because of that, you really only need one, and this should be it. Great graphics, good stability and plenty of variety add up to make this the essential iPhone racing game. $5.99

SimCity: This port of SimCity 3000 is stunning. This is no gimped version of SimCity, dumbed down for a touchscreen. It’s the full game, complete with advisers and all the building types you can handle, with intuitive touchscreen controls. Finally, you can build the epic metropolis of your dreams whenever you sit down and have a few minutes to kill. $9.99

Touch Hockey: FS5: Air Hockey on the iPhone is just like regular air hockey, minus the high probability of getting one of your fingers smashed with the puck. Simply put your finger on the mallet and try to score some goals. It’s also fun to play with two people, with each person holding an end of the iPhone. And hey, no quarters required. Lite: Free; Pro: $1.99

Trism: This is essentially a modified version of Bejeweled, and if you know that game then you know why you’d want it on your iPhone. It’s a classic puzzle game, one that makes the transition to the touchscreen beautifully. You’re trying to get three pieces of the same color together to make them disappear, and depending on how you’re holding your iPhone, the resulting tumble of pieces will happen in a different direction. It adds a new level of strategy to the game while retaining what made the original so awesome. $2.99

[A Bonus 11th game, From Brian: I’d like to add Motion X Poker Quest to the list for its amazing use of the accelerometer and in game physics used to roll the dice, as well as beautiful graphics and sounds and addicting game play. ]

There’s Native 3D Gaming in Playstation’s Future, Says 3D Advocate

Mutanttwins_fallout3

Everyone knows the Playstation 3 has one key thing over the Wii and the Xbox 360: A Blu-ray player.

But according to a recent report, the PS3 will soon have one more thing above the others: native stereoscopic 3D gaming. It’s a development that’s not terribly surprising, but it’s interesting enough (and potentially lucrative) that its competitors are sure to be watching. 

According to Neil Schneider, the CEO of 3D tech purveyor MTBS, Sony will begin supporting their Blitz Tech 3D engine on the console in 2009. Expected to be a downloadable firmware update, the tech will allow players to upgrade their console to stereoscopic 3D visuals and inexorably, to Blu-ray content on 3D.

Andrew Oliver of Blitz Games Studios says that 3D capability through the BIOS firmware is likely unique to Sony PS3 and will give them a competitive advantage in this area.

Mitsubishi_07_3
A stereoscopic 3D update in the box will presumably enhance the visual depth perception that allows 2D images to pop out of the screen. But the question will be placed precisely on the quality of the perspective deviation of the games, which is what makes good 3D, well, good. Otherwise, the screen might get all fuzzy.

Another question is the variability of the TV displays used when playing the 3D-enhanced games. Some sets already have their own 3D secret sauce — the new Mitsubishi Laser TV, for example, uses a 3D IR emitter along with a ‘checkerboard display’
format, where the ‘checkerboard’ is a type of complicated geometry calibration to display 3D images.

The PS3 3D firmware update will likely be able to fit all of these calibrations, but we don’t know for sure whether it will look better or worse in some TVs.

Already, you should be able to play games regardless of the system in several new, 3D-enabled TVs like the Mitsu, and Samsung’s PN42A450P Flat Panel HDTV. However, this option has received little buzz as most of the games aren’t set-up to take advantage of the tech.

The bigger question as always, is the quality of the content, and the PS3, with or without 3D, is still running behind.

At the system’s inception, the Blu-ray presence promised superior graphics and a larger capacity for extra content, like smoother animations and epically long stories. But unfortunately for Sony, it took way more time that the Wii or XBox 360 to come up with appropriate, fun games that lived up to the hardware.

With a cool new firmware app in tow, it’s up to Sony’s game developers to come up with good games and take advantage of the 3D, which has grown exponentially as an accepted technology in the last few years. If they pull it off, the Playstation might have one more thing up its sleeve before the final score has been tallied in the seventh generation of gaming systems.

Photos: Screenshot of Fallout 3, Mitsubishi 3D test/HDTVExpert





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Happy Christmas From Gizmodo UK [Now Go Away Play With Your Toys]

pspan class=”mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image” style=”display: inline;”img alt=”happy christmas.jpg” src=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/happy%20christmas.jpg” width=”326″ height=”317″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //spanThere’s no point in pretending that you are still working, so we won’t either. That’s it for now loyal readers. /p pTime for us to turn off our PCs and laptops and move ourselves to the nearest pub and avail ourselves of much beer and cheer. It’s been a good year, much of it down to you guys fencing fiercely in the Comments sections. /p pHave a great holiday break Gadgetheads. Eat, drink and spend too much on technology you want, rather than need. It’s not financially sound advice, we agree, in these recessionary times but then we are a gadget site dedicated to the kinds of technology that make our lives a little brighter – even after the house and car is repossessed. /p pWe’ll be back blogging from Dec 29th. Until then, be well and overindulge in the kit you’ve spent all year saving for.-Martin Lynch/p pa href=”http://technorati.com/tag/gadgets” rel=”tag”gadgets/a a href=”http://technorati.com/tag/christmas” rel=”tag”christmas/a a href=”http://technorati.com/tag/technology” rel=”tag”technology/a/pimg width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’http://feeds.uk.gizmodo.com/c/552/f/9581/s/29fe1c3/mf.gif’ border=’0’/div class=’mf-viral’table border=’0’trtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2.html?title=Happy Christmas From Gizmodo UK [Now Go Away Play With Your Toys]link=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/24/happy_christmas_from_gizmodo_u.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/emailthis2.gif” border=”0″ //a/tdtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark.cfm?title=Happy Christmas From Gizmodo UK [Now Go Away Play With Your Toys]link=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/24/happy_christmas_from_gizmodo_u.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif” border=”0″ //a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a href=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27588523602/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/44032451/a2.htm”img src=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27588523602/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/44032451/a2.img” border=”0″//a

Gizmondo 2 Delayed Until Next Year – Does Anyone Care?

pspan class=”mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image” style=”display: inline;”img alt=”Gizmondo.jpg” src=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/Gizmondo.jpg” width=”400″ height=”300″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //span/p pIf you didn’t follow the fall and fall of the Gizmondo console since its a href=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/2006/05/22/the_gizmondo_story_from_top_to.html”disastrous first outing/a you may not know that the release of a successor, the Gizmondo 2, was originally touted for Christmas 2008; ie: now./p pIt should come as no surprise to hear that it has been delayed until next year, with creator Carl Freer citing the credit crunch and economic climate as the main reason why he couldn’t find an investor./pimg width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’http://feeds.uk.gizmodo.com/c/552/f/9581/s/29c0eee/mf.gif’ border=’0’/div class=’mf-viral’table border=’0’trtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2.html?title=Gizmondo 2 Delayed Until Next Year – Does Anyone Care?link=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/22/gizmondo_2_delayed_until_next.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/emailthis2.gif” border=”0″ //a/tdtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark.cfm?title=Gizmondo 2 Delayed Until Next Year – Does Anyone Care?link=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/22/gizmondo_2_delayed_until_next.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif” border=”0″ //a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a href=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27233461770/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/43781870/a2.htm”img src=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27233461770/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/43781870/a2.img” border=”0″//a

UK Doctors Warn Of ‘Wii Injury’ Epidemic

pspan class=”mt-enclosure mt-enclosure-image” style=”display: inline;”img alt=”wii injuries.jpg” src=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/wii%20injuries.jpg” width=”510″ height=”350″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //spanbr clear=”all”br / We know that the Wii is a danger to a href=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/15/wii_wrist_strap_breaks_tv_woma.html”TVs/a and a href=”http://uk.gizmodo.com/2007/01/02/wiimote_disaster_caught_on_vid.html”relatives /a but doctors in the UK think this Christmas is going to result in a sharp spike in Wii-related injuries. /p pThe Wii might be getting gamers off their butts and making them more active but all that activity could come at a price this Christmas, as the Wii tops Christmas shopping lists. /p pDoctors claim that those spending too long on the Wii – especially those unused to moving more than their thumbs when gaming – are at risk from strain. In fact, researchers at Leeds Teaching Hospital have already identified an injury they call “Wii knee”. Bizarre, but true. /pimg width=’1′ height=’1′ src=’http://feeds.uk.gizmodo.com/c/552/f/9581/s/29bb663/mf.gif’ border=’0’/div class=’mf-viral’table border=’0’trtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2.html?title=UK Doctors Warn Of ‘Wii Injury’ Epidemiclink=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/22/uk_doctors_warn_of_wii_injury.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/emailthis2.gif” border=”0″ //a/tdtd valign=’middle’a href=”http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark.cfm?title=UK Doctors Warn Of ‘Wii Injury’ Epidemiclink=http://uk.gizmodo.com/2008/12/22/uk_doctors_warn_of_wii_injury.html” target=”_blank”img src=”http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif” border=”0″ //a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a href=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27233451169/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/43759203/a2.htm”img src=”http://da.feedsportal.com/r/27233451169/u/0/f/9581/c/552/s/43759203/a2.img” border=”0″//a