August 1st, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
It looks like Nintendo will finally be getting some challengers to its balance board monopoly… or one at least. Cheapo Wii accessory-maker Njoy is set to introduce its own version of the Wii Fit’s footboard come September 12th for the weirdly more-expensive price of £64.99 (or about $130). Of course, Njoy’s model does have a built-in LCD display (presumably for checking your weight even when the console is off), though it won’t come bundled with any software, virtual trainers, or the assurances of a thorough Mario and Luigi inspection process.
[Via Balance Board Blog]
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Posted in Nintendo, balance board, BalanceBoard, wii fit, WiiFit, third party, ThirdParty, njoy | No Comments »
March 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
Although Nyko’s wireless FrontMan axe is slated to land for Xbox 360 this June, it seems as though it has been beaten to the proverbial punch by some random rival from who knows where. Known only as “3rd Party,” the aforementioned company has seemingly crafted a wireless Explorer that plays nice with the Xbox 360, and better still, it looks to be available right now. Still, considering the fact that it’s labeled “Guitar for Games” and designed to function with the “X 360,” we’re not entirely sure we’d be willing to risk our $41.94. But hey, if you see “quality” written all over that image pictured above, we certainly aren’t going to stop you from pulling the trigger and hoping for the best.
[Via XBox 360 News]
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Posted in xbox 360, Xbox360, 3rd party, 3rdParty, guitar hero, guitar hero iii, GuitarHero, GuitarHeroIii, controller, axe, guitar, third party, ThirdParty | No Comments »
October 17th, 2007 by
Filed under: Cellphones, Handhelds
In chatting up Apple’s sudden change of direction today on the whole native iPhone SDK issue, Steve Jobs did a little name dropping by mentioning that he digs the way Nokia does things with S60’s support for third party applications. It seems apparent from the get-go that Steve has every intention of offering apps through some sort of official, money-generating conduit — iTunes, we’d wager — and with that comes the promise of digital rights management, authenticity verification, and all those nasty little technologies that set the hacking community ablaze. To that end, Steve mentioned that he digs Nokia’s approach of requiring that apps be digitally signed so they can be traced back to their developers, an effort to stem “viruses, malware, privacy attacks” that he thinks will flourish on a “highly visible target” like the iPhone. There’s a problem, though: there’s no telling when the last time is that Steve touched a phone not of his own creation, but we’ve used S60 devices pretty recently (like, today) and we have it on good authority that you can disable certificate verification for installed apps. Think iPhone users are going to have that option? Probably not. Apple’s still visibly concerned about keeping the iPhone under its perceived draconian control (even though it’s been busted wide open time and time again), and we’ve no doubt that trend will continue in full effect with the SDK. It’s a huge, landmark upgrade from the web-based SDK developers have now, yes — but we’d recommend Steve screw around with an N95 for a while before he heaps any more love on the way Nokia goes about its business.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in iPhone, Apple, cellphone, phone, software, nokia, 3rd party, 3rdParty, SDK, third party, ThirdParty | No Comments »