un motivo para comprar discos y libros es que internet y lo digital son enormemente perecederos. qué te queda de las cosas que tenías en la pc en 2009?
No gadis do Lugo rico o pan bo con fermento dunha panadería de Antas segue no estante mesmo ao final do día. No gadis do Lugo envellecido que sabe usar un sacho non chega ao mediodía
Spanish illustrator who emerged from the 1980s adult comic scene, Julio Martínez Pérez aka Das Pastoras (born in 1956) blends brutal musculature, painterly color, and a tension between the grotesque and the epic.
In Virtua Tennis (released on October 6, 2000 for the Dreamcast), Sega proved that "realism" doesn't have to be boring. By taking the lightning-fast arcade engine and adding a deep World Tour mode, they created what many still consider the greatest sports game ever made, a title so intuitive that anyone could pick up a controller and feel like a pro within thirty seconds.
Grand Slam Intel:
The Two-Button Mastery: Unlike modern tennis sims with twenty different shot modifiers, Virtua Tennis uses just two buttons: Topspin and Slice. The depth comes from your positioning and how long you hold the direction during your swing. If you're planted, you're dangerous; if you're running, you're toast.
The "World Tour" Grind: This was the secret sauce of the Dreamcast port. You create a player and travel the globe, but instead of just playing matches, you compete in bizarre training mini-games, like knocking down giant bowling pins with serves or protecting a series of targets from a ball machine.
The Roster of Legends: You get to play as (or against) icons like Jim Courier, Tommy Haas, and Cedric Pioline. Each has a specific "style", Courier is a baseline power hitter, while Tim Henman is the serve-and-volley king.
The 4-Player Smash: This was the ultimate "party" game for the Dreamcast. With the system's four built-in controller ports, doubles matches were chaotic, high-speed affairs that usually ended in a lot of shouting and "accidental" lobs.
“AI is basically sucking up all human knowledge and throwing it back at us - and charging a price.”
Talking Heads founding member David Byrne speaks to @faisalislam about AI and its impact on creativity.
#Newsnight