Aug 07

PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale gets Raiden ...

PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale’s character list includes stars from Devil May cry, Metal Gear Rising and a plethora of Sony deep cuts according to a new leak.

There’s a reason it’s called PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale and not Sony All-Stars Battle Royale. It won’t just be Sony characters beating the snot out of each other on PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita. A variety of characters from other publishers’ games will make it into the game according to leaked details about the game, and more than just the ones that have already been announced.

Funny thing about PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale: when Sony’s mascot brawler peeked its head above ground for the first time earlier this year, the haters focused less on the game’s outward similarity to Nintendo’s famous Super Smash Bros. series and more on Sony’s library of characters. Who cares that it’s got four people fighting it out in wild, shifting environments from  famous games, can a match up between Kratos and Nathan Drake really be as exciting as on between Pikachu and Link? Sony isn’t a character company!

When director Omar Kendall of Superbot spoke with Digital Trends, he promised that his game would not only thrive thanks to Sony’s characters like Parapa the Rapper but from the influx of characters from third-parties. “I think we wouldn’t really be doing the title a proper service if you only focused on first-party,” said Kendall, “Obviously PlayStation and Sony, they’ve got some great brands. but when you think about PlayStation and its long history, I think that includes third party. I think it only makes sense. A game like this, you’re going to see some third party characters.”

Now we know the characters to which he was referring. A post on Reddit (via NeoGAF) detailed the character roster sans a couple of unlockable characters yet to be revealed. Raiden from Konami’s Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance will duke it out alongside the young Dante from Capcom’s DmC: Devil May cry, as well as the previously confirmed Heihachi from Namco’s Tekken and 2K Games’ BioShock star Big Daddy.

Filling out the crew are a swath of other Sony characters. Nariko from Heavenly Sword, Sir Daniel Fortescu from MediEvil, the evil Cole McGrath from InFamous 2, Ratchet from Ratcher & Clank, and Spike from Ape Escape are coming along.

The leak also details a number of special items from the game as well as stages. The items especially delve deep into Sony’s back catalog, calling back to long lost classics like the PlayStation 2 action game The Mark of Kri.

Sony is expected to make many of these game details official at Gamescom on Aug. 14.

PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale gets Raiden from Metal Gear Rising, Dante from DmC, says leaked character roster

Jun 27

Toshiba Satellite L830-10X Review

In this review

Looking for a laptop for movies on the go but don’t want to pay the whopping price for an ultrabook? Fear not, weary traveller, for there are compact, budget-minded options that hope to make the only thing weighing you down on your journey your bulging wallet.

One such new addition is the Toshiba L830-10X. its 13-inch size makes it great for chucking in a rucksack and its wide screen lets you play DVD movies without those unsightly black bars. It’s packing an Intel Core i3 processor, 4GB of RAM and can be yours for £500.

While many laptops are wrapped in an all-black coat, Toshiba clearly thinks that this world needs brightening up. it offers the L830 in a white shell that makes a refreshing change from the plethora of black and silver computers that come through CNET UK Towers — although it’s also available in black if you’re feeling glum.

The whole upper chassis has been given this white treatment, with the lid sporting a subtle grid pattern. the base has been kept black, which is probably for the best, seeing as that will be in constant contact with grubby train tables and office desks with dangerous pools of spilled coffee.

Toshiba Satellite L830-10X black The keyboard tray offers a distracting amount of flex for those who like to pummel out a text document.

If you’re not at all keen on all-white electronics and wouldn’t previously have been seen dead carrying Apple’s old MacBook around, then it probably won’t be the laptop for you. I personally find it rather appealing and wouldn’t be ashamed to whip it out in a meeting or a cafe when waiting for a train.

It’s an entirely plastic construction, which is pretty standard on a lower-mid range machine such as this. it feels generally quite firm, with only a bit of flex being offered by the lid and on the wrist rest. the black bottom feels particularly sturdy so you needn’t worry about laying down some cotton wool before placing it onto a table.

The body itself measures 329mm wide and 221mm deep, which makes it a good size for chucking in a bag and carting off on your journeys. at 30mm thick, it’s hardly challenging the ultrabooks or Apple’s MacBook Air to a ‘who’s skinnier’ competition. It’s about standard for the price range and isn’t likely to stretch out your messenger bag too much.

Around the sides you’ll spy a VGA-out socket, an Ethernet port, HDMI-out, two USB 3.0 ports, one USB 2.0 port, headphone and microphone jacks and a DVD drive.

Under the lid, things aren’t quite as attractive. the keyboard and tray are made from a different plastic that has more of an off-white beige-ish hue, which makes it look a little dowdy compared to the brilliant white surround. it gives the impression that Toshiba has cut corners by using cheaper materials.

The keys themselves are square, isolated little things that don’t look particularly classy, but that’s nitpicking. although they’re quite easy to press, they don’t offer the most comfortable of typing experiences, due in no small part to the large amount of flex offered by the keyboard tray. It’s very off-putting feeling it flex beneath your fingers when you’re trying to type out a long document.

The trackpad is more pleasant to use. it offers a rough texture that’s pretty easy to slide your finger over and it’s reasonably responsive too, making it well suited to flicking around your web browser of choice. it also has a rather attractive chrome-effect edging. it doesn’t add anything to your browsing experience, but it’s always nice to see something shiny on the tray.

Above the keyboard is a white speaker grille. the speakers are reasonably clear but they lack proper bass response and aren’t particularly loud. They’ll do the job if you just want to play some video clips but if music and movies are on your agenda then you’ll want to pair the L830 with a set of headphones.

Toshiba Satellite L830-10X keyboard The keyboard tray offers a distracting amount of flex for those who like to pummel our a text document.

The screen is a 13.3-inch affair with a rather standard resolution of 1,366×768 pixels. Crucially though, it has an aspect ratio of 16:9, meaning you can play widescreen videos with fewer of those black bars creeping in.

I plopped in my DVD copy of Art of Flight and was very chuffed to see the video taking up the entire screen, without needing to stretch it out of proportion. the same video played on a 4:3 monitor had large black bars at the top and bottom. the L830′s screen might not be huge but it makes best use of the available space for video.

The screen isn’t full HD so it isn’t going to play Blu-ray quality videos, but you’d be pretty optimistic to expect that on a modestly priced 13-inch machine. it can handle 720p resolution footage though and it’s both bright and reasonably bold so it’s well-suited for DVDs.

Inside the white jacket you’ll find an Intel Core i3-2367M processor clocked at 1.4GHz, with 4GB of RAM. Those aren’t exactly impressive specs — especially as it’s using the older Intel Sandy Bridge chips, rather than the latest Ivy Bridge models. still, as a lower-end machine, it’s not surprising that Toshiba hasn’t opted for the more recent chips.

To see what it’s capable of, I fired up the PCMark05 and Geekbench tests and was given scores of 4,698 and 4,018 respectively. Those scores sadly don’t measure up to what I’d expect from a laptop of this price. By comparison, the 15-inch Lenovo Essential G570 achieved over 6,000 on the Geekbench test and can be yours for around £400 — that’s 100 quid less than the Toshiba.

On paper then, it doesn’t seem as powerful as others in the low-end bracket, but that’s not to say it doesn’t have enough juice for the essentials. I found it was quite capable of playing back and streaming high-definition video, even while running other programs like Spotify and Chrome. I was also able to open numerous web browser tabs and flick between them without noticing much in the way of lag, so it seems perfectly suited for handling most office tasks.

Toshiba Satellite L830-10X angled It’s bettered in my benchmark tests by the Lenovo Essential G570, which is £100 cheaper.

Of course, it’s not going to be able to handle more intense tasks like video editing — not without screaming in binary anyway. if that’s on your agenda then you should really think about doubling your budget and going for something with more junk in the trunk. if, however, your only real needs from a computer are word processing, web browsing and watching videos, then it’ll be fine.

Annoyingly, Toshiba has loaded the L830 up with an enormous amount of extra software including Toshiba assist, Toshiba Disc Creator, Toshiba Eco Utility, Toshiba Hardware Setup, Toshiba Media Controller, Toshiba Online Product Information, Toshiba PC Health Monitor, Toshiba Recovery Media Creator, Toshiba Recovery Media Creator Reminder — the list goes on.

Although the odd bit might be of use, it’s mostly bundled nonsense that will sit on your drive taking up space and clogging up your background processes. Best to have a sift through when you first turn it on and get rid of anything you’re never going to use. I don’t know what Toshiba Value Added Package is but I’m pretty sure I’ll never miss it.

As a 13-inch machine, you’re probably going to want to carry it around with you at least some of the time. You’d therefore hope it could last more than 20 minutes away from a plug.

I booted up my battery benchmark test and found it was able to keep going for 2 hours 36 minutes, which isn’t too bad. the test is extremely brutal and involves running the processor at a constant 100 per cent with the screen’s brightness set to maximum. if you use your machine more carefully and turn off things like wireless connectivity and keep video use to a minimum, you’ll be able to get a much better time.

The Toshiba L830-10X might have an attractive white shell and the wide screen will help for watching videos, but it’s let down by poor performance that doesn’t justify the price tag. the more powerful Lenovo Essential G570 costs £100 less.

If you particularly want a portable machine for movies on the go then it’s worth a look, but for raw power, your money could be better spent elsewhere.

Toshiba Satellite L830-10X Review

Jun 26

Microsoft Tablet vs. iPad Is Nonsense, But An XBox ...

Like an 80s spy novel, Microsoft dropped a sparse note late last week with: “This will be a major Microsoft announcement — you will not want to miss it.”

It’s a tablet most agree, Microsoft’s first partnership with Barnes & Noble, others say. According to CNet:

If true, the report suggests that a new Microsoft tablet would be aimed at Amazon’s Kindle Fire rather than Apple‘s slate.

Let’s hope that part is true. iPad killers tend to turn the delete button on themselves, even if the ever-hopeful — wishing Apple will get a real run for its money  – persist. Stephen Chapman put it best at ZDNet.

For the sake of competition and consumer choice, I really do hope that Microsoft is able to step their game up to the point of going toe-to-toe with Apple, but my skeptical disposition isn’t quite as optimistic or hopeful. Truth be told, I’m smitten with my iPad and the plethora of apps therein.

So maybe a Kindle Fire fighter, not an iPad killer, but Microsoft might create something in its own category. Think about the XBox for a moment, one the great triumphs of Microsoft in the past decade. Think about all that it offers — and what it doesn’t. High-end games with multi-player integration, dozens of streaming options from a host of partners via XBox Live, a very simple user interface that never intends to be anything but pure entertainment. Packaged in a tightly controlled environment where apps trickle in, not pour.

An XBox tablet makes sense.

Adding Nook-like elements to it wouldn’t hurt — Barnes & Noble, too, has mainly limited its e-reader apps to entertainment-centric endeavors. this has also been Fire’s main focus. And that stands to reason, because both the Nook and Kindle came from a specific point of view — reading. iPads can be nearly full-functioning computers. That also makes sense, since Apple comes from serving that kind of user.

As a company with a history, Microsoft now finds itself somewhere between. It is a software maker largely known for function, but has also built a gaming system ideal as a TV streaming device.

If you look at today’s tablet options, what’s missing from the list above? Certainly not catch-all tablets, or e-reader-plus tablets. you can do anything from write a report to watch HBO on a tablet. but what about something analyst Rob Enderle described to Computerworld as a, “ Xbox-like tablet subsidized with games that users would buy”?

If Microsoft could work the key functionalities of XBox into it — mobile gaming augmentation that doesn’t stink, a Kinect element as part of the camera integration, XBox Live … that does not sound like a loser concept to me.

Microsoft Tablet vs. iPad Is Nonsense, But An XBox Tablet …

Jan 11

Lenovo CEO Keeps Focus On Hardware, Eyes PC Market ...

The plethora of Lenovo device announcements at this week’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES), including a buzzed-about “yoga” laptop that flips inside out to become a touchscreen tablet, points to a company still fascinated with producing consumer PC hardware.

That mindset sets Lenovo apart from other PC giants (HP, Dell) that have moved towards selling higher-margin services and cloud computing. “Our strategy is to focus on product,” confirmed Lenovo Chief Executive Yang Yuanqing in an interview at CES. This year, those Lenovo products range from more than a dozen PCs to tablets to the company’s first Smart TV.

Yang is hoping the devices, especially the ones in newer, faster-growing categories, will help it maintain its growth streak. Lenovo has been the fastest-growing PC vendor among the industry’s top 5 companies for the last eight quarters. After passing Dell last year to become the No. 2 seller of PCs globally, Lenovo is eying the top spot. “In 2012, we will become No. 1, hopefully,” said Yang. “That is our aspiration.”

The PC business is known for its brutal margins. while acknowledging that challenge, Yang said he still believes a product-focused Lenovo can “make a decent amount of money.” Scale matters. “If you can reach a leadership position where you have double-digit market share, you will shift to profitability,” said Yang. “In every industry, somebody will make money and someone will lose money. it depends on your competitiveness and focus.”

At the same time, Lenovo would like to improve its margins outside China. in its home market, Lenovo enjoys margins of more than 5-6%. Outside China, that figure is lower. “We want to reach a similar level [to China] over time,” said Yang.

To keep growing faster than competitors Lenovo has been seeking out new product categories where it can make an impact. At CES, the company introduced several new thin and light ultrabook laptops, including the hybrid tablet “yoga” model. After introducing the idea late last year, chipmaker Intel is trying to make ultrabooks the mobile computing trend of 2012.

At CES, Lenovo also introduced a 55-inch Smart TV, the K91, based on the Ice Cream Sandwich version of Google‘s Android operating system. though Lenovo does not have experience with TVs, Yang said the move was a “very natural expansion,” similar to the company’s expansion into smartphones and tablets several years ago. Several of the TV’s components, such as its chip, hard drive and operating system, are similar to the parts Lenovo has used in its computers. “It’s just a different-sized PC,” said Yang.

Lenovo still needs to better establish itself in the U.S. where it is ranked No. 5 in PCs. the company believes its new products and continuing “For Those who Do” ad campaign will help build brand equity. certain products, like its LePhone smartphone line, won’t come to the U.S. until progress is made in this area, according to Yang.

“We are definitely exploring that kind of opportunity, but I don’t think everything is ready yet,” said Yang. in addition to establishing stronger consumer brand awareness, Yang would like Lenovo to build more sophisticated retail channel networks in the U.S. and forge closer relationships with wireless carriers, he said. “Smartphones and tablets must connect to certain ecosystems,” he said. “In China, it’s easy for us to partner with content providers and app developers. Outside China we don’t have such a strong capability.”

Lenovo is establishing those ties now through its consumer PCs, said Yang. “It takes time,” he added.

Lenovo CEO Keeps Focus On Hardware, Eyes PC Market Crown