I'm not going to get too excited yet until it gets
enough third party support (accessories and software) and a lot of positive user experiences.
Now lets hope Nintendo can get
enough third party support and even better, third party exclusives.
Not exact matches
Political scientists have noted that many
third parties that had strong political
support but not
enough to elect many official to office have often found planks of their
party platforms migrate to the platforms of major
parties later on as the major
parties seek to do so to co-opt
support from
third party voters and backers.
If there were
enough people who thought like the IDC to create a
third party in the political center to break the stranglehold of tweedledum and tweedledee misgoverning NY, I'd
support them in a heartbeat.
But the real problem for the existing
parties is the
third factor at work — namely, that there are a host of battleground seats where Ukip
support is large
enough to have a decisive impact, even if the
party comes nowhere near winning.
In essence, the
party must decide whether to hold its nose and back Cuomo, who many of its members don't find liberal
enough, or declare war on a sitting governor who is currently the favorite to win a
third term by
supporting a different candidate.
The interesting thing is to see that a.) None provide any credentials proving their methods are better; b.) they don't like the tone of the article — then again, a lot of people, when all they do is talk among those who only agree with them get offended when they run across someone that isn't in lock step with them; c.) they try to attack me personally, as a «hater», which is totally unfair and judgmental about someone whom they have never met; d.) can't point to any specific dogs with significant accomplishments that have been clicker trained — hunting, police, obedience, tracking, etc... and just finding a specimen or two isn't very convincing evidence... get
enough dogs and sometimes you'll find the genius dog that almost trains itself; e.) there is no point by point refutation of what I've said,
supported by
third party evidence.
The hardware was good
enough to offer a wide range of games and we were ready to welcome
third -
party editors, with a real development kit, instruction booklets, some real
support, etc..»
Nintendo has
enough first -
party games coming out next year to
support the Wii for one more year, but after that I just can't see how Nintendo can keep the Wii afloat after that unless the
third parties finally figure out how to make good games for it.
It will not just be
enough to have great first -
party titles, but it will need good
third -
party support as well
All those exclusives alone would be more than
enough to keep any PS3 owner's thumbs busy and wallets empty for the whole year, but it just so happens Sony was just as blessed with amazing
third party support as ever.
You sell me a glorified Gamecube in a different shell, completely bork
third party support as result, all because you didn't feel that HDTVs were
supported enough and yet you talk about your next console
supporting a TV standard that NOBODY has and is not even a fraction as popular as HDTVs already were at the time the Wii launched?!
Iwata is also aware of the fact that some
third -
party developers are not interested in developing for the system, and while some of them are
supporting it, he feels the situation will improve once more
third -
party developers start seeing success on the system and the install base becomes high
enough.
The Gamecube was the one time in the last 20 years that they didn't put a major technological roadblock in the way to completely destroy
third party support and sure
enough things noticeably improved.
While the N64 was by no means a perfect system — hamstrung as it was by a reliance on expensive and limited cartridges which in turn meant a lack of
third -
party support — there's no escaping the fact that back in 1996 (or 1997 if you weren't lucky
enough to get an imported machine), it felt like playing with the future.
Along with a Metroid, Mario, and a new Zelda title, the NX simply has to be complimented by significant second and
third party support to convince the gaming community that the NX is reason
enough to consider abandoning PlayStation and Xbox One.
Organisations like Greenpeace are rich
enough to have their own legal advisers and pay
third party organisations to produce reports that
support their position.
Will
enough third -
party publishers
support it?
Not to mention, it is not yet a wide -
enough app -
supported feature, with no
third -
party support as of yet.
Google has an answer to Amazon's smart speaker, called Home, but it's still a fairly incipient effort, and it would likely need a lot more
support from
third -
party apps to get
enough traction that'll make it a worthy Alexa competitor.
Until the HomePod offers
support for multiple streaming apps and has more
third -
party app and feature integration, its excellent sound quality isn't
enough to warrant buying one.