Imagination Technologies has
a great video below that shows the differences in the APIs» performance when rendering a scene crowded with gnomes on a PowerVR Rogue GPU.
Not exact matches
Still, Torres formed a fine partnership with Gerrard at their peak, and provided the Anfield crowd with some
great moments, as
shown in the
video below.
Below is a
great video showing how to wash your diapers in a HE washing machine.
Below is a
great video that
shows you exactly what cloth diaper liners do, and from watching it you may understand why they are a necessity for many moms.
The
video below shows someone doing chin ups with
great form with a lot of weight.
Coming back to the performance side of things, Nvidia has passed along the demo
videos below to illustrate the
great leap in capabilities that its new GPU represents, and it's going to push game developers to produce versions of their mobile games harnessing that power, which will be
showing up in the Tegra Zone app discovery store in due course.
It's important to remember that a
great many of the products on display at CES are either variations of existing devices (the iRiver Story, discussed in the
video below and debuting in the US at CES, bears an undeniably close resemblance to the Kindle) or prototypes that are being
shown to gauge interest from potential distributors.
Along with Hit, the
video below shows scans that feature Trunks (with blue hair) from Dragon Ball Super, a
Great Ape Baby Vegeta boss battle, and a slew of screenshots from online, story mode, quests, and battles.
The
below video includes three separate clips: one
showing Donkey Kong and Cranky Kong in action (as an introduction for those not familiar with the game), one
showing off how
great the game looks, and finally a clip demonstrating the brand new Funky Mode, where you get to play as the
greatest character in
video game history.
Well you'll be happy to know Theatrhythm Final Fantasy includes some of the
great music from the game and various references to it, as
shown in the
videos below:
2:50 p.m. Updated
below with astounding
video from Kesennuma, Japan Over the weekend, I mused on a question that's bothered me since I read Roger Bilham's report on the
great earthquake and tsunami of March 11: Given the history of devastating tsunamis not far away, how could it have taken until 2006 for the word «tsunami» to
show up in government guidelines related to the Fukushima nuclear complex?
Check out this
video below that
shows some of the best features of Android 5.1.1 and let us know if the Moto 360 is
great with the update.
Today, I found a
great short
video on this topic by Nobel - Prize winner James Heckman, which is embedded
below and which I'll
show my ninth - grade English classes.