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  1. Amy Eastland • Nov 27, 2024 at 04:33pm EST 12 Comments Digital Extremes and Valve are currently giving away free copies of Dark Sector, the third-person title made by the Warframe devs. From today until November 30, PC games will be able to obtain this game for free by visiting the Steam store page for Dark Sector. This game is a third-person action shooter that was first released on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 in 2008 and then was ported to Steam in 2009. If you've been wanting to try this game out but weren't sure whether you want to spend money on it, this is a great time to get hold of it and add it to your backlog. Dark Sector is a game that does have mixed reviews, mainly based on the visual design of the game. This game has been compared to Resident Evil 4 and Gears of War by critics. Themes that were seen in Dark Sector were also seen in Warframe. For example, the name Tenno is seen very frequently throughout Warframe, as that is the name of the faction that is controlled by players. Related Story New Xbox UI Image Shows Steam Label, Further Hinting At The Merging of the Best of Xbox and Windows In this game, you play Hayden Tenno (voiced by Michael Rosenbaum), a man who works at the CIA. In this game, you witness Hayden go through a transformation, as he has been infected with the Technocyte Virus on his right arm, which then begins to take over his entire body. As a result of the Technocyte Virus, you see his psyche begin to deteriorate. However, he begins to gain superhuman powers, including the ability to grow a bladed glaive on his arm. With this glaive, he can throw it at his enemies with precision. As you progress through the game, you see Hayden begin to transform further, and his powers evolve, making him a deadly force to be reckoned with. Dark Sector's main focus is a single-player campaign, but the game also features a multiplayer game mode. At the moment, it's uncertain whether the multiplayer game mode is still active, but due to the game being free on Steam for now, it's possible that the multiplayer game mode will still be active and available to play. The Steam Autumn Sale is also on right now, which will provide many discounts for any games that may be on your wishlist. Will you be playing Dark Sector? Further Reading https://wccftech.com/dark-sector-third-person-shooter-from-warframe-devs-free-to-own-on-steam/
  2. I’ve been using Linux for over 25 years, and I love it! From Corel Linux, Mandrake, OpenSuse, Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint, MX Linux, Manjaro and finally back to Ubuntu. I’ve created content, watched videos, coded microcontrollers and even attempted to game on Linux. In the past, gaming was limited to Neverball, Neverputt and Super Tux Kart. Sure I could play some games, but the triple-A titles were beyond my grasp, and so I dual-booted with Windows in order to get my game on. It wasn’t until Valve’s Steam Deck arrived that Linux gaming became “easy” thanks in part to the Proton compatibility layer and a growing community of gamers reporting their successes and failures. This got me thinking. Could I use Steam OS on a desktop PC? And so, for the next few days I’ll be building a Linux gaming PC using the Khadas Mind and the Khadas Mind Graphics. Essentially a small form factor Intel 13th Gen Core i7 1360P with 32GB of LPDDR5 6400 MHz RAM and a full (not laptop) Nvidia 4060 Ti with 8GB of RAM. This should be enough to get a modest gaming rig built for the living room without running a full-size PC case. The Khadas Mind is tiny, and made from an aluminum chassis that oozes quality. How Khadas has managed to pack the spec into this machine is a wonder, but you do pay a premium price for this. The Khadas Mind has a slot interface that connects to breakouts that sit underneath. There are Microsoft Surface laptop chassis, an extended dock, and the focus of this live blog, an external GPU. The Khadas Mind Graphics give us a full Nvidia 4060 Ti GPU, not a laptop card, the full desktop spec card and with that we should get some decent performance. The Khadas Mind Graphics provides power to the Khadas Mind, so we only need one plug. With the kit in hand, I now move on to installing a Linux gaming OS. But which one? ChimeraOS or Bazzite? Link: https://www.tomshardware.com/news/live/building-a-linux-gaming-pc
  3. Your Nickname: @SpiderManツ Your Age : 21 How you could help us a Devil harmony member ? : help in the project How much you rate Devil harmony project from 1 - 10 ? :10%10 Other information about your request ?: - Last request link : the first
  4. Music Title : Taste Singer : Sabrina Carpenter Release Date : 23/8/24 Official YouTube Link :
  5. Researchers at MIT and elsewhere have significantly boosted the output from a system that can extract drinkable water directly from the air even in dry regions, using heat from the sun or another source. The system, which builds on a design initially developed three years ago at MIT by members of the same team, brings the process closer to something that could become a practical water source for remote regions with limited access to water and electricity. The findings are described today in the journal Joule, in a paper by Professor Evelyn Wang, who is head of MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering; graduate student Alina LaPotin; and six others at MIT and in Korea and Utah. The earlier device demonstrated by Wang and her co-workers provided a proof of concept for the system, which harnesses a temperature difference within the device to allow an adsorbent material—which collects liquid on its surface—to draw in moisture from the air at night and release it the next day. When the material is heated by sunlight, the difference in temperature between the heated top and the shaded underside makes the water release back out of the adsorbent material. The water then gets condensed on a collection plate. Link: https://techxplore.com/news/2020-10-solar-powered-drinkable-air.html
  6. It may sound a bit strange coming from a hardware nut that is more at home with a big ol' desktop PC, but I'm stoked about the possibility of the integrated graphics in AMD's new mobile CPUs. The Ryzen 6000 series will be hitting laptops shortly and will be making an appearance in all the usual gaming machines alongside Nvidia and AMD's finest mobile graphics cards. And while they'll quickly become the models of choice for serious gaming, it's actually the prospect of ultra-thin and light machines that has me most excited. Imagine a small 13-inch laptop that doesn't have the room to keep a bulky GPU cool, but can handle the heat produced by one of AMD's latest APUs. A machine that would normally make for a ropey experience with the integrated graphics of yore, but that can turn its hand to 1080p gaming at a reasonable frame rate. That's the promise of AMD's new RDNA 2-powered APUs. AMD has leapfrogged the first generation RDNA architecture for its integrated graphics, going from Vega to the very latest technology, which means if nothing else it can shout about what an improvement it is over the Ryzen 5000 mobile chips. I may only have AMD's word for the actual performance at this point, but it keeps banding around a 2X performance increase over the last generation, which means you're suddenly in the realms of 60fps in plenty of less demanding games at 1080p. Admittedly this is generally going to be at the lowest possible settings, but if frame rate isn't that important to the game in question, you may be able to dabble with medium settings at 30fps or so. There are two different iGPUs going to be squeezed into the new Ryzen 6000 series mobile parts, with AMD Radeon 680M offering 12 CUs and a 2,400MHz clock while the 660M has 6 CUs pootling along at 1,900MHz. We'll have to see how these GPUs fair in games ourselves when the first laptops start landing (and day now), but going by the graphs that AMD is showing off they do look surprisingly capable. The fact that the Ryzen 6000 mobile chips are so rounded just sweetens the deal. You're looking at support for PCIe 4.0 for sweet SSD storage options, DDR5, and Wi-Fi 6E as well. These chips are all eight-core, 16-thread models across the whole stack as well, which means there's plenty of raw processing grunt on offer too. Intel's Alder Lake is also hitting the market at about the same time, and that's definitely got some interesting tech to offer. Even so, it's the integrated RDNA 2 graphics in Ryzen 6000 that has me most excited about this year's laptops. Here's hoping laptop manufacturers produce something that makes the most of them. https://www.pcgamer.com/with-rdna-2-in-super-thin-laptops-the-steam-deck-isnt-your-only-mobile-gaming-option/
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