HyperDevbox ExZeus Arcade allays fears that Android games are destined to suck



For whatever reason, Android’s high-performance Native Development Kit introduced back in the Cupcake days never got a ton of attention despite the subtle hints that it’d give devs the low-level access they needed to create killer, graphically rich, immersive environments ready to compete with pretty much any other gaming device you could shove in your pocket. Of course, at the time, every phone in the market was running an older, slower ARM11 core — so maybe the new generation of ARMv7-based devices we’ve got hanging around now like the Nexus One and Droid are the catalysts we need to get this party started in earnest. Japan’s HyperDevbox studio has just shared the news that its ExZeus Arcade shooter makes full use of the NDK, your microSD card, and a custom sound driver to bring a gaming experience hotter than pretty much anything we’ve seen on Android thus far; the only catch is that you need Android 2.0 or up and a phone with a dedicated GPU to get it going. It’s available now in the Market for a seemingly reasonable $3.99 — and let’s let this serve as a reminder to other game studios that they’ve got the tools and the horsepower to rock Android hard. Follow the break for video of ExZeus in action.

Continue reading HyperDevbox ExZeus Arcade allays fears that Android games are destined to suck

HyperDevbox ExZeus Arcade allays fears that Android games are destined to suck originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Mar 2010 18:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Taipei gets 1,000-strong fleet of WiMAX-equipped taxis



Looking for something else to be envious of now that in-flight WiFi is starting to be more readily available? Then look no farther than Taipei, which has just announced the roll-out of a 1,000-strong fleet of WiMAX-equipped taxis. Alright, so a short cab ride might not send you into the same sort of internet withdrawal that a five hour flight does, but we’re not ones to turn down mobile broadband when it crops up in places normally reserved for a bit of down-time or “conversation.” Best of all, the in-taxi WiMAX will apparently be free during the initial stage, although VMAX Telcom hasn’t yet decided if it will charge a fee in the future. No word on any expansion plans beyond the initial 1,000 cabs just yet either, but the service will apparently be limited to the greater Taipei area — at least until VMAX’s WiMAX coverage expands to other parts of Taiwan.

[Thanks, Tim]

Update: Our pals at Engadget Chinese have informed us that in-taxi WiMAX will unfortunately only be used provide internet access to small touchscreen devices installed in the cabs, not to your laptop.

Taipei gets 1,000-strong fleet of WiMAX-equipped taxis originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Mar 2010 18:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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News: Google: ‘no timetable’ on China talks



Google: ‘no timetable’ on China talks

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Monster botnet held 800,000 people’s details
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News: Google: ‘no timetable’ on China talks



Google: ‘no timetable’ on China talks