February 27, 2011

MCTS Certification Key | MCTS Training Key The 10 Most Violent Video Games of All Time - MCTS KEY

Video games, much like comic books, rock and roll, and horror flicks, have been blamed for sullying children, inspiring violence, and contributing to the nation’s moral decay. It’s worth noting that, hysterical pundits aside, the latest studies suggest that violent video games aren’t harmful to most kids. That’s not to say that anything should go; even the most blasé gamers would probably agree that parents should monitor their kids’ gaming habits. Still, the violent video game debate has reached the heights of the Supreme Court where nine justices will decide in June 2011 if selling violent video games to minors should be deemed illegal.

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Over the years, there have been, admittedly, several titles in the hobby’s relatively brief history that have pushed the boundaries of decency in some critics’ eyes. Epic Games’ upcoming Bulletstorm—a first person shooter that rewards players for insane gunplay—is the latest video game to come under fire for violent content, but it certainly isn’t the first. Check out the slideshow below for a countdown to the #1 most violent video game of all time. Bulletstorm, which has yet to be released, doesn’t qualify—yet. If you disagree with my selections, feel free to post your own list (and your reasons) in the comments. And be sure to let us know where you stand on the upcoming Supreme Court decision, too.

Free MCTS Certification Training | Free MCITP Certification Training | Top Tablet Comparison: iPad vs. Xoom vs. TouchPad vs. PlayBook

For nearly a year since Apple launched the iPad, everyone’s been clamoring for viable competitors to the great tablet device. Customers want choices, and manufacturers want their slice of the booming tablet market. Some decent options, like the Samsung Galaxy Tab and the Barnes & Noble Nook Color, have come out (along with a lot of not-so-decent ones), but in the last couple of months we’ve been shown what the cream of the tablet crop looks like.


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At the top of the tablet market, fighting for dominance, are four manufacturers, making four tablets that each run different operating systems. At the head of the list, of course, remains the Apple iPad. It’s dominating the market, and with the iPad 2 likely due to arrive in a matter of weeks, it could take another leap ahead. Coming up fast behind it, though, are the Motorola Xoom, the HP TouchPad, and the BlackBerry PlayBook, all of which appear poised to make significant waves in the tablet pool.

The Motorola Xoom is a 10.1-inch tablet (slightly larger than the iPad) and is the first device running Android 3.0 “Honeycomb,” the tablet-optimized version of Google’s popular Android operating system. Android, and by extension the Xoom, still suffers from a lack of apps that look good on larger screens, but the Xoom’s hardware is solid, and Honeycomb looks to be a giant leap in the right direction for Android tablets.

RIM, always a business-centered company, is launching the BlackBerry PlayBook with both professionals and consumers in mind. Sporting a 7-inch screen, it’s decidedly more pocket-friendly than the iPad or the Xoom. BlackBerry smartphone owners can use their phone’s 3G or 4G connection to get online with the PlayBook. It runs a brand-new operating system, one that will allow developers to build apps using Java, Flash, Adobe Air, and other technologies. That means we could see a lot of apps, particularly cross-platform ones, for the PlayBook.

The newcomer to the tablet party is HP’s TouchPad. The 9.7-incher, available this summer, runs WebOS—the fruits of HP’s $1.2 billion purchase of Palm last year. The operating system looks ideal for a tablet, with the card-based system that so many people liked on the Palm Pre. The tablet looks almost exactly like the iPad, but sports some unique features, like a touchstone capacitive charger, and the ability to tap a Palm phone and send information back and forth between the devices. HP is at an enormous app disadvantage, though, and it remains to be seen if it can convince developers to build apps for the TouchPad like they have for the iPad and Android-based tablets.
Over the last couple of months it seems we may have finally seen what great tablets are going to look like in the near future. How things will shake out among the competitors remains to be seen, but it certainly appears that tablet buyers will finally have several excellent options. See how the big four stack up side-by-side in the chart below.

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Let’s get cocky and assume that next week’s Apple event brings us a new iPad—the iPad 2, if you will. Let us also assume that the iPad 2 will add front- and rear-facing cameras, and thus FaceTime to the mix. And now that Motorola’s Xoom is finally available to the masses, let’s take a quick look at how the first Honeycomb tablet stacks up against the iPad we know—and the iPad we know is coming.

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Pricing
We ran an in-depth Xoom pricing piece earlier in the week, and the short of it is: despite the seemingly hefty price tag attached to the Xoom, a two-year Verizon contract and a Xoom are about the same cost as two years with the iPad on AT&T. This one is more or less a draw.

Safari for iOS vs. Android Browser App
This battle had the potential to be summed up in one word: Flash. Apple is unlikely to announce support for Flash next week, while the Xoom will supposedly have Flash support in the next three weeks or so. Until Adobe, Google, and Motorola sort out the hold-up, neither tablet offers a full Internet experience, but the edge has to go to the tablet that at least promises it. If Motorola (and Google and Adobe) can’t make this happen, it will be a colossal failure.

But Flash isn’t everything. Both browsers have the disappointing habit of loading mobile sites intended for cell phones instead of the full Web site you are anticipating when you type, say, espn.com into the browser. Scrolling all the way to the bottom of the page and clicking on the link to the main site will often solve this problem, but it’s an annoyance nonetheless.

The iPad’s Safari toolbar includes basic navigation, a Tabs button (which includes a number in its icon representing how many you currently have open), a bookmarks button that takes you to a traditional pull-down Bookmarks menu, a Multi-function button (Add Bookmark, Add to Home Screen, Mail Link to this Page or Print), a Google search window, and an intuitive keyboard that pops up for entering URLs or field info. Honeycomb’s keyboard is similarly easy-to-use. Android 3.0′s revamped Browser app features tabs arrayed across the top as in a traditional browser (rather than a tabs icon), a new navigation bar for refreshes, searches, forward/backward navigation, and a quick bookmark option. Both browsers re-wrap text to fit your screen when you tap on an article’s text twice.

Multitasking
Honeycomb slam-dunks iOS here—sorry, Apple. Perhaps next week’s new iPad will feature updated multitasking, but as things stand, Android is the winner.

Apple requires a double-click on the physical Home button, which reveals a scrollable bar at the bottom of the screen full of icons representing the apps you have used recently. Tapping one takes you to that app, right in the middle of whatever you were last doing on it. That’s helpful, but Honeycomb one-ups Apple. An on-screen button creates a vertical, scrollable array of windows—not icons—displaying each recently used app and a thumbnail of how you last left it. In other words, there’s no way to tell, at a glance, what your apps are doing when you double-click the iPad’s Home button—you just get icons. A single tap of the Honeycomb multitask button shows your active apps and what each is doing. The very idea of multitasking is to save time, and Android bests Apple here by saving multiple taps and showing you all current activity in one glance.

Screens
The primary difference here is the aspect ratio of the screens: the iPad’s 4:3 versus the Xoom’s near widescreen ratio, making the former a better fit for general photo viewing and the latter more ideal for most movie watching. The Xoom’s 10.1-inch screen is ideal for movies that are shot in this very ratio, but both screens adapt to their content well. At maximum brightness, the iPad’s 9.7-inch screen is a bit brighter than the Xoom’s. That said, the Xoom screen offers a higher resolution of 1,280-by-800 (the iPad’s is 1,024-by-768). This is not terribly noticeable when viewing Web sites, but with HD content, the Xoom edges the current iPad—who knows if next week’s update will have a higher-resolution screen. Both displays offer excellent sensitivity and multi-touch.

FaceTime vs. Talk
The current iPad has no camera, but given how hard Apple has pushed FaceTime ads in our, well, faces, it would be a shock if the new iPad doesn’t get outfitted with at least a front-facing camera. Assuming it does, FaceTime now has some stiff competition in Talk, the Honeycomb video chat app.

Talk supports multiple chats at once—you can video chat with one friend and have a text-based chat with another without ending either (though your video does pause while you ignore the video chat buddy to write your other chat partner). Connection, as with FaceTime, takes a few seconds, but the wait is not so annoying that it’s a detractor.

Are they both easy to use? Yes. But Talk gets the edge because it works across more platforms. With FaceTime, you need an Apple product to communicate with another Apple product. Talk works via Google accounts—so you can chat on your Xoom with someone on their computer (yes, even a Mac), provided they have an account as well. Seeing as multiple platforms are invited to this party, along with any Honeycomb devices, Talk is clearly a more versatile option.

Email
If you’re a Gmail addict, the (very) slight edge goes to the Xoom—hey, it’s a Google device. You need a Gmail account in order to use the Xoom, and your account and mail is woven into the fabric of the Honeycomb OS. It uses a dedicated Gmail app, and also has an Email app for other accounts. You can sync the Xoom with Microsoft Exchange to have corporate e-mail—and calendar updates—pushed to your desktop, alongside Gmail notifications.

The iPad is pretty similar in this regard: you can sync multiple e-mail accounts—including corporate accounts—to push e-mail to your desktop, and just like on the Xoom, Gmail conversations are threaded.

Obviously, there’s much more to compare, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves, since of one the devices is still (for a short stretch of days, at least) hypothetical. PCMag will be in San Francisco at the Apple event next week with full iPad 2 coverage—and more to say about how the Xoom stacks up against it. Until then, see the Xoom slideshow below.

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