Definitivamente Sony está dispuesto a apostar todo por las nuevas tecnologías 3D. En la conferencia de la E3 de este año no sólo gran parte de la presentación es en 3D sino que han prometido varios combos prometedores que soportarán esta tecnología.

Primero, el paquete completo de God Of War Origins 3D donde versionarán al 3D los títulos de esta franquicia. También saldrán con esta tecnología los dos juegos de Team ICO, o sea Shadow of the Colossus y el propio ICO.
Pero eso no es todo también mostraron un nuevo sistema para jugar en multijugador en una sola pantalla pero sin pantalla dividida. ¿Como es eso? bueno, utilizando la misma técnica que usan los lentes al oscurecer uno u otro lado para generar la sensación 3D pero esta vez sincronizando la pantalla para que cada jugador vea sólo su parte del juego. Definitivamente es revolucionario.

Esta tecnología se ofrecerá en un paquete que incluirá un monitor 3D de 24 pulgadas con cable HDMI de 2 metros incluido, un juego de anteojos activos 3D y una copia de Resistance 3 todo por 500 dólares. Si sólo queremos los anteojos por separado los abonaremos 70 dólares y estarán diseñados para trabajar con monitores 3D de otros modelos.






God Of War Origins 3D lo mejor de la conferencia de sony! y el precio del psvita muy bueno 250 dolares la que solo es wifi y 300 la 3g!! a intendo se la ponen dificil!
ME GUSTA ESE PAQUETE, PERO YA TENGO UN PS3, ADEMAS FALTA SABER EL PRECIO QUE LE VAN A PONER POR ACA.
If your atriecls are always this helpful, I'll be back.
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ES VERDAD SERIA BUENO TENER LA PANTALLA DEL PAQUETE DE RESIDENCE Y JUGAR LOS GOOD OF WAR DE PSP Y EL PRECIO DEL PSVITA PARECE BUENO PERO AMI ME FALTA SOLO SEBER LA FICHA TECNICA PERO ME JUSTA.
Si el paquete me sale en $499 de lujo pero seguramente en México mínimo $10000.
Me huele a producto rápidamente descontinuado por pocas ventas.
Never would have thunk I would find this so inidspenlsabe.
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Welcome back, Sarah!!Sounds like what you need most is not A THING but A THINKING. (Err did I just write that? Well bear with while I explain. I've lneared a LOT about this topic the hard way, with my chronic until-last-week-undiagnosed illness. Maybe what I've lneared can help you I don't cave under pressure not exactly, anyway. What I do is rebel. The moment I tell myself I have to do something, well you can be sure it won't get done. But that's something that I can change, my way of thinking. First, I quit doing client work. Clients were beyond my control as they should be. They created external requirements that were really requirements, and not on my time table either, and I almost never felt good doing work for clients that's my personal hangup, though, so perhaps it's only useful to you as a metaphor. (Which obligations make you feel yanked around?)Second, I stopped telling myself I have to Whenever I catch myself saying, I've gotta, I need to, I have to, I ought to, I stop and remind myself that I don't actually HAVE to do anything. It's all optional. That's a choice I can make. There may be consequences but if I don't, say, do a new Freckle screencast, how bad could it be? If I am a bit late with customer support emails because I feel so bad I can't look at the screen how much will it really hurt me? (I don't like skipping out on email but sometimes I just can't handle it.)Turns out that there's a lot you can skip, or delay, without anything disastrous going wrong. So, Thirdly, I always ask myself, What's the worst that could REALLY happen? and it's never too terrible, so then I relax, and I can do it (when I am able to) without using guilt to pressure myself. I think those of us who tend to think we have to do everything (or do everything right, or do everything right on time) suffer from a nameless dread. I HAVE TO DO IT. IT HAS TO BE DONE. OR OR OR or what? Well, it sounds morbid, but imagining the worst possible outcome is pretty cathartic. You have to have a pretty good imagination to come to the conclusion that not answering your customer's email today will end up with you living on the street, making your children perform tricks for their supper. So naming the nameless dread makes it clear that it's really unlikely, and therefore much less scary. Lastly, I've stripped what I do down to the bare bones. Some days I feel fine, other days I can barely get out of bed. This is a tricky situation when you're used to being the engine that makes your business go. Who's doing the marketing?! Who's dreaming up new features?! Who's planning the next huge thing?! Well, right now nobody. Case in point: I spent months trying to work on the visual designs for our next software product, Charm, and I got almost nowhere. All the stress and worry and anxiety and telling myself I can do it… they didn't do jack shit. In the end, I still have only a handful of designs worth a damn. My brain is too sick & tired to do its best, so I've started to listen to it. Charm is not on hold, but the great design is. Thanks to my husband, it'll still launch soon-ish, but the user experience won't be anywhere near as great as it could have been. But what's the worst that could happen? People see it, hate me, and vow to hunt me down? Doubt it.So in short, I:1. Changed my work / environment so I didn't feel yanked around, so I did feel in control2. Stopped giving my willful side a reason to rebel, and got real about what I had to do 3. Explored the nameless dread! Turns out it doesn't like it when you open the closet door and shine a light on it.4. Listened to my body/feelings and begun to admit to myself that I can only do what I can do, and no more by definition And somewhere in there I've actually told people when I felt bad and couldn't do stuff, and started saying no to things that I would have said yes to before. (Which is a form of denial, ha.) And canceling when I had to cancel for my own sanity/health. Turns out, when you're honest with people about your limits, they're friendly and supportive. Whoddathunk.Woo, that was a lot. Hope there's something in this giant monologue that's helpful to you Hugs, Amy