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  • KozmoNaut
  • Member Since May 15th, 2007
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Definitely the scene where the sky is blackened with arrows. The spartans duck down behind their shields and one of them just starts laughing as the arrows are pummeling them.

Spartan 1: You just had to say it, didn't you?
Spartan 2: What?
Spartan 1: "Then we'll fight in the shade!"

It just sums up their attitude towards battle perfectly.
The wheel is both freewheeling and notchy, depending on how you configure it. Theres a tiny motor inside which moves the notches. By default in windows, you switch between the two modes by clicking the wheel.

This is like the MX Revolution, and not like the old VX where you had to move a lever on the bottom of the mouse
That would be IR in conjunction with accelerometers for the pointing and motion sensing abilities.

Don't forget the speaker, the built-in Mii storage, the expansion port and of course the rumble.

I use regular alkaline AA's in my wiimotes, and the usually last for a bit more than 3 weeks, with daily usage.
@Z

I'm very well satisfied with my Fuji F40. I've had it for 1½ weeks now, and I've taken more than 600 pictures with it so far. The only ones that have turned out blurry have resulted from me shaking and definitely not from anything the camera did.

Buying a Powershot S5 (which does look like a damn nice camera) would set me back over $150 more than what my F40 cost. Plus, the F40 is small enough for me to take it along with me where ever I go. Missing a great photo because your camera is too chunky and you left it at home really sucks.
You really should take the time to check out some of the newer stuff... Their speakers really are damn good. The TVs not so much, but I really dig the speakers.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I commonly need to boot a system from an external disc and take a snapshot of the host system. I also then need to burn a copy of the image to a DVD. While I can do it with two separate external devices, and two power supplies, and two I/O cables, it'd be nice to find a small dual-drive enclosure. It would need to have USB, eSATA, and FireWire. Either slim-line or half-height bay for the optical burner would be fine, and space for either a 2.5- or 3.5-inch hard disc. Any ideas?"
 

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