triband

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  • What the Golf

    ‘What the Golf’ is coming to the Nintendo Switch on May 21st

    by 
    Marc DeAngelis
    Marc DeAngelis
    05.12.2020

    The goofy non-golf game What the Golf is coming to the Nintendo Switch with extra modes and features on May 21st.

  • Triband

    'What The Golf?' is the perfect game for people who don't care about golf

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    03.22.2018

    Just when you thought we couldn't find any weirder games at GDC 2018, here comes another one. What The Golf?, created by Copenhagen-based developer Triband, is being billed as the perfect anti-golf adventure. That's due to the fact the title defies the sport's strict rules -- like a set number of holes and, um, using round balls -- in favor of silly, sometimes absurd mechanics that make it feel like anything but a game about golf. Instead of swinging at balls, here what you try to drive to the hole can be a house, a rag doll or (because why not) a cute horse.

  • The Linksys EA9500 pierced my apartment's WiFi-proof walls

    by 
    Roberto Baldwin
    Roberto Baldwin
    09.17.2016

    I live in a two-bedroom San Francisco apartment built in 1916. It has a view of the bay and the top of the Golden Gate bridge. There's crown molding, high ceilings and some pretty dope neighbors. It should be perfect. And it is -- if you're cool with plaster walls blocking 90 percent of all WiFi signals.

  • There's no such thing as too many antennas for ASUS' high-end router

    by 
    Mat Smith
    Mat Smith
    06.02.2014

    Six antennas, apparently delivering up to 3,200 Mbps. Those are some impressive credentials, especially from the typically sleepy world of wireless routers. ASUS reckons its new six-pronged WiFi brick is not at all sleepy either: The RT-AC3200 will come with an adaptive Quality of Service feature that allows users to manage their bandwidth and traffic, working on tri-band 802.11ac. Meanwhile, AiRadar will apparently intelligently strengthen and tweak your wireless coverage. ASUS is promising that this will give improved signal stability, range and optimal speeds. If it sounds like something that could need technical support and a lengthy troubleshooting phone call, rest assured, ASUS is promising a 30-second set-up time that's friendly to router rookies. There's no pricing alongside the technical specifications, but we reckon it could well be the kind of router you'd likely need to make the most of Google Fiber and similar high-speed internet connections.

  • Samsung's SGH-P520 gets photographed

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    08.07.2007

    Shortly after learning that Samsung's touchscreen-based SGH-P520 was slightly more than a figment of our imagination, a foreign site has seemingly sat down with oodles of time and snapped more images than you're likely to look at. Still, this oh-so-thin mobile has the sex appeal nailed down solid, so be sure and take a closer look at all the curves awaiting you after the break.[Via Slashphone]