Morning Discussion
by Alice O'Connor, Jan 13, 2010 5:00am PSTA fine recent post on the ever-wonderful BLDGBLOG discusses freeform movement through internal urban spaces both in reality and the movie Die Hard. If you've ever loved--or loathed--crawling through vents, blasting through walls and seeking alternate routes, you might find the perspective interesting. Do be warned that it'll probably make you think about Deus Ex, which invariably leads to playing Deus Ex again.
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In case you missed it, watch the Xbox One recap here
Xbox One doesn't require always-on connection, but mandatory installs tied to accounts
Call of Duty: Ghosts preview: rebooting a franchise
Call of Duty: Ghosts DLC exclusive to Xbox One first



Having owned multiple LCD screens, and a 37 inch LCD TV.. I have to say that this (and probably all other) plasma's have vastly superior image quality.
The colors really "pop" and the black levels are so much better than I could have even imagined. Jesus. Right after setting it up ejectorpod, my sister, and my sister's deadbeat bf (search my post history) all watched Star Trek (2009) on blu-ray. It looked fucking amazing.
My only complaint is that I could see some image retention after watching the movie letter boxed. After I noticed it I ran a break-in DVD all night.
Anyway, wow. Just fantastic.
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Depending on what you have on the screen you'll be able to see temporary IR even after the TV is well broken in. It's always just temporary though and is typically only visible in certain circumstances. Like if you put up a high contrast pattern for a few minutes then send it an all-black screen, you'll see sort of an afterglow left behind where the background black level of the pixels is slightly brighter in areas that were lit.
I ran about 120 hours of break-in on mine before using it like normal. It was a mix of both break-in patterns and normal TV all zoomed in to get rid of channel logos. I don't think it should be necessary for IR prevention, but it's recommended by AVSforum guys and the like to set up the TV for calibration.
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