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Feature: Top 10 PC Gaming Related Failures Of The Decade (2000-2009)


While there have been lots of progress in ventures related to PC gaming in the past decade, there have also been lots of products, events and services that didn't quite turn out as planned. From computer operating systems that were buggy to plans to improve online services to launching a new consumer gaming event, we have seen lots of efforts that were less than successful.

Big Download has picked 10 such efforts related to PC gaming that either failed completely or morphed into something else entirely. These failures should always serve as a reminder that even the smartest of people and the biggest of companies can still have their issues.

Click on the image above to continue reading Top 10 PC Gaming Related Failures of the Decade (2000-2009)

New PC graphics uses ray tracing for (possible) game graphics improvements


It's been a while since a PC graphics company has made a big challenge to the big Three (Intel, Nvidia, ATI) in terms of supporting games. The last such company was 3dfx who championed the 3D acceleration movement in the late 1990s but couldn't keep up the pace and was sold to Nvidia.

Today a new company called Caustic Graphics has officially announced its presence with claims that their PC graphics product will be able to out perform current solutions by up to 20 times. It also claims that their second-generation product, due out in early 2010, will have 200 times (and that's not a typo) the performance of current solutions. Caustic Graphics will base their graphics product on raytracing, a graphics technique that allows for highly realistic looking 3D graphics. Raytracing has also proven to have issues with performance in the past but Caustic claims their technology "enables highly parallel CPUs and GPUs to massively-accelerate raytracing, putting it on par with rasterization and resulting in cinema-quality 3D delivered interactively on low-cost PCs."

The San Fransisco-based Caustic plans to reveal more info about their first product in April 2009. At the moment they are targeting high end computing needs but we suspect that PC gaming is also in their plans.
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