The News Review:
- Final Four nline Gambling Concludes With Tar Heels And Spartans
- The toy that roared: Ars reviews the DSi
- China’s Changyou Launches IP Game
- Micro-Billing Byte by Byte Suits the World of Cellphones
Final Four nline Gambling Concludes With Tar Heels And Spartans
New nline Casinos
That betting is all about to come to an end on Monday night. North Carolina and Michigan State will both try to complete their journey in Detroit and the two teams are hoping that journey ends with a title. For bettors it is much simpler than the players playing the game. With North Carolina being a heavy favorite it seems like a cut and dry choice for bettors. These are usually the type games that do not go exactly as the betting public had planned. The Tar Heels are favored by eight points over a Spartans team that has already bounced some of the highest seeds out of the tournament. Their latest victim Connecticut was one of the number one seeds and gambling favorites to win the championship.
The toy that roared: Ars reviews the DSi
Ars Technica
So don’t worry about the cameras or the music features: the DSi is all about buying your games online. Title Nintendo DSi Manufacturer Nintendo Price $169. 99 Buy it now.
China’s Changyou Launches IP Game
Wall Street Journal
Competition is keen among Chinese companies that develop large-scale online role-playing games where hundreds of thousands of people can log in simultaneously to play from their personal computers. In the past five years about a half-dozen of these companies have launched IPs in the U.
Micro-Billing Byte by Byte Suits the World of Cellphones
New York Times
It is that trailblazer known as the phone company. Consumers are using their mobile phones to download tens of millions of games songs ring tones and video programs. And they shell out money for these items even as they resist paying for similar digital goodies online using their computers. It is a curious equation: pay for stuff on a tiny low-resolution screen while getting some of the very same games and video free on a fancy widescreen monitor. At its annual trade show in Las Vegas last week the phone industry pushed new software stores video players games and content. Their efforts are based on a digital twist on Pavlov: The phone rings and we pay. “There’s been no expectation that anything would be free” said David Chamberlain an analyst with In-Stat a market research firm.
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