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Everything posted by Gambit
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Hi mate welcome back to the realms of scooby love :) looks pretty good from the profile picture :) I do like the hawkeyes
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Yes mate :)
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That for me would be enough to say he had his chance. But if he can take being knocked off if its by accident and race without slamming everyone. I'll let othe choose I'm easy either way. I watched the replays so see what had gone on. And I watched the clips you had recorded.
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Looking good that mate. Is the bonnet next [emoji6]
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[emoji22] call in sick [emoji6]
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Gave him ten to give him something to build on lol for the last two week's. [emoji1]
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No he's disqualified and will forever be in 16th place on the league table. [emoji3]
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Laps updated for tonight Nordschleife :) Get this week out the way then I'll actively look for other racers for next season try get a few of us on :)
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Much better I'll see if Photoshop will install again shortly I did try but it's lets say non genuine :D
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Nice one :) Yeah thats what I'm guessing just emailed back to try find some more info so it's solid :D Just waiting on a reply.
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Ok this is the reply. I'm impressed I got an email back on a sunday. But I'm none the wiser other than yes passengers over the age of 12 will need their own tickets. I'm guessing people in a car is part of a game set up for club stands then. Hi Peter, The cost for a driver or a passenger is still the same ticket cost. You will need a ticket per person over the aged of 12 years. Every ticket you order for a car club, your entitled to the same amount of car passes. You can not order more car passes than tickets. :) What your club called? Kind Regards, Nicola
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Hi mate not a problem at all. And yes lots for kids to do but not all free :( I think I'll be leaving mine at home but mine are older :) 16 and 14 and youngest is 6. Yes if you pay via the club booking form you will be on the stand with us all. I'll have to have a look see if I have any pictures from Japfest. so you can see what it's like. Kids under 13 are free but I'm sure with club stand pass you get people in for free. I will email and double check this I should have asked when I was on the phone to them :) But this is from their site highlighted below :) Enter your car club here It’s A Knockout Club Competition Car Pull Club Tug O War Bucking Horse Tyre Lift People in a car Modified Live Club IKO 2015 Champions Children’s Entertainment Here at Modified Live we believe children are our future and no visit to the race track is complete without something for your kids to enjoy. Not only do kids 13 and under come for free but there will also be plenty of exciting and noisy action for the kids to enjoy watching and taking part in around the event. As the ‘pits’ are actually open air you and your children will have open access to roam the pits, see the cars and talk to the teams and drivers in person if you wish as well as seeing some exciting on track action from both the Time Attack cars and the awesome Drift car and F1 displays. We have introduced bouncy castles and children’s entertainment throughout the day. Cadwell Park also has a free adventure playground to keep the little ones entertained whilst you grab something to eat!
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I don't think so these companies offer us discount http://uk.subaruownersclub.com/forums/forum/37-subaru-owners-club-company-discounts/ I'm not sure if I emailed them and had no reply. Could always say you're a member on S.O.C sort of drop it in they might offer some :)
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Left it for dust mate didn't see it at all :)
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Oz Racing Formula HLT in Black - 18 inch
Gambit replied to White-Sti-2008's topic in Subaru Parts For Sale
Well it's safe to say it wasn't me who won the lottery last night :( -
Hopefully get a few of us on see if Dogs at work Brog might make it :) be nice to get a club meet going was good last time bombing about :D
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What have you done on your games today?
Gambit replied to Gaulson's topic in Games/Console/Computer Nerd Room
Looks good but I'm still doing dying light but not enjoying it as much as I thought I would just hope it gets better I find it more frustrating than anything, but it doesn't take much. -
Exactly mate I know everyone has different idea on what to do with cars I'd rather appreciate their view and get on with mine even if it's not what I would necessarily do to mine but then I'd do stuff that doesn't go with their taste. But twice on facebook I've tried to offer some sort of help and had it thrown back in my face so I just thought fack it I'll just keep a few of the ok ones or ones that have a purpose to me and won't offer any help they can find us with a google search then I'll direct them to you Savage Oh I can see matt will be using the rant thread later ..... (Pop's Popcorn in the microwave)
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Right just seeing whos up for a bit of Horizon I can do Thursday night :)
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DEBATE: The case for and against Nvidia's new Android console Nvidia has just revealed the latest chapter in its Shield story and it’s caused quite a stir. Its vision, the Shield Console, is of outstanding 3D graphics, seamless cloud game streaming at 1080p and 60fps and 4K video playback all in one, svelte $199 (approx. £130) box. Powered by its insanely powerful Tegra X1 processor and the new Android TV platform, it takes aim at Sony, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and numerous other established names. It’s a bold and tantalizing prospect. Here we look at the arguments for and against the Nvidia Shield being a landmark product in the future of gaming. quality, but the Shield Console is different. Nvidia has demonstrated that it is capable of handling titles like Doom 3: BFG Edition, Resident Evil 5, Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel and – perhaps most impressive of all – the PC-punishing Crysis 3. There's clearly a lot of power under the bonnet here – more so than has ever been on offer to Android developers in the past. This is an opportunity for mobile developers to expand into a new market: the living room. We've been waiting for Apple to make such a move for years, but it’s taken a gaming company like Nvidia to make it happen. It’s an opportunity we hope they'll take seriously. It's not as if the Shield Console is an entirely new concept – we've seen several other similar efforts fall by the wayside in recent years. Ouya was a crowd-funding phenomenon that looked set to disrupt the domestic gaming market, yet it sold poorly and its Tegra 3 chip is now woefully inadequate for playing modern Android titles. That was followed by the equally dismal GameStick and Mad Catz M.O.J.O., neither of which gained any traction. Even Nvidia's previous Shield products have enjoyed a somewhat muted response from gamers – while promising, they've hardly sold in the kind of quantities that will trouble the established gaming companies. No one really seems sure that there's even an audience for this kind of product, even if Nvidia’s name and technology makes this a more serious prospect than those that came before it. Cloud gaming is a wonderful idea in principle and could well represent the future of gaming. Why spend money to upgrade your system every few years when all of the processing can be done ‘in the cloud’? Looking at it from that perspective, the Shield console has the potential to be the only system you ever need – with 1080p, 60fps game streaming on offer, all the unit has to do is beam the action to your TV, with Nvidia's banks of servers doing all the hard graphical work. Add to this a potentially massive pool of games to choose from – all supported by the Netflix-style monthly subscription service – and the Shield Console may well usurp your Xbox One or PS4 overnight. This service is already in testing on the Nvidia Shield Portable and Nvidia Shield Tablet – previous members of the Shield family – but will launch officially alongside the Shield Console this May. To cap it all off, users will be able to purchase new titles like The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt and Batman: Arkham Knight via Grid and receive a Steam code, which they can then redeem on their PC, offering the best of both worlds. One of the key issues is that the vast majority of Android games aren't built with Shield tech in mind. Fifty optimised titles are expected to launch alongside the Shield in May, but we're willing to bet that many of these will merely by existing Android games that have been hastily retrofitted with support for the Shield's. While the company has done well to persuade the likes of id Software and Capcom to support the Shield Console at launch, it remains to be seen if these same companies will continue to pour valuable investment into a system that has a tiny user base when compared to the Xbox One and PS4 – or even the standard Android smartphone and tablet market. The controller that ships with the Shield Console isn't new – it launched alongside the Shield Tablet last year and also works with the Shield Portable when it's in TV mode. Still, an entirely new pad wasn't needed, as the Shield Controller offers the kind of build quality and ergonomics you'd normally expect from Microsoft, Sony or Nintendo. It feels a lot like the Xbox 360 pad – one of the best in the history of gaming – but comes equipped with a superior D-pad and an internal rechargeable battery as standard. It's possible to pair up to four pads with the Shield Console, and the process is as simple as holding down the green Shield button when standing near the system. Games consoles live or die by the quality of their interface, and in this respect Nvidia is well and truly sorted. The Shield Console is based on Nvidia's mobile tech, and that means it will be surpassed within a year. That's just the way the company does things – it's following the pace of the smartphone and tablet industry, where new tech is pushed out on a yearly basis. The Shield Portable used Tegra 4, while the Shield Tablet gas Tegra K1. The Shield console is the first powered byTegra X1, and in 12 month's time we'll no doubt be talking about the next Shield product, which will almost certainly showcase Nvidia's latest processor. Progress is fine and dandy, but with a yearly update cycle the Shield Console won't have time to build an audience. Think about it like this: the Xbox One and PS4 have only just completed their first year on the market and have many, many more ahead of them, but after 12 months the Shield Console will already have been overtaken by its successor. That's a turn-off for both consumers and developers alike – why support a system that is out of date so quickly? The $199 price tag is pretty impressive when you consider what you're getting here – not only is the Shield Console a formidable gaming platform, it also offers the benefits of Android TV and is capable of 4K video playback. Granted, it's not as powerful as the next-gen Xbox One and PS4, but it's smaller and more compact, making it the ideal system for those who aren't quite ready to stump up the cash for Sony and Microsoft's systems. Moreover, in future, Nvidia Grid could match next-gen consoles for fidelity, and the low entry price makes regular upgrades more palatable. The Grid platform is also something we've seen before, albeit in a slightly less impressive form. OnLive launched back in 2010 and while it's still clinging on for dear life, the service's subscriber base is small and performance is blighted by problems with lag and image quality. Sony has its own cloud streaming service too – powered by one-time OnLive rival Gaikai – so Nvidia certainly doesn't have this section of the market all to itself. But at the moment the average home broadband connection is simply too slow to make it a viable reality. We've been testing Grid on our Shield Tablet on a typical 20Mb home connection and while it's easily as good – if not better – than OnLive, there are still enough irksome issues to make it feel like a second-class experience when compared to running the game on a proper console or PC. Set top boxes like Amazon Fire TV and Apple TV prove there's a growing demand for "smart" devices on our televisions – many TV sets even come with such functionality built in. The fact it will stream 4K video is hugely significant as there are few rivals that can just now. With Amazon, Apple and Google fighting it out to be the streaming platform of choice, and Netflix along for the ride, the Shield Console could be the device that puts Android TV at the forefront. Better still, Nvidia’s offering has something no rival Android TV box can match – a serious gaming platform supported by a serious name in gaming. Being able to stream amazing new games to your TV will be brilliant, and we like the idea of giving people a free Steam code with Grid purchases so they can enjoy it on their PC. But therein lies a problem – why would you play a game on your TV if you have a gaming PC in the house? And if you're the kind of person who is genuinely excited about games like The Witcher 3 and Batman: Arkham Knight, there's a pretty good chance you've already bought a dedicated games console in order to play them – why would you bother with the Shield Console? The Shield console needs to offer an experience that’s as good, or superior, to playing on PC or console, and then it needs software that attracts people to using it. Perhaps Nvidia will land on the right formula in time, but so could any one of Sony, Microsoft, Valve and plenty of others. However it fares, Nvidia should be applauded for thinking differently.
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Uncharted 4, The Last Of Us just to name the 2 I want to play at the minute. and about 200 quid 2nd hand I don't mind that. And I've never played heist either so noob also :D It's going to be like the italian job this I see :D
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I've only got the burns s5 wrc99 but want the 2001 bug rally car he won in and same for mcrae winning rally car. Then a solberg hawkeye then I'll be happy with my subaru collection [emoji3]
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Hi mate welcome to the club. As stants said feel free to get stuck in on the forum all friendly here. Well most of the time haha [emoji1]
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Nice yeah thats what I meant sorry the window's and that stuff [emoji6]
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Sheffield Monthly Meet PICTURES are up
Gambit replied to Ash007ks's topic in Yorkshire & The Humber Regional Meets
Well all being well he will. But if he doesn't have to let me know so I can pass it on to them so they don't just turn up lol