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Farsight Studios
The Pinball Arcade / Farsight Studios
Platform Specific
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NVidia Shield Tablet Review
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<blockquote data-quote="jaredmorgs" data-source="post: 165105" data-attributes="member: 459"><p>Some may know that I imported to Australia a NVidia Shield Tablet. This marks the second venture into Android Hardware that NVidia has undertaken, and I have to say it's pretty amazing.</p><p></p><p><strong>Processor</strong> Tegra K1 (basically a glorified PC GPU shoehorned into a tablet form factor)</p><p></p><p><strong>Screen</strong> True 1080p 8" screen. For me, 8" is the new 7".</p><p></p><p><strong>RAM</strong> 2GB</p><p></p><p><strong>SSD size</strong> 16GB. This was the only option when first released. The tablet has a SDCARD slot that takes up to 128GB cards though. You can also used the baked-in app2sd solution to move large data files off the SSD and onto the SDCARD.</p><p></p><p><strong>UNFORTUNATELY NOT WITH TPA BECAUSE AFTER TWO YEARS THE DEVELOPERS HAVE NOT YET FLICKED THE SWITCH TO LET US MOVE THE 700MB OF TABLE FILES EXTERNAL TO THE APP, GRRRRR</strong></p><p></p><p>aaaanyway</p><p></p><p>The tablet's primary features are aimed squarely at the Tablet Gamer. There is a dedicated Shield Controller available with just as many inputs as a PS3 controller. Adding to that, the controller has a built-in track pad on the controller itself which is great for those games that require touch control. It also has a built-in headset jack so you don't need to run a long lead from the tablet to your headphones. And the biggest thing is that the controller uses Wi-Fi Direct, which offers half the signal latency of Bluetooth.</p><p></p><p>You can set the Tablet into Console mode. Connect the Tablet to your HDMI Monitor with a hardware cable and switch this mode on to make the tablet into a fully fledged Android gaming console. All controls are built into the controller for navigation. You never need to leave your seat. It also has native Chromecast/Miracast support built in due to the KitKat 4.4.2 ROM.</p><p></p><p>The tablet has a built-in stylus as well. I originally wasn't that concerned with this feature, but I have to say it is an absolute gaming plus when playing games like Sky Force 2014. Not having my huge pudgy digit blocking the view of the ship has made a huge difference to my scores on this game.</p><p></p><p>ROM updates are managed directly by NVidia, and I have to say they are really, really frequent. The launch of the device saw some serious issues with Wi-Fi performance, however about a month after the tablet went to market, I have installed an official fix to the issue. Very timely updates. </p><p></p><p>Speaking of the ROM, it also has native recording *with* mic audio. Twitch streaming direct from the device (should you have a decent upload speed, which I don't in Australia). Immersive Mode built into the Settings blind. And if you like annotating pictures (like we do when beta testing), removing the styus activates a lasso menu with annotation tools built in.</p><p></p><p>It is a very impressive device, at a very impressive price.</p><p></p><p>And, of course, it plays TPA very well. Doesn't even sweat when you activate 4xMSAA. I even turned on GPU compositing for everything and it didn't even blink.</p><p></p><p>I would love to try a build of TPA using PC assets on this device. I think that it would be able to cope easily with running the build. It's rumored that the Nexus 9 will be sporting a Tegra K1 64-bit processor (Shield runs 32-bit), so the new generation of devices might start to close the gap between PC and Mobile.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jaredmorgs, post: 165105, member: 459"] Some may know that I imported to Australia a NVidia Shield Tablet. This marks the second venture into Android Hardware that NVidia has undertaken, and I have to say it's pretty amazing. [b]Processor[/b] Tegra K1 (basically a glorified PC GPU shoehorned into a tablet form factor) [b]Screen[/b] True 1080p 8" screen. For me, 8" is the new 7". [b]RAM[/b] 2GB [b]SSD size[/b] 16GB. This was the only option when first released. The tablet has a SDCARD slot that takes up to 128GB cards though. You can also used the baked-in app2sd solution to move large data files off the SSD and onto the SDCARD. [b]UNFORTUNATELY NOT WITH TPA BECAUSE AFTER TWO YEARS THE DEVELOPERS HAVE NOT YET FLICKED THE SWITCH TO LET US MOVE THE 700MB OF TABLE FILES EXTERNAL TO THE APP, GRRRRR[/b] aaaanyway The tablet's primary features are aimed squarely at the Tablet Gamer. There is a dedicated Shield Controller available with just as many inputs as a PS3 controller. Adding to that, the controller has a built-in track pad on the controller itself which is great for those games that require touch control. It also has a built-in headset jack so you don't need to run a long lead from the tablet to your headphones. And the biggest thing is that the controller uses Wi-Fi Direct, which offers half the signal latency of Bluetooth. You can set the Tablet into Console mode. Connect the Tablet to your HDMI Monitor with a hardware cable and switch this mode on to make the tablet into a fully fledged Android gaming console. All controls are built into the controller for navigation. You never need to leave your seat. It also has native Chromecast/Miracast support built in due to the KitKat 4.4.2 ROM. The tablet has a built-in stylus as well. I originally wasn't that concerned with this feature, but I have to say it is an absolute gaming plus when playing games like Sky Force 2014. Not having my huge pudgy digit blocking the view of the ship has made a huge difference to my scores on this game. ROM updates are managed directly by NVidia, and I have to say they are really, really frequent. The launch of the device saw some serious issues with Wi-Fi performance, however about a month after the tablet went to market, I have installed an official fix to the issue. Very timely updates. Speaking of the ROM, it also has native recording *with* mic audio. Twitch streaming direct from the device (should you have a decent upload speed, which I don't in Australia). Immersive Mode built into the Settings blind. And if you like annotating pictures (like we do when beta testing), removing the styus activates a lasso menu with annotation tools built in. It is a very impressive device, at a very impressive price. And, of course, it plays TPA very well. Doesn't even sweat when you activate 4xMSAA. I even turned on GPU compositing for everything and it didn't even blink. I would love to try a build of TPA using PC assets on this device. I think that it would be able to cope easily with running the build. It's rumored that the Nexus 9 will be sporting a Tegra K1 64-bit processor (Shield runs 32-bit), so the new generation of devices might start to close the gap between PC and Mobile. [/QUOTE]
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