It would be great if I could see my legs when I look down.
Ok seriously, I would like to see more games like Far Cry 2. I loved being able to follow the story ot just explore a huge open world. I had so much fun playing it on PC.
I'd like games to stop putting walls up. I would have LOVED...
Not everyone lives in the core of a city where there are lots of hot spots. I tether my Milestone when I need to complete a project on word/excel/etc. or to do some small tasks that might require my desktop/netbook.
If I had an unlimited plan, which I don't, I could play games when I'm out in...
Downloads != Users. I guess they're spying on everyone, how else do they know they've got millions of users. :P
Opera Mini is great software! The desktop browser is... ugly. Do they have Opera Mini for desktops?
I'm in the same boat. I have an 8800GT SC and I was thinking about upgrading, but then I got a 2nd card from my Secret Santa for SLI.
I was planning on upgrading if Fermi was worth it... but I'm not too impressed so far. Guess I'll just have to see what the future holds.
Loved Excitebike and Road Rash
There was another NES/SNES game that I played only once that let you have a career, get upgrades and race around the US. But I can't remember what it's called... and there are so many of them like that. I liked that one. haha
The Bigs for Wii. Made me want to kill something. The controls are horrible and the computer is impossible to win against.
http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/wii/home/936450.html
Oh and Eek the Cat for SNES. I hated that game, could never guide (aka kick) the granny through the levels...
I was wanting to watch rented movies, so they aren't always mine to backup.
I'm still curious to see if mapping a Blu-Ray drive would allow me to play a movie on another comp with WinDVD, etc. I'll just have to try it someday when I get a Blu-Ray drive for my computer.
For now I decided to...
You can share an optical drive on almost any version of Windows. On other computers you can then map the optical drive to your computer. It works just as if the drive was on your computer (for most things). This is sometimes done on computer lab setups.
It's also a way of installing programs...