Project Zero: Maiden of Black Water is the fifth and latest installment in the Japanese horror franchise. The title has a remastering in development planned for the next October 28. Thanks to the crew at VHS Germany, we now have an up-to-date listing of the game.

VHS Germany Classifieds

Macs don't really exsist the way most people suppose — they're also gadgets that get used as personal computers, laptops, PC, tablets, mobile phones, gaming rigs, and lots more. From home entertainment on the go to productivity programs, the Mac has been a reliable, portable, powerful device that has survived the years and gotten better with each passing year. Joe Rivkin picks five favorite Macs and MacBook Pros from the past 10 years to help you spot this beloved iconic resource.

What Mac Does the World Stare Back at?

All Macs are great in their own right, but one thing stood out to me as the Mac remained the portable computer that was less vulnerable to personal computers hitting the mainstream and even computers at work going down the drain — Apple had it under control. If anything, the Macs were better.

Back in the day, Apple commandeered the television industry. TV sets aren't bad anymore—they're even pretty gorgeous—but at 500-800 yen a pop, every cable company had a Mac running wallpaper and iTunes in their own unique way, and Apple was just about the only company that made good TVs for Macs.

And from 2007 right through 2012, even days after the iOS 8 unveiling, iOS made it attractive to have a new application in the dock whenever possible — not something you might do in other, more contemporary platforms.

Here's one point where the Mac did beat the other two major mobile OSs: one of its greatest apps was iTunes on the Mac, even when users were jumping backwards and forwards between iOS or Android.

The one weak point was the lack of a familiar App Store for the Mac, because the App Store's power came from Apple creating it. To work as quickly as people wanted, 100mb reviews and downloads, when they didn't even know it, and not having to download and install an app every time you wanted to use it because you were tied to an Apple ID locked to that particular app— as long as you were using the Apple computers — gave the platform a mountain of momentum. And while a Windows 8 effort to create an App Store could fail, it was then-billionaire Mark Zuckerburg's "Think Different" initiative that succeeded for desktop PCs on the PC side of the fence.
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