The Xbox 360 Elite has a USA retail Price of $299.99 and the 250GB bundles are $100 more. The PS3 120 GB model has a USA retail price of $299.99 and the 250 GB model is $50 more. Both models cost the same price although you are a little more likely to find the Xbox 360 Elite at a reduced price in MAY 2010. There is an excellent video comparison that is under related links.
no there is not a gm mode sorry
IMHO Xbox 360 cos wii's are just boring.
you would need to take a xbox and a xbox 360 apart so you can put key parts of the xbox 360 into the xbox but i wouldn't recommend doing it tho cos it would mean every time you turn it on you would have to overwrite 100s of codes but if you do, do it the graphics would be very bad :)
Cos(360 - X) = Trig. Identity Cos(360)Cos(x) + Sin(360)Sin(x) => 1CosX + 0Sinx => CosX + o => CosX
yes, but only a few and a lot you need a download for. ex:(can play with basic download) Star wars: republic commando ex:(can play after 2nd download) superman returns ex: (can play after 3rd download) godzilla melee: destroy all monsters
The cos of 2pi is 360 degrees which is 1.
Cos 295 fall s in the 4th quadrant where cosine is positive cos 295 = cos (360-295) = cos 65 = 0.4226
1
You cannot prove it because it is not true! cos(0) = 1 cos(2*pi) = 1 cos(4*pi) = 1 ... cos(2*k*pi) = 1 for all integers k or, if you still work in degrees, cos(0) = 1 cos(360) = 1 cos(720) = 1 ... cos(k*360) = 1 for all integers k
The expression ( y \cos(\theta) ) will have its maximum value when ( \cos(\theta) ) reaches its maximum, which is 1. Since ( \theta ) is constant at 720 degrees, we can calculate ( \cos(720^\circ) ). The angle 720 degrees is equivalent to 0 degrees (since ( 720^\circ - 360^\circ = 360^\circ ), and ( 360^\circ - 360^\circ = 0^\circ )), thus ( \cos(720^\circ) = 1 ). Therefore, the maximum value of ( y \cos(θ) ) is simply ( y ) when ( \theta = 720 ) degrees.
510 ~ (510-360) ~ 150 Cos 510 = Cos 150 = - Cos 30 = - ( radical 3 ) / 2
No. Cos squared x is not the same as cos x squared. Cos squared x means cos (x) times cos (x) Cos x squared means cos (x squared)