Skip to main content

Nintendo 3DS to Ship in Fall?

British website CVG is reporting that the Nintendo DS’s replacement, the “3DS” will be shipping six months earlier than expected.

Last month Nintendo announced its intention to release a 3D model of its uber-successful handheld DS gaming system. The unit would not require glasses, and it would be compatible with existing DS games. The announcement also claimed that the 3DS would release in March of 2011, although it was not clear if it would be a Japanese only release. More was expected to be revealed at E3 in June.

We likely won’t have confirmation of the release date until E3, but if it is true, it means that Nintendo is confident in the appeal of its 3D games (and has since gotten over the horror that was VirtualBoy). Pushing it up to fall will not only position it for the holiday shopping season, it could be a move to compete with Microsoft’s Natal, which is also scheduled for a fall release.  It is also unknown if the suggested October release date will be Japanese only.  In the past, North American and European dates typically are within a few weeks of each other at most, while Japanese release can be as much as six months before, which could explain the multiple dates.

We won’t know anything for sure until E3, but with the release of the release of the Natal, the Sony Move, several big title games, and now possibly a 3D Nintendo DS, it could be a big year for the video game industry.

Ryan Fleming
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ryan Fleming is the Gaming and Cinema Editor for Digital Trends. He joined the DT staff in 2009 after spending time covering…
Father’s Day Gift Idea: These cheap 3D printers are on sale for less than $300
best 3d printer deals featured image

3D printing has become a lot more accessible these days than it had been in the past. Back then, you'd have to shell out as much as $1,000 for one. Today, however, there are plenty of budget 3D printers out that cost less than $300, such as the Monoprice Mini Delta, Longer Orange 10, and Comgrow Creality Ender 3. These are fantastic gifts for dad and if you order today they'll surely arrive before Father's Day.
Monoprice Mini Delta
-- $160, was $176

The incredible thing about the Monoprice Delta Mini, aside from the fact that it's one of the cheapest 3D printers on the market, is that it boasts a range of advanced features you typically won't find in a $160 3D printer. It has a sturdy, all-metal frame, a heated build plate that helps prevent warping, automatic bed leveling functionality, a maximum resolution of 50 microns, a full-color LCD screen, Wi-Fi connectivity, and compatibility with a wide range of materials. For something that costs less than a FitBit, all that stuff baked-in is pretty impressive. That's not to say the Monoprice Mini Delta is all that great. For starters, it's called Mini because its printing area is only 110 millimeters in diameter (4.3 inches), and 120 millimeters tall (4.7 inches), which definitely puts a limit on what objects you can print.

Read more
The 50-year old Silicon Valley lab that practically invented modern computing
50 years xerox parc alan kay

If I was a betting man, I’d wager that you’re reading this article from home. Why? Because, in the age of COVID-19, home is where just about everyone is these days. The fact that you’re reading this article in the way that you are, however, owes more than a passing debt to a Silicon Valley research laboratory called Xerox PARC, an abbreviation for Palo Alto Research Center.

Turning 50 years old this year, PARC changed the way that we use computers on a profound level. Far outstripping its remit as the research and development wing over the Xerox Corporation, it was to computing what Neils Bohr's institute at Copenhagen was for quantum physics in the 1920s or Motown Records was for soul music in the 1960s.

Read more
3D printing lets hospitals make ventilator substitutes with common equipment
PEEP mask 1

Materialise 3D Prints Non-Invasive PEEP Masks to Alleviate Ventilator Shortage

Many hospitals around the world currently have an alarming shortage of mechanical ventilators, which they can use to treat COVID-19 patients. Responding to this crisis, Belgian 3D printing company Materialise has developed a 3D-printable device that transforms standard equipment available in the majority of hospitals into a mask that can help coronavirus patients get the oxygen they desperately need into their lungs. The company’s smart solution promises to create high positive pressure in patients’ lungs without the use of a traditional ventilator.

Read more