Bazsites.com Beyond The Law The Third Wave
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On the Web
- GameSpy - Review by Bernard Dy. Score 1/5. "It's primitive and feeble."
- Game Industry News - Reviewed by John Breeden, score: 4-1/2 out of 5.
- Gaming Nexus - Review by Tyler Sager. Score 4.5/10. "Poor AI, extremely clunky interface, lack of character upgradeability or customizability, and lackluster presentation all combine to make a truly disappointing game, even for the bargain price."
Wikipedia Articles
- Hong Kong Second Wave - Hong Kong Second Wave is a term used by film critics to describe a group of Hong Kong film directors in late 1980s to 1990s. The most notable directors belong to Hong Kong Second Wave includes Wong Kar Wai, Fruit Chan, Stanley Kwan, Clara Law, Peter Chan and Evans Chan.
- Samarobryn - Samarobryn was a word in prophetic writing conceived by Nostradamus and quoted by Nostradamus as, "a very great famine caused by a pestilent wave through long rain the length of the Arctic pole. In Samarobryn, one hundred leagues from the hemisphere; they will live without law, exempt from politics.
- Optical theorem - In physics, the optical theorem is a very general law of wave scattering theory, which relates the forward scattering amplitude to the total cross section of the scatterer. It is usually written in the form
- Haas effect - The Haas effect is a psychoacoustic effect related to a group of auditory phenomena known as the Precedence Effect or law of the first wave front. These effects, in conjunction with sensory reaction(s) to other physical differences (such as phase differences) between perceived sounds, are responsible for the ability of listeners with two ears to accurately localize sounds coming from around them.
- Specular reflection - Specular reflection is the perfect, mirror-like reflection of light (or sometimes other kinds of wave) from a surface, in which light from a single incoming direction (a ray) is reflected into a single outgoing direction. Such behavior is described by the law of reflection, which states that the direction of incoming light (the incident ray), and the direction of outgoing light reflected (the reflected ray) make the same angle with respect to the surface normal, thus the angle of incidence equals the angle of reflection; this is commonly stated ...