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RS3: Racing Simulation 3 is an racing video game developed by Ubi Soft Paris and published by Ubi Soft. It is a sequel to Monaco Grand Prix: Racing Simulation 2. It was released for Microsoft Windows in December 2002. A PlayStation 2 port was released in October of the next year, albeit exclusively in Europe.
The codes were printed on sticky labels to put on the back of the Game Gear cartridge. When entering codes, the player could easily see what to type in rather than looking through the book. In the code input menu for the Game Gear Game Genie, a player typing the word "DEAD" will cause the screen to move up and down, possibly as an Easter egg.
The Reed–Solomon code is actually a family of codes, where every code is characterised by three parameters: an alphabet size , a block length, and a message length, with <. The set of alphabet symbols is interpreted as the finite field F {\displaystyle F} of order q {\displaystyle q} , and thus, q {\displaystyle q} must be a prime power .
The "gearbox" text was produced using Martel's old typewriter because Martel felt that only it had the font with an ideal lower-case "g". [8] Gearbox Software was founded on February 16, 1999, by Randy Pitchford, Brian Martel, Stephen Bahl, Landon Montgomery and Rob Heironimus, five developers formerly of Rebel Boat Rocker.
The Reed–Muller RM(r, m) code of order r and length N = 2 m is the code generated by v 0 and the wedge products of up to r of the v i, 1 ≤ i ≤ m (where by convention a wedge product of fewer than one vector is the identity for the operation).
3 Torque Converter w/ Lockup Electronic 8HP 30 3rd 300 N⋅m (221 lb⋅ft) 2018 – Present Longitudinal: 5.2500 0.6400 8 8.2031 1.3507 1.8330 P & S 4 2 3 Torque Converter w/ Lockup Electronic 8HP 51 3rd 500 N⋅m (369 lb⋅ft) 2018 – Present Longitudinal: 5.2500 0.6400 8 8.2031 1.3507 1.8330 P & S 4 2 3 Torque Converter w/ Lockup Electronic ...
RSC-3: an RS-3 that used 3-axle trucks instead of 2-axle trucks. The middle axle on each truck was unpowered. This variant was designed for service on light track, as the extra axles better spread the weight of the locomotive. [3] RS-3m: an RS-3s whose engines was replaced with the more reliable EMD 567B engine.
On 25 October 2011, Jagex released an anti-bot system [138] code-named the 'ClusterFlutterer', as part of a game update intended to permanently prevent "reflection" bots from working. The release of this was nicknamed the "Bot Nuke", and was estimated to have banned 98% of the accounts that were using bots, eventually resulting in 7.7 million ...