newVideoPlayer( {"type":"video","player":"http://www.youtube.com/v/4Yp2jeZU9HQ&hl=en&fs=1&fmt=22","customParams":[] ,"width":570,"height":412,"ratio":0.824,"flashData":"","embedName":null,"objectId":null,"noEmbed":false,"source":"youtube"} );
Quake III running on a Motorola Droid was impressive. But Quake III running on the Nexus One – no physical keyboard, a souped up processor – that’s downright heavy metal.
newVideoPlayer( {"type":"video","player":"http://www.youtube.com/v/q9Xaz7ECI4M&hl=en&fs=1&fmt=22","customParams":[] ,"width":570,"height":412,"ratio":0.824,"flashData":"","embedName":null,"objectId":null,"noEmbed":false,"source":"youtube"} ); Ten years ago, Quake III required a PC tower with some gaming cred. Today, all you need is a smartphone running Android 1.6 or later. And it’s even a free download.