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US PlayStation 2 To Have A Modem & Hard Drive?

rit writes, "It looks like Sony is trying to beat Microsoft to the punch with the Playstation 2 - according to this article at CNet, they have announced plans to release the U.S. Version of the Playstation 2 with a modem and a hard drive. No details on modem speed or hard drive, but we can assume it will be at least up to par or close to what Microsoft plans to offer with the X-Box; giving Sony a one-year head start on Microsoft for gaining a stronger foothold in the gaming market. Now if only they'd ship it with an ethernet card... "

7 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Nah - Develop a Front End. Leave the rest Alone. by detritus. · · Score: 4

    I don't see a reason to ship it with a hard drive and modem. The IEEE 1394, USB and PCMCIA ports should be a clue to anyone (who knows what they are) that it can easily support modems, hard drives, etc...

    Shipping them with hard drives and modems will soon become obsolete. I hope sony takes the direction of making them optional accessories and not turn to a proprietary bus to market sony-only accessories (that's all we would need).

    Personally I think they should leave it alone and work on developing a front-end for the Playstation (hmm - SonyLinux?) to make hardware support and driver detection so the hardware really has no limits to what is plugged into it.

    - Detritus

    "I never really liked computers, but then the server went down on me"

  2. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  3. why care? by Max+von+H. · · Score: 5

    It's not running Linux. Its OS is not open-source. It doesn't use a Transmeta CPU. It doesn't have Ethernet. They don't even talk about it on Userfriendly, and Hubble hasn't spotted one near yet.

    Really, I wonder why any slashdotter would be interrested into it...

    But... I WANT ONE!!!!

    max

    --
    -- It's always darker before it goes pitch black.
  4. Ethernet would make a lot of sense by Menthos · · Score: 4
    Indeed. Why not put in a simple, cheap 10 Mbit/s Ethernet chip and combo connectors in the gaming devices, instead of just a modem? Ethernet chips are really commodity hardware these days - I see absolutely no reason why they don't put it in. It makes connecting much more flexible.

    Ethernet makes sense even for those without a permanent net connection (big gaming party in the house?). Also, most people with cable modems use Ethernet - the connection between the cable "modem" and your computer is often an Ethernet link. Add a cheap hub, and voilà!

    --

    GNU/Linux. The Freshmaker.

  5. Re:Nah - Develop a Front End. Leave the rest Alone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    No, no, no! No offense, but you just don't get it. I used to be a hardcore console gamer several a few years ago. It might seem strange to the tech-heads here, but the way the console game industry works is different than the computer game industry.

    As a console gamer and developer, if the system doesn't come with a harddrive or a modem or whatever peripherial, then they do not exist, period. Sure, Sony themselves could sell an official harddrive addon and an official modem addon, but almost every developer and gamer will act as if they do not exist. Its the all-in-one-shrinkwrapped-box theory of the console game industry.

    They key to the console industry is that you have fixed hardware. So this pretty much rules out most peripherial components. I could name tons of examples with past console systems... but I will let you do your homework on that, if you need.

    Lets all hope that the harddrive and modem for the PSX2 don't mean that console game developers will develop buggy games like most computer game developers.

  6. Playstation 2 & Linux by jelwell · · Score: 4
    Setting a few people straight: Playstation 2 development is already done in linux :) does this imply that it would be easier to port linux to the PSX2?

    Quite possibly - as a matter of fact the PSX 1 development kit uses GCC as it's compiler! doesn't that mean there's already GPL code that targets the PSX. My bet is the PSX2 dev kit will ship with GCC also. I'm a little shocked no one has ported linux to their PSX. Although with a hard drive and a modem, it'll suddenly be useful to be running linux on it. :)

    By the way: Screw hopes for an ethernet card by default - that can be bought seperately and use with the USB port. The important thing is that if the system comes with a default modem installed, more games will take advantage of it; then when you buy your ethernet adapter, there will games for it. If it doesn't come with either then games won't come with networking either. :(

    Now if only Sony could figure out that a default of 2 controllers aren't enough. Not enough games come out with 4 player modes for the PSX because the system only has two ports standard. And a few too many games that say they support the 4player multitap don't work well with the tap!

    Joseph Elwell.

  7. Smells like a rumor by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 5
    This is looking like an incorrect rumor for a couple of reasons:

    Sony has stated in the past that they wouldn't be shipping a modem because it didn't make sense to slap such outdated technology on a machine as cutting edge as the PS2. They're waiting for more people to get DSL or cable modems.

    The PS2 case has already been designed and is in production. Is Sony really going to start over on this now?

    There's no purpose for a hard drive. The Sony Network isn't ready yet. No online games are in development. People are writing games for 32MB RAM and a huge DVD. What is a hard drive going to add to the mix that will justify the significant extra cost? It would be cheaper to just add another 32MB of memory, or to double the VRAM.

    Hard drives are a consumer nightmare: relatively high failure rate, not suited to being kicked around in a console.

    On the other hand, a US release date for the PS2 hasn't been announced yet, so anything is possible.