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Memory Deal Bolsters Xbox 2 HD Removal Rumors

friedknut writes "According to a CNET News article: 'Flash memory maker M-Systems announced on Wednesday that it has signed a contract to provide storage products for future versions of the Xbox, bolstering speculation that Microsoft may ditch the game console's hard drive', since the flash-based memory devices will 'be of significantly higher capacity than the 8MB Xbox memory units Microsoft currently sells to save game and user data.' But of course, Microsoft representatives declined to comment on the company's plan for next-generation Xbox hardware."

5 of 276 comments (clear)

  1. This will change nothing by RoundTop-VJAS · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The XBox 2 will still have a hard drive in it. The reason for this is that one of the reasons that the xbox has been a success is the ability to rip your music onto it and play it in your favorite games.

    This feature demands a hard drive as flash memory, while getting cheaper, does not have the amount of memory avaliable for 100+ songs for as cheap as a hard drive.

    That said, I think we will see larger memory cards as saves get bigger, also I hope to see them drop in price.

    Above all else, remember that no console has removed major hardware functionality yet.
    NES->SNES->N64->GC was all upgrades, each having more features than before
    GB->GBP->GBC->GBA->GBA-SP Same deal
    PS1->PS2
    Dreamcast-> damn you for going under. We loved you.

    I look forward to the xbox 2, and while I may not be a person to preorder it, or even get it within 6 months of release, it is on my list of things to get.

    --
    RoundTop

  2. Some benefits by Bega · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems like a good idea to me. Xbox having a hard drive, was a good concept, altough it had its pros and cons. The biggest con of it is the need to buy an external 8MB memory card if you would've wanted to move your saves to your friend's console (which made me wonder why not over ethernet..?). And on top of that, most games don't support the memory cards at all. And no, the music ripping feature wasn't really that great - not too many games supported the feature anyway.
    Flash is probably a better (and perhaps more secure?) format for use, if they go on like Nintendo and invent their own formats on existing 'hardware' (Cube discs). I hope that the write times aren't the same as with console memory cards nowadays if you need to store big amounts of data.

    --

    THIS IS THE INTERNET. PLEASE PICK UP YOUR SERIOUS BUSINESS SUIT AT THE FRONT COUNTER.
  3. The hard drive will stay by Openstandards.net · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMOLRPG) demand hard drive space, so the HD will stay. Sony PS/2 tried it without the hard drive for EverQuest Online (Frontiers), and realized it was a problem because they couldn't significantly upgrade the clients with the self imposed 3M limit. Thus, FXII requires a USB hard drive in order to play. Those that play the games on PCs know that patches can include a lot of changes, which can require a significant download to upgrade the clients. Plus, the clients effectively cache maps and other things, creating large files to permit efficient game play. The hard drive will stay.

  4. Re:Wow. by -brazil- · · Score: 5, Insightful
    and without having to spend ~$40 or more on a hard disk for each console

    ...and instead having to spend rather more thant that on "a few hundred megs" of flash memory, the console will become more expensive and slower, while of the advantages you mention only the failure rate seems significant to me.

    --

    The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer.
    --Henry Kissinger

  5. Re:Wow. by h0tblack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    With the original Xbox Microsoft ended up with an extremely open and hackable console mainly because of their single-minded drive to get into the console market. It was a sensible decision, use hardware and software that you'r already familiar with, throw a load of cash at it, get a good market share.
    We're now coming upto stage2 of the plan. Now microsoft have proved themselves as a serious player in the console market and gained some experience, they can look forward to the future. They're creating something that will be more of a traditional closed-architecture console in many ways and far far less of a pc-in-a-box. They'll have more control over the platform, less hackability and although through the original Xbox they've got a lot of users and developers on-side, they may have to prove themselves over again.