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Ballmer - Xbox 'Can Take Sony' In Next Generation

An anonymous reader writes "According to GameSpot, a Q&A with Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has him saying that, although the company's Xbox game console isn't making money (or bleeding them dry), the pain has been worth it. 'We have gone from nowhere to a significant player,' he said, adding: 'I am betting we can take Sony in the next generation.' Guess things are set to get even more interesting with the forthcoming next-gen console launches."

676 comments

  1. Sad but (maybe) true by nzgeek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sadly, I'm guessing that Ballmer's crass remark may end up being true if Sony take too long to release the PS3. At the very least Microsoft will make big inroads in western markets, and stand to do well in Asia if (a) the console is much sexier than the current version, and (b) they managed to sign some big Asian games studios. Admittedly neither of these is very likely.

    I have no problem if Microsoft become a bigger player in the console market. The original XBox definitely raised the standards of what we could expect from console performance, and without XBox there would be no one to keep Sony honest*. What I don't want to see is Microsoft pulling a Windows on the console market. That would be very bad for all involved, and would just give Ballmer the meathead more to crow about.

    *Yes yes yes. Gamecube, Dreamcast, Phantom, blah blah. Anyone honestly think they could keep Sony honest?

    1. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by nahog78 · · Score: 0

      As far as I know, Sony is showing off a working model of the PS3 at next years E3.

      http://gamesdomain.yahoo.com/article/30182

      http://money.cnn.com/2004/07/12/news/international /sony_playstation.reut/

      A working model isn't expected until 2006 however. Microsoft havent released similar plans involving the xbox2 for next years E3. So overall, based on E3's working models I'd expect it to be closer than you claim.

    2. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Slashdot+Insider · · Score: 3, Insightful
      without XBox there would be no one to keep Sony honest*
      *Yes yes yes. Gamecube, Dreamcast, Phantom, blah blah. Anyone honestly think they could keep Sony honest?
      It's always somebody elses job isn't it? Somebody else better keep Sony honest because I don't want to have to shoulder that burden! I don't want to have to make the sacrifice. Somebody else will do it. Ever thought about your own actions? Why not take it upon yourself? Don't buy a PS2. Buy a Gamecube, Xbox, N-Gage, GBA, or (insert console here). Sure beats trusting Microsoft...

      Now pass this along to 10 other people within the next 30 minutes and your wish will come true.

    3. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Tzarius · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There's also the consideration that the next Xbox may not be backwards compatible. If that's the case, and Sony manages to put this feature in the PS3, a lot of consumers will be willing to hold off (for maybe a year?) for a console that isn't just starting fresh, in terms of their gaming library.

      Also, there's the comparison of the Dreamcast and the original Playstation where the DC got the jump but failed to keep the momentum and faded away. (Do correct me if I have my consoles mixed up!)

    4. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      While I agree.... the truth of the matter is every console eventually gets beaten over time. Nintendo sat at the top and didn't do nearly enough while SNES just went south.

      Sony made some mistakes in PS2 that they better fix in PS3. Like bundling network adapters, and making games easier to go online. That stuff will be key in the next generation. They mind as well go wireless now.

    5. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by SFBwian · · Score: 1

      It was the Dreamcast and Playstation 2. Sony made a large announcement within days of the Dreamcast release date regarding either dates/features/games of the PS2.

      --
      I'm looking to get rich. I've got steps #2 (????) and #3 (PROFIT!) planned out, but am having trouble coming up with #1.
    6. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Yakko · · Score: 0, Troll

      I used this logic to specifically punish MS by buying a Dreamcast, a PS2, a Gamecube and a GBA. Above all, I don't want MS owning the market and flooding it with games that aren't fun.

      Then again, my purchases didn't make much difference, if any... but the fact remains that MS got $0 from me, and will get $0 when I finally buy a used xbox to mod it and use as a file server.

      --

      --
      Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
    7. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by saden1 · · Score: 1

      Lets be real here, Sony has better games and we all know EA Sports games can be had on any platform. Consoles are not worth buy because of exclusive games. It is a matter of personal preference and how many of your friends own the same console. To me, XBox has no value that isn't provided by PS platform. Sony has kept me happy and I intend to stick with them.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
    8. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1
      There's also the consideration that the next Xbox may not be backwards compatible. If that's the case, and Sony manages to put this feature in the PS3, a lot of consumers will be willing to hold off (for maybe a year?)

      Confirmed. As an Xbox owner, backwards compatibility will be very important to me. If MS drops this ball, I'll be sitting tight for PS3 and its vast libary of PS1, 2 and 3 titles, quite a few of which I've played and enjoyed on friends' systems.

      Either way, I get to play Halo 2. Can't wait!

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    9. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by antic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think MS did better with the xbox than I expected. I previously owned the initial Playstation, and before that we had a SNES in the family (as teens).

      Now I have a modded xbox, my brother has one, and a few friends have bought them.

      MS have gone from having no console product and no real reputation in games (negative if anything) to selling a decent number and giving us a real competition for the next generation of consoles. I know people have wanted MS to fail, but I think it's hard to disagree with Ballmer: MS could very well take Sony or come very close next time around.

      I have my xbox loaded with games, mp3s, movies and use it to play DVDs, etc. I think Halo is brilliant (and play it through quite regularly), enjoyed Splinter Cell, and have a great time with Fusion Frenzy, Unreal, Tiger Woods, about 5 different NBA games and so on. I don't even pretend to buy the games -- I have a 250GB HDD in there for a reason!

      It's a great mix of playing games and tinkering with alternative dashboards/launchers and applications, etc.

      If it came from anyone but Microsoft, I think the slashdot crowd would be all over it, installing open apps, getting it to do a myriad of different things.

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    10. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by bircho · · Score: 0

      Maybe this can be true in US. But for another countries, i don't think so. Here i live there are PS2 in every store, but i NEVER saw a X-box.

      American market can be big, but Asia one seens to be bigger. And I don't know about Europe, but South America is Sony's territory.

    11. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 0

      "if Sony take too long to release the PS3"

      History has shown the latecomer usually the winner. But yet somehow the xbox has not done this... Even if the xbox 2 is released first, it still smells like the dreamcast. Everyone will say, "oh, thats cool", while they line up for wristbands to take a peek at the ps 3. And now that it seems like MS has taken all the plusses out of xbox 2 (backwards compatability, hard disk, easy portability from and to pc...) That makes it all the more likely that Sony might still come out on top. I say might because who knows what might happen in this fickle market in the next 10 months...

      --

      Shift happens. Fire it up.
    12. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by ashkar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A better way to punish MS would be to buy the XBox (which they lose money on) and only buy used games (the only way they can make a profit).

    13. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by LordSah · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I wonder how many folks that refuse to give money to Microsoft based on moral reasons evenly apply their morality to other purchases. Do they make sure they buy fair-trade coffee? Refuse Nike shoes? Purchase food that wasn't grown by a factory-farming corporation? Buy 'dolphin-safe' tuna?

      Microsoft is fiercely competitive, but I'd hesitate to call it _evil_. Microsoft doesn't have an army of children it's exploiting, and doesn't destroy the environment to make it's millions.

      Pick and choose your battles I guess. Personally, Microsoft can have my $100 or whatever for Windows, because the convenience and price is better than the competition. They're gonna use that money to make a better version of Windows and hawk it--big deal. My peronal beef is with big media companies such as Disney and Clear Channel. I could rant a long time about the injustices of big media, but it's off topic.

      My point is that maybe you'd (not you, the general 'you') want to investigate if your antiestablishment energy would be more productive elsewhere. Fretting about Microsoft can be good, but maybe it's better to help out here, here, or here?

    14. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by mirko · · Score: 1, Troll

      -1 Godwin
      BTW, deliberately losing money on a product to make its price more appealing and to gain marketshare is an anticompetitive practice called dumping, and it appears to be punished by law in democratic countries.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    15. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by nametaken · · Score: 1


      I've always been a bit mystified by this concept of them losing money on the console to make a market inroad and hurt competition? Doesn't this qualify as "dumping", an illegal activity?

    16. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by JPriest · · Score: 1

      Then other people will be more willing to buy new games becsaue they have a high resale value. I think that arguement is so retarded. If you want to hurt MS spend the $500 on Linux games and software.

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
    17. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by tokaok · · Score: 2, Informative

      no dumping only counts if you are only selling at a loss in one market to kill competion, but selling at profit in another where you are already in control of the significant market share.

    18. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      And that isn't the situation because...? I assume they are selling Windows/Office at a profit. Presumably they are using the money from those endeavors to fund the price point they've placed the XBox at. Of course, they aren't really undercutting the PS2 so much, just pricing on par - with better hardware.

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    19. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      I don't think activism through one's "dollar vote" has been particularly effective in the past. The only thing that can keep Sony honest is REAL competition. Most people don't care enough about anything to consciously decide who to buy from. The only competition is with a superior product or lower price (or, sadly, better marketing). The only effective way to beat monopolism is to create some competition. If MS wants to play that role against Sony, I'm glad - they are one of few who has the resources to.

      The dollar vote is very powerful, but inherently unorganized. It's always gonna follow the superior product/price/brand. This isn't an election, consumers cannot be held accountable for keeping companies honest - only other companies can do that.

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    20. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never knowingly purchased EVEN ONE SINGLE Microsoft product, nor have I ever recommended or specified the purchase of same. This logic doesn't apply to 'fair trade' coffee or other such because it is simply a premium product with a marketing USP of guilt assuasion. I have no problem with Nike footwear, I DEFINITELY would seek out line-caught tuna and avoid factory farmed food where reasonable.

      Microsoft is a special case, they produce utter crap and succeed through mafia-like business practices. My personal opinion is that the US govt. should break them up.

    21. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by timts · · Score: 0

      it might be true, but can it take on the next gen of pure PC based console which might even be upgradable?
      there are many games as exclusively on console or consoles now, or first on some console
      but as xbox quickly showed its lack of power comparing to new PC in merely a few years, I really doubt the console market with higher margin situation will last for ever.

    22. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by fishfinger · · Score: 1

      But the Xbox will have 'value' that the PS can't provide if M$ get bigger in the console market and 'pursuade' developers to sign exclusivity agreements!

    23. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Refrag · · Score: 1

      If you want to punish Microsoft by increasing their installed base, I suppose you could attempt that. It'd be like punishing a squatter by giving them more land, though.

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
    24. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Refrag · · Score: 1
      I wonder how many folks that refuse to give money to Microsoft based on moral reasons evenly apply their morality to other purchases. Do they make sure they buy fair-trade coffee? Refuse Nike shoes? Purchase food that wasn't grown by a factory-farming corporation? Buy 'dolphin-safe' tuna?
      It depends on that person's individual morality and their enlightenment on such issues. And, yes, they do.
      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
    25. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Folks will wait for the PS3. Sony Playstation is a name people trust. Its a brand name like Coca Cola, and its gotten sweeter each version.

      Xbox may be a performer, but it lacks everything that makes the PS2 a work of a art. Quality games from the japanese developers, original titles etc.

      The PS2 hardware is a work of art, that falls short of xbox's power. Fortunately for SONY, the PS2 makes it all up where it counts. GAMES.

      And that is why people trust SONY. That is why people trusted Nintendo. That is why people no longer trust nintendo. GAMES.

      People will love the xbox2, but wait to see the Ps3 because SONY is the champion of consoles.

      Sony could very well pull a Nintendo and see all of their developers flock to another console such as Xbox2.

      Marketing will play a big part in this. We are really in a new generation of games. The next gen games are going to be full of normal mapping, high geometry, post processing fx, and all kinds of ram eating graphics power. This is perhaps a very big step, and who takes the biggest can certainly cause a shift. Sony was successful because the Saturn looked terrible, and Sony suddenly had this amazing 3d game system called the Playstation. The gayest name on the planet, grew into the coolest name in the industry.

      Microsoft is trying to pull a Sony. And they could win if they take the biggest step and have atleast 2 KILLER APPS. I'm talking insane games, like the upcoming Unreal versions, where they're normal mapped to hell, self shadowing, HDTV resolutions, networking, etc etc...

      If MS does it right... they could shake Sony. Its possible. Its going to be difficult without a killer game or 2 on Xbox2 at launch. No its not half life2, or Doom3. It would have to original and mind blowing just as MGS2 was when it was originally used to hype PS2 (not that it was original, but it was a work of art that had everyone drooling for sony.

      But hey if Sony keeps making games like ICO and Gran Turismo 4, Xbox aint got a chance. ICO is perhaps the finest experience in gaming one could have, and Gran Turismo 4 is the benchmark by which all others are judged.

      Sony's got a lot of good titles in its pocket... speaking of which... PSP looks incredible.

      Sony's a strong giant, and Microsoft better have one hell of a big stick if they want to beat Sony.

    26. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by EulerX07 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Buy 'dolphin-safe' tuna?

      No, but I buy "Tuna-Safe" Dolphin though.

    27. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by BenBenBen · · Score: 3, Funny
      As far as I know, Sony is showing off a working model of the PS3 at next years E3... A working model isn't expected until 2006 however
      Only on slashdot could an obvious contradiction be "informative". What did you actually mean?
      --
      The Slashdot Paradox: "100% Overrated"
    28. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by MadBiologist · · Score: 1

      ICO is the finest experience in gaming? What crack are you smoking? I realize that it's a commonly held good game, but the finest experience ever? I think not. Look at the sales of that, and realize that as good as it is (I have it, have played it, and thought it okay), it is not games like ICO that make a system dominent.

      There are good games for all the systems like Zelda, Halo, FFantasy #(pick you favorite), and noe of them make a system dominent ever, it's a complex confluence of points... marketing and hype, price, eye candy, "coolness factor", third party support. There are systems that had the "perfect storm" of all of these, NES, SNES, Playstation, PlayStation 2... but to prodict the sucess or failure a year and a half out of anyone getting their hands on one of these systems is pretty absurd.

      Nintendo has heart, Sony had brains, and Microsoft has a freakin big wallet. Any one of them could work to make the next big system.

      --
      'Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?'
    29. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Phisbut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I find it funny how Nintendo is never mentionned in the console war, it's always about PS2 and Xbox (or PS3 and Xbox2).

      A very big part of the gaming market is located in Asia, and that market it fought for by Nintendo and Sony. Xbox doesn't succeed very well over there, and I doubt Xbox2 will do any better.

      As far as exclusivity goes, about 95% of games that are on either PS2 or Xbox are also on the GameCube, and now that SquareEnix is back on the Nintendo platform (both GameCube and GameBoy), Sony lost one of its best exclusivity there.

      Meanwhile, Nintendo keeps on creating and maintaining very popular brands that are exclusive to them. EVERYBODY (under 30) has played a Mario game at least once in its life, and Mario is still very popular. Add Donkey Kong and Zelda to that, and you got a pretty good range of exclusive games. And if Nintendo pulls another Pokémon-like mania...

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    30. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Wally+Fenderson · · Score: 0

      How about buying the xboxes so microsoft loses money, and
      a> useing them for some sort of artdecco project
      b> Drop them off a parking garage for the satisfying crash, or
      c> just use them as a dvd player, if you don't have one.
      Any way you go, Microsoft loses more money, and does not increse their market share.

      --
      It must be Thursday. I could never get the hang of Thursdays.
    31. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Jythriadoc · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the 'moral' reasons you think are so clear are not really so. This reminds me of the 'Buy American' campaigns of the late 80's where most of the goods we were told were 'American' were produced with a higher % of foreign labor than others. I mean, aside from the issue of basic economics where supporting a more crappy product is just dumb, the moral clarity was just BS. Take your 'fair-trade' coffee. Why do coffee growers deserve protection from over-production? Most of these 'morality' decisions I hear floating around are nothing more than ill-thought attempts at 'I'm better than thou.. I'm moral!'. Feh!

    32. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by seaniqua · · Score: 1

      Sony had better beef up their lasers too. My PS2's last an average of a year before they go "blind." I've always wondered if this was an issue on the rest of the next-gen consoles? (too poor/cheap to go get the other 2)

      --
      That's right, I read at +2 and post at +1. Not even I care what I have to say.
    33. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doing business like Microsoft isn't called "fiercely competetive", it's called bordering criminal in my book.

    34. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      Microsoft loses MORE money if you DON'T buy an X-Box, moron.

    35. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by LukePieStalker · · Score: 1

      One word: Halo.

    36. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they're forced by military juntas to overproduce? Or because they have to struggle to maintain their current standard of living? (Red Queen situation: run twice as hard to stay where you are.)

      I know it was a flippant remark, but I'm no more tolerant of lazy thinking in social and moral realms than I am in coding. Honestly, you'd have been flamed to the ground if you'd used the same language to advocate java (no pun intended) over C.

    37. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by ckaminski · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about you don't buy an xbox, that way, when the units don't sell, they get cut to disgusting prices, or even better, get sold into an overstock channel?

      Why give them *ANY* money if you want to prevent them from increasing market share?

      Such a silly argument. It's like advocating buying CD's but then breaking them into tiny bits and mailing them back to Sony to get back at the RIAA?

    38. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by ultrabot · · Score: 2

      Do they make sure they buy fair-trade coffee? Refuse Nike shoes? Purchase food that wasn't grown by a factory-farming corporation? Buy 'dolphin-safe' tuna?

      The things you list are not as relevant as trying to own a monopoly on software in general. Of course various companies use children as cheap labour, but they are hardly held at gunpoint. It's also mostly a problem for the kids involved, while Microsoft's reign is a problem for the information technology as a whole. Supressing technology is more evil than lousy working conditions in some third world country.

      The technology could one day improve the living conditions of the third world. You should be more concerned with corporations patenting genetically engineered foodstuffs.

      My point is that maybe you'd (not you, the general 'you') want to investigate if your antiestablishment energy would be more productive elsewhere

      The anti-MSFT movement seems to be doing quite well, much better than various anti-globalization/whatever movements. IT professionals can actually hurt microsoft much more than someone who doesn't buy Nike sneakers can hurt Nike. And they can help advance OSS, which is even more important.

      So keep on hurting MSFT, and let the non-IT personnel take care of lesser ills in the world :-).

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    39. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Funny how, in spite of you complaints about the media, you seem to have been successfully brainwashed into the "the worst thing you can do is make a child cry" mentality. Child-exploitation and pollution as the only evils? Let me guess, you believe in a third evil and it's 'racism'?

      Honestly, I don't want to get into an argument about whether Microsoft is evil. (As if this isn't a favorite topic on /.) However, I think any person or group who wants to take away my freedoms are just as evil as those who'd like to take away my food, and they're probably more common, and more likely to succeed.

    40. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dickhead moderators. mod down ^.^

    41. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by fermion · · Score: 1
      These two things are not the same. The morality you mention is going to cost consumer more money and only help labor. While it is moral to minimize the oppresion of labor, it has nothing to with MS.

      MS has a marketing problem. There are other products that do basically the same thing that cost much less. Increasingly, MS is depending on it's branding to justify significantly higher prices. Unfortunately the brand has suffere some serious setbacks and in many cases is no longer percieved to be customer centered. To wit, Sony, ignoring the DRM crippled music for the moment, has provided products that seem to be customer centered, while MS has generally provided products that put MS needs in front of the customer. In an ideal world, corporate and customer needs will be alligned, but this is not generally the case for MS.

      Therefore, MS is losing customer trust. xbox does not sell because few trust MS to deliver customer centered games. If they follow the Windows path, the primary purpose will be to artificially lock customers into MS, not provde a good user experience.

      Many people consider MS a good value, and willingly give money for the privilage of using thier products. You believe the value is better than the compition, in the same way that an average person believes a Nike shoe is better values than a no name costing 80% less. That is marketing. Nothing more, nothing less.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    42. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the console gaming market... this has been happening since the early days of the NES. Microsoft didn't start it... you haters sure like to twist the facts

    43. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by mirko · · Score: 1

      How do I twist the facts ?
      I was discussing XBox and evilness with the grandparent.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    44. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by rzbx · · Score: 1

      "They're gonna use that money to make a better version of Windows and hawk it--big deal."

      So you believe that $100 dollars is really going to be used to "better" Windows? Consider the fact that they are spending a lot of money of XBox and not doing it to make a profit (as of now). How about all the markets where Microsoft has thrown money into so as to drive the competition under. What you don't realize, is that Microsoft is basically the worst kind of company there is. Now it can be argued, but consider this. For most products we pay about the cost of what it takes to produce it, pay employees, ship it, etc. As long as competition is healthy, things work out pretty well. Microsoft deals with intangible goods. How is it that MS is such a profitable company? A large profit margin. The largest of just about any company in the world. Some employees get paid extremely well, and the top executives/investors/etc. have more money than you can imagine. The company is sitting on money that has not been put to much good use. This can be argued, but we all know how anti-competitive MS has been. When dealing with intangible assets, it becomes even easier to stifle competition and make very large profit margins. Consider that without MS, there would a large software service industry with standards that one company could not just kill off or ignore easily, and that the profit margins would be smaller. A healthy economy has more money moving around, not sitting inside the banks of large corporations like MS. This is all basic economics that you don't need to learn in any school. Agreed that those other problems AIDS, world hunger, and protecting our rights is important. But you don't realize the severity of contributing to Microsoft, in any way shape or form. Why not support those causes and NOT support MS? The bias against MS is well deserved. I'm tired of hearing people defend MS, but just as much about MS bashing remarks that have no foundation. If your going to bash MS, put down some good material. People don't need to hear the BS, since it turns them away from those that really do have things to say about the "evil" company.

      About this story, to hell with it. I don't care for supporting Microsoft. If you feel that there is a need for more competition in the console market, then go with a completely different console. Or buy some Linux platform games. The choices of what you buy do make a difference. As a consumer you make daily decisions that, knowingly or not, make a difference. It surprises me how many people that despise what MS is will still go out and buy the XBox. Then again, maybe it doesn't. When the pendulum swings, it has to go all the way till it comes back. We haven't reached that peak yet where at least half their consumers are fed up.

      --
      Question everything.
    45. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Impotent_Emperor · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, I deign dolphins to be lower creatures. And, as such, I shoot them for fun as they leap and bound through the ocean.

    46. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      I think he meant, "They'll be showing off a working model at E3, the launch isn't expected until 2006."

      Or get more useful info from Ars Technica.

    47. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by tbannist · · Score: 1

      " Do they make sure they buy fair-trade coffee? Refuse Nike shoes? Purchase food that wasn't grown by a factory-farming corporation? Buy 'dolphin-safe' tuna?"

      What's wrong with Nike again? They pay people in a third world country very little to make shoes? Isn't that still four times (or more) the average income of those countries? The people who work for Nike would rather work there than at the alternatives. Somehow, that doesn't fit my definition of evil.

      "Microsoft doesn't have an army of children it's exploiting..."

      This may be a radical opinion but this is a pretty relative thing, which is worse for the child? Starvation or working in a sweatshop? The company that is paying the children to work is only as evil as the parents who allow their children to work, the government that allows companies to employ children, and the children who choose to work.

      In general, it is not evil to pay someone a rate they are willing to accept to perform work they are willing to do.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    48. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had my GameCube since day one, and it's never had a problem, but a friend bought one shortly after which mysteriously died suddenly after a month (although the warranty replacement has been fine ever since). I know people who've had flawlessly working PS2's for years, and I know one guy who uses a DVD player cleaning disc after every use because it doesn't work right if he doesn't. Maybe you've just been unlucky. Maybe Sony designs their machines to fail so you have to buy more. I don't know, but I've completely forgotten the point I was trying to make.

    49. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by tbannist · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's not going to happen for several reasons:
      1. No hard drive
      2. No backwards compatibility
      3. No more underpriced hardware
      The xbox 2 won't be able to store mp3s or play xbox games because it won't have a hard drive. It doesn't have a hard drive because Microsoft needs to make money on the xbox 2 to prop up the stock value. So therefore they can't underprice the hardware anymore. This means you won't be able to "tinker" with alternative dashboards, launchers or applications.

      Honestly, the more I hear about it, the more it looks like the xbox 2 is going to be a huge bomb. The only thing it can hope to salvage it is Halo 3, which probably won't be released until the PS3 hits the market (it might be even later). I'm guessing it will be a deliberate attempt to steal the PS3 launch thunder.
      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    50. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by VendingMenace · · Score: 1

      Perhaps i am just daft, but what does DEMOCRACY have to do with dumping? Do you mean CAPATALISTIC countries?

      I am not trying to be overly nazi-esque. I am just curious as to whether there IS a connection between market practices and law and the system of democracy. Or whether the above is just a typo.

      Of course, even if it were democracy, then it wouldn't really affect us, since we don't actaully live in a democracy, but a republic. But that is a whole 'nother discussion. And i am rambling now :D

    51. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by admdrew · · Score: 1

      In terms of hardware, the Xbox has obvious superiority over the other consoles of its generation. By turning a console system into an actual processing machine, Microsoft began to bridge the gap between consoles and PCs with the Xbox. Its value over the PlayStation (more powerful processor, internal harddrive) may very well represent the direction Microsoft will go with Xbox2, a console that could rise above the PS3.

      As far as games go, both systems have very good exclusive titles. The newer Final Fantasy games on the PS and Halo on the Xbox come to mind immediately. Project Gotham Racing 2, an Xbox-only title, is easily the best racing game made. It captures the excitement of the Need For Speed series in a realistic fashion that the Gran Turismo games attempts but ultimately fall short.

      Besides Halo 2, Doom 3 will most likely be released on only the PC and Xbox (with good reason; it's the only current console with enough horsepower). As far as FPS games go, Halo 2, Doom 3, and Half-Life 2 are the biggest names right now. Two out of three will be available on the Xbox, none on the PlayStation.

      \

      While I'm a PC gamer at heart, my Xbox takes precedence over any other system in my living room.

    52. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Gehenna_Gehenna · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, neither Halo nor it's highly anticipated succsessor will be playable on the neXtBox. It will come down to what software neXtBox has available at launch. Unlike PS3, no software backwards compatability may cause some current Xbox owners to hesitate on the purchase of their next console. If Sony is able to launch a more powerfull console with a solid launch library, that combined with the huge back library of PS2 titles available may swing some Xboxers back into Sony's fold.
      At the end of the day, it is way to early for anyone, even Microsoft, to say that they can catch Sony. Sony will continue to be the leader, and Nintendo has proven that they have the stones to weather a competitive environment. I'd say it's still anyones game. Ballmer is just spewing what the stockholders want to hear. You will never hear Microsoft Steve say "We'll never catch Sony, but we are happy to fight over seconed place while continueing tolose money on every console purchase."
      Microsoft is definately here for good, but they are a long way from declaring dominance.

      --

    53. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by admdrew · · Score: 1

      A lot of the early Xboxes had problems with their DVD drives; two of my friends with 1.0 Xboxes had to send theirs to MS for a drive replacement (free, thankfully), but the newer ones (I have a 1.5 Xbox) shipped with different drives that did not have this problem.

    54. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by admdrew · · Score: 1

      Wow. Your 'facts' regarding the nextgen Xbox are stunning. Rumors have been spreading about the lack of a harddrive in the Xbox2, but these rumors have about as much basis as the tech documents floating around that detail the Xbox2's hardware. Considering MS's tight-lipped stance on the Xbox2, making assumptions about hardware at this point are just that: assumptions. Even if a harddrive isn't included, I'd be surprised if MS didn't offer an aftermarket harddrive for it, meaning it would be entirely possible for the end user to supply their own drive.

      A lack of backwards compatibility would be terribly unfortunate, and Microsoft is not dumb. If it is offered on the Xbox2, all of the old Xbox games will be marketable, and the Xbox2 will come onto the market with an existing library of games. Considering the PC-like hardware and software on the Xbox (P3 processor, standard DVD and hard drives, Windows 2000 kernel), it'd be fair to assume the Xbox2 would follow a similar design (some reports say multiple PowerPC G5 cores and an ATI graphics chipset). This would be very good news for compatibility issues, because it would allow the Xbox2 to run Xbox games without an additional processor (like the PlayStation2 and GameBoy Advance do).

      Though rumors point to a lack of harddrive and backwards compatibility, one article reporting this provided some insight:

      "Bear in mind that at this point in the lifespan of the original Xbox, almost none of the specifications as announced made it into the final product unchanged."

      I'd just be careful when attributing speculation about the nextgen systems to absolute fact, especially given the amount of time before they actually come out.

    55. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by DeXtroMe · · Score: 1

      No, selling the same product for a profit in one market, and losing money in another market.

    56. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Opie812 · · Score: 0

      Microsoft deals with intangible goods.

      They do? I'm sitting here looking at a Windows XP CD. That's pretty tangible to me. The binaries are pretty tangible too. So is the OS that my laptop is using right at this instant. XBOX? Tangible. You get the point.

      The company is sitting on money that has not been put to much good use.

      I doubt the money is under Bill Gates's matress. If it's in a bank, it's being put to good use...well, maybe not *good* use, but it is being put to use nevertheless.

      Consider that without MS, there would a large software service industry with standards that one company could not just kill off or ignore easily, and that the profit margins would be smaller

      Without MS, it would undoubtedly be some other company. Maybe IBM. They used to be evil. But now that they support OSS they aren't. Fair enough, I suppose.

      A healthy economy has more money moving around, not sitting inside the banks of large corporations like MS

      Again, the money just doesn't sit there. I'm no economist or banker, but I'm confident that this money is being invested to create new opportunities and new wealth for MS and others.

      --
      I'm not a nerd. Nerds are smart.
    57. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Yakko · · Score: 1

      I picked my battle. This xbox battle was one that I could definitely win by simply not buying a (new) xbox, and buying no (new) games. MS gets no sale, which was my whole point; MS gets no revenue from either the console or games from me, regardless of whether or not I buy a used xbox and used games from Gamestop.

      The "evil" factor of MS doesn't enter into it. My decision was primarily geared toward making it known that their console and games don't appeal to me, and the other guys' products and games do.

      It's not a question of morality. I don't really think about where my food or clothing comes from, or that Windows XP has more holes than my socks, but I buy the food and clothing, and use Windows because I must. Opting out of xbox was totally voluntary. Same goes for buying CDs. I know I'm still supporting those RIAA rats by using iTunes, but I buy songs because it's convenient. They have a product that I want.

      --

      --
      Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
    58. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But that's part of the whole problem for Microsoft. The hardware on game consoles is always a loss-leader and the money is made back selling games or, in Microsoft's case, monthly fees for online games as well. The hard drive will probably be dropped just to force people like you to buy games, otherwise MS will continue to bleed money in the game market.

    59. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Rassleholic · · Score: 1

      And if Nintendo pulls another Pokémon-like mania...

      For the love of all that is right and good, this evil must be prevented! To endure another round of merchandising blitzes and an endless parade of clones would be a crime against humanity.

      --
      Not noteable, IMO a rubbish article.
    60. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Yakko · · Score: 1

      My whole point in voting against MS with my wallet (and many, many times -- EVERY new game I buy for the GC and PS2 is a vote against the xbox) was to make it clear that their product and their games don't appeal to me. I've been reevaluating my decision constantly ever since xbox shipped, and have yet to find a "must have" game... that killer app that makes me commit to the platform.

      Truthfully, I've already found a "killer app" for the xbox: Used xbox + mod chip + new hard drive = file server/NAT box (supporting 802.1q VLAN, even!) for $300 or so that I can put next to the TV set. Ironically, MS gets no reward for this. They don't support it; why should I support them?

      Crazy Taxi did it for my Dreamcast (waaaay too late in entering the DC market. I'll have to REALLY search for games now. The DC's a great machine, and I made the mistake of thinking MS spoiled it just because it had a Windows CE logo on it). Same with SSBM and the GC (and most of my GC games are the most fun games I have!). Then there's the whole 2D old-school-feeling Sonic Advance series that finally got me to buy a GBA. Namco Museum, of all things, got me onto the PlayStation platform, though GTA3 sold me a PS2. They all became products that I wanted.

      --

      --
      Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
    61. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by johnnyb · · Score: 1

      Isn't it amazing that they are _still_ reaping rewards of games designed years ago?

      It kind of makes you stop and think about the things you're doing today, and what they might turn into 10 years down the road...

    62. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I try to purchase ethical products, to the extent that I can, and to the extent that I'm aware of the issues involved.

      Of course I do make exceptions when the alternative would be too impractical (twice I've purchased a laptop PC with a copy of MSWin that I didn't need or want).

      I also wish that I could manage without a car (in fact I did, for quite a few years), but sadly that would be very inconvenient.

      As for what counts as evil...personally I think that some of the nastiest corporations weren't even indirectly referenced in your post. DeBeers, DuPont, Monsanto...

    63. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by megarich · · Score: 0

      I think gamecube can if they just rething their business model. They need to allow their new system to be more than just a "kiddie console". And they need to have better timing of their games(i.e not wait 2 years to come out with mario kart).

    64. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Gaijin42 · · Score: 1

      It depends.

      In a world where MS has manufactured all of the XBOXs that they are ever going to make, they would lose maximum money by nobody buying any more XBOXs.

      In a world (much like the world we actually live in) where MS makes more new XBOXs every day, then they lose the most money by people buying an XBOX, and never buying a game, because it costs them more to make each box than they sell it for. This world allows for an infinite amount of money to be lost, as long as people keep buying boxes and not the games.

      However, most people do tend to buy games, or buy live subscriptions, so they are not making out too badly.

      The dont even care that they are losing money as a whole. It is their first generation box. They are hoping to become profitable in the future.

    65. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by megarich · · Score: 0

      I won't buy nike shoes. I don't drink coffee(just case I hate it). Eh "safe" foods for me is taking it too far. You're right there are alot, ,ALOT of other evils in the world. Its just that most of the other evils arent monopolies and you can pick the lessor of the two evils so to speak.

    66. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, I am not defending Nike et al. at all. But morality in consumerism is not a black and white issues, just like any other morality problems. Have you ever considered that when you force a country to raise minimum wage or put restrictions, the result could be worse than it is now? For example, Nike could just fold up their shop in Indonesia and move it to, say, Ethiopia. Then, what happen to Indonesians whose livelyhood depends on Nike's employments? God knows Indonesians need jobs. Americans always compare how many dollars they get paid per day, but they also forget that while they get a couple dollars a day, those roughly translated to about 18,000 local currency. It's a lot higher than what some people could earn and certainly helps to feed their families, even if the food quality isn't the best. The same thing about underage employments. If they don't work for a sweatshop, they may be forced to sell newspapers for much less. The fact is, until you provide the alternatives like establishing scholarship and a bit extra for kids, they'd be forced to work, either for themselves or for a multinational company. There was a story once in NY Times about a kid in Cambodia who was forced to fish things out of garbage to live since she could no longer work due to age restriction. What a life! She'd love to be 'exploited' for dimes to buy her food.

      Now, what about Microsoft? They may not employ kids, but are they contributing to the lowest economic class? No, they are contributing to the middle class and upper class. You can fire them programmers and they'd still be able to get a job elsewhere. They won't starve. Don't tell me about trickle down effect. Those idea never worked with Reagan and it won't work with anybody.

      Just being a devil advocate.

    67. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "deliberately losing money on a product to make its price more appealing and to gain marketshare"

      The only way that would be dumping is if MS was selling the Xbox somewhere else for above cost. There is no law prohibiting lowering prices to gain marketshare. A good example is razors and razorblades. Many companies give the razors away, only to make up the cost on razor blades.

    68. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no real reputation in games (negative if anything)

      Maybe I've had more luck than you in M$ games, but I have call you on that statement. I hate M$ as much as the next /. user but I have always defended M$ when it comes to their hardware and games. Of course I guess it kind of helps to make those better when you aren't blocked from knowing what you need to know about M$ code you're using

    69. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by The12thRonin · · Score: 1
      The "evil" factor of MS doesn't enter into it. My decision was primarily geared toward making it known that their console and games don't appeal to me, and the other guys' products and games do.
      Exactly how does buying used show their console doesn't appeal to you? Apparently it appeals enough that you will buy it used so they don't get a cut of the revanue, but appeals to you enough that you will give Gamespot an obscene profit on selling the used equipment and games.
      Seems to me that if it didn't appeal to you, you wouldn't have it at all. That's why I've never owned a Gamecube, but have owned a PS2 and XBox.
    70. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by king-manic · · Score: 1

      A better way to punish MS would be to buy the XBox (which they lose money on) and only buy used games (the only way they can make a profit).

      I buy an xbox for $199 and used games:

      Xbox cost $250 for MS to make
      $250 - $199 = $51 net loss.

      I don't buy an xbox:
      Xbox cost $250 for MS to make
      $250 = $250 net loss.

      Seems not buying one hurts them more.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    71. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Truthfully, I've already found a "killer app" for the xbox: Used xbox + mod chip + new hard drive = file server/NAT box (supporting 802.1q VLAN, even!) for $300 or so that I can put next to the TV set. Ironically, MS gets no reward for this. They don't support it; why should I support them?

      Seems like a lot of work for what you get. For $299 I got a full system from Frys. 2.7ghz Celeron, 128 meg ram, 40 gig hd, cd burner, NIC, sound, speakers etc. It came with XP, long since removed, you could easily put Linux on it.

    72. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by king-manic · · Score: 1

      IT's nto so simple, it's sorta of like a rounding function. Up until a certain point, each purchase of an xbox mitigates their loss. However if your purchase is the one that justifies them going into another round of production, then you cost them more money. however not buying has a direct, calculable loss. The maximal loss you could induce is to a: have no one buy one (first runa nd all r&d costs are now losses) b: cause them to manafacture an amount of machines exceeding the values of intiial r&d and first run and then not buying any of this large run.

      This the onyl assured way you can contribute to a maximal loss is to nto buy one.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    73. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Phisbut · · Score: 1

      Ok... I agree that it was really horrible to see... but from a commercial point of view, it's about the biggest success there ever was in the video game industry.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    74. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by raoula · · Score: 1

      The company is sitting on money that has not been put to much good use.

      AS the other poster pointed out. This money is sitting in a bank where it is being invested. How do you supposed banks make money? it is not only on the monthly fees they charge you. This is why they can afford to waive the fees if you have more than a determined amount deposited in the bank.

      Additionally, do you really think Bill Gates has billions of dollars in the bank? A large percentage of that is net worth including stocks bonds stock options etc. all of these support other businesses thus keeping the economy going. The economy is not solely supported through consumer goods

    75. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Phisbut · · Score: 1

      But that is exactly how one can measure how good a game is. If a game can survive the test of time, then it is a good game.

      What actually makes (most) people want to play a certain game is the design and the gameplay. That's what provides entertainment. Cool graphics is just a bonus.

      When game makers (whatever the console) decide to publish a game solely because it will have cool graphics, then the game stinks... badly... The best games of all rarely have the best graphics of all.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    76. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have never knowingly purchased EVEN ONE SINGLE Microsoft product, nor have I ever recommended or specified the purchase of same.

      Yeah right. I don't belive you've never, ever, bought a computer without Windows on it.

    77. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by boaworm · · Score: 1

      For me the games are just one part of the story.

      I just bought a console, and I thought long before I made my purchase. The thing that tipped the thing in the XBox's favor was the modding possiblities. I had it "flashed" instantly, and inserted a 120GB disk. That gave me features like:

      DVD/SVCD/VCD/XVid/DivX playback
      Games on HD
      Built-in FTP server
      SMB Support (play directly from my fileserver)

      Compare that to the PS2 which requires hardware modification to play "non-retail" games and VCD/SVCD, and no network and no HDD.

      Before modding, its the PS2 that wins. After modding, PS2 is just pointless.. Sorry sony, but i sold my soul to Microsoft *GAH* :)

      --
      Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
      Aristotele
    78. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by axis-techno-geek · · Score: 1
      If it came from anyone but Microsoft, I think the slashdot crowd would be all over it, installing open apps, getting it to do a myriad of different things.

      True, actually if the Slashdot crowd wants to "get Microsoft" every one should go out and buy 5 Xboxes, but just the Xboxes, as they lose money on every one they sell, the consoles are always a loss leader, the games and accessories are where the money are.

      Need a second controller, hey that will be ~$30 (US) for something that cost them less than $10 to build and package, go and buy a second Xbox, you'll get the controller and a spare Xbox and they (MS) lose some more money.

      --
      This is not the sig line you are looking for... -- Old Jedi Sig Line Trick
    79. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      im guessing you have never heard of debt bondage. its quite prevalent in third world countries. where families can not pay back loans to loan-sharks...who basically take generations of families into bondage to pay for the "loans" by putting them into sweatshops and such. they often take the children since they are young and can make them wrk longer. many people can not find a way out...if they try to resist they often beat them or go to the extent of killing family members.

    80. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Gehenna_Gehenna · · Score: 1

      Swell, but the lack of hard drive in the neXtBox may make modding it into a server/gaming rig difficult. This generation you helped make Xbox aplayer, but what will you be playing in 3 years? Sony may be happy to buy your soul right back.

      Also, I was one of those ridiculous few that bought the Linux Kit for the PS2. FTP, SMB, DVD and Grand Turismo. Combine that with my new dual G5 and I can happily live and game in a Microsoft free world.

      Of course, I chose the super expensive way to go, but the less money I give to Microsoft the happier I am.

      --

    81. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      So the way to punish Microsoft would be to tell pollsters that you have an XBox and a zillion games and are going to buy another one, calling Microsoft and saying "Make more XBoxes", and then never buying an XBox or any games.

      Sounds like a good plan.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    82. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I prefer "Goat-Safe" Penguin, myself.

      But I'm just an AC at /. so...

    83. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by LordSah · · Score: 1

      The things you list are not as relevant as trying to own a monopoly on software in general. Of course various companies use children as cheap labour, but they are hardly held at gunpoint. It's also mostly a problem for the kids involved, while Microsoft's reign is a problem for the information technology as a whole. Supressing technology is more evil than lousy working conditions in some third world country.

      I don't buy into the notion that Microsoft is suppressing an entire industry... In the markets MS is dominant, MS is still delivering fresh technology. As long as _someone_ does, I'm happy.

      What really strikes me is that you seem to have adopted this idea that Microsoft really is the worst problem facing the human race. Before AIDS? Global warming? No, it really is Microsoft? I could be wrong, but that's the message I'm reading underneath your words.

    84. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by boaworm · · Score: 1

      Yea, I have a G5 DP 1.8 and a TiBook (550). The way I figured, Microsoft lost like a $100 bucks on me when I bought it, and i'm not buying anything more from them :-)

      If only apple would release a console!

      --
      Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
      Aristotele
    85. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by LordSah · · Score: 1

      > Supressing technology

      Also, do you understand that the day Microsoft quits writing interesting features for its products is the day it quits making money? For both Windows and Office, MS's biggest, by far, competitor is the last verion of Windows or Office.

      If MS doesn't make versions of its software that is worth the price over the old versions, MS quits making money.

      The idea that Microsoft is hell-bent on taking over the entire software industry only to stop it dead in its tracks is so patently false it's ridiculous.

    86. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      ICO is the finest experience in gaming? What crack are you smoking? I realize that it's a commonly held good game, but the finest experience ever? I think not. Look at the sales

      Yes, ICO is the finest experience in gaming. Read the reviews. No game has ever had such an effect on people. Visit Ign's boards or ebgames.com reviews, or amazon.com reviews... read all of the reviews and notice the emotional impact ICO had on the reviewers. Its a work of art.

      Judging a game on its sales is silly. We're talking about a brilliant game that didnt sell well because it looked lame on the store shelves. But those who gave it a shot... they all wrote reviews on those sites, on forums all around... their experience is 99% the same. ICO has had a huge effect on gamers.

      I'm serious... really read the folks out there who have played ICO. I know there are some who will say it was boring, or they didnt get it... but they are a very small minority. Generally i've found that those who outright hate it (not saying you, because you didnt hate it), but those who seem to blast ICO, tend to be quick on the trigger, tempermental younger gamers, who would be affraid to open up about being emotionally effected by a game. Then again.. some people like Drama, and some people hate it. I dont know. ICO was incredible from every design point of view. While it looks dated now, the music, the ending, the mechanics of two characters working together, animation, music, ambience, and general sense of not knowing what or where you really are, or what your doing.... given up by your family, sacraficed to the castle's ghosts, only to find a friend in need, who you cant even understand, and then the ending and story (which i will not ruin)are perfect. Somehow the relationship grows as you play, yet the mechanics dont really change. Its interesting, and done so well from a story and art point of view. It says so little, and yet you get a whole lot out of the story through its subtle moments. The ambience plays a big part. Anyways...

      As for your statement about marketing hype, price, eyecandy, coolness factor, and third party support... i agree completely. I never predicted the future, just tried to relate the past to the present and future.

      Nintendo has heart? nah. Nintendo has aging characters and a poor image among adult gamers. Sony has the edge, and Microsoft is the underdog, with a big freaking wallet as you put it :)

      Any of them could win, you are correct. I'm just saying xbox is no where close to PS2's sale figures and popularity. In order for Xbox to dethrown PS2, they have to pack a serious punch. And that punch is all of the things you mentioned, marketing, developers, first party games etc, LAUCNH titles...

      and you're right. ICO did not make PS2 Dominant. That wasnt my point. ICO is an example of SONY's development goals... which is to develope truly unique and amazing games. Making ICO was a risk, it had not sold anywhere near MGS2... but ICO was the better experience.

    87. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by LordSah · · Score: 1

      I was just listing a bunch of things that I could see someone getting really worked up over. I buy the cheap corporate-farmed food from Safeway, don't give a damn about where my shirt comes from, and happily drive my sports car at 85 mph knowing that it's less efficient. (I do donate to United Way, regularly donate time and effort to a Ukranian orphans project, and try to be an otherwise nice guy)

      The notion that someone should hurt Microsoft, because it's evil, and therefore does some good for the world strikes me as extremely odd. I can see not buying Windows because you like Linux better, or just don't like Microsoft--people buy Chevies because they don't like Fords. But carefully planning and crafting your buying habits, _only_ to hurt Microsoft?

      I think someone should re-evaluate their priorities, and rethink where they need to expend their energies if they are thinking like this.

      Changing topics: Several generations up the thread, someone was talking about buying an XBox because MS loses money on it, and then only buying used games. That's just hypocritical--if you don't like a company, you should just refuse to use its product. Additionally, it's counter-productive to your goal, as you're still pumping money into the industry which XBox benefits. For every friend that sees you playing the XBox you hurt Microsoft by buying, MS just won a little bit. It only takes one or two of them to buy a game or two to offset any "pain" you've inflicted.

    88. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Backwards compatibility would be nice but is not a requirement. Lack of a hard drive does not necessarily mean unhackable. Regardless the most important factor is, will the Xbox have the good games? The only games I'm serious about getting right now are full spectrum warrior (Xbox) and Gran Turismo 4 (PS2) and unless things change dramatically that's how it'll be for the forseeable future for me - nonetheless the point is that while I already have an Xbox, I plan to buy a PS2 so I can play GT4. If I only had a PS2 I'd be planning to buy an Xbox so I could play FSW. My choice of games might be unusual, but my attitude isn't - if the game you want to play most is only on a given console, you get that console.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    89. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely, completely wrong. If you buy more Xboxes and don't use them for game platforms, or at least don't buy new games, their market share doesn't go up in any useful way. It might make game developers believe that there are more Xbox users who will buy their games out there, but then they will be burned by low sales due to artificially inflated numbers. Buying an Xbox doesn't give them any money, it costs them money. This is true until either they stop losing money when they make Xboxes, or when they stop making Xboxes.

      As long as Microsoft keeps losing money when people buy an Xbox, buying Xboxes hurts them. If they get the production cost down far enough to where they break even, then it'll be time to stop.

      Also let's not forget, the more Xboxes sold now, the more cheap used Xboxes there will be on the market for hacking later.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    90. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by ultrabot · · Score: 1

      What really strikes me is that you seem to have adopted this idea that Microsoft really is the worst problem facing the human race. Before AIDS? Global warming? No, it really is Microsoft? I could be wrong, but that's the message I'm reading underneath your words.

      Of course it's not the worst, but it's what they call a low-hanging fruit.

      BTW, I don't think AIDS is a big problem as far as human race is concerned (individuals notwithstanding). HIV virus appears to be quite controllable with drugs these days, and getting the virus in the first place requires voluntary action that could be avoided by precautions (condoms & clean needles). So people who are afraid of AIDS don't get it.

      Global warming, well there sure as hell is no way I could prevent it. Why fight something that is entirely beyond your control?

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    91. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Ansonmont · · Score: 1

      Small point, but Donkey Kong IS a Mario game.

    92. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by ultrabot · · Score: 1

      The idea that Microsoft is hell-bent on taking over the entire software industry only to stop it dead in its tracks is so patently false it's ridiculous.

      No, they just want a total control of the industry so that everything happens on their terms. I don't want to see a publically traded predatory corporation in that position.

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    93. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Hognoxious · · Score: 1
      spend the $500 on Linux games
      Why would I want to buy the same game 20 times?
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    94. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Hognoxious · · Score: 1
      Buying an Xbox doesn't give them any money, it costs them money.
      But it still might cost them less than you not buying it. Depends if the loss they make considers only variable/direct costs or a contribution to overheads.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    95. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Hognoxious · · Score: 1
      BTW, deliberately losing money on a product to make its price more appealing and to gain marketshare is an anticompetitive practice called dumping
      It may well be an anticompetive practice, but it ain't dumping.
      It's more like the "raxor blade" model.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    96. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I for one welcome our new cetacean overlords.

    97. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Nick+Harkin · · Score: 1

      It depends, you could say that that Xbox is already made, so they are at -$x, and if you buy it, they will be at -$x+y, where is the cost to make the xbox, and y is how much you pay for it.

      I guess it depends on weather they end up building another one to replace the one you bought...

    98. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Colazar · · Score: 1
      Nintendo has heart? nah. Nintendo has aging characters and a poor image among adult gamers.

      I expect to see Nintendo making inroads into adult gamers again, as they move from young adult to family adult.

      With the Gamecube price having hit $99, I bought it as the "kids' console". In doing so, I have discovered how fun the games are. This dynamic should give Nintendo a window in which to win back some adult gamers.

      --
      He decided to just watch the government, and kind of scale it down to size, and run his life that way. --Laurie Anderson
    99. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Yakko · · Score: 1

      I currently don't own an xbox. Once the cost of getting one used (plus mod) comes down, it may appeal to me. Definitely not for playing games, though, but I can't argue with the form factor for what I DO have in mind for it...

      --

      --
      Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
    100. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Actually, strictly speaking Mario is a Donkey Kong character. Although he was just described as "The Carpenter" or "Jumpman" in those days.

    101. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Don't be a moron. Lots of people never buy complete systems, only parts, and assemble their own. I'd never bought a Microsoft product until last year when my company gave us a credit at Dell which we were required to buy a system (either desktop or notebook) with. Dell didn't offer anything without XP on it, so I was stuck with it, but of course I immediately disassembled the system and used the useful parts in my own, and installed Linux.

      Prior to this, I had always bought motherboards, cases, etc. individually.

    102. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Global warming, well there sure as hell is no way I could prevent it. Why fight something that is entirely beyond your control?

      Actually, you can help in some small ways: purchase a fuel-efficient vehicle instead of an 8mpg H2, ride a bike for short trips, reduce your energy usage (use the A/C less, turn off unnecessary lights), etc. The nice thing about all these is you'll also save money, just as you will by using OSS instead of MS software.

    103. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Changing topics: Several generations up the thread, someone was talking about buying an XBox because MS loses money on it, and then only buying used games. That's just hypocritical--if you don't like a company, you should just refuse to use its product. Additionally, it's counter-productive to your goal, as you're still pumping money into the industry which XBox benefits. For every friend that sees you playing the XBox you hurt Microsoft by buying, MS just won a little bit.

      There's a simple solution to this: disassemble the Xbox, and transplant the innards into a new, custom case (an attractive wooden case might be nice...). This will 1) prevent friends from seeing that you have an Xbox, and 2) eliminate the butt-ugly Xbox case which would otherwise ruin the appearance of your living room.

    104. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In only Microsoft would base the XBox2 on Longhorn. Then we could rest easily...;-)

    105. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      There are good games for all the systems like Zelda, Halo, FFantasy #(pick you favorite), and noe of them make a system dominent ever

      Um, I think you forget that the PSOne was only selling moderately well until one particualr game was announced as exclusive. That game being FF7.

      Then, and ONLY THEN, did it begin to sell like wildfire.

    106. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Originally he was Jumpman, but by the TI99/4A days he was named Mario. He was still a carpenter and not a plumber, though.

    107. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    108. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't have a hard drive because Microsoft needs to make money on the xbox 2 to prop up the stock value. So therefore they can't underprice the hardware anymore

      Microsoft's best bet is to price Xbox low for its parts; it will probably sell it below Sony's current $300 for PlayStation 2. Although the company estimates that Sony loses between $125 and $175 on each PlayStation 2, it thinks its own hardware costs will be lower than Sony's were at first, even with more memory, a slightly faster central processing unit and graphics processor, and the hard drive.

      a little older but still just so everyone knows this argument is a POS everyone loses money on hardware its part of the biz (http://www.forbes.com/2001/01/09/0109xbox.html)

    109. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...create new opportunities and new wealth for MS and others."

      Exactly. Need I say more?

      "Without MS, it would undoubtedly be some other company."

      Assuming it would be only *one* other company. Competition doesn't work well with only one company.

      Btw, a CD sold for the *software* on it is not a tangible good. The CD yes, NOT the software, which is what they are selling. Binaries (OS) tangible? Do you even know what tangible means?
      Sure, MS sells tangible goods such as mice, keyboards, etc. But they deal most heavily with sofware, an *intangible* good.

    110. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by antic · · Score: 1


      OK, true. I no longer buy anything but MS mice and recommend them to everyone (all the Mac users in our office have them now).

      I know a lot of people love Age of Empires and stuff like that from MS and my cousin loves some Impossible Creatures game that looks pretty cool, but I've had no experience with any of their games.

      Still, they had no reputation in consoles at all whereas Nintendo and Sony are household names in that market.

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    111. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by antic · · Score: 1


      I don't think backwards compatibility is a big deal. I went back to play my PSX games the other day and christ, the graphics were abysmal.

      Back in the day, playing Tenchu, it was easy to get hooked on the atmosphere and have fond memories, but the reality is pretty different.

      I guess it's preferable, but I think the main issue would be a point of argument for fanboys. Zzz.

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    112. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Dagonkin · · Score: 1

      Because - quite simply a "market" in this sense is something like "console gamers" market != product type.

      as long as they are seen to be trying to make a profit in their xbox department they should be ok (legaly that is ethics are left as project for the reader)

      well that is how i see it anyway

    113. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by kisrael · · Score: 1

      If I were microsoft, I'd be doing *everything* I could to get Rockstar to release the next GTA on their system first...(and I'd like to see a GTA not geared to the PS2's limitations...)

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    114. Re:Sad but (maybe) true by Meski · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with Nike again? They pay people in a third world country very little to make shoes? Isn't that still four times (or more) the average income of those countries?

      it's close to 4 x 0, but who is watching?

      The people who work for Nike would rather work there than at the alternatives.

      Starvation and death being the alternatives, I can't say I blame them. Wonder if they give them time off to get educated? Or would that encourage them to not be good corporate peons in the corporate feudalist system Nike probably prefer?

  2. riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    thanks steve... is that "significant" as in "we are about 17million+ console sales behind Sony" or the other sort of "significant"?

    1. Re:riiiight by duffhuff · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, but being nearly tied with Nintendo, the oldest console player, for second place is. They basically came out of nowhere.

      If you haven't already realized, the Xbox is a *good* console. If Sony just sits on their haunches with the PS3, Microsoft could very well take the lead from them in the next generation, especially now that the new Xbox and Playstation seem likely to launch very close together.

      The Xbox brought lots of innovative new features to the table, if Microsoft can continue to come up with interesting stuff they will likely have the most compelling system.

      Word of mouth may have kept many away from the Dreamcast, but I doubt it'll stop Xbox Next (or whatever they are calling it)

    2. Re:riiiight by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      All the other big players, Atari, Nintendo, Sony, came pretty much from nowhere and took the crown. So the minimum expectations for new entries should be taking spot one immediately.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    3. Re:riiiight by rootofevil · · Score: 3, Funny

      if by came out of nowhere you mean:

      -bankrolled by a multibillion dollar corporation hellbent on marketplace domination
      -do i need any other points?

      now if the phantom does anything (or for that matter exists) - THAT would be coming out of nowhere.

      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    4. Re:riiiight by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1
      -bankrolled by a multibillion dollar corporation hellbent on marketplace domination

      How do you think that Sony took the lead in the console wars? You don't win marketshare by playing nice, you do everything in your power to produce reasons (good games, fixing launch problems, Xbox Live) why people would want to buy your console over your compedators.

      -do i need any other points?

      Save it. We know you're an elitist just from your one reason, you don't have to come up with 20.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    5. Re:riiiight by _KiTA_ · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I wouldn't say Microsoft really came out of nowhere and almost tied Nintendo is representative of Microsoft's strength in the console biz. It's more along the lines of how weak Nintendo was earlier this year. Nintendo *really* stumbled recently, and Sony took a huge lead because of it. MS basically had a free ride because of that, as well.

      There's a few things stopping MS from winning the console wars.

      1. Japan is EXTREMELY Xenophobic. They aren't going to sell out their extremely LARGE (highest pre-selling American game: Zelda at 700k units. Highest pre-selling Japanese game: Dragon Warrior 7 at 3,000k units.) console market to a "Gaijin" company without VERY good reason. The XBox is NOT good enough to make them give up their stranglehold on the market.

      If you don't get why Japan is where the console wars will be won or lost, let me point it out to you. 99% of all successful console games in the past 20 years have been from Japan. The only exception I can think of is Halo -- and that was a PC game which had it's XBox port released a year before the PC version. Unless Microsoft can invade and make progress in Japan, they will NEVER make any headway in the console market. Period.

      2. Sony might drop the ball but the chances of them truely screwing up the PS3 is *very* slim. Yes, the cell processor is a gimmick and a scam, and will fall flat. The PS3 will almost definately be a success, however, because of sheer inertia.

      The only thing that could really kill them is if their arrogance makes them do the same kind of stupid errors that Nintendo did in the late 80s that put Big N in the spot they are now (basically being arrogant asses, pissing on 3rd parties and trying to push people around). Granted, the PSP and their repeated micromanagement with stuff like Final Fantasy 11 in the US kinda hints at that same kinda arrogance... However. Nintendo would be far more likely to capitulate on this than Microsoft.

      3. Nintendo is *not* going to be idle during all this. Nintendo blew *everyone* out of the water this E3. Sony had a mock up of a unfinished portable with a 2 hour battery life. Microsoft had games they announced a year ago. Nintendo had a playable version of their new portable and about 9 bombshell announcements, one after another. The "Reggielution" as it were got so many people fired up that it really breathed some very much needed fresh air into Nintendo's sails.

      Nintendo is calling their next console the Nintendo Revolution. This represents Big N's new thinking -- that horsepower isn't going to be enough to win the next generation of console wars. They're right. The DS completely blew everyone away who saw it, not because it was so graphically potent -- although it was quite nice -- but rather, because it brought so many NEW THINGS to the table. Touch pad, Wireless Link, WIFI Internet on a portable, 2 screens, etc. These are going to bring new games, and new WAYS to play games, and that is going to push sales.

      In other words -- Japan has 2 huge titans gearing up for a *huge* battle for #1. There's no room for some silly spoiled foreigner brat of a company to try and push their way in. Especially when all they can muster up for information at the largest console convention in the world is some new screenshots of a game that was announced at last year's E3. Unless Microsoft gets serious, they're not going to be getting anywhere.

    6. Re:riiiight by mcc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Coming out of nowhere to be tied for last place is impressive?

      Creating a very technically impressive console by losing a billion dollars a year is impressive?

      More to the point, losing a billion dollars a year to be tied for last place is impressive? Hell, give me that much of a budget to piss away, and [i]I'll[/i] tie for last place in the console industry.

    7. Re:riiiight by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Nintendo, the oldest console player

      Nintendo isn't very old at all. And is that any mode of comparison, anyhow? Should we say that Sega's Saturn was doing well because it was ahead of Atari's Jaguar? After all, Atari is older than them all.

      In addition, things like that don't mean much for very long. Sega was second to Nintendo in the Master System/NES days, then took the lead with the Genesis. After that, they really never reached success ever again. Even if Microsoft was #1 right now, their next release could fail miserably.

      As for additional comparisons... Microsoft didn't do nearly as well as Sony with their first console. The Playstation was #1 from the word go, and stayed in that position, with a very strong lead, for a long time. If Microsoft can't even beat Nintendo (which hasn't been a real contender since the SNES) they've got little chance against Sony.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    8. Re:riiiight by 0racle · · Score: 0, Troll

      Thats some crystal ball you have there. Can you tell me what stocks I should buy?

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    9. Re:riiiight by DrAegoon · · Score: 1

      No, it's not impressive. It's typical Microsoft business tactics and precisely the reason Sony and Nintendo should be wary. Microsoft already has the resources and ambition to become the proverbial 800 pound gorilla in any market they enter. The only variables are how the competition responds and whether they can make a viable product.

      Microsoft took zero market share pre-XBox, threw ridiculous amounts of capital at the task, and came out with a viable contender. A company like Microsoft can afford to take a long outlook on the market and is probably better off not going all or nothing on their first shot. Sony shouldn't dismiss MS, they should take the XBox as even greater incentive to make the PS3 the best product possible. In the short run at least, this kind of competition is highly beneficial to the average end user.

    10. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're a fucking oracle - you tell me!

    11. Re:riiiight by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 1

      "thanks steve... is that "significant" as in "we are about 17million+ console sales behind Sony" or the other sort of "significant"?
      "


      Ah yes, with Microsoft the glass is always half empty, isn't it? Never mind that what they do have is a pretty darned decent start for their first system and that their current line of customers have a strong chance of becoming next-gen customers.

    12. Re:riiiight by cynical+kane · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This reminds me of the scene in Ace Ventura, where Jim Carrey talks out of his ass.

      Zelda was a Japanese game. Or have you forgotten that Nintendo is a Japanese company?

      Have you ever heard of Metal Gear Solid? How about Metroid Prime? Or Grand Theft Auto and its sequels? All American games, huge successes in the American market.

    13. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm... Metal Gear is from Konami and Metroid Prime is Nintendo, iirc.

      And I could be wrong, but I believe GTA: Vice City was developed by Rockstar North, which is based in the UK.

      They were huge successes on the american market though, I can agree with you on that one.

    14. Re:riiiight by mcc · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nintendo isn't very old at all.

      Nintendo was founded in 1889 as a playing card company. Their first electronic game system product was a line of light-triggered gun gallery machines in 1972. They first entered the console market in some fashion later in the 70s as the Japanese distributor of the Magnavox Oddysey console. As the 70s continued they released three home game systems in the "Color TV Game" series, each of which was a small thingy you could hook up to a TV to play one of a number of Pong-like games that were hardwired in to the unit.

      In 1980 they released both the Game and Watch line, as far as I'm aware the first handheld electronic gaming product, and their first in-house developed game, Shigeru Miyamoto's "Donkey Kong", an arcade game that was also released for a number of home console systems.

      Of course, the first Nintendo product that was an in-house developed console gaming system with games stored on removeable media was the NES, which wasn't released until... 1985, making it the first successful video gaming product in the aftermath of the great crash of the video game market.

      ...what exactly are your criteria for "old"?

      (source)

    15. Re:riiiight by phulshof · · Score: 1

      Erm... MGS is a Konami game, which as far as I know has always been a Japanese company with offices in the US and Europe as well. I can even remember (I'm _that_ old) playing MG on my MSX2 computer. :)

    16. Re:riiiight by MemoryDragon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually I think Japan is rated more important than it really is. Its main market is slightly bigger than germany alone. There is only one fact why it is important. Japan has many game studios and is looked up upon for historical reasons. The big markets currently are probably US, the EU as a whole (face it economically the EU is a single country) and China, with India probably as an emerging market.

      Japan from a non producer perspective is small compared to those markets. The fact why there are so many successful japanes game companies has two sides. Face it US corporations usually produce lots of rather lousy non intuive sequels, whereas japanes companies used to go for the riskier sides and didnt rely entirely on sequels and shooters. But the situation changes currently with more and more sequels to sequel being released by them also.

      The other thing is, from the middle of the 80s til Microsofts attempt, there has not been a single successful console which was not japanese. So we have japanese manufacturers holding a tight grip on what games are released and we have game producers who want to enter the market. Guess who has an advantage?

    17. Re:riiiight by MemoryDragon · · Score: 0, Troll
      Well there were two reasons why Sony won over Nintendo back then.
      • They used CDs

      Due to the fact they used CDs people could copy their games much easier than Nintendos, so they reached a critical mass earlier and then the thing became a self seller with the non educated masses (who really buy the games)

      If Microsoft was smart they should learn a lesson from that. They used the same tactics in the eighties and early nineties to get rid of competition like Borland and Lotus.

    18. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Have you ever heard of Metal Gear Solid? How about Metroid Prime? Or Grand Theft Auto and its sequels? All American games, huge successes in the American market.

      Don't get me wrong, I agree that there are some excellent "made in USA" games out there, but I think you chose three *really bad* examples, since none of these games you mentioned are 100% American - in fact, two of them are not American *at all*:

      Metal Gear Solid series: made by Konami, a Japanese company, in Japan.

      Metroid Prime: created in USA by Retro Studios with the cooperation / guidance of Nintendo's Shigeru Miyamoto and his personal team - in other words, a joint effort between a Japanese company and an American one.

      Grand Theft Auto series: Rockstar Games is a British company and the games were created there, AFAIK. Please correct me if I am wrong.

      P.S.: If you were thinking about MGS: the Twin Snakes, just replace replace "Metroid Prime" with "Metal Gear Solid", "Retro Studios" with "Silicon Knights", "Nintendo" with "Konami", and add Hideo Kojima alongside Shigeru Miyamoto.

    19. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      1. Japan is EXTREMELY Xenophobic.

      No they're not. That's a very old and closed-minded view from someone that obviously hasn't spent much time in Japan. You are simply perpetuating a stereotype and passing it off as an excuse as to why the Xbox didn't do nearly as well as it should have. Here's a hint: a console won't do well if the target marget is not interested in the games. Pretty simple.

    20. Re:riiiight by cynical+kane · · Score: 1

      Metroid Prime was developed by Retro Studios, an American company. You're right that MGS is a Konami game, though. But I was thinking of the Gamecube version, which was developed by Silicon Knights, a Canadian company.

    21. Re:riiiight by MukiMuki · · Score: 2, Informative

      Warning : Swear words (is there an auto-filter for this?)

      Look, I'm sorry, and I do not care how badly I get modded down for this, but I am TIRED of hearing "The XBox has done well for its time as a newcomer" blah blah blah. I call bullshit.

      The problem is that the X-Box will never make a goddamn dime. Well whoopty do, how much of an accomplishment is placing yourself in 2nd-ish place if you haven't made a dime off it? Shit, I could sell cars for $5000 less than Ford, outsell them, and put myself $3 million in the hole, but does that mean I won?

      And then comes the "Microsoft has all the money in the world" people who will not bother to RTFPost all the way and response anyway, but this doesn't fly either. Investors aren't going to be happy if a portion of Microsoft is constantly in the hole. It's a company, like any other, and investors must be listened to eventually.

      Mind you, I love my X-Box and wouldn't mind if Nintendo and Microsoft just sat down, made one system (with Nintendo's console and Microsoft's hardware expertises combined like some twisted two-company version of Voltron) and took over. Now people in both countries are willing to buy it and developers get their needs addressed. Of course it won't happen, so I'll drop the tangent here.

      The point is, the X-Box has accomplished nothing worth bragging about. Microsoft's been throughing cash away in the MSN bin for years, this doesn't mean they're brilliant. All it's really done is set up a false game economy that'll come crashing down if investors pull the plug on the X-Box 2.

      Note that the only way to make the system proffitable in the enxt generation will be to cut costs so they aren't losing money through their asses, leaving them with a system that won't even have the same consumer pull the original did (basiscally everything the PS2 does but a fuck-ton better, hardware-wise. Hell, if every PS2 3rd party- scratch that, if Squaresoft and Namco made X-Box ports of and launched them simultaneously with all their PS2 games, the X-Box would have WON.... in the US, maybe Japan, who knows). Yes, consumers have loyalty, but that loyalty will be strongest towards the PS2. I mean, how many GC/X-Box owners made that their FIRST system? Usually it was because PS2 owners had a moment of boredome and weakness (e.g. exclusive title, e.g. Halo, Resident Evil, and Smash Melee) and picked one up for the hell of it. Next gen, everyone launches simultaneously, and 80% of Japan's developers are putting all their steam into the PS3, it doesn't matter what Microsoft does in the slightest short of buy the rights and port every PS2 game during its development cycle. (Which would rock.)

      Fock, that is all.

    22. Re:riiiight by cynical+kane · · Score: 2, Funny

      But aren't all english-speakers american? Whoops.

    23. Re:riiiight by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Nintendo was founded in 1889 as a playing card company.

      Well, yes, that would make them very old, but since they weren't making video games at the time, that doesn't count for much here...

      1985, making it the first successful video gaming product in the aftermath of the great crash of the video game market.

      Exactly... They weren't even a competitor in the home market until AFTER Atari had already sold millions of units. And Atari isn't the only company that was around before Nintendo.

      If you or the parent want to make a point that Nintendo is the oldest one still alive in the console wars, that's fine, but by any reasonably standards, there are plenty of companies developing video games before Nintendo.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    24. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Have you ever heard of Metal Gear Solid? How about Metroid Prime? Or Grand Theft Auto and its sequels? All American games, huge successes in the American market. Maybe you should double-check where these game originally came from. Maybe you should realize that GTA can hardly be called a good game by ordinary people.

    25. Re:riiiight by mcc · · Score: 1

      Um.. the entire point I was trying to make is that 1985 can HARDLY be said to be Nintendo's entry into the home market unless you are defining this market very narrowly.

      If you or the parent want to make a point that Nintendo is the oldest one still alive in the console wars, that's fine, but by any reasonably standards, there are plenty of companies developing video games before Nintendo.

      How many of these companies are still around? Coleco's dead, Atari exists only as a trademark currently being used by the company formerly known as Infogrames, Mattel can hardly be said to be active in the video game market except for some subsidiaries that produce PC games...

      *shrug*

    26. Re:riiiight by dafoomie · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you don't get why Japan is where the console wars will be won or lost, let me point it out to you.
      The market in Japan for video games is shrinking. Even Satoru Iwata was quoted as saying the same. The Japanese market is not as signifigant as it once was. What is important, however, is Japanese developers. If they can get enough Japanese developers to sign on to Xbox, even if its only outside of Japan, they'll be fine.

      99% of all successful console games in the past 20 years have been from Japan.
      I dunno where you get your numbers, but thats certainly a -little- high. Tetris is the #2 best selling game of all time. And theres this little game called Grand Theft Auto from some American studio. Then theres all the Rare games. And Tomb Raider sold pretty well.

      Yes, the cell processor is a gimmick and a scam, and will fall flat
      True.

      However. Nintendo would be far more likely to capitulate on this than Microsoft
      Nintendo is doing fine. They have tons of money and are in a very good financial situation.

      There's no room for some silly spoiled foreigner brat of a company to try and push their way in.
      As I said, the Japanese video game market is going down. Japan is where a lot of the games come from but America is where the real money is made. Xbox can do well in Japan if they tried, but it might not be worth it in sales.

    27. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What have you been smoking? Hideo Kojima being american?

    28. Re:riiiight by TOakes · · Score: 1

      And theres this little game called Grand Theft Auto from some American studio. rockstar games is a british Studio

    29. Re:riiiight by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1

      >>This reminds me of the scene in Ace Ventura, where Jim Carrey talks out of his ass.>Zelda was a Japanese game. Or have you forgotten that Nintendo is a Japanese company?

      I was speaking of preorders in the US, not that Zelda was American.

      Simply put, Japan's game market is much, much bigger than the US's. Even if it's shrinking now, it'll have to shrink to less than half of it's current size for the US market to "catch up".

      That's why people saying that "The real money is in the US console market" crack me up. Crazy me, I figure going after the market with 2-3 times the number of customers is where I'd make more money. Silly, eh?

    30. Re:riiiight by Afrosheen · · Score: 0, Troll

      "In other words -- Japan has 2 huge titans gearing up for a *huge* battle for #1."

      Where did I see this last? Oh yeah! Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla. Godzilla vs. Ghidra. Godzilla vs. Rodan. Man, it seems like every year they've got a pair of titans set to destroy the city.

      Please Nintendo, make it stop. You're about to become the next Sega as far as home consoles go. Portables? The PSP may wipe the floor with you..but you'll come back on the basis of price yet again.

    31. Re:riiiight by Afrosheen · · Score: 1, Troll

      You also forgot..the XBox isn't technically impressive _at all_. You take a standard pc motherboard, some regular ram and an onboard nvidia chip..presto, Xbox console. Wow, now that's fucking amazing.

      My nonexistant 10 year old cousin could make the same console in 15 minutes with off the shelf parts.

    32. Re:riiiight by jinx_ · · Score: 2, Interesting

      well, that carries two implications. #1 -- xbox didn't have japanese companies making their games. well guess what... it certainly wasn't for lack of trying. #2 -- microsoft was attempting to recruit developers and couldn't. why? no one expected the xbox to be worth the development time as it hadn't sold like crazy and just didn't have the numbers.

      chicken+egg problem. it doesn't help that if you go to almost any japanese department store the ps2/nintendo/gba/etc section is enourmous and the xbox section is _itty-bitty_. just trying to find the ps2/gamecube title you're looking for can be excrutiatingly painful. why? too many titles all over the place! finding the xbox title you're looking for is a pain in the ass too. why? no one carries it. =]

      --
      jinkusu
    33. Re:riiiight by bigsmelly · · Score: 1

      It's techinically impressive for a couple ofreasons

      1) The unified memory architecture - the graphics and the main memory are shared. This means you dont have to wait for your PC or AGP bus to transfer your textures before you render them

      2) The price point - How much can you pick up your Xbox set top media center for now?

    34. Re:riiiight by dafoomie · · Score: 2, Informative

      Rockstar North is in Edinburgh, Scotland. Rockstar Games and Take Two are in NYC. Developer in Scotland, Publisher/Owners in NYC. Still supports my point of being outside Japan.

    35. Re:riiiight by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 4, Informative

      IIRC:

      Grand Theft Auto, Getaway, Sing Star, Eye Toy, Tomb Raider, Lemmings, Worms, Rare games, Peter Molyneux games all developed in UK.

      Prince of Persia etc. developed in Canada.

      The Sims etc. developed in USA.

      Wierd games with quirky characters (Oddworld, Heart of Darkness) developed in France

      Settlers developed in Germany

      Tetris devised in Russia, but ported everywhere. Some new wierd PC games (perimeter) from CIS countries also.

      Mario, Zelda, Final Fantasy from Japan.

      The Hobbit, Way of the Exploding fist, etc. from Australia.

      No one country has a monopoly on game development, but there are differences in traditions between the main areas.

    36. Re:riiiight by wfberg · · Score: 1

      It's techinically impressive for a couple ofreasons

      1) The unified memory architecture - the graphics and the main memory are shared. This means you dont have to wait for your PC or AGP bus to transfer your textures before you render them


      Oh come on. Low end systems and laptops have had shared memory for ages. There's nothing new about that at all. Sure, to speed things up (and risk more instability) you can give up memory protection alltogether and let the CPU and GPU access the same places in RAM, but that's not technically impressive at all.

      2) The price point - How much can you pick up your Xbox set top media center for now?

      They're making a loss on each unit sold. How is that technically impressive? They're just price dumping, they didn't go and invent mass production or anything of the sort.

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    37. Re:riiiight by LordSah · · Score: 1

      Your 10 year-old cousing couldn't build the custom graphics chip the XBox uses. Nonetheless, a mediocre PC makes a pretty kick-ass console. The PS2 only has a 4 mb video buffer, 32 mb of main memory, no hard drive for virtual memory, and an system architecture that is rather difficult to grok and optimize for. So the XBox, by _console_ standards, is very amazing. From an engineering perspective, it enables quite a bit more oomph for games.

      It's nothing new in the PC world, except that it:
      - hooks up to the TV
      - is brain-dead simple to operate
      - never needs upgrading or maintainence
      - is more reliable than most PC's
      - is cheap
      - has a rather incredible and simple networking infrastructure (XBox Live)

      The engineering and technical problems around turning an off-the-shelf PC into such a system isn't trivial.

    38. Re:riiiight by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1

      Please Nintendo, make it stop. You're about to become the next Sega as far as home consoles go. Portables? The PSP may wipe the floor with you..but you'll come back on the basis of price yet again.

      Considering that Developers haven't even gotten final tech specs of the PSP yet, nor are there real time devkits (current Devkits include emulators that run at 1FPS -- both these combined mean they can't tell if they're works in progress will run decently on the finalized hardware) I would say it's a bit too early to say that Sony's portable will be out-powering the DS.

    39. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm Australian, you insensitive clod!

    40. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's nothing new in the PC world, except that it:
      - hooks up to the TV

      PCs have been doing that for years too
      - is brain-dead simple to operate
      If your PC was set up to just autorun cds on boot, it would be too
      - never needs upgrading or maintainence
      Neither does a PC, if the games are still written for the same arcitecture.
      - is more reliable than most PC's
      Install only one piece of software on a PC and it'll be pretty dang reliable.
      - is cheap
      Somewhat, yes. A PC mass-produced to similar specs would likely be around the same price if made en masse
      - has a rather incredible and simple networking infrastructure (XBox Live)
      Having used it myself, I don't see a whole lot incredible about it, compared to similar services for single and multiple games on the PC. YMMV, of course.

    41. Re:riiiight by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      However. Nintendo would be far more likely to capitulate on this than Microsoft
      Nintendo is doing fine. They have tons of money and are in a very good financial situation.

      I think the OP intended to write capitalize, not capitulate.

    42. Re:riiiight by timftbf · · Score: 1

      "I mean, how many GC/X-Box owners made that their FIRST system? Usually it was because PS2 owners had a moment of boredome and weakness (e.g. exclusive title, e.g. Halo, Resident Evil, and Smash Melee) and picked one up for the hell of it."

      Me, for one. I bought a Cube on launch day because it had *far* more interesting (to me) titles than the PS2 or than was planned for the XBox.

      I picked up a PS2 on a whim a few months ago because I wanted an EyeToy. There's some other things on it that are worth having now I've got one, and getting more Final Fantasy will be cool, but not much in the way of "killer apps".

      Regards,
      Tim.

    43. Re:riiiight by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 1

      The unified memory architecture is nothing. Hell, the RiscPC had a similar thing in 1995, more or less. It had normal RAM and then it had up to 2MB fast VRAM. The system could use any spare VRAM for normal applications as and when it needed.

    44. Re:riiiight by macshit · · Score: 3, Interesting

      1. Japan is EXTREMELY Xenophobic.

      The distribution network may be xenophobic (I have no idea really), but I'm pretty sure the great majority of consumers don't give a crap -- indeed, being non-Japanese may actually be an advantage because you might end up being considered fashionable (and yeah, a lot of American stuff is currently pretty hip in Japan).

      However Japanese consumers do care about good games, in genres they like -- which MS pretty much completely failed to provide. The success of the PS2 was also strongly influenced by (1) hype (which Sony pegged, and MS -- though they tried a bit -- didn't), (2) compatibility with existing PS games, especially important near launch, (3) being a familiar and trustworthy brand-name that has in the past come out with plenty of popular games, and to some extent (4) good industrial design (design-wise, the xbox was a bloated mess).

      In the case of the Xbox, distributor discrimination doesn't seem to have been a factor either, as the Xbox was promoted heavily and received a lot of prime display space in stores (to an extent completely unjustified by its sales, so I assume MS was paying a bundle for it), even in many small independently owned stores (which I figure might be a bit more um, patriotic). This was true for quite a long time, though in the past year xbox games seem to have been relegated to the back shelves (presumably because nobody buys them...).

      This is all based on my personal observation, as someone who lives in Tokyo. As far as I can tell the ultimate reason the xbox failed was because most people said "I already have a PS2 and there are lots of games I like; why would I want an xbox?"

      BTW, I don't own either one... (I have a gamecube :-)

      --
      We live, as we dream -- alone....
    45. Re:riiiight by bugbread · · Score: 4, Informative

      1. Japan is EXTREMELY Xenophobic. They aren't going to sell out their extremely LARGE console market to a "Gaijin" company without VERY good reason.

      As a resident of Japan, I can never understand why Microsoft's collosal incompetence in Japan is blamed on some sort of Japanese xenophobia. MS released a system that was huge, whose clock got reset when unplugged (unplugging peripherals is very common in Japan to save on electric costs), which scratched customer CDs and DVDs and then told those consumers to just "ignore it, it's no big deal", which featured as a flagship game aimed at adults "Sneakers", which got a 34% on gamerankings.com, as well as a "killer app" consisting of an FPS (Japanese aren't too fond of FPS), and yet the reason the Japanese didn't buy it is xenophobia??

    46. Re:riiiight by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      It sounds a lot like my VIC-20, but with the Power of the Internet.

    47. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simply put, Japan's game market is much, much bigger than the US's. Even if it's shrinking now, it'll have to shrink to less than half of it's current size for the US market to "catch up".

      That's why people saying that "The real money is in the US console market" crack me up. Crazy me, I figure going after the market with 2-3 times the number of customers is where I'd make more money. Silly, eh?


      What's kinda silly is just making up statistics out of thin air:

      " Xbox sales in Japan -- the world's second-biggest market for video-game consoles and software after the U.S."

    48. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you don't get why Japan is where the console wars will be won or lost, let me point it out to you. 99% of all successful console games in the past 20 years have been from Japan. The only exception I can think of is Halo -- and that was a PC game which had it's XBox port released a year before the PC version. Unless Microsoft can invade and make progress in Japan, they will NEVER make any headway in the console market. Period.

      Do you have a reference, or are you just making assumptions?

      Top 10 selling console games in the US for 2003:
      1 MADDEN NFL 2004 PS2 ELECTRONIC ARTS
      2 POKEMON RUBY GBA NINTENDO OF AMERICA
      3 POKEMON SAPPHIRE GBA NINTENDO OF AMERICA
      4 NEED SPEED: UNDERGROUND PS2 ELECTRONIC ARTS
      5 ZELDA: THE WIND WAKER GCN NINTENDO OF AMERICA
      6 GRAND THEFT AUTO: VICE PS2 ROCKSTAR GAMES
      7 MARIO KART: DOUBLE GCN NINTENDO OF AMERICA
      8 TONY HAWK UNDERGROUND PS2 ACTIVISION
      9 ENTER THE MATRIX PS2 ATARI
      10 MEDAL HONOR RISING PS2 ELECTRONIC ARTS
      Source

      6 of those 10 are from US developers. And since your other comment about the US console market being smaller than Japan's is provably false, I think it's safe to say these are reasonably "successful" games.

    49. Re:riiiight by DeadScreenSky · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The rest of your points are pretty spot-on, but...

      Face it US corporations usually produce lots of rather lousy non intuive sequels, whereas japanes companies used to go for the riskier sides and didnt rely entirely on sequels and shooters.

      This really isn't fair or particularly true. Sure, Japan gets more weird or niche games overall, but outside of a few exceptions that doesn't mean they ever sold all that well. Looking at the twenty best-selling games in Japan so far this year (via Magic Box's recent news), I only see two games that aren't existing franchises or sequels. Maybe it used to be better, but I think if you actually look back you will see it has almost 'always' been like that in Japan - niche games do niche business, almost always, almost everywhere.

      And US game devs have made lots of innovative games, it was just that in the past you were more likely to see them on a PC rather than a Japanese console. This is even more true for European devs.

      --
      There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion. -- Francis Bacon
    50. Re:riiiight by dmouritsendk · · Score: 1

      The Xbox brought lots of innovative new features to the table, if Microsoft can continue to come up with interesting stuff they will likely have the most compelling system.

      Hardware doesn't make a game system, games does.

      Microsoft lack good 1 and 2 party companies that do exclusive XBox titles, I don't expect this to happen.

    51. Re:riiiight by Rayonic · · Score: 1
      whereas japanes companies used to go for the riskier sides and didnt rely entirely on sequels and shooters
      I'll keep that in mind while playing Dragon Quest 7, Final Fantasy 11, Virtua Fighter 4, and almost anything from Capcom.
    52. Re:riiiight by hal2814 · · Score: 1

      "The PS3 will almost definately be a success, however, because of sheer inertia."

      Try telling that to Atari.

      "Japan has 2 huge titans gearing up for a *huge* battle for #1"

      This already happened (Saturn vs. Playstation) and despite the Japanese choosing Sega as their favorite, Sony is the one who is still in the console market.

      Microsoft could use some support from Japan, but it won't be necessary to take over the console market. It would be like winning Ohio in a Presidential election. There's a lot of votes there, but it's no California.

      I personally don't care for the X-Box, but it is a serious contender and it will be interesting to see how well MS competes with Sony when Sony doesn't have a head start on their console release.

    53. Re:riiiight by hambonewilkins · · Score: 4, Interesting
      whose clock got reset when unplugged

      Same thing happens to my dreamcast yet that was a HUGE success in Japan.

      Do this for me: count the number of American cars you see in Japan. Count the number of Japanese cars you see in America. Japan has a very protectionist economy, it wouldn't surprise me if that's why the Xbox is down.

      --

      God Bless America. Why? Did it sneeze?
    54. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      On the other hand, try this: Count the number of American cars you see in Europe versus the number of Japanese cars you see in Europe. Your car anecdote is more of an indication that people simply prefer Japanese cars. Certainly in Europe, many American cars are (or have been, historically) too large to drive or park comfortably on narrow roads (although, from what I understand, the Ford Focus is earning a following).

      If anything, I suspect that in some cases, lack of international penetration by American products is simply a result of the American companies not understanding the foreign consumers. (Of course, there are many American products which have had huge international success, perhaps because the foreign markets responded to them the same way as at home, or maybe because they found out what the foreign markets wanted ahead of launch.)

    55. Re:riiiight by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      Wait, he may be eltist, but he's right. MS had the money to create the Xbox in less than 18 months and to buy Bungie and Rare. MS did not come out of nowhere.

      The reason Sony took the lead because they had the money to spend (and because Nintendo was lazy). The reason Sony hasn't lost the lead is because the Xbox does not have a lot of compelling games to convince people like me, who have over 20 consoles at home, to go out and buy it.

      Sony, unlike Nintendo, has leanred its lessons and is applying them not only to the PS3 but the PS2 as well. And, since we are seeing all three of the new consoles next May, all three will have the chance to learn from what the others are doing.

      I predict continued Sony dominance, a resurgance for Nintendo, and continued losses for MS. I just don't think Steve and Bill have their hearts in gaming...

    56. Re:riiiight by radish · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Or maybe Japanese cars are better/cheaper/prettier/more reliable/whatever? As a european living in the US, I have _never_ seen an american car I would actually want, they're all way to fugly.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    57. Re:riiiight by KirkH · · Score: 1

      You're data is old. I don't have the numbers in front of me, but to really bolster you're point you need to take about more than pre-orders. Pre-orders don't mean a whole lot.

      Talk about which _recent_ Japanese games have sold more in Japan than GTA, GTA:VC, Madden, Halo, etc have sold in the US.

      Talk total software units sold. Hint: more are sold in the US than Japan. Europe is second. Japan is now third.

      Talk total hardware units sold.

      Japan may have used to be the biggest consumer of videogames, but they lost that crown some time ago. I have no idea why you're saying that market is still 2-3 times bigger than the US market.

    58. Re:riiiight by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1
      The reason Sony took the lead because they had the money to spend (and because Nintendo was lazy). The reason Sony hasn't lost the lead is because the Xbox does not have a lot of compelling games to convince people like me, who have over 20 consoles at home, to go out and buy it.

      They're convincing people like me though. I've bought a ton of games for it, and although I've had to sell some of them for financial reasons, I always come back for more. Granted, I havn't played mine in a while, but I have a shiny new PC to play around with, plus all of my gaming buddies from college are all over the state.

      Bungie has produced one game for the Xbox so far. Halo. That's it. Oh yeah, Halo 2 is on the way. Rare. They released a mediocre platfrmer. They have a Conker game on the way. That's four games. You don't build up a behimoth like the Xbox with four games.

      Maybe Steve and Gates don't really have their heart and soul in it. However, I beleive that the people who are actually behind the Xbox itself (Come on, do you think that the Xbox is Balmers creation?) really do have their hearts into this. They learn from mistakes (most notably, the huge controller), they find good studios to make other games (most of the time), such as Bizzare, FASA studios, Bungie, plus they have a lot of AAA third party studios such as Ubisoft and Rare.

      They are not just throwing money at a market and hoping they are coming out on top. They are convincing people like me that, yes, their system isn't just hype that no one will support, they are indeed capable of making good systems. They've made some mistakes, but they are also doiug a lot of things right, and for this reason they are gaining marketshare (last I heard), and winning people over.

      As a side note, I'm one of their harder prizes, about a year and a half ago I loathed the Xbox with every fibre of my being. You can thank Xbox Live for dissolving my elitism.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    59. Re:riiiight by chip-to-chip · · Score: 1

      Actually I think Japan is rated more important than it really is. Its main market is slightly bigger than germany alone. There is only one fact why it is important. Japan has many game studios and is looked up upon for historical reasons. The big markets currently are probably US, the EU as a whole (face it economically the EU is a single country) and China, with India probably as an emerging market.

      While it's true that the US and China are bigger economies than Japan, I think that understates the importance that video games have in Japanese culture. Even though they have a smaller economy, they can still sell many more copies of popular games.

    60. Re:riiiight by Impotent_Emperor · · Score: 1

      I thought that Ford produced different types of cars for the European market, not SUVs like for the U.S. market. At least, that's what a management professor of mine had said.

      After googling quickly, Ford Europe did release something called the Mondeo. But I don't know if that's actually popular or not, or even respected.

    61. Re:riiiight by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      You don't build up a behimoth like the Xbox with four games

      Dude... M-W.com. Try it, please?

      The Xbox is not a behemoth. It's not even close. The Atari 2600, NES, Genesis, SNES, PS1, PS2 were and are behemoths. The Game Boy series is the granddaddy of all behemoths. The Xbox is floating at the same level of market penetration that NEC saw with the TurboGrafx, that Atari saw with the Atari 5200, that Nintendo saw with N64, and that Sega saw with the Master System, the Saturn and the Dreamcast. You are fighting facts with personal anecdotes. But, if we want to go the anecotal route: My Atari 2600 from 24 years ago, is still up and running, and I'm still buying games for it, and there are people still selling 2600s on the net (Want one with S-Video output? It's out there.). The games were compelling and fun, and still are now.

      If you can look at me in 20 years and tell me that you are still playing your Xbox on a regular basis, then I will concede your point.

      My suspicion is, however, if Sony learns from its mistakes on the PS2 (and everything they've said on that front point to the answer being "yes") and creates the PS3 most of us want, then players such as you and your friends will not be looking at the Xbox Next. Just a guess. ;)

    62. Re:riiiight by scoot241 · · Score: 1

      Even if the PSP has more "power" than the DS, what makes it any different than having a PS2 in your hand? The DS is an innovative handheld, with (obviously) two screens, a touch screen, microphone and wireless access (both Nintendo and standard versions). Oh, right, you can play mp3s and movies on the PSP... but you need to buy the special PSP movie discs, which I don't think will sell very well.

    63. Re:riiiight by radish · · Score: 1

      Actually you're right, what I meant to say was American cars produced for the American market.

      Europe is full of American cars made for the local market, they sell very well. Ford has been the biggest selling manufacturer for a few years in the UK.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    64. Re:riiiight by putaro · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Count the number of American cars that come in a version with the steering wheel on the right (remember Japan drives on the left just like England).

      Jeep started making Cherokees and Grand Cherokees with the steering on the right and you see a boatload of them on the streets here in Tokyo. Not much else in the way of American cars usually but there are lots (and I means lots) of Mercedes, BMW's and Audi's as well.

      Japan has a protectionist economy, that's very true, but Detroit has done it's damndest not to compete in this market as well.

    65. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ford Europe did release something called the Mondeo"

      A replacement for the escort, so generally their entry level hatchback. They also produced the 'Puma' which was an overpowered subcompact that I personally long for, and the V6 Cougar which replaced the very unpopular Probe as being the slightly more luxury end of the market.

      The Mondeos are ubiquitous.

      Generally speaking SUVs are really unpopular over here simply because of the petrol cost of shifting around a collection of upholstery and interior gadgets. However, they're becoming more popular amongst 'F***ing idiots'.

    66. Re:riiiight by putaro · · Score: 1

      Scuse me? Japan is about 125 million people - Germany is about 82. That's 50% more than Germany. Japanese GDP is about $2.95 trillion vs Germany's 1.9 trillion, again about 50% more.

      China is currently the number 2 economy GDP wise, at $4 trillion, however, that's spread over 1.25 billion people so the disposable income is pretty low. Not a lot of money in China to buy video games.

      You can consider the E.U. as a single economy, but for a product that needs to be localized it's not really a single market.

    67. Re:riiiight by MadBiologist · · Score: 1

      No you're not... we just havn't gotten around to telling you yet...

      --
      'Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?'
    68. Re:riiiight by Physics+Nobody · · Score: 1

      As an American living in the US I agree with you. I honestly can't think of a single American car I would actually want to own...I've only ever bought European cars so far. There are a number of Japanese cars I wouldn't mind having either, but I just don't purchase that many cars...

      --

      Physics is good

    69. Re:riiiight by admdrew · · Score: 1
      The Xbox is not a behemoth.

      Try lifting one.

    70. Re:riiiight by Lynxara · · Score: 1

      Exactly. This is why the X-Box is primarily popular in Europe and America-- where games that are directly tailored to Western tastes can be published by Westerners on a Western console. It's also why the X-Box hasn't done well in Japan and just isn't going to. A Western game that's good by our standards is probably not going to address the desires of the Japanese gamer. There's no good reason why it should.

      While the different regional console wars do influence each other, I really think the battle for the Japan/Asian market, the battle for the American market, and the battle for the European market should be viewed as very different things. Different market pressures operate in each region and the tastes of that region's gamers will be unique.

    71. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Mondeo was a replacement for the Sierra.

    72. Re:riiiight by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 3, Funny
      Here's a hint: a console won't do well if the target marget is not interested in the games

      And if the console can't fit through the doors of the average Japanese apartment...

    73. Re:riiiight by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      There we go! MS can get a new health-consious hook: Buy two Xboxes, get the official Xrod and attach each box to either end of the rod.

      And who says gamers can't get exercise! :)

    74. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the xbox clock is reset after 4 hours whereas the dreamcast could go a number of weeks.

      do you see the difference?

    75. Re:riiiight by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1
      Well, first of all, your entire post stemmed from my misuse of Behimoth. Sorry.

      If you can look at me in 20 years and tell me that you are still playing your Xbox on a regular basis, then I will concede your point.

      Way to place safe bets. I bet in 20 years you and I won't even remember this conversation. Making statements about "Oh, I'll still be playing THIS console in 20 years, but not this console" isn't usually a safe judgement. After all, I though Perfect Dark would be enough to last me 20 years, but now that I tried playing it the other day, the horrendus framerate and crappy N64 thumbstick made it unenjoyable to me. Sad to say, I might not ever play it again. However, I never thought I would still be playing DooM after all these years. Yet, I still Deathmatch quite regularly over ZDaemon. You just can't ever tell.

      My suspicion is, however, if Sony learns from its mistakes on the PS2 (and everything they've said on that front point to the answer being "yes") and creates the PS3 most of us want, then players such as you and your friends will not be looking at the Xbox Next. Just a guess. ;)

      I never said that the Xbox Next would blow the PS3 away. But I do beleive based on how it's improved the Xbox that Microsoft has an idea of what it's doing, and is likely to gain a foothold in the marketplace. And you know what? I'm going to reserve my judgement on both systems until about a year after both systems come out and the hype has died down. One for monitary reasons (I doubt I could afford a console at launch) and second of all I don't want to place all my eggs in one basket, on the off chance that the console turns into a disaster. Unlike you, who seems to be perfectly fine placing his bet on the PS3 before he's even seen the damn thing in action. Why?

      There we go! MS can get a new health-consious hook: Buy two Xboxes, get the official Xrod and attach each box to either end of the rod.

      And who says gamers can't get exercise! :)

      Oh yeah. You're one of 'them' :rolleyes:.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    76. Re:riiiight by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      Unlike you, who seems to be perfectly fine placing his bet on the PS3 before he's even seen the damn thing in action. Why?

      Two reasons:

      1) Because I have been playing video games since the late 70s and have seen the rise and fall of so many "sure things" that I no longer count on a console's manufacturer as being important. It is, and always has been, about the games and the marketing. Those are the two things a successful console must have. The PS3 already has all of the PS1 and PS2 games. That alone gives it a massive edge over the Xbox Next which, according to all indicators, will not have any sort of backwards-compatibility.

      3) Because I have had to use Microsoft products for the past 20 years from DOS end-user to Win 2K sys admin (and beyond) and have never been happy with their support, vision or follow-through. Their modus operandi is to be complacent until the time comes that their dominance is threatened. It is extraordinarily rare that MS eyes a market and manages to take it over (IE being one of the rare cases, with, perhaps, Pocket PC eventually gaining dominance - but both of those items are "tied" to the operating system). MSN, WebTV, Ultimate TV, the non-Xbox gaming hardware, etc., eventually loses money and MS shuns it for a few years until it becomes obsolete. MS, for all of its hunger, has no clear goal on what it wants to be. Thus, it tries to be everything to everyone... and then doesn't manage to get reliable, usable, popular products with strong support into the hands of the consumers. It's not that I hate MS, it's that I don't trust they're a mature enough company to follow-through in the areas that it matters.

    77. Re:riiiight by fred+fleenblat · · Score: 1

      In a large company, it is not critical that each part of the company be individually profitable. What is important is that the various parts be set up correctly from a strategic point of view such that the profit of the company as a whole is maximized over a time period that satisfies investors.

      So let's ask what is strategic about Xbox?

      The main thing is that if they hope to make Xbox 2 profitable, they had to suffer the learning curve and risk to capital of introducing Xbox 1. It would be great to go straight to version 2 and skip all the growing pains of version 1 in any product, but product development just doesn't work that way.

      Second part of the plan: MS is desperate to have a box in your house that they control, which affords them an opportunity for another monopoly in a different room of 2+ billion people's homes. This is kind of a longshot, but big companies can roll big dice.

      Third part of the plan: by the time Xbox 3 rolls out, the marketing people should have figured out a way to get people to pay for PVR, video on demand, high definition, 7.1 surround, webtv, satellite, broadband, VOIP, wireless, EVERYTHING IN ONE BOX and you only pay MSFT $30/month. This is what they want, a giant revenue stream from a cheap box they control and that everyone wants.

      Final part of the plan: with a monopoly on the delivery platform, they can dictate terms to movie studios, cable companies, TV networks, game developers, even telcos on a pay-to-play basis. This is when they make their realprofit. With even partial control of these revenue streams, MSFT can make back 100x their losses on Xbox 1.

      Microsoft is not stupid, they are not throwing away their money on a bad investment just to annoy Sony, and they are not the least bit concerned that they spent a $1 billion and didn't make it back immediately.

    78. Re:riiiight by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1
      Just so you know the age benchmark, I was born in the 80's. I have been playing computer and video games since I was young. You have 10-20 years start on me. Now then...

      1) Because I have been playing video games since the late 70s and have seen the rise and fall of so many "sure things" that I no longer count on a console's manufacturer as being important. It is, and always has been, about the games and the marketing. Those are the two things a successful console must have. The PS3 already has all of the PS1 and PS2 games. That alone gives it a massive edge over the Xbox Next which, according to all indicators, will not have any sort of backwards-compatibility.

      The Atari 7800 I beleive had backwards compatability with previous Atari consoles. The SNES did not, and look at how well it did. I think more need not be said in this case. :) In my humble opinion, backwards compatability is a novelty and should not be expected of a console to do well.* Besides, if you want to play those Xbox games that badly, you'll probably be able to pick them up dirt cheap for at least a Console Generation from retailers who are trying to let go of old stock.

      It is extraordinarily rare that MS eyes a market and manages to take it over (IE being one of the rare cases, with, perhaps, Pocket PC eventually gaining dominance - but both of those items are "tied" to the operating system). MSN, WebTV, Ultimate TV, the non-Xbox gaming hardware, etc.

      I'll agree with you here. However, are you implying that the Xbox gaming hardware is going better off than normal? Because if so then I agree with you 100%. * I know I know, what about the Game Boy. (I love my GBA SP) I will answer with this. I personally don't have a problem storing 4-5 consoles that I want to play near my TV. The cable mess might be hell, but it's not that big of an inconvenience. I, however, don't want to carry 4-5 different handhelds with me, it's not convenient.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    79. Re:riiiight by Ayaress · · Score: 1

      Where do you get Japan being zenophobic from? I'm going to have to quote the ambassador who spoke at my university:

      The Japanese culture is considerably more open than American. American clothes, TV shows, movies, video games, electronics, and any number of other brand-names are popular. In fact, he could list about a dozen very popular TV shows produced in the US and Canada that were even more popular in Japan than they were here.

      They've picked up forign sports. Not many native sports in Japan are still popular, but Baseball is huge, and they have soccer, football, and all the others.

      Their biggest restaraunt chain? McDonalds. I'm sure you've heard the joke about the Japanese child who came to the US for vacation and excitedly told his mother, "Look, they have McDonalds here, too!"

      The only area he came up with under questioning from the audience where the native products are considerably more popular than foriegn imports was cars. He didn't really know why, but the explanation is pretty obvious and very much not zenophobia. Many Japanese cars aren't exported. They actually build them in the regions they're being sold in and by the people they're being sold to. There's a Mitzubishi plant not far from where I live, and it picked up a good chunk of laid off GM and Ford workers last year. This lets them avoid the cost markup on importing (much cheaper to import 5000 crates of parts than 5000 cars) and sell for effectively the same price the domestic sellers do. It also reduces production cost, since land is so much more expensive in Japan, and most of its already taken up by something.

      However, in Japan, most European and American cars are imported, adding a cost markup. They're on an even keel with Japanese cars here. Throw in a markup of several thousand dollars, and they're in trouble.

    80. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "99% of all successful console games in the past 20 years have been from Japan. The only exception I can think of is Halo"

      grand theft auto, tomb raider....but to be honest i can't think of any console games worth playing besides these three....well super mario bros was pretty cool...but thats about it

    81. Re:riiiight by rhuntley12 · · Score: 1

      Let us not mention the huge amounts of PS2's that die or have to be standing sideways for them to even work, shall we? I agree with the not so great flagship games for Japan though. The scratching CD's and DVD's I've read about but I have not actually ever seen it or talked to anyone who knew anyone this happened to, was this a Japan only thing? The xbox has some fantastic FPS, if you ignore the whining of no mouse, it just sucks that the Japanese don't seem to like them.

    82. Re:riiiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are talking like one of those arrogant and you don't seem to understand that the US is where the wars will be won and lost simply becaus ethey are the only market where a competor can make an inroad microsoft won't win in japan untill they take the US and can put real effort into making the software top compete in other countries. If you were to go look at the game sbeing made on the different systems microsoft knows this and they are focusing on games that do well in america. and where does 99% of all successfull games come from i am wondering if you know who is the largest producer of video games in the WORLD i can tell you they are housed in califorina. go look it up then come back and talk aobut how and where to sell electronic entertainment products

    83. Re:riiiight by bugbread · · Score: 1

      Large, unparkable American cars with steering wheels on the wrong side of the car and a history of breaking down rapidly?

      <br>
      Do this for me: Count the number of Russian cars you see in America. Count the number of American cars you see in Russia. It's not because of protectionism that Russian cars sell poorly in the US, it's because of quality. The same goes with Japan. Speaking personally, there are some things that I would be happy buying that are from America, but electronics and cars are not among them.

    84. Re:riiiight by kisrael · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, I think Europeans think of Ford as a European company, because of the long historical association with and factories in Germany...

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
  3. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  4. in Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Sony can take over the world ... in Japan

    1. Re:in Japan by nzgeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Parent sounds kinda flamebait-ish, but actually pretty perceptive.

      Sony have a huge following in Japan, and there are a squillion totally insane and unfathomably games for the PS2 that never see the light of day outside of Asia.

      I doubt MS would be able to understand Sony's Japasia market, let alone penetrate it.

    2. Re:in Japan by GT_Onizuka · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Which, in and of itself, is a whole other problem for Microsoft. Without extensive Japanese support, they lose a lot of 3rd Party oppurtunities that Sony picks up. Most of the great 3rd party titles released on the X-Box (SC2, Splinter Cell etc.) are released on other systems as well, which gives me no reason to pick up an X-Box while I already have a PS2 and a NGC.

      --
      If you take out Country Kitchen buffet, old people won't know what to do.
    3. Re:in Japan by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Microsoft just won't be able to cut it in Japan. Not unless they can effectively use their monopoly advantage to stop Sony ever releasing the PS3. The Japanese would rather support their own home-grown mass-produced product than some American box from a company that most people respect only because it has money.... but for no other reason. THAT factor alone is a big one as to why Xbox couldn't cut it here (not to mention the bad and overly loud marketing MS did here *cough*Batsu Box*cough*) Also consider that as consoles get more expensive to develop on, less game houses are going to want to port their stuff between consoles... meaning all those 3rd party developers are going to have to pick sides.

      --
      READY.
      PRINT ""+-0
    4. Re:in Japan by MMaestro · · Score: 3, Interesting
      True but when you REALLY think about it, how many Xbox games have been ported to other systems? SC2 (with mixed results being the graphics most notably), Splinter Cell (lighting effects on the PS2 are horribly turned down), and... Star Wars KOTOR on the PC? (Nice but most already had a Xbox or didn't wanna deal with the huge system requirements.)

      Compared to Nintendo, Microsoft has its Mario (just go and make the Master Chief from Halo your mascot already!), its FPSes, a couple RPGs (does KOTOR count?), and enough sports games to challenge EA's draconan rules. In Japan, considering the sheer amount of games that are released there but never make it to the US... well. Lets just say theres enough PS2 games there that some video game stores there sell ONLY PS2 and they STILL don't have enough space to put up every game for the system. (Drumming games, guitar games, eyetoy games, dancing games, Japanese drumming games, karaoke games, a new Gundam game almost every year, a new RPG almost every 6 months, enough fighting games to make even a hardcore gamer's head spin, etc etc... We get about half that, plus awful voice acting, and often times poor translations.)

    5. Re:in Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems like the new meme isn't going so well yet ... in Japan!

    6. Re:in Japan by davegust · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sony would be foolish to discount Microsoft's resolve to be successful in Japan. Read up on the failure of Word 6.0 in Japan, followed by the success of Word 95.

    7. Re:in Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep it up... in Japan!

    8. Re:in Japan by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      All they gota do is put an add in the paper saying;

      "Are you a good games programmer that got sacked by sony, or werent goon enough to be hired by sony? Come to us, we can bring you up to speed, and you can have a chance to stick it up to sony"

      Surely there are jap crazy game fans/coders that are unemployed or not hired by sony/namco etc...

      All it takes is $$$ and you can hire anyone with reasnable skills, hell, for MS, spending $50m on a jap game dev house isnt gona hurt even if the programmers are so so, they can be brought up to speed, or just hire 2x as much.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    9. Re:in Japan by EulerX07 · · Score: 1

      One would also be foolish to compare a word processor with console hardware.

    10. Re:in Japan by The12thRonin · · Score: 2, Funny

      Do you really want the Master Chief popping up saying "It looks like you're trying to type a letter. Do you want help?"

    11. Re:in Japan by metamatic · · Score: 1

      Regarding Splinter Cell... The PS2 version had graphics which were more than sufficient to support the gameplay, and it's gameplay that counts. In addition, the PS2 version had an entire extra level, and it was one of the best maps in the entire game.

      Even if I had an Xbox, I'd have played the PS2 version.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    12. Re:in Japan by rhuntley12 · · Score: 1

      I always hear people talk about their insane games, and I've imported tons of them. You really don't hear that about 95% of them make you want to break things.:) I think they are more prone to risking the time and money on a game that will probably flop, whereas the huge studios elsewhere won't. I'm looking at you EA.

    13. Re:in Japan by nzgeek · · Score: 1

      That bad?

      I remember reading about some game called "Cookies'n'Cream". I could never find a copy, but apparently you either controlled two on-screen characters at the same time (one with each thumbstick), or as a two-player co-op game. You had to do stuff like row a boat... sounded like a ton of fun if you got drunk first.

    14. Re:in Japan by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      True but when you REALLY think about it, how many Xbox games have been ported to other systems? SC2 (with mixed results being the graphics most notably)

      Except that Soul Calibur 2 was NEVER designed just for the Xbox. It was known at the beginning that Namco was developing for ALL THREE systems at once.

      And yet, the GC version outsold the PS2 and Xbox versions as well. Why? the Xbox had slightly better graphics and 5.1 surround sound for it's SC2 over the GameCube. However, the GC version had Link.

      and enough sports games to challenge EA's draconan rules.

      Wow, your glasses truly are rose tinted, aren't they? Perhaps you didn't notice, but Microsoft has CANCELLED it's crap ass XSN Sports titles for this year (the only non-crap ones being Links and Top Spin, which were great)? Or had you been in a cave in April? Oh, and look who JUST HAPPENED to get on the XBL bandwagon after Microsoft cancelled competition for it? Yep, EA.

      Seems to me that EA was the one wearing down Microsoft, not the other way around.

    15. Re:in Japan by nabasu · · Score: 1

      Soul Calibur 2 was an arcade game that got ported to the consoles. It wasn't originally an XBox game.

  5. You can STEVE! by MasterB(G)ates · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    But you won't ...

    --
    In the Slashdot moderating system, humourless based offenses are considered especially heinous.
  6. Not without tying it wont by unassimilatible · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Of course, were XBox and PS2 a fight, they would have stopped it.

    Funny how Microsoft's essentially unlimited resources are not enough to penetrate a market (based on the relative lack of success of the XBox to date).

    Not until MS finds a way to tie XBox 2 to Windows will they be able to "take" Sony. Maybe if they can force users to activate Windows via the XBox? ;-)

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Not without tying it wont by AvantLegion · · Score: 5, Insightful
      >> Funny how Microsoft's essentially unlimited resources are not enough to penetrate a market

      Red herring. MS could've sold each console for $50 and taken control of the market. But that would not set them up for long-term success. They are essentially playing within the same boundaries as everyone else, although they do pump in an extra infusion of cash as needed. But their monetary advantage paled against Sony's mindshare advantage.

      Besides, are the only successful products in the world the ones with >50% of the market share? How does the rest of every industry operate?

    2. Re:Not without tying it wont by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Funny how Microsoft's essentially unlimited resources are not enough to penetrate a market (based on the relative lack of success of the XBox to date).

      They weren't competing against Be Inc this time, they are competing against Sony.

      Microsoft is a huge company, but so is Sony. And Sony has plenty of money to fight-off Microsoft, and a major advantage when it comes to developing hardware.

      I can't think of any market (other than their core OS/Office market) that Microsoft has ever been able to dominate. Are you using a Microsoft Keyboard/Mouse? Is everyone else?
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    3. Re:Not without tying it wont by Anonymous+Writer · · Score: 1

      Not until MS finds a way to tie XBox 2 to Windows will they be able to "take" Sony. Maybe if they can force users to activate Windows via the XBox?

      Actually, you make an interesting point there. Microsoft has normally used it's monopoly in one market to expand it's market share in another. This usually involved tying it in with Windows. However, they have traditionally stayed away from hardware manufacturing in the case of Windows boxes and Pocket PC devices, with the exception of things like keyboards and mice, because they rely on the PC hardware industry. But since they make the Xbox, they can't tie it in with Windows because this may put them in competition with the hardware manufacturers they rely on. Despite the Xbox's reliance on the PC hardware standard, they can never allow it to actually become a PC. If they do, other hardware manufacturers may jump ship and use other operating systems. They can only use their Windows monopoly to support the Xbox financially, but have to keep their software business model and hardware manufacturing separate.

    4. Re:Not without tying it wont by dosius · · Score: 1

      Isn't XBOX Win2K-based and sporting a Celeron/733?

      Moll.

      --
      What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
    5. Re:Not without tying it wont by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Besides, are the only successful products in the world the ones with >50% of the market share? How does the rest of every industry operate?

      They turn a profit. RTFA. MS is losing money on the Xbox. That pretty much means its not a successful product right there.

      If you think that's not important in deciding whether or not it's successful, I've got some dot-com shares to sell you.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    6. Re:Not without tying it wont by unassimilatible · · Score: 1
      A company's financial resources being instrumental in penetrating a market is not a red herring. MS launched Windows 2000 with a $100 million advertising campaign. Let's see a Linux distro do that.

      My point was, Mr. Argumentative, that even 800-lbs, Gorillas can't always shoehorn their way into a market. Jesus, some of you like to argue just for the sake of arguing.

      MS could've sold each console for $50 and taken control of the market

      It could have, and then again been pursued by federal regulators, this time for predatory pricing.

      Besides, are the only successful products in the world the ones with >50% of the market share?

      I do believe the whole point of the original article was how MS is going to kick Sony's arse. Ballmer's argument, not mine.

      --
      Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    7. Re:Not without tying it wont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Not until MS finds a way to tie XBox 2 to Windows will they be able to "take" Sony.

      ms is going to tie in their xbox live service with their passport/msn messenger service. i belive they have already implamented the link in the current version of xbox live but are waiting for developers to make new games to take advantage of this feature

    8. Re:Not without tying it wont by Ath · · Score: 1
      Technically, you are right that the Xbox alone is not successful because it is not profitable. But that is not how console companies work. Profitability is based on the console PLUS the average number of games purchased by each console owner. The Xbox seems to do quite well in this area.

      The other part you are not factoring in is brand awareness. Three years ago, there was no Xbox and Microsoft was not a player at all in the console market. Now they are the number 2 brand worldwide, at least in sales. And in brand awareness, they are definitely in the top 3. You think that is easy? Ask Sega. They essentially disappeared overnight.

      Microsoft is in the console market for the long haul, and profitably of their first attempt at the market was never their goal.

      Your comparison of dot-coms is pretty much irrelevant because the failure of most dot-coms was because they had no real revenue model over the longterm. Those that did and who did not waste the majority of their capital on an attempt at brand awareness are still around today. In the case of Microsoft, they have a lot of capital to invest in the console market and they definitely have a company-wide revenue model to support that investment.

      I also work for a company that is all about the brand and when we open a new market, we expect fully to lose money in that market during the first years. We take a long term view of the situation. We don't work off quarterly results and profitability reports. Why? Because, in the end, we want a viable company and set of products well into the future. Microsoft's entry into the console market is exactly the same approach. They never thought of making a profit with the first generation of the Xbox. Instead, they wanted a strong showing in the console market. And they definitely achieved it.

    9. Re:Not without tying it wont by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      >Not until MS finds a way to tie XBox 2 to Windows will they be able to "take" Sony.

      In fact, I won't be surprised if next-generation PC's explode when placer near any Sony product... (that's what I thought when I read the header).

    10. Re:Not without tying it wont by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 1
      Profitability is based on the console PLUS the average number of games purchased by each console owner. The Xbox seems to do quite well in this area.

      If that were true, then MS would be turning a profit on the Xbox. They're not.

      Three years ago, there was no Xbox and Microsoft was not a player at all in the console market. Now they are the number 2 brand worldwide...

      This is Microsoft we're talking about. As someone else pointed out elsewhere in the discussion, it would have been a shocking embarrassment if they couldn't make a significant dent in the market. No one with that kind of marketing department and that much cash to throw around ought to have accomplished any less.

      Microsoft is in the console market for the long haul, and profitably of their first attempt at the market was never their goal.

      No other company could have done that, not at the volume of Xbox sales. That's not a cause for admiration. It means that MS can afford to be either slack or lackluster, where other companies do not have that luxury.

      Your comparison of dot-coms is pretty much irrelevant because the failure of most dot-coms was because they had no real revenue model over the longterm.

      Well, MS had better. Even their pockets are only so deep. Do they? No doubt they have a "model", but is it realistic? Other posters here have demonstrated how MS must crack the Japanese market to have even a slim hope of overtaking Sony, and how little chance they have of really doing that.

      That wouldn't be a problem for most companies, but then most companies are turning a profit when they're the #2 player in a market the size of the one for gaming consoles. MS has to be #1. They clearly no longer understand any other way of doing business.

      Well, it's now been nearly 3 years since the Xbox was launched. This is past the "first years" now, isn't it? To be sure, you shouldn't worry too much about profitability at first. But a "viable company" must become profitable at some point. A money-losing operation, over a run of years, is the very definition of non-viable.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
  7. Considering we're talking about Ballmer... by johnthorensen · · Score: 0, Troll

    Yeah, Microsoft will be taking Sony...

    ...In the ASS!

    :P

    -JT

    1. Re:Considering we're talking about Ballmer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod Parent UP!

      Most original joke I've seen on Slashdot in awhile...nice to hear something other than "All your base..." or "In soviet Russia..."!

    2. Re:Considering we're talking about Ballmer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In soviet Russia, joke origiantes you!

    3. Re:Considering we're talking about Ballmer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in soviet russia, your ass takes it in the sony

  8. correct only if... by boisepunk · · Score: 1

    This prediction by this man will only come to be correct if M$ makes sure their next console can't run linux (I highly doubt that nobody's going to be able to make a simple way to do it again).

    --
    main(0)
    1. Re:correct only if... by sw33tjimmy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I think you overestimate the number of people in the world that are interested enough in Linux to try installing it on a game console. When we're talking sales in the tens of millions of consoles... the number of uberl337 linux haxors is pretty insignificant. ;)

      the vast... and I mean VAST majority of console consumers don't know jack from squat when it comes to computer components, let alone the inner workings of Linux. I suppose the current Xbox attracted a few due to it's pc-esque architecture, but I seriously doubt that will happen again. Even if it does, as I said, we're talking about a miniscule percentage of the gaming populace.
      But perhaps I completely missed your point? I tend to do that sometimes.

      --
      Get Virtual.
    2. Re:correct only if... by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 1

      Good point. DVD Knoppix on the PS3 could just be the thing that could blow MS out of the water. Open Office on every game console all over the world would do the trick thank you very much.

      --
      READY.
      PRINT ""+-0
    3. Re:correct only if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you know what punk means?! You are clearly a boy of Boise. Enjoy being a victim.

  9. Incorrect quote by teamhasnoi · · Score: 4, Funny
    "I am betting we can take Sony in the next generation."

    should be:

    "I am betting we will take it in the ass from Sony in the next generation."

    Really, that is far more plausable.

    1. Re:Incorrect quote by Wizarth · · Score: 1

      I am betting we can take Sony in the next generation... In Japan!

      Oh wait. As discussed, they probably wont.

      I am betting we will take it in the ass from Sony in the next generation In Japan!

      Much better.

    2. Re:Incorrect quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I am betting we can take Sony in the next generation." in Japan.

  10. Deja vu... by sandalwood · · Score: 1

    I forgot where I read this, but when Bill Gates was asked what made him think the Xbox had a chance in the video game market, he replied, "there has never been a dominant company in the game console business for more than one generation in a row." Which was already wrong by the time he said it, but he was proven wrong again soon afterwards. The devil is in the details, guys; I'll believe your market dominance when I see it.

    1. Re:Deja vu... by dosius · · Score: 1

      It's happened twice. Nintendo (NES, SNES) and Sony (PSX/PSone, PS2). Who knows, Sony might even pull a 3-peat.

      Moll.

      --
      What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
  11. Re:Frist Psot by Draconix · · Score: 0, Troll

    *hands you a gun* Go for it. I'm standing right here. Pull the trigger and become a man, because everyone knows the only way to become a man is to shoot someone who hasn't done you any harm, but is different. While you're at it, you'd better find a homosexual and a person of another skin color than your own too. Normally I don't respond to stuff like this, but I'm kind of tired of the BS. Even from trolls on /. I'd expect better.

    --
    By reading this you acknowledge that you have read it.
  12. Re:Of course they can... by weapon · · Score: 0

    You have to ask yourself how many sales they make from people installing Linux on them, both direct and indirect.

    Weapon

  13. Bah by ucblockhead · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Microsoft hasn't successfully entered a market since the browser wars. When the histories are written in fifty years, Microsoft's peak will be said to have been in 2000. They are starting to lose share in browsers. They are not dominating the PDA market like they wanted to. They are not the king of set top boxes. They are slowly but surely losing the server market. Despite reams of hype and much marketting muscle on Microsoft's part, Sony still sells ten Playstations for every Xbox.

    Microsoft is where IBM was in 1980. They are on top, but headed for a fall. The reason? Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy.

    --
    The cake is a pie
    1. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > They are slowly but surely losing the server market

      Actually, they're doing really well in servers and shooting towards a 60% marketshare. You are probably right about the consumer stuff, but the IBM analogy will hold and MS will be around in enterprise computing forever.

    2. Re:Bah by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 4, Informative

      "They are not dominating the PDA market like they wanted to."

      Actually, they are. Since the launch of Pocket PC, Windows CE devices have been growing in marketshare consistantly. In fact, the #1 PDA manufacturer isn't PalmOne anymore, it's HP.

      "They are slowly but surely losing the server market."

      They can't lose what they never had. Microsoft never owned the server market.

      "Microsoft is where IBM was in 1980. They are on top, but headed for a fall. The reason? Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy."

      IBM is still a $90 billion a year company. There was no IBM "fall". They are still very much alive and kicking.

      "Despite reams of hype and much marketting muscle on Microsoft's part, Sony still sells ten Playstations for every Xbox."

      Statistically, you're full of crap. At the beginning of this year, Microsoft had sold 13.5 million XBOX consoles. Sony has sold 50 million PS2 consoles. That's 3.7 to one, not the ten to one you quote.

      And, remember, PS2 launched over a year and a half earlier than XBox.

      "Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy."

      When Apple rips off features from Windows XP (fast user switching, video chat, disk encryption, save window with places on left), it's "innovating". When Microsoft invents these features, it's "copying".

      "They are not the king of set top boxes."

      Carriers deploying Microsoft TV based products:
      - Comcast Cable (largest cable operator in world)
      - Megacable (largest cable operator in Mexico)
      - Bell Canada
      - Swisscom (largest broadband provier in Switzerland)
      - Reliance Infocomm (largest broadband provider in India)

    3. Re:Bah by Daimaou · · Score: 1

      "When Apple rips off features from Windows XP. . .disk encryption. . ."

      Sorry, but Windows XP ripped disk encryption off from Linux and BSD, who probably ripped it off from somebody else. Apple probably got it through their BSD roots and not from Microsoft.

    4. Re:Bah by pb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or for that matter, "fast user switching". I guess that's only an innovation for a single user OS, eh?

      --
      pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
    5. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering Microsoft didn't exist in 1950, I'd say 2000 was assuredly their best year divisible by fifty.

    6. Re:Bah by MC+Negro · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You beat me to it. A link for those curious. As stated on the website, Windows disk encryption was neither innovative nor truly secure. In a security class I had to take, I watched the professor demonstrate just how easy it was to bypass the NTFS file encryption. With a simple hash-generating script (the inner workings of which I've yet to explore :-), he was able to bypass an "encrypted" directory's protection.

      --
      "You and your third dimension."
    7. Re:Bah by Chris+Carollo · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy.
      The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market. First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive. Also, the Xbox was built to be easy to program, utilizing standard libraries (DirectX) and development environments (Visual Studio). They launched a unified online gaming environment with full voice that no one else is even close to touching. And they're the ones who are unable to innovate?

      I know that it's unpopular to actually say good things about Microsoft, but the Xbox is a really good console. It's easy to program, full-featured, and especially lately seems to be getting a lot of the top releases.

      The fact that a company could enter an industry with no prior experience and do better than the likes of Nintendo is really impressive, huge bankroll or no. They had a good strategy, good hardware, innovated in relevant areas, and managed to do pretty well. The simple fact that they stand a good chance of unseating Sony in the next round of consoles (which many analysts believe) is just evidence of their success.
    8. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While your post is very good, for the record, Microsoft HARDLY invented video chat, and Apple had disk encryption as far back as system 8.5 or so, it just went away for a little while.

    9. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Microsoft hasn't successfully entered a market since the browser wars."

      How does this nonsense get modded up? Absolute FUD.

    10. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy."

      You really have no clue do you?

    11. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2, Informative


      IBM is still a $90 billion a year company. There was no IBM "fall". They are still very much alive and kicking.


      It sounds like you define "fall" as a complete failure or bankruptcy of a company. Not so. IBM of today is a major player in IT. However, during the 80's, they were THE voice of business IT. They owned the market. They set standards. Heck - the IBM PC didn't become popular because it was first to market, most powerfull, least expensive, or first to provide the business computing killer app. But it was a success in business because businesses wanted microcomputers and IBM had one to offer.

      Not anymore. Today's IBM competes with other major players in the market; their position in the market fell. Which is a good thing. Unless you're business is IBM's business.
    12. Re:Bah by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Yeah, my 'fast user switching', in Debian, consists of CTRL-ALT-F7 and CTRL-ALT-F8, and it's significantly faster than Windows I might add.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    13. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4, Insightful


      Also, the Xbox was built to be easy to program, utilizing standard libraries (DirectX) and development environments (Visual Studio).


      By "standard", you mean Microsoft's standards. Which is fortunate since this is a Microsoft product. An obvious advantage to this is being able to develop a tittle for both the Windows and Xbox (or "pc" and "console" if you prefer the misnomer) markets. But in the end, this "standard" is not any more special as any other existing standard. When you code for Sony, you use their tools. And when you code for Microsoft, you use their tools.

    14. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone mod this Microsoft fanboy flamebait. This is slashdot after all.

    15. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Umm...Apple hardly ripped off any of these features from Microsoft and certainly not from XP. I remember full on video conferencing in the early '90s with "budget" UNIX workstations like the SGI Indy. (We are talking pre Win95 here - back in the Microsoft stone age.)

      The encrypted file system introduced in OS X is actually based upon some NeXT technology. (And NeXT is even older than those SGI Indy systems...or did you also miss the part of history when Steve Jobs brought over all the engineers from NeXT and took over Apple?) Anyway, NeXT had an encryption API (for use by applications) for fast elliptic encryption. Go read a little about the encrypted file system in OS X and you will find, well, how about that - fast elliptic encryption!

      Also, OS X is UNIX based and UNIX systems are inherently multi-user. The "fast user switching" (and remote desktop stuff) just exposed the multi-user guts of the OS in a user friendly way. (Yes, NeXT also had stuff like remote desktop - login to any machine on the LAN and see your files and apps as if you were sitting at your own box.)

      Its just taking time for the OS guys at Apple to take all the good ideas from what came before and fit them together in a logical way in OS X.

      In many ways, the "modern" Windows UI (95, 98, NT4, 2000) actually borrow from the NeXT UI. In my opinion, XP tried to do something new with the UI and it turned out pretty bad where as OS X also tried to do something new with the UI and (while somewhat rough at first) is actually getting pretty damn good!

    16. Re:Bah by character_assassin · · Score: 1

      There is a difference: the technical aspect of developing games for Sony consoles is a pain in the ass. Sony has practically gone out of its way to irritate and obstruct developers, as anyone who has actually worked on a Playstation game will tell you. This alone gives Microsoft a huge advantage, and quite frankly, partially explains why XBox games are typically better than their Playstation counterparts.

      --

      If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
    17. Re:Bah by LordSah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except that Microsoft's tools are easily accessed and digested. All you need to know is on msdn.microsoft.com. The IDE is widely available (cheap for academic versions, free for upcoming Express versions), and the SDK is free. A person can learn DirectX on his/her own, rather easily, and that knowledge is directly applicable to the production of an XBox game.

      No other gaming platform (except the PC) has anything at all like that. I googled for "sony playstation 2 sdk" and the only SDK-like tool I found was this link. You must become licensed as a PlayStation developer to even purchase the product. Metroworks didn't list any prices, but I'd be surprised if it was less than $5000.

    18. Re:Bah by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Wow a pro MS post modded to 5 despite being nothing but a thinly disguised advertisement.

      P.S. Not one of the so called "innovations" you state came from MS. Not one.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    19. Re:Bah by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I know that it's unpopular to actually say good things about Microsoft, "

      And yet you get modded up to 4. Actually it's the best way to get karma on slashdot.

      For the newbies take this hint. Always post a couple of "I don't like MS but they make a great (X)". In other words take a light swipe at them while praising one of their products highly. It's the best way to get karma.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    20. Re:Bah by Horizon_99 · · Score: 1

      Innovative? Come on, it's a pc with a big ugly X on top, for a company like MS, that was taking the easy way out.

    21. Re:Bah by sunspot42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Since the launch of Pocket PC, Windows CE devices have
      >been growing in marketshare consistantly. In fact, the #1
      >PDA manufacturer isn't PalmOne anymore, it's HP.

      Great. Microsoft will be king of a **DEAD MARKET**. Congratulations, Bill Gates! Now maybe you can realize your lifelong ambition and become the world's #1 buggy whip manufacturer, too!

      PDA's are so 9/10, dude. The market for them is contracting. Cell phones are where the action is now, and Palm has the hottest - and most profitable - cell phone by far with their Treo line.

      That's the downside to Microsoft having a business model that's based upon leveraging their monopoly OS position and ripping off the innovations of others. That model only works when dealing with devices that truly need to run software written for their OS. Few people need to run Word or Excel on a dinky cell phone or PDA display, which leaves Microsoft incapable of leveraging their OS monopoly in the cell / PDA space to gain total market control. They have to compete on useful features and the functionality users crave (or didn't know they needed), and Microsoft is incapable of developing either. The day Microsloth comes up with something on their own as useful as Palm did with the Treo is the day hell freezes over. MS is way too busy trying to lock customers into their OS jail to spend a nanosecond worrying about what the customer truly wants or needs.

    22. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Except that Microsoft's tools are easily accessed and digested. All you need to know is on msdn.microsoft.com. The IDE is widely available (cheap for academic versions, free for upcoming Express versions), and the SDK is free.


      Fair enough. But what you're describing is a superior, but no less proprietary, IDE and SDK.


      A person can learn DirectX on his/her own, rather easily, and that knowledge is directly applicable to the production of an XBox game.


      So what you're saying is I can produce Xbox games without any specific licensing?
    23. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market. First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive.

      And that hard drive was -such- a good idea, they're NOT putting one in XBox2!

      Also, the Xbox was built to be easy to program, utilizing standard libraries (DirectX) and development environments (Visual Studio).

      Okay, so PC dev kits work on PC parts in a DRM'ed PC. This is innovative... how, exactly?

      They launched a unified online gaming environment with full voice that no one else is even close to touching.

      Except... Sega.net on Dreamcast (!) had over one million customers within one year. Xbox Live has about half that.

      And they're the ones who are unable to innovate?

      Sounds about right to me.

      The fact that a company could enter an industry with no prior experience and do better than the likes of Nintendo is really impressive, huge bankroll or no.

      How can you say MS/Xbox is doing better than Nintendo when they aren't even making a profit?

    24. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Wow, good post. I do hope you have some vested interest in posting the pro-microsoft rhetoric... If not, it's really very curious.

      Personnally, I don't know/don't care much whether Microsoft dominates the handheld or set-top market. They're both overly-heavy niche markets that won't ever pay back on the investment because a more simple and more effective product already competes. I say, good for Microsoft if they want to throw money down that toilet; somebody will make good come of it.

      I don't know or care about handhelds or set-top boxes, but I do know enough to tell you that you're full of it when you start talking about Microsoft "innovation."

      • When Apple rips off features from Windows XP (fast user switching, video chat, disk encryption, save window with places on left), it's "innovating". When Microsoft invents these features, it's "copying".


      With a order of magnitude more money and more people to spend on R&D, Microsoft managed to implement a good idea (fast user switching), and Apple turned it around and made work better.

      Go figure.

      File encryption? Um, sorry that's been around for a lot longer than Microsoft has used it -- no matter what name you want to put on it. Ditto video "chat." And a list of file folders... true "innovation" there :).

      Obviously you haven't had the opportunity to encounter real innovation like Expose or Rendezvous. Obviously you haven't had the opportunity to see what creative thought and Cocoa can create, like Launchbar or the editor formerly known as Hydra, SubEthaEdit. That's what innovation is, and that's what well thought out tools can provide.

      • IBM is still a $90 billion a year company. There was no IBM "fall". They are still very much alive and kicking.


      I guess you don't remember, or you choose to forget that before IBM changed the way it runs business that they were a few months from dead. Trying to bleed customers is a dead-end business model, and that's exactly what Microsoft continues to do, and exactly what IBM went away from.

    25. Re:Bah by RoLi · · Score: 1, Insightful
      The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market. First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive. Also, the Xbox was built to be easy to program, utilizing standard libraries (DirectX) and development environments (Visual Studio).

      So Microsoft crippled a PC, put some optimizations in and sold it as a console.

      Are our standards really that low that this counts as "innovation"?

      XBox doesn't contain anything new. Harddrives are hardly new. The x86 architecture isn't new.

      The PS2 architecture however was completely different to anything existing. The new "cell" architecture also is completely new.

      That's a whole other level than just putting some off-the-shelf hardware parts into a console.

    26. Re:Bah by LordSah · · Score: 1

      Because something is proprietary doesn't mean it isn't a standard. There's lots and lots of examples of standards that are proprietary--GIFs, PDF, MSWord, the Philips CD, Intel's Audio Codec. That's the way things work.

      So what you're saying is I can produce Xbox games without any specific licensing?

      You can build and run it on a PC. Once you want to publish it to XBox, there is a licensing fee, but if I recall correctly, it's quite a bit less than Sony's or Nintendo's fee. The port from your PC version to the XBox is relatively trivial, as such things go.

    27. Re:Bah by Threni · · Score: 1

      > They are starting to lose share in browsers

      They are number one in browsers by a long way, and have dropped just 1% recently. Not bad if you compare their browser - last updated in 2001 - with multiple rivals, some of which are updated every week. I'd put that down as a strength, not a weakness. Sure, I use Firefox as it's a better browser, but that's not what we're discussing here.

    28. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When Apple rips off features from Windows XP (fast user switching, video chat, disk encryption, save window with places on left), it's "innovating". When Microsoft invents these features, it's "copying".

      Yet again we find that Microsoft didn't do it first. In the old days -- like around 10 to 15 years ago -- AIX had a feature called the hft, the High Function Terminal. The HFT let you press a combination of keys and switch to a new virtual terminal on the same console. Each one could run its own X11 session, so you could switch from one user to another quite easily, and in, say, 1 or 2 seconds. Other versions of Unix had similar features.

      Fast user switching is just basically the same thing only implemented at a slightly higher layer in the software. It's not a new idea. If Microsoft invented anything here, it was a way to make this happen on its own Windows system, which does work differently than Unix. But that's an implementation issue.

    29. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is really that the Windows-PC architecture (for this is what an Xbox is) is well-known, thus the familiarity makes it relatively easy to program for. The PS2 does not have this advantage, and also has a less well understood processor architecture (i.e. vector processing - and the only other mainstream use of this I know of for home use is the vector coprocessing on the Power series chips in the Apple range).

    30. Re:Bah by WasterDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh jesus, have you not been watching? WTF do you think the whole PS2 linux scene has been about? They sure as shit weren't planning on making any money from it. They were only vaguely hoping that it would produce some brilliant new games company for them to buy ... a Polyphony or Psygnosis.

      No. This has been so they can learn about developers. What developers like. What works in development environments. And, to be honest, if they get their shit together they'll end up with something almost identical to Visual C++. I would put even money on it being a modified eclipse based platform, actually.

      Point is that Sony know they messed up from a developers point of view on at least the first two playstations. They appear to have held developer relations together in a much more solid fashion for the PSP project ... They seem pretty determined to fix it.

      I'll be interested to see how this whole PS3/Xbox2 think pans out actually. I won't be buying an XBox2, but I won't be convinced I'm backing the winning horse either.

      Dave

      --
      I write a blog now, you should be afraid.
    31. Re:Bah by wfberg · · Score: 1


      Great. Microsoft will be king of a **DEAD MARKET**. Congratulations, Bill Gates! Now maybe you can realize your lifelong ambition and become the world's #1 buggy whip manufacturer, too!

      PDA's are so 9/10, dude. The market for them is contracting. Cell phones are where the action is now, and Palm has the hottest - and most profitable - cell phone by far with their Treo line.


      There's also the pocket-pc based MDA/MDA2 on offer from T-Mobile, and the eTen 300/700. Basically just your run-off-the-mill iPaq (the MDA is made by HTC, who also produce iPaqs) with a radio unit built-in that accessible to the OS as a cell/data modem. The only specialized software on it is the SMS functionality in pocket outlook and the dialer.

      Microsoft is also making a wince-based smartphone OS. That's kind of creepy, seeing how much it sucks. Unfortunately, the main competitors in phone-sized smart devices (Nokia, SonyEricsson) have dropped the ball significantly. While they're both using the Symbian/EPOC OS, they're incompatible with each other, and the usability of the system is really below par compared to the psion "organizers" of days past.

      Seriously, the Psion 5 organizer/PDA was a great device. To this day, I can switch it on and say "dammit, this OS is better than pocketpc, even though pocketpc came years later and stole a lot of their ideas". Unfortunately, it's a black-and-white device, with a tiny cpu for today's norms, and with no built-in cellular or bluetooth connection.

      If you happen across a psion 5 or later device, try it. You'll like it. And it will bring home just how significantly Nokia and SonyEricsson fucked up their shot at the smartphone.

      The worst thing now is that pocketpc has more developers/enthusiasts (even open sourcers) programming for it than palm or symbian have. I now own a pocketpc based device, that MDA2 (actually mine is branded Qtek 2020) I mentioned. I have to reset it twice a day, but at least I can find apps for it. *sigh*

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    32. Re:Bah by AliasTheRoot · · Score: 1

      Actually the best way to earn Karma is to point out the way that the parent post is Karma whoring ;)

    33. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy. Hey! They made MS Bob

      ...seriously though, Three Degrees is about the only MS app I know that actually contains new ideas.

    34. Re:Bah by smatt-man · · Score: 0

      IBM is still a $90 billion a year company. There was no IBM "fall". They are still very much alive and kicking.

      Try telling that to the 1000's of people IBM laid off in the mid-80's to 90's. Sure, they're making a comeback NOW, but then was a completely different story.

      --

      ---
      Lousy rotten karmic retribution.
    35. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When Apple rips off features from Windows XP (fast user switching, video chat, disk encryption, save window with places on left), it's "innovating". When Microsoft invents these features, it's "copying".
      Yeah, like MS has never ripped off Apple.... *cough* Explorer *cough cough*
    36. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, it's just a variation on the tried-and-true "I know I'm going to get modded down for saying this, but..." trick.

      Of course, when it's my turn to moderate, I do mod them down. I'm not falling for that fancy Reverse Psychology trickery, not me!

      (Posted Anon to preserve moderations in this thread.)

    37. Re:Bah by Ossadagowah · · Score: 1

      The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market. First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive.

      What about the Sega Saturn?

      Also, memory cards allow you to bring your game and continue at someone else's house. You don't have to take the entire console with you.

      --
      anata sekai o kakumei surush ga nai deshou? Anata no susumu michi wa yoi shite arimasu.
    38. Re:Bah by Rayonic · · Score: 1
      WTF do you think the whole PS2 linux scene has been about?

      It was about getting around certain tax laws in Europe, by classifying the PS2 as a "computer".

      I mean,

      1) You can't use the official PS2 Linux to directly access the hardware, thus you can't really code up a commercial-grade game.

      2) The Xbox programming scene is bigger, even though you have to physically mod-chip it.
    39. Re:Bah by nikster · · Score: 1

      so... you say that taking a Windows box along with all the tech developed for it (Visual Studio, DirectX, networking), then stripping the OS and hardware of all non-gaming related features, and packing it into an ugly-as-sin box is the "most innovative console ever"?

      Microsoft created the ultimate gaming PC, put it in said ugly-as-sin box, and claimed it was a console. then proceeded with the usual tactics to sign up or buy out develpers etc. it's impressive in the same way an 800 pound gorilla is impressive. but it's not innovative.

    40. Re:Bah by Swedentom · · Score: 1

      "When Apple rips off features from Windows XP (fast user switching, video chat, disk encryption, save window with places on left), it's "innovating". When Microsoft invents these features, it's "copying"."

      And you know why? Because Apple does it better.

      --
      Sig Nature
    41. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Microsoft is where IBM was in 1980. They are on top, but headed for a fall. The reason? Because despite the rhetoric, Microsoft can't innovate. They can only copy.
      I think you mean, "Microsoft can't innovate. They can only buy and rebrand". In any case, the idea's the same.
    42. Re:Bah by teebo80 · · Score: 1

      No other game console has the processing power of the Xbox. No other game console introduced a hard drive with there system. To me this is innovative.

    43. Re:Bah by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 1

      The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market. First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive.

      That's not innovation. There's a reason that Sony, et al, don't include a hard drive: it raises the cost and adds a major point of failure for very little return.

      Also, the Xbox was built to be easy to program, utilizing standard libraries (DirectX)

      That's not true. It wasn't "built to be easy to program." That basic rendering is fairly straightforward on the Xbox has little to do with Direct3D and everything to do with using video system that essentially takes a giant memory buffer and knows what to do with it. DirectSound and DirectInput are not used on the Xbox. Also note that 80% of game programming has nothing to do with graphics, sound, or the controller.

    44. Re:Bah by NecoX · · Score: 1

      It's not "innovative", it's a PC.

    45. Re:Bah by cybergrue · · Score: 1
      The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market.

      Ummm, NO.
      The X-box is a simplified PC, nothing more. It is not inovative in any meaninful way what-so-ever. All the tools for the Xbox are variants of the PC development tools. The XBox live stuff is simple rehashes of stuff that was done on the PC 5 to 10 years before.

      Around 2000, it became clear that the consoles were gaining the advantage over PC simply due to support issues. The game manufatures were getting tired of supporting the increadible range of varient components that could go into a PC, whereas a console had standardised architecture. I heard a story about a major games manufacturer (Activision I think); that a single call to tech support for any problem with a game, wiped out the profit for that unit. There was a major worry about this time that PC's would cease to be a platform that games were developed for. Microsoft was starting to dominate game development the same way they had dominated the desktop with their DirectX APIs when this happened, so what did they do, they created a console that was just a standardised PC, that could only be programmed using their tools. Most of the XBoxes early games were just ports of PC games (some of which had not even been released on PC at the time) Because the XBox is just a PC, it would have been very hard for MS not to put a HD in it.

    46. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Evidently you haven't heard of anti-trust, which is one reason IBM "fell" -- their hands were tied.

    47. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Because something is proprietary doesn't mean it isn't a standard. There's lots and lots of examples of standards that are proprietary--GIFs, PDF, MSWord, the Philips CD, Intel's Audio Codec. That's the way things work.


      Some proprietary standards are less so than others. Let's take two from your list of examples: MS Word and PDF. The MS Word format, if published, is kept out of the public eye. The PDF format is well documented, publically published, and can be implemented by anyone.


      Once you want to publish it to XBox, there is a licensing fee, but if I recall correctly, it's quite a bit less than Sony's or Nintendo's fee.


      So there is a licensing fee... like Sony.

      What we're ending up describing is, essentially, a proprietary environment just like Sony. Microsoft uses its standards. Sony uses theirs. Microsoft's environment might (or may not) be more accessable, easier to use, cheaper to develop, etc. Which are all laudible characteristics, to be sure. But the basics of licensing and standards between the competing platforms are esentially the same.
    48. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      I'm not aware that I made any comments as to WHY they fell. I'm simply stating that they did. They why of it is a completely different discussion.

    49. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "PDA's are so 9/10, dude. The market for them is contracting. Cell phones are where the action is now, and Palm has the hottest - and most profitable - cell phone by far with their Treo line."

      Yes, but the problem with this is that you're talking about a single market, and I'm betting that it's a CDMA market rather than GSM.

      The rest of the world is quite happy with Symbian Series 60, and so far the phone variant of pocket PC is flopping faster than Michelle McManus under jovian gravity due to being a halfway house between a PDA and phone device.

      "The day Microsloth comes up with something on their own as useful as Palm did with the Treo is the day hell freezes over."

      Optical mice.

    50. Re:Bah by Physics+Nobody · · Score: 1

      "The Xbox is one of the most innovative consoles to ever hit the market. First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive."

      Honestly, I just don't get what's so 'innovative' about that. The word innovation seems to have become so overused it has lost most of its meaning.

      Putting a hard drive in a console is not hard. It's something that would have been relatively easy to any manufacturer to do, it was simply never considered worthwhile. The problem is that it's bulky and raises the cost of the machine too much. The only reason MS was able to do it in the XBox is because they didn't have to care about actually making a profit. That's innovation?! You'll notice that the XBox 2 has no hard drive...

      --

      Physics is good

    51. Re:Bah by wedgewu · · Score: 1

      I don't know why including a HD onto a console is considered "innovative". Frankly, my first gaming platform (my PC) had a HD... and this was 20 years ago! If I remember correctly the usage of the HD isn't anything different from what the PC does... Making a game where the camera is the input tool - that's innovative. Having a touch screen as an input tool along with the standard buttons - that's innovative. These things change the way we play games. Doing something the PC has done for years? Bah. I'm not saying there is no innovation in the Xbox, but I'm tired of hearing how the HD was "innovation."

    52. Re:Bah by pappy97 · · Score: 1

      "The fact that a company could enter an industry with no prior experience and do better than the likes of Nintendo is really impressive, huge bankroll or no. They had a good strategy, good hardware, innovated in relevant areas, and managed to do pretty well. The simple fact that they stand a good chance of unseating Sony in the next round of consoles (which many analysts believe) is just evidence of their success. "

      Exactly! Great point! 99% of these kinds of ventures fail, badly. Just look at the XFL. Vince Mcmahon (sp?) tried to create a pro football league to compete with the NFL and bombed, badly. The XBOX came out of nowhere and is a legit competitior to Nintendo and Sony.

      Now if only the innovation used in the XBOX Department spread to Windows, etc, etc...we'd really have something...

    53. Re:Bah by LuSiDe · · Score: 1

      A storage method for a game console existed for years. Flash cards! And yet, when one doesn't use that but a harddrive, that's an "innovation"? It certainly ain't an invention. Innovation is a lousy buzzword anyway.

      And feel free to add your contribution at nimh.org/microsoft. I tried, and failed already.

      --
      WE DON'T NEED NO BLOG CONTROL.
    54. Re:Bah by admdrew · · Score: 1

      Regarding Word and PDF: first off, Word and PDF are not parallel products. PDF was designed to allow documents to be transported electronically while still retaining its original characteristics. Word, however, is a word processor at its core; its primary uses are related to creation and printing of documents.

      Though I don't know much about Word and PDF implementations, I do know there are free readers available for both formats. Also, an open source office suite that works wonderfully with Microsoft's publishing formats is widely and freely available

      What we're ending up describing is, essentially, a proprietary environment just like Sony.

      True, DirectX is proprietary... but it's extremely widespread and is hardly comparable to Sony's format. We may hate Microsoft, but a lot of their standardized systems (.NET anyone?) are easy and intuitive to develop with.

    55. Re:Bah by admdrew · · Score: 1
      innovation (n.)
      1. The act of introducing something new.
      2. Something newly introduced.

      I'd say that the Xbox was innovative by that definition. Using PC hardware and a lot of standards to create a console that was easily the most powerful on the market was not just new for Microsoft, it was new to the industry.

      And given MS's deep pockets, what they managed with the Xbox was less impressive than innovative.

    56. Re:Bah by admdrew · · Score: 1

      Nearly every reply to this said the Xbox was not innovative. Do you people know what the word 'innovative' means? Innovative means 'new' and 'never done before,' and does not necessarily have anything to do with quality. By the definition of innovation, the Xbox was truly innovative, certainly moreso than the PS2.

      All of the features of the Xbox that are touted (standard PC hardware, easy to develop architecture, a harddrive, etc) have never been implemented together in a console system. This makes it innovative. It was a new idea to do this. Whether these features were *good* ideas is up for debate, but MS did do it all first.

      Look at the features of the PS2: it provided advanced 3D effects, backwards compatibility, and a DVD drive. The N64 was 3D accelerated and did spectacular colored lighting. Every GameBoy since the 'brick' has been backwards compatible. And the previous PS also had an optical drive.
      The PS2 is hardly innovative, but that doesn't make it a bad system at all.

      Before you arguing over something as simple as a single world, make sure you know what it means, especially if the parent (like the parent of this) uses said word correctly.

    57. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      PDA's are so 9/10, dude.

      What the hell is 9/10?

    58. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What the hell is 9/10?

      0.9, Silly.

    59. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Regarding Word and PDF: first off, Word and PDF are not parallel products. PDF was designed to allow documents to be transported electronically while still retaining its original characteristics. Word, however, is a word processor at its core; its primary uses are related to creation and printing of documents.


      It doesn't matter what the format does. The fact still remains that PDF is well defined and publicly published. MS Word is not.


      Though I don't know much about Word and PDF implementations, I do know there are free readers available for both formats. Also, an open source office suite that works wonderfully with Microsoft's publishing formats is widely and freely available


      The 3rd party free readers for PDF work very well - they follow the documented standard. The Open Source word processor works very well thanks to extensive reverse engineering. However, it isn't perfect. You might want to note that every article on Open Office posted here involves a thread that talks about what areas of Word support fails.


      True, DirectX is proprietary... but it's extremely widespread and is hardly comparable to Sony's format. We may hate Microsoft, but a lot of their standardized systems (.NET anyone?) are easy and intuitive to develop with.


      My criticism has nothing to do with the quality or accessibility of either standard. And neither does the original statement (although maybe that's what they had meant).
    60. Re:Bah by Phil+Wilkins · · Score: 1

      First and foremost, it's the first console to ever include a hard drive ...and the first one to ditch it for the next generation. It's also the first console to lose a billion dollars a year, and not drag it's owner under.

    61. Re:Bah by Boglin · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but being a game nerd, I need to point out that the 3DO had a hard drive way back in the elder days of 1993. Now, if you want to say that the XBox was the first console that actually matter that had a hard drive, you can take credit for that.

      While I might grouse as much as anyone that the XBox wasn't innovative, the 3DO had innovation out the wazoo, but still managed to be a bad idea, so innovation isn't everything.

    62. Re:Bah by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      >It was about getting around certain tax laws in >Europe, by classifying the PS2 as a "computer".

      They did that with the Yabasic discs they threw in, not with the Linux kit, which came much later.

      1: The sony folks say you CAN do a commercial quality game.

      2: How is the Xbox scene bigger? Can you prove that?

    63. Re:Bah by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      So releasing a console after a competitors allowing one to use more powerful hardware is innovative? In what way?

      When the PS2 was released, no other console had an expansion bay to put a hard drive in. No other console had USB AND Firewire ports. No other console used a controller designe exactly the same as the previous one.

      Isn't this innovative?

    64. Re:Bah by LordSah · · Score: 1

      I don't remember what we were originally debating :) I'll agree that XBox (like Sony) is fundamentally a proprietary technology that requires licensing.

      Your post to which I originally replied:
      By "standard", you mean Microsoft's standards. Which is fortunate since this is a Microsoft product. An obvious advantage to this is being able to develop a tittle for both the Windows and Xbox (or "pc" and "console" if you prefer the misnomer) markets. But in the end, this "standard" is not any more special as any other existing standard. When you code for Sony, you use their tools. And when you code for Microsoft, you use their tools.

      I think what I was pointing out is that Microsoft's "standard" really is a standard. The fundamental technology (DirectX) is widespread, accessible and mature enough to be considered the standard on which the gaming industry can me built. (Yes I know OpenGL is used as well, and I'm not trying to belittle it).

      It's something of a non-argument to try to shoot down XBox's "standards" advantage just because you still have to license your game. XBox's "standards" really does make XBox more accessible, easier to use, cheaper to develop for, etc. which is an advantage.

      By the time the you're ready to publish a game, licensing is not what's going to hold you back. The development, art and testing resources required dwarf the licensing so much it's ridiculous. XBox will win game titles over time, because the development and testing resources required are much lower.

      Thanks for the intelligent conversation BTW. No one says that often enough here :)

    65. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      I think what I was pointing out is that Microsoft's "standard" really is a standard.


      Agreed. But having a standard isn't all that unique. The origional post had listed Microsoft's use of their standard as innovative. My point is that everyone (Sony included) has a standard.

      Granted - Microsoft's standard may very well be superior; easier to use, easier to access, applied to multiple markets. And, in fact, I glossed over the origional posters mentioning the Xbox being "easy to program". However, just having a "standard" does not imply any of this. I wouldn't have been so critical if the parent poster had gone in to greater detail to demonstrate the importance of this particular standard over others.
    66. Re:Bah by Chris+Carollo · · Score: 1
      Granted - Microsoft's standard may very well be superior; easier to use, easier to access, applied to multiple markets. And, in fact, I glossed over the origional posters mentioning the Xbox being "easy to program". However, just having a "standard" does not imply any of this. I wouldn't have been so critical if the parent poster had gone in to greater detail to demonstrate the importance of this particular standard over others.
      Original poster checking in a day late (I hate it when I forget I posted and then don't check for replies!)

      In my opinion the innovative thing about MS's standards is that they are well-established and widespread. Anyone doing any PC graphics programming knows DirectX already (that is, basically all game developers, console or not -- remember editors largely work on the PC). Then add on the plugin nature of Xbox projects to Visual Studio so that everyone can leverage their existing compiling/debugging/IDE knowledge, and you've got a substantially eaiser product to program for that any other console...ever.

      As far as I know very few GameCube or PS2 developers actually use the tools provided by Nintendo or Sony. Third-party tools rule the day on those platforms.

      I mean, have you see PIX running on an Xbox? It is un-freaking-believable. The best graphics tool I've ever seen in my life, by many orders of magnitude. It's practially magic.
    67. Re:Bah by Chris+Carollo · · Score: 1
      And yet you get modded up to 4. Actually it's the best way to get karma on slashdot.
      Hey, I generally browse at 3 and probably 95% of the posts as of my post were complete swipes at MS. I honestly expected to check back later and be modded down as a troll.

      It happened before when I dared criticize people for copyright violation of something other than software, so I was expecting it here too. Honest!
    68. Re:Bah by Chris+Carollo · · Score: 1
      When the PS2 was released, no other console had an expansion bay to put a hard drive in. No other console had USB AND Firewire ports. No other console used a controller designe exactly the same as the previous one.
      How many of those features were used by games on those platforms? The controller conformity was definitely nice, though it seems a bit odd to be including not changing something being "innovative". But the hard drive port was a total failure, and how many games exactly used those USB and FireWire ports?

      Compare that to how many games use the HD on the Xbox and how many games simply couldn't have been done without a HD.
    69. Re:Bah by Chris+Carollo · · Score: 1
      What about the Sega Saturn?
      Did it include a hard drive?
      Also, memory cards allow you to bring your game and continue at someone else's house. You don't have to take the entire console with you.
      Um, the Xbox had memory cards too if you wanted to do that. But the HD meant that you weren't forced to buy one if you weren't interested in that functionality. Seems like a good deal to me.
    70. Re:Bah by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      I think what I was pointing out is that Microsoft's "standard" really is a standard. The fundamental technology (DirectX) is widespread, accessible and mature enough to be considered the standard on which the gaming industry can me built. (Yes I know OpenGL is used as well, and I'm not trying to belittle it).

      Except that the DirectX "standard" only works on Windows-based platforms, such as Windows PCs, the Xbox, and Windows CE devices. However, it is NOT a standard on other operating systems such as Sun's JAVA OS, or any *Nix including OS X and Linux.

      OpenGL, however, is a standard that ALL OSes can use, even if Microsoft intentionally cripples OpenGL support on Windows in favor of their own 'standard'. After all, I run UT2004 on my OS X iBook, and there isn't a hint of DirectX support in OS X, it runs on OpenGL on here.

      A standard that is only a standard on one type of platform (like DirectX being a standard only on windows platforms) is not a standard in the truest sense of the word.

      Besides, DirectX is just a hack to get games to run better on Windows, as well as force developers away from known and true industry standards. According to Microsoft industry standards are good, so long as they own those standards (.doc, DirectX, etc.).

      When you can show me the widespread adoption and use of DirectX as a standard accross mutliple types of platforms (IE not just Windows based platforms), then I will say that yes, it is a true standard. As long as it exists only on a Windows based system, however, I will call it a tool in maintaining monopoly status in the PC OS and office suite markets, and yet another way that Microsoft snubs its nose at Industry Standards in favor of their own which they own all the rights to.

    71. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, you can buy a MS powered smart phone.

      But who actually buys one?

      Palm and Symbian are the players in this market, not MS.

    72. Re:Bah by LordSah · · Score: 1
      Except that the DirectX "standard" only works on Windows-based platforms

      Yep. I say: Big Whoop. The non-windows gaming market share is what, %2? 5%? It costs a lot of money for the engineering and testing to ensure your game is cross-platform. It's generally not worth the cost to gain that meager 2-5% of market. And surprise! most game studios don't bother.

      A standard that is only a standard on one type of platform (like DirectX being a standard only on windows platforms) is not a standard in the truest sense of the word.

      Google doesn't agree with you. I'll specifically point to:
      a basis for comparison; a reference point against which other things can be evaluated; "they set the measure for all subsequent work"
      commonly used or supplied; "standard procedure"; "standard car equipment"
      regularly and widely used or sold; "a standard size"; "a stock item"
    73. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with your points on open standards (I kind of hint towards that in the PDF vs. Word discussion). However, I've tried to keep away from the subject. After all, we're talking about consoles here. Open standards are completely alien to this environment (Linux running on Xbox / PS2 hacks aside).

      Although the entire IT industry used to be like that at one time too. Maybe its time for the console market to catch up.

    74. Re:Bah by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Yep. I say: Big Whoop. The non-windows gaming market share is what, %2? 5%? It costs a lot of money for the engineering and testing to ensure your game is cross-platform. It's generally not worth the cost to gain that meager 2-5% of market. And surprise! most game studios don't bother.


      The important point that may be missed here is that if developers stick to open standards whenever possible, it will lower their cost to migrate from platform to platform.
    75. Re:Bah by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Almost all of the online games use the USB ports for the keyboard or the headset. That includes the first online capable game: Tony Hawk Pro Skater 3.

      Many of the PS2's FPS"s also support the USB ports for mouse and keyboard. Half Life and Deus Ex do, unreal Tournament, I'm not for certain about Quake III Arena.

      Various other games support them, RPG Maker does. Karaoke Revolution does, and the Linux kit does, of course.

      Firewire support: The only games that I personally know of that have it are Gran Turismo 3 A-spec and one of the Timesplitter games does. I also think Monster Rancher 3 does too.

      HD support is limited currently to SOCOM II and FFXI, (and the Linux kit) but that's just in the US. In Japan many more games support the HD, like FFX and Xenosaga.

      I can't think of a single game genre that absolutely requires a hard drive or that couldn't be done without one. Not even MMORPG's (EQOA for the PS2 doesn't use the HD)

    76. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look - nobody out of their early/mid-teens really cares about karma. Get over it.

  14. I'm not so sure by nutbarpsycho · · Score: 1

    Sony took over the industry with the PS1, and managed to retain thier hold with the PS2. XBOX was a distant second in North America, and barely noticed in Japan. What makes him so sure MS can overtake Sony with the next iteration? I would expect that Sony maintains their hold of the console market until the next crash, which is definitely going to happen eventually.

  15. Monopoly against monopoly by Saven+Marek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hear that sometimes many people thing MS being a monopoly is a bad thing but one large monopoly against another like MS against Sony is the essence of competition. This is the sort of thing consumers dream of, witness such cheap hardware as XBOX and PS2 now, where only one thing has driven the price down

    COMPETION!

    The net's biggest adult anime collection

    1. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think competition might have more to do with it.

    2. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by Laur · · Score: 1
      I hear that sometimes many people thing MS being a monopoly is a bad thing but one large monopoly against another like MS against Sony is the essence of competition.

      What are you talking about? Sony does not have a monopoly in any market that I am aware of, certainly not like Microsoft (+90% of the desktop OS market, probably similar for the office software market). Sony may be a large corporation and may have a dominant marketshare in some markets but they are no monopoly. Also, two giant titans may seem like the essence of competition to you but it is far from it. Better competition would have many players of different sizes, although this is usually not possible due to several factors (such as high barriers to entry). While it is true that the competition between Sony and MS has been great for prices this is only because MS is not competing fairly. They are selling at a loss and hemorrhaging money just to gain marketshare, they are not competing for profit.

      --
      When you lose something irreplaceable, you don't mourn for the thing you lost, you mourn for yourself. - Harpo Marx
    3. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      I hear that sometimes many people thing MS being a monopoly is a bad thing but one large monopoly against another like MS against Sony is the essence of competition.


      You're confusing the term "monopoly" with "large, well-funded, and capable corporation". It doesn't take monopoly to create competition.
    4. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

      Monopoly vs Monopoly??? Er... if there are two big companies in a market, that market is no longer a monopoly...but an oligpoly.... (mono = One in either greek or latin, dunno which, too lazy to google)...And Sony's no monopoly...it's a HUGE company, but it doesn't have total pricing control over its markets (not like M$ anyway). They may have enjoyed some power with the launch of the walkman, and the trinitron TV, but these days they simply represent the 'expensive' segment in most consumer electronics markets. Also, at least in the videogames market, you cannot consider Microsoft to be a monopolist either. It's basically one of 3 big comapnies fighting it out.

    5. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by DrAegoon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Saying "one large monopoly against another" completely defies the definition of Monopoly. What you describe is an Oligopoly and is a non-ideal form of competition. As a previous poster pointed out, an ideally competitive market has a large number of producers and consumers which allows the buyers to determine the price of goods. In an oligopoly each producer has a large enough market share to exert control over the market. This is what lets Microsoft have such an effect on the market. They can depress the market price by selling at less than cost. In the short run this is good for consumers.

      Microsoft, however, has no intention of doing what's good for consumers. Their goal is to eventually force Sony to sell bellow cost and make the market un-profitable for them. Whether this is feasible depends on more than simple economics so it is by no means a foregone conclusion. The best case for consumers would be to have numerous, interoperable choices in consoles so the number of producers isn't limited to a select few. The one sure thing is that Microsoft won't start any movements in that direction.

    6. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by shackma2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      An Oligopoly is not a non-ideal form of competition when the products being made are high cost items. Imagine if there were many small firms in the console business...instead of there being only 3 consoles to deal with, one would have to choose between many (not as good) products. ALso, Video game manufactures would have to make games that could work on all the consoles. For the video game market, an Oligopoly is ideal.

    7. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      What you describe is an Oligopoly and is a non-ideal form of competition.

      Only if the oligopolists are colluding, and in this case, they clearly are not.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    8. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oligopolies sometimes provide results superior to ideally competitive markets. In the long run. You should know this.

      Esp in this patent/copyright landscape, no chance a large number of producers could independently produce so much

    9. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that Sony, or any other company for that matter, does things for the "good" of consumers? All publicly traded companies do exactly the same thing: do things that are good for their shareholders.

      The beauty of capitalism is that that goal often (but not always) does not contradict with "doing what's good for consumers" especially if there is competition.

    10. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I feel obligated to disagree with your comment, "Microsoft, however, has no intention of doing what's good for consumers."

      They have already done what's good for consumers - specifically gamers. They sell a good product at a very reasonable price. In addition, they brought both innovation and competition to a possibly stagnating market.

      Your next comment that "Their goal is to eventually force Sony to sell bellow cost and make the market un-profitable for them." also seem to be biased speculation.

      Perhaps, instead, their goal is to release a successful product... beneficial for them (profit, necessary for the company to continue functioning) and the consumer.

    11. Re:Monopoly against monopoly by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      "an ideally competitive market has a large number of producers and consumers which allows the buyers to determine the price of goods"

      According to whom and why is it ideal? This is flatly wrong. The ideal marketplace is one with a single producer and single consumer who are both the same entity because the greatest economies of scale can be harvested and the efficiencies realized through research can be most broadly implimented.

      The price would also be lowest because it would need to be kept below a price that theoretically could not be competed against - below the price of market entry.

      Example of a single producer? Look at what happened to the price of oil at the turn of the century when the industry consolidated horizontally and vertically - I think it went down about 95% and fueled tremendous economic development.

      Example of a single consumer? Walmart. It's not really a single consumer, but for many producers, a tremendous majority percentage of their output is purchased by Walmart. Walmart leverages this by being able to efficiently integrate into the producers production cycle to work with them to lower costs (along with purchasing power).

      The suggestion above - that many producers and many consumers is best - is precisly the worse possible circumstance. A bunch of companies with tremendous overhead all going broke trying to undercut the other and limiting their potential research budgets, game developers making decisions on what system they want to optimize for, console makers having to decide whether to standardize to make things easier for the developers or to add their own improvements that will make the console better or break compatability, and gamers wondering if the system they buy will go out of production or if the next version of Madded will be made for it or not.

      Of course, the reasoning in your post is what you would expect from someone to lead off a paragraph with the sentence "Microsoft, however, has no intention of doing what's good for consumers."

  16. Blah Blah by psyclone · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Anyone else getting a little tired of the constant hype of new consoles? This is getting a bit rediculous. A few years ago it was all hype about xbox 1, PS2, and gamecube. A month after those consoles hit the market, the media turned to hyping the next gen consoles.

    Wake me up when the next console is ready to be sold, give me full tech specs with game screenshots, and I might give it a nod.

    If the world moves too fast on these, small to mid-sized developers won't have the time to develop a game for the current console -- they'll always be anticipating the next generation and games will cease to be polished.

    1. Re:Blah Blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I agree!

      When I was younger the NES was the dominant console. And it was the dominant console for YEARS! None of this hype of some new console coming Real Soon Now that will be amazing. Nintendo was the console. That was when you could just call it a Nintendo and it didn't seem wierd. (You can tell smoeone is a whippersnapper when you talking about playing nintendo and they say which one)

      Anyways, I just play PC games now only. A PC does cost alot but 1) I can upgrade it later 2) it wont automatically be obsolete next christmas 3) I can use it for other stuff.

      I just can't get excited about consoles. They always have a handful of amazing games and then the rest of the wall at the game store is just filler crap games.

      I went through that with the PS1, seriously, I played the small group of "killer app" games, then I would go to the store wanting to blow some cash on a game but they all sucked!

      Now I don't bother with consoles. The only time I wanted to buy one in the last few years was when Final Fantasy became console only...but even that wasn't enough to make me bother to blow the cash on it. Too many other fine RPGs for the PC. As much as I like linear blue-text-box having japanese RPGs the PC just is king of RPGs...

    2. Re:Blah Blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Almost as "rediculous" as the posters who constantly bitch about recurring console articles, as though complaining about them will magically make them stop.

    3. Re:Blah Blah by Dunarie · · Score: 1

      2) it wont automatically be obsolete next christmas

      Generally, a console generation lasts about 5 years, with a few straglers still coming out after a year or so. Compared to about 2 years or so before you need a major overhaul of your computer to keep up with current games. Hell, it's been about THREE years since the PS2 came out, and it won't be another year untill the next-gen consoles a first unveiled. It'll probably be at LEAST a year after that untill they are released.

      Though I personally am more of a computer gamer now, since I spend most of my time at my computer, why should I have to get up and go to the couch just to play games!? But still, it's absolutely ridiculous to claim that PCs have the advantage of taking longer to become obsolete, especially for gamers.

  17. I guess we'll find out at E3 or GDC or something. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
    I seem to recall that nintendo and sony have both announced premieres at e3 2005 for their next generation consoles, and that microsoft will probably be there as well.

    the question is, does ballmer know more about ps3 than we do? I'm sure he knows more about the next console from Microsoft than we do...

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  18. You're on crack. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The idea that people who like to reverse engineer things in any way drives sales is the kind of naive and twisted idea that can only come from the kind of mind that I see on the anti-drug commercials.

    You know, the kind that gets hit with a cast iron frying pan.

  19. xbox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it feels strange to say this, but i applaud the xbox's way of catering to the hacking community by being so familiar because of its similarities to pc architecture. things like bunny huangs hacking xbox book has definitely influenced me purchasing one or two of them.

    well, that and doa xtreme beach volleyball.

  20. Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the fuck is Xbox man "J Ballmer"'s first name? Is it really just "J"? Or if not, what is the damn thing? I've searched all over the place for the answer but everything just says "J Ballmer" maybe with a picture of him with his shaved head and earrings. *cough*

    1. Re:Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, fuck me. The Ballmer from the story and the J from J ALLARD got confused in my head. Ok, someone tell me what J ALLARD's first name is.

  21. optimistic, no? by faust2097 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only thing that Microsoft could do to 'take' Sony is to sign a lot of exclusive deals with pretty much every top developer. This round of consoles has shown that it doesn't matter how much more powerful the hardware is if you don't have enough games to please the market.

    1. Re:optimistic, no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, you're a generation off. Think Nintendo 64 and how all the developers migrated to Playstation. Sony's prooven two generations in a row now that having the strongest support from developers, even in the face of "killer" apps like Smash Brothers Melee and Halo is the key to having the winning console. Unless Microsoft can somehow capture the support Sony has, I don't see the next generation will be much different than this one in terms of Microsoft vs. Sony.

    2. Re:optimistic, no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So in Balmer's own words...

      "Developers, developers, developers!"

    3. Re:optimistic, no? by faust2097 · · Score: 1

      The N64 had a whole ton of other problems besides the fact that Nintendo treated third-party developers like crap. The cartridge + license fees for games was over $30/unit for an outside developer. Nintendo was still trying to exercise content control and the N64 was hell to develop for.

    4. Re:optimistic, no? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Signing the top game developers (or as the case may be, buying them out) is precisely what MS has been doing with the Xbox, and undoubtably have planned for xb2.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    5. Re:optimistic, no? by IrresponsibleUseOfFr · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. A console, first and foremost is a platform. Therefore, it has to appeal to developers, not just consumers. Microsoft was able to buy a lot of developers the first time around. They have taken huge losses as a result. But, the way things stand now, the X-Box is in good shape. Games that are released on all three consoles tend to look and play the best on the X-Box. Microsoft is also the first with a truly successful online gaming service. As long as the market remains: PS2, X-Box, Gamecube. I believe the X-Box will slowly chip away at the other two console's marketshare. People will eventually buy an X-Box along with their currently existing PS2 or Gamecube. If a game comes out on all three, which most do, people will pick up the X-Box version.

      However, the X-Box 2 is going to flop in a major way if it can't play X-Box games. There will not be enough games on the X-Box 2 to please the market. They are literally throwing away their whole entire investment in creating the X-Box platform by developing an incompatible X-Box 2. If that isn't bad enough, the money they spent on the X-Box will now compete with their new X-Box 2 for developers.

      The X-Box 2 needs to compliment the X-Box. It needs to do everything the X-Box did only better so the two platforms don't compete for developers and consumers. There is a couple things they could do graphically to silently improve existing X-Box titles (better texture-filtering/using npatches). But compatiblity is king. There is no way the X-Box 2 will be able to stand on it's own against the juggernaut that is the playstation game library.

      If they have licensing problems with nVidia, so be it. Pay what you have to make it work and mark it up to a learning experience. Then make sure it doesn't happen again.

      However, I doubt it will happen. Microsoft's leads are way too willing to throw away their hard won place in the market. Ballmer is a bean-counter without the vision to stop them. Instead, he'll just do his little monkey dance about how good the X-Box 2 is going to be. It is really sad, because the X-Box was a really good console. And Microsoft could continue to do cool things with the line. Too bad they are going to piss it away.

      For those needing evidence, I state that I will not buy a X-Box 2 if it is not X-Box compatible. I am in the X-Box's core demographic. I will buy a PS3 if it is compatible with PS2/PS1 games. I don't feel I'm alone. Microsoft is going to lose developers, and they are going to lose consumers like me, and that is why they are going to lose the next-generation console wars.

      --
      Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true! -Homer Simpson
    6. Re:optimistic, no? by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      I agree. I own a gamecube, an xbox and a PS2. All three are set up and usable in an instant through my Denon; the Sony and the Xbox are component video (yay!), and the gamecube is composite. HDTV viewing is awesome. The gamecube is rarely used because we have few games for it. The Sony is used quite a bit - both PS2 and PS1 games. I have a large PS1 library and we (my family and friends) enjoy many of the older games. The xbox is used for fewer games, but they are very, very good games. Project Gotham I/II, Halo, Mechassault, Crimson Skies. If Microsoft follows through with the plan to make the next xbox incompatible, it probably won't be coming into my home in the near term. On the other hand, if it is compatible, I'd buy it in an eyeblink. Money's not the issue for me - losing the ability to use the software we've grown to know and enjoy is.

      My purchase of a PS2 was (at the time) predicated almost entirely upon its ability to run PS1 games. Over time, that proved to have been a good call, because I still play those games (as do my kids.) Buying PS2 games was a natural and comfortable thing to do. Naturally enough, we've bought a lot of them. So my PS library dwarfs the xbox and nintendo libraries added together. As someone else noted, the marketing strategy isn't about the hardware - it's about the software and reaping rewards from the licenses attached to them. Sony's made a bundle off of me. xbox... not really. Not yet, anyway.

      If Microsoft can't see the value in this process, I can't imagine why.

      Having said that, if the PS3 isn't backwards compatible with the other Sony consoles, it won't be coming in, either. :)

      I do think the xbox is the superior console, not because it is innovative, but because it is powerful; and also from the point of view of the end results: xbox games look and play better, generally speaking. MS, in my opinion, needs to leverage the good games it has into the next generation.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  22. XBox2 vs PS3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Round 2.... Fight!

  23. The Xbox2 will rule all by secondsun · · Score: 4, Funny

    The XBox two will rule all because it will have such hits as Halo:Revisited and Halo2, and Halo3, and X-Halo, and World of Halo, and Halo all stars. We will get to play throught intense action games without being bored to death by those awful RPG's.

    Oh wait, didn't Nintendo say the same thing?

    --
    There is nothing wrong with being gay. It's getting caught where the trouble lies.
    1. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by GT_Onizuka · · Score: 1

      Halo Allstars better contain Halo: Lost Levels! :D

      --
      If you take out Country Kitchen buffet, old people won't know what to do.
    2. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      You do realize that it's the sex box, because every time you give money to M$, your getting screwed.

      What's Ballmer smoking and why won't he share?

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
    3. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by PolyDwarf · · Score: 4, Funny

      You forgot Halo Kart Racing, Halo-Sims, Master Chief's Cook-off, Halo Fighter (And Halo Fighter 2, 3, 4, EX, Alpha, EX Alpha, Alpha EX Super, etc), and, finally, the Master Chief Dating Simulator.

    4. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh wait, didn't Nintendo say the same thing?

      For second there I thought you were alluding to Lucas Arts and yet another Star Wars game. Luke attack the death star, again, but this time with better graphics and sound... Yeah, I lost interest, sorry to the fans.

    5. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by Ari_Haviv · · Score: 1

      don't forget Halo Forever

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    6. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The XBox two will rule all because it will have such hits as Halo:Revisited and Halo2, and Halo3, and X-Halo, and World of Halo, and Halo all stars.

      They'll also need to have Grand Theft Halo: Covenent City.

    7. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by stor · · Score: 1

      And you forgot "Halo: Beach Volleyball"

      Cheers
      Stor

      --
      "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
    8. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by Sekoku · · Score: 1

      >>the Master Chief Dating Simulator.

      You hear that, Microsoft!? Dead or Alive: Extreme Beach Volleyball just isn't enough for us! The people love the Chief! Now after Bungie brings Halo 2 to the masses, get them started on our date with John! Heck, I'll even toss in a free decision makin' choice for you! So you can see how the Asian market sells these so well!

      John/Chief: "I can't find my Dual-SMGs!"

      The player: 1) I'm sure they're somewhere *whistle*
      2) You sure they aren't in you're armor?
      3) I'll help you look for them, here, take my battle rifle, you can hold on to it.

      Big points for those that are subtile to the Chief! Even bigger points for those that choose to play as a female (as those in Everquest seem to like to do so much)! It's GOLD, Mircosoft! GOLD!!!!!

      (Wow, I have no life if I think this is a good idea, for females and males...)

    9. Re:The Xbox2 will rule all by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

      Wait a second, that might actually be cool.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
  24. Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Ballmer thinks MS can take Sony this time 'round? Really, can we take anything this man says seriously anymore? This latest "episode" combined with past instances of this and this screams HELL NO!

    Oh, in case you're one of the young ones and don't understand that last one, click here for the version that panders to your generation.

    Suuuure Stevie! That Ballmer, he cracks me up.

  25. Microsoft is good... by Maljin+Jolt · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...I am looking forward to run linux on it.

    --
    There you are, staring at me again.
  26. Gamers are fickle. by dmaxwell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think MS can ever hope to do in gaming what they've done with Windows and Office. They could get on top for a generation of machines. They could even figure out how to do some things better and make money even if they aren't the best selling console. But every four or five years, there will be a competitor or two with credible competition. Any dominance they win will be under continual threat. Nintendo found out the hard way and Sega REALLY found out the hard way.

    Many gamers don't even commit to one console. And gaming platforms aren't like business platforms. They go stale after a few years. Gamers always want to be the first kid on the block with the hot toy. Technical superiority isn't enough either. "Intellivision basketball is much more like real basketball." only worked once when console gaming was getting off the ground. As long as the graphics are the next obvious step up from the last console it will come down to the controllers and the GAMES. The graphics being a little bit better won't mean jack.

    I only point this out because MS seems to be badly addicted to having monopolies. Having one in gaming is a completely different kettle of fish. The closest thing to a monopoly in gaming was Atari back in the day. They weren't invincible and neither was Nintendo. The real danger is that an also-ran console is a deep money pit. MS currently has the second place console and I'd guess they're just breaking even. It's a big risk and lot of money just for the chance be number one for a generation.

    1. Re:Gamers are fickle. by Soko · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most people asked "Why XBOX, Bill?" when Microsoft got into the console market.

      IMHO, it's not to establish a new monopoly as much as it is to protect the one they already have. I mean, what's stopping the PS2 console from becoming a nice workstation?

      Soko

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
    2. Re:Gamers are fickle. by mdfst13 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "I'd guess they're just breaking even"

      Last I heard, Microsoft was losing money hand over fist in their game console division. Part of the problem is that they lose money on every console sale. They might be breaking even in software sales; they're hampered a bit by an unwillingness to port to other platforms. Makes it harder to make money when you skip part of your potential market.

    3. Re:Gamers are fickle. by darnok · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > But every four or five years, there will be a
      > competitor or two with credible competition.

      I don't believe this is the case with consoles.

      Nintendo, Sega, Sony and maybe one or two others essentially created this market from scratch; MS was able to enter it only because they had such huge cash reserves that they could afford to buy their way into it. Very few other companies would be in this position.

      The days of the likes of Coleco and Atari coming up with big innovations in consoles are well and truly past.

    4. Re:Gamers are fickle. by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Nintendo, Sega, Sony and maybe one or two others essentially created this market from scratch; MS was able to enter it only because they had such huge cash reserves that they could afford to buy their way into it. Very few other companies would be in this position.

      The days of the likes of Coleco and Atari coming up with big innovations in consoles are well and truly past.


      I wasn't thinking of a come from behind success that comes roaring out of someone's garage. It's just that Sony at least isn't going away. Nintendo may not be #1 but they're making money. And who knows, a mobile phone company could drop something out of nowhere.

    5. Re:Gamers are fickle. by molarmass192 · · Score: 1

      No man, that's too much of a stretch. The reason they got into it is simple, it's an extension of their software business. Games have a huge upfront development cost, but after that, it's pure profit margin gravy. That said, there's a fundamental difference in the market for games vs. the market for OS and Office software. Games become "obselete" way more quickly than OS or Office software. I remember reading something to the effect that games have a profitable shelf life of 3 months, contrast that to the still profitable XP boxsets that are going on 3 years now.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    6. Re:Gamers are fickle. by Kevin+Stevens · · Score: 1

      Not sure when the last you heard was, but the XBOX IIRC, uses a pentium III 800 chip. You can get these at a retail price of $30 now. I dont recall what the other components were off the top of my head, but im sure the production costs have all halved to quartered for them. I would think that by now they are able to produce the things at cost.

      Microsoft is not alone in selling its parts at below cost and losing money on them. Its been a practice used by most systems out there, the Gamecube/Gameboy being notable exceptions. The money rolls in from software sales. Also, all console manufacturers protect their "exclusive" territory fiercely. I dont think you will ever see a mario, metroid, or zelda game on anything but a nintendo system, just like I dont think you will ever see halo on anyhing but an MS system.

    7. Re:Gamers are fickle. by radish · · Score: 1

      Actually, Atari and Coleco created the market, Nintendo and Sega grew it. Sony were the first entirely unrelated company to come along with bucket loads of cash and buy their way in, Microsoft were the second, although they haven't been anywhere near as succesful (yet).

      Don't forget, before the launch of the original PS people were saying "how can a company like Sony with no games experience or reputation take on the might of Sega and Nintendo?". Well....

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    8. Re:Gamers are fickle. by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

      The XBox used to cost about $300 to make. At the time, a P3-800 was already over the hill (P4s and P3 1.3 Ghz were already out). I doubt that they were much (if any) more expensive then than they are now. Microsoft was never using innovative or cutting edge parts (that would drop in price). The bigger expense is the hard drive. Those don't become cheaper, just bigger (i.e. the smallest hard drive now is the same price as the smallest hard drive was three years ago, but five times the size). Yes, Sony is probably subsidizing their console as well, but it's cheaper to make.

      Nintendo makes money from its Japanese operations, so it will continue operation even with its low US sales. Microsoft has similar market penetration in the US but without the Japanese market. As such, they can't be getting nearly as much licensing revenue (from 3rd party games) as Sony in the US. Further, Microsoft can't sell as many units of Halo as Sony can sell of Sony's flagship game, because Microsoft's installed base is so much smaller. And they can't make as much money as a third party would because they only support one console.

    9. Re:Gamers are fickle. by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Ahh, the Linux kit, the joys of posting to /. using Firefox, watching that "Developers, Developers, Developers" using mplayer and playing Nethack all on a Playstation 2.

      .

  27. Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Logicdisorder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think old Steve is getting far to high off his own hype. As it stands Sony is number 1 and I do not see that been any different with the next version of the game console. The reason I think this is becasue of the big change in the XBox 2. They are using a different CPU(IBM RISC), a new GPU(ATI) adding there own microcode to the CPU to stop people doing what they have been doing to the current XBox.

    It also means(and this is what I think)that you will not be able to play XBox games on the XBox 2, they will have to re-write DirectX, build a RISC OS for it and then there is Live I would say there will have to re-write most of that as well. MS has never writen software for RISC in the past and I think that the time frame they have set themself is very unrealistic.

    Now if you look at how Sony they have had far more years under there belt in the console market, they have partnered up with some good people to bring the PS 3 to life and have build a technology that they are plaining on putting in there other product(Cell).

    Saying all that I am looking forward the XBox 2 and think it is a good step for MS in there battle for the console market. Do I think they will catch up with Sony, no but I think they will make money off the XBox 2 and that is a good out look for the future of the XBox console. May be the XBox 3 will be the one that turns the tide.

    --
    "The most dangerous creation of any society is that man who has nothing to lose." - James Baldwin, American author
  28. The simple trend of failure by Jim+Ethanol · · Score: 1, Redundant
    Buhahaha... The reality is that Microsoft has continuously failed in EVERY new venture it has ever attempted when it us unable to force feed it to users via it's OS monopoly. Period.

    Case in point:

    Windows CE - After many years and many many Palm still dominates PDA's, not to mention Linux in the embedded market!

    MSN - A large cost center that only gets hits until people figure out they can change their start page, or better yet their browser!

    Ultimate TV - MS to own your living room. What happened to that?

    Microsoft Money - Despite MS giving it away, EVERYONE still uses quicken.

    Xbox - Another financial retard, still born and being kept alive by Daddy Gates deep pockets.

    The list goes on and on... the fact is that outside of the core monopoly, they've never seen a financial success. Despite their best efforts. Given that history tends to repeat, I don't think Sony has much to worry about. At least not from MS. Sorry Steve.

    1. Re:The simple trend of failure by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      MS always seems to enter markets with the expectation of owning them in a few years at most. It seems they spend all of their time and energy trying to expand the boundries of their monopoly. This costs them financially when it doesn't work. It draws unwanted attention from antitrust regulators when it does. Sooner or later the law of averages will catch up with them and they'll get an antitrust action they can't wriggle out of.

      MS is like the ancient large empires. The only way those empires could maintain their economies was by continual expansion. The larger they got, the harder it got to maintain what they already had. Each new conquest would only temporarily pump up the economy before dragging it down again. That is a classic vicious cycle. Of course, some factor like another empire or badass barbarians would check the expansion and then the implosion would begin. If the analogy holds, expanding a monopoly is ultimately counterproductive. Other empires? Check. There's IBM, Oracle, and that minor power Novell. Barbarian hordes? We all know who those are. Geographic limits? There's the overall size of markets and those pesky antitrust laws.

      There is a sane way for them to maintain themselves though. They could diversify into many businesses. They don't have to utterly own a few markets. That just rapidly brings on growth limit problems. They just need to have a little piece of a lot of markets. But there is nothing that will give them the growth they've enjoyed the past twenty years.

    2. Re:The simple trend of failure by syates21 · · Score: 1

      Windows CE - After many years and many many Palm still dominates PDA's, not to mention Linux in the embedded market!

      Or not

    3. Re:The simple trend of failure by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Gartner? The Microsoft sponsored "analysts"? Bwahah..

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  29. Dumping charges by bstadil · · Score: 3, Informative
    Red herring. MS could've sold each console for $50

    It's called Dumping. If they did that Nintendo or Sony could file a complain in each area of the world and have it stopped. MS would be fined and a duty to make up the difference would be imposed.

    MS is probably skating close to the edge as it is with their current pricing.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
    1. Re:Dumping charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      BZZT! Wrong. Honestly, if you don't know what you're talking about - why post?

      MS could have easily sold the XBox for $50 as long as it was $50 [or the local currency equivalent] in all markets. Selling a product below cost is not dumping, idiot.

      Here, read this and find out that you're completely wrong.

      This is why I hate Slashdot. People are so interested in both gaming the system to gain karma and to try to sound smart that nonsense like the above gets posted. Please, don't post here anymore. You're obviously not trying to add anything to the actual discussion. If your self esteem is this poor, go see a shrink.

    2. Re:Dumping charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why I hate Slashdot. People are so interested in both gaming the system to gain karma and to try to sound smart that nonsense like the above gets posted.

      Sigh... you must be..NEW HERE!

    3. Re:Dumping charges by badriram · · Score: 2, Insightful

      not exactly... Dumping does not apply to all industries... cause if it does free software and opensource would be in lots of trouble...

    4. Re:Dumping charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Bzzt, your totally wrong, dickface. Here is a quote from your link....

      There are many different ways of calculating whether a particular product is being dumped heavily or only lightly. The agreement narrows down the range of possible options. It provides three methods to calculate a product's "normal value". The main one is based on the price in the exporter's domestic market. When this cannot be used, two alternatives are available -- the price charged by the exporter in another country, or a calculation based on the combination of the exporter's production costs, other expenses and normal profit margins. And the agreement also specifies how a fair comparison can be made between the export price and what would be a normal price.

      Now take a look at option #3. Oh, what is that, the parent poster was right?

      This is why I hate slashdot, totaly ignorant assholes like you post a link Without even reading what they linked to, and take a position of authority, with zero knowledge of said position.

      So, go back to your parents basement, and read the link you provided, and then say sorry to the parent poster, who was 100% correct in his/her position.

      Kind of ironic, isn't it, that you turn out to be the one who added nothing to the conversation.

    5. Re:Dumping charges by IsoRashi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, talk about the pot calling the kettle black...

      From your link:

      It provides three methods to calculate a product's "normal value". The main one is based on the price in the exporter's domestic market. When this cannot be used, two alternatives are available -- the price charged by the exporter in another country, or a calculation based on the combination of the exporter's production costs, other expenses and normal profit margins. And the agreement also specifies how a fair comparison can be made between the export price and what would be a normal price.

      So essentially the original poster is correct. Next time do us all a favor and go see a shrink.

      --
      This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
    6. Re:Dumping charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, even though I already explained this twice, I will try one more time.

      MS is an American company. We are looking at U.S. law. Microsoft is not exporting the XBox to the United States. The U.S. is the home market for the XBox. Therefore, no U.S. law is going to call MS selling the XBox at $50, "dumping."

      Look at what you quoted: "the exporter's production costs", "the exporter's domestic market"...you're a fucking moron. This is pathetic. Please reply to this and tell me how what you said has anything to do with MS dumping XBox units for $50. Microsoft simply CANNOT, under the legal definition, dump the XBox within the U.S. because that is the home market. Please reply and tell me where I am wrong on that one. I actually have read what I linked to and know that MS is an American company. Any more to say?

    7. Re:Dumping charges by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      He could have been mistaken, asshole.

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      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  30. Sad, but probably true by 1337+Twinkie · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The sad thing is that Balmer may be right:

    1) The current Xbox is losing money, but the Xbox 2 will be built with cheaper materials (esp. Flash memory, instead of a hard drive)
    2) The current Xbox has much better graphics than the PS2, and there is no reason to believe that this will change with the Xbox2/PS3 3) Microsoft is hell-bent on dominating the console market (watch the discovery channel special "Inside the Xbox").
    4) They believe that if you control a family's entertainment, you essentially control the family (again, from "Inside the Xbox")
    This is one market MS cannot afford to lose. They will throw everything they have at it.

    1. Re:Sad, but probably true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2) The current Xbox has much better graphics than the PS2, and there is no reason to believe that this will change with the Xbox2/PS3

      umm - why not? its been a few years since PS2 and Xbox1, so why wouldnt graphics be better in a console being released in another few years?

      and *everyone* seems to forget the whole fact that often, its the games that make people buy a console... i've got a cube, ps2 and xbox, and its the ps2 that i play the most. all 3 have got some good games, but for me, the ps2 has got more games that i like playing.

    2. Re:Sad, but probably true by krray · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And I will do everything that I have done to ... ignore Microsoft.
      The Playstation (the original :) is still working just fine.
      Always wanted a PS2, can afford it too. Couldn't ever justify it. (see above :).

      The Mac on the desktop is, well, amazing. I think I've finally found a computer system that can keep up with me. I don't say that lightly. Watching TV, playing Quake, encoding a DVD, burning another ... all at the same time as I notice the Powermate flashing and probably have a email [spam].

      The Powerbook is a office companion as well as a network fed movie player in the living room. A little back-end video rendering and the mini-farm smokes anything I've ever seen something like 3D-Max or Studio-Viz produce -- and in half the time typically. Oops, another way to make some money.

      There's a reason "old" PC's are being magically re-born in the offices with Linux as well. Microsoft is finally losing their strangle hold on anything "PC" related and at their burn rate it'll only take them a few years before the coffers are running low and the revenue stream is drying up.

      They may throw everything they have at Sony. And now IBM? Those are some pretty serious forces to deal with ... not to mention all the _other_ people they've ticked off over the years.

    3. Re:Sad, but probably true by Stealth+Potato · · Score: 2, Insightful
      2) The current Xbox has much better graphics than the PS2, and there is no reason to believe that this will change with the Xbox2/PS3

      I know I'll be playing the old codger here, but do you think I care about graphics? I still have my NES from the mid 80's, and play it regularly. (Hell, I have an Atari 2600 in the closet that might just still work). Gameplay (and to an extent, nostalgia) are what really count for me. Fancy Schmancy graphics be damned. :-)

      (Of course, my personal opinion does not speak for the masses. Some gamers actually prefer games to have detailed or realistic graphics and special effects above such trifling things as gameplay or (where applicable) story. I hope it is sufficiently clear from my sarcastic tone that I view this group in the same way Yoda thought of a young Luke Skywalker. ;-P)

      Even if Microsoft manages to "dominate" Sony, I'll still have my other consoles. There's no way I'll ever give up my PS2, PS1, Gamecube, N64, SNES, NES, Gameboy (both original and Advance), and various Sega systems. Hell, even the ill-fated Virtual Boy has a place in my collection. I still have the Power Pad and ROB (Robotic Operating Buddy) for the NES. But even people less psychopathically obsessive than I will probably still buy the next-gen Sony and Nintendo systems, even if Microsoft woos them with the XBox 2. Gaming is hardly exclusive; I know very few console gamers who own only one brand of console.

      My experience tells me that this is due in large part to the varieties of software available for each system. Many titles (almost all of the good ones, IMHO) are exclusive to one console; I used to be very loyal to Nintendo, but when Square started producing exclusively for Sony, I was simply forced buy the Playstation. As far as XBox goes, I've played Halo right through (which seems to be the flagship XBox title, as far as I can tell), and I'll tell you right now I didn't like it much. The gameplay was okay, but simplistic; and I found the story (in single-player mode) positively uninspired. It's an okay multiplayer game, but I would eschew it in preference of others. Obviously, my biased judgement does not mean Halo is a bad or mediocre game; for every person like me, there's at least one more who absolutely adores Halo. I just don't really like FPS games as much as I do RPGs, adventures, or puzzle games. Gamers come in all flavors, and I don't think one company can possibly have complete control of the diverse spectrum that is Gamerdom. In short, I don't think any company, least of all Microsoft, is capable of bringing to the market a sufficient variety of games to satisfy every single gamer.

      This is one market MS cannot afford to lose. They will throw everything they have at it.

      If that's the case, I'm not too worried. Microsoft may have a lot to throw, but they have terrible aim. :-)

    4. Re:Sad, but probably true by imnoteddy · · Score: 1
      1) The current Xbox is losing money, but the Xbox 2 will be built with cheaper materials (esp. Flash memory, instead of a hard drive)

      ????? On a cost per byte basis hard drives are less expensive than flash.

      --
      No electrons were harmed creating this post, though some may have been subjected to electrical and/or magnetic fields.
    5. Re:Sad, but probably true by RoLi · · Score: 1
      2) The current Xbox has much better graphics than the PS2, and there is no reason to believe that this will change with the Xbox2/PS3

      XBox was released 2 years after PS2.

      When the PS2 was released, the graphics were great by that time. When the XBox came out, everybody has already seen it on PCs.

    6. Re:Sad, but probably true by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1
      Fancy Schmancy graphics be damned. :-)


      We had 4 bit graphics and WE LIKED IT THAT WAY!

      =)

      My god, are we becoming curmudgeons already?
      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    7. Re:Sad, but probably true by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      but you won't see MS including 8 GB of flash memory, not hardly. They will probably include just enough for saves and minor downloads for games. Most people dont come close to using it all anyhow. Saved music? Bad consumer! youre supposed to have a cd player (and legitimate cd) if you want to listen to that! Bad, bad consumer!

      Also, consider the actual cost of a hard drive vs. flash. That's right, failure rate. The hard drive cost MS more due to having to warranty failures, not just from including them in the first place. Using cheap, low-heat flash they will see a scarce number of RMAs compared to the first xbox.

    8. Re:Sad, but probably true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The current Xbox has much better graphics than the PS2, and there is no reason to believe that this will change with the Xbox2/PS3

      The Xbox was released a year later after some mightly impressive developments by NVIDIA. If Xbox shipped along side the PS2 you can bet the PS2 would have had better graphics.

      During this next release cycle Xbox2 will ship first using high-end PC-like hardware, while the PS3 will ship later with custom hardware. The PS3 will blow the Xbox2 out of the water graphically.

      On the other hand the year lead PS2 had was one of the reasons it still has market domninance. Perhaps having the PS3 ship later than the Xbox2 will be its downfall.

      However, there was an article not too long ago talking about how the Xbox2 might be coming out too soon for its own good. The logic is that if only 1 of the big 3 consoles have their next-gen hardware on the market, then game developers aren't going to start pumping the extra cash needed to produce next-gen games until there's two or three platforms for them to run on. Why spend 50% more to develop cutting edge graphics and high-resolution art if it will only reach the fraction of the maket with an Xbox2.

    9. Re:Sad, but probably true by IronChef · · Score: 1

      Always wanted a PS2, can afford it too. Couldn't ever justify it. (see above :).

      Twisted Metal: Black, Time Crisis 2 & 3

      That's all it took for me.

  31. Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Sebby · · Score: 2
    I won't support a monopoly, especially one that's bought its way out of being properly disciplined, even if their product turns out being better - which is very unlikely given MS' product history

    --

    AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    1. Re:Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nintendo for years engaged in vicious price-fixing, and other wonderfully monopolistic practices.. and sony hasn't exactly been the poster boy company either

      The "support a monopoly" argument works when it's something like Linux vs MS, it doesn't work so well when it's 3 giant multinational coporations that have all engaged in (at best) questionable business tactics.

    2. Re:Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Sebby · · Score: 1
      You seem to confuse 'monopoly' with 'competition'. Normal AC behavior

      --

      AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    3. Re:Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Competition means forcing developers into a clause not allowing them to write games for other platforms ala Nintendo? Sony selling PS 1 at a loss funded by its other products?

      Oh wait, this is only bad when MS does it.

      Open your eyes.

    4. Re:Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Sebby · · Score: 1
      Open YOUR eyes!

      I was going to beat down your argument point by point, but I see someone else already has.

      And besides, why the hell should I bother with an AC troll like you anyways.

      --

      AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    5. Re:Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi Bill G.! Didn't know you came here and posted anonymously!

      C Ya at the office!
      Steve B.

    6. Re:Sorry Balboy, still won't buy it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

      1. Nintendo didn't force their way into the market from another market the already 'owned' (unlike microsoft), they've ever been in only one market, so they have always been a competitor, unless of course, they were the only one in the market, which, for those that have their eyes open , is obviously not the case here.

      2. You're a troll.

  32. Re:Of course they can... by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

    people will buy the xbox for the joy of hacking the xbox

    That may not be the best idea. I have no doubt that MS is trying out schemes to lock down PC hardware. The Xbox hackers are doing penetration testing for them.

    That said, I look forward to gen1 Xboxes showing up in the thrifts for $20 or $30. With a Linux port, thats quite the handy cheap PC.

  33. Re:Game Guides by Ayaress · · Score: 4, Funny

    He said it CAN take Sony. He didn't say anything about WILL take Sony.

    The next version of Windows CAN be bugless. It won't, but until it comes out, they can say it CAN be a lot of things.

  34. I'm really looking forward to this new generation by Nanookanano · · Score: 3, Funny

    so I can finally afford a PS2 console and games. /rockin' the PSone

    --
    "..don't you eat that yellow snow."
  35. Looking at the original interview on news.com by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ballmer:-
    For us--I don't know about the industry--but for us management is going to grow, security is going to grow, the server platform itself ought to grow, collaboration, business intelligence. I can look at almost anything and tell you I see absolute growth possibilities.

    Translation:- We can't innovate for crap, so I'll just make some blanket statement about how IT is going to somehow grow bigger - without giving any concrete or useful examples.

    --
    READY.
    PRINT ""+-0
  36. who cares? by eekygeeky · · Score: 3, Insightful

    jesus christ, who cares?

    unless the next model comes with wires in my scoobieroos wonderwear, there is nothing to be improved upon- all it means is recycling the same shitty bullshit boring games into a uber-designed new plastic housing and sucking up your dough for the "most realest everrrr!!!!" virtua-skateboarding.

    who fucking cares? i'll let you know when breakthrough videogame entertainment comes along- right now we have a significant commercial movement towards original donkey knog, for god's sake.

    admit it, you are still playing halflife and rainbow 6...and i, i with an XtrUberConsoBoxen, i still play hack. and larn.

    carl

    1. Re:who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya instead of buying an ubarsuparbox0r so I can play "Zelda 34: Lots of Polygons" I just play zelda 2 on a nes emulator.

      Same shit, different graphics.

    2. Re:who cares? by binaryspiral · · Score: 1

      Preach on brotha Carl...

      I owned an XBox for 23 hours. Sold it on ebay for $600 on the day it was released.

      Bought a second one a few months later when they released a game for it. Still wasn't impressed - ebay in 3 weeks.

      I'm still playing N64 games and emulating the NES classics. Back when consoles were a decade apart and they gave time for game artists to work their magic and tweak the consoles to their limits.

      Now with a 6 month development cycle most consoles are lucky to get two years of the sports titles out before the developers have to start learning a whole new box of crap.

      Or even worse, they just recompile the old game with new shit from the manufactures to make more triangles and 18.876 channel sound and vibra-wireless-eighty button controllers.

  37. Xbox is by glaive00 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Speaking as an over of both an Xbox and a PS2, I have to say that the Xbox is a far better system. Network connectivity out of the box, incorporated hard drive. It would seem that the Xbox was one of the few things Microsoft did right (at least from a system standpoint. The finances are a different matter entirely.)

    If Microsoft can continue to take the loss on the ahrdware and continue to offer a superior system, Sony may be in for a rough ride...

    1. Re:Xbox is by james_r_boyer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Good point. Personally I own all the consoles and I like the Xbox best. Make no mistake Microsoft knows what they are doing. Despite the fact many of their products have problems if it was not for ms the computer industry would not be where it is today. Don't even mention Apple people Jobs is more of thief that Gates.

    2. Re:Xbox is by robogun · · Score: 1
      Network connectivity out of the box,


      Given Microsoft's record, it is only a matter of time before security hoels are discovered and horrified gamerz everywhere around the globe find their xboxes 0wn3d


      Microsoft should count itself lucky that the console is not dominant. They should not become complacent in that regard in case they do begin to make it.

    3. Re:Xbox is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as an over of both an Xbox and a PS2, I have to say that the Xbox is a far better system. Network connectivity out of the box,

      Um, which box? I think maybe you mean network connectivity out of a DIFFERENT box, like the one with the little microphone. Xbox Live still costs an extra $50, last I heard.

      Curiously enough, Playstation 2 systems -DO- come with network connectivity out of the box nowadays; they bundle the network adaptor and an online game now.

      incorporated hard drive.

      If that was worth anything, why are they NOT including one in XBox 2?

    4. Re:Xbox is by jrf83317 · · Score: 1
      I must agree with you. The xbox is a better overall console then PS2.

      I am sick of listening to everyone bitch like little pussies about how they will not even look at the system because it is Microsoft product. How about you all get over yourselves and realize that your little boycott of MS will have no affect. Just take a damn look at the xbox and I guarantee you will be getting rid of your PS2 because the Xbox is a better system.

      I have not had a friend of mine yet, who has not really liked the xbox over their PS2 when they actually get to play mine.

      As for windows products. I have numerous windows machines (I own and have worked with various Linux/Unix systems as well) and have never had a problem with windows products. Maybe all you dumb asses out there need to learn how to use a computer and stop screwing shit up. Yes there are virus and spyware issues. But Linux would be in the same boat if they were in the lead.

      Rant Done!!!!

  38. Next generation FUD machine by News+for+nerds · · Score: 2, Funny

    What does "take" means?
    Xbox Next will take PS3 to the next generation as a flower girl, then go away somewhere obscure...

  39. From Nowhere to Significant by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4, Insightful


    We have gone from nowhere to a significant player


    Who didn't expect Microsoft to be a significant player? For Microsoft to have entered this market and remain insignificant in it would have been evidence of a colossal blunder. Microsoft has the funding it takes to bring in top talent / expertise and develop. Microsoft has one of the most formidable marketing machines in Technology. These alone almost guarantee Microsoft got attention when it entered a market that isn't exactly awash with players.

    However, an important piece that might not be immediately apparent is that Microsoft's day 1 for competing with console makers didn't start with the Xbox. Microsoft has competed for decades; every time a consumer or game developer makes a choice on whether they pick a "PC" or console.

    Granted, this hasn't been direct competition per se. People tend to look at PC gaming and consoles as exclusive markets. However, there IS a certain degree of indirect competition between the two markets. And more importantly - whether Microsoft has been competing with consoles all along or competing with other OSes for personal computing gaming... Microsoft has been developing expertise in gaming technology.

    Microsoft is not going from "nowhere to significant" with the Xbox. It's nowhere as drastic as Ballmer makes it sound. Microsoft has simply decided to shift their existing business strategy to compete directly with console makers.

    Granted, the console industry is made up of considerable competition. Microsoft's task isn't trivial. But combine their existing expertise, funding, and talent for marketing... it's no surprise the Xbox has had at least mediocre success.
  40. COMPETION! COMPETION! by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Funny
    That 'preview' button is

    AEWSOME!

    ;)

  41. Only on Slashdot! by oogoliegoogolie · · Score: 1

    Where no matter how much $$ the corporation makes, or how many deals it signed with the RIAA, it is cheered when compared to MS.

  42. Paradigm Shift by News+for+nerds · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "We may still be losing money, but we have gone from nowhere to a significant player with a whole different approach. We've generated something brand-new."

    Excuse me, is he joking?

  43. Text of interview by hunterx11 · · Score: 3, Funny
    Ballmer had a rather poignant and well articulated opinion, imo:

    CONSOLES! CONSOLES! CONSOLES! CONSOLES! CONSOLES!

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  44. Microsoft is trying to pull an Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is trying to pull an Apple. They want to control the hardware and the software in one box just like Apple. The problem is that the xbox is not cool to own which means MS can't charge a premium like Apple can do.

    1. Re:Microsoft is trying to pull an Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like my xbox. Personally I dumped the ps2 long ago. Overall its a better package and I personally like the games better.

  45. XBOX isnt so big in Japan. by scrame · · Score: 0

    I live in Tokyo, and I havnt seen an Xbox here for a while (not that I have been looking). A few months ago my local convenience store had them in the discount bin for 10,000Yen (less than $100). MS is a big company, but if they cant get a foothold in the japanese console market, they will have a hard time getting good game development, which is what ultimately makes the system.

  46. In Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Xbox Next overtake the PS3... IN JAPAN.

    Still sounds unbeliveable.

  47. typical microsoft by nasero23 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They always seem to get so ahead of themselves. They need to learn that using computer hardware may give the system a bit more power, but it also makes it ten times easier for people to rip apart and mod, and in the end it costs microsoft more money. Xbox2 may be a good system but they just dont have the backing like Sony does when it comes to game companies, Sony has Square-Enix, Capcom and other major ones putting their biggest games out on the PS1/PS2 and now PSP.

  48. Re:Frist Psot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hahah. Racism and homophobia aren't cool dude, but you're talking about NOT taking FURRIES as the totally warped people that you are. Noone hates you to my knowledge, you're just a laughing stock because you expect to be taken seriously when you dress up like unicorns and fuck. To the vast majority of healthy minded individuals, yes, you ARE a joke. Keep it underground.

    Sorry, but you can't pull the "well homosexuality is OK, but..." argument.

    Just face it, in the face of reason, you're ridiculous.

    PS, the original poster obviously and clearly wasn't being serious.

  49. Has to Be Said... by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 2, Funny

    MICROSOFT: All your gamers are belong to US! Make your time!
    SONY: What you say! Somebody set up us the antitrust legislation! FOR GREAT JUSTICE!

    1. Re:Has to Be Said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DeVELOPERS, DeVELOPERS, DeVELOPERS!!!!
      DEVeLOPERS, DEVeLOPERS, DEVeLOPERS!!!!

      AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!

  50. Developing for consoles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The best thing Sony could do is let Microsoft release its XBox2 and hold off on releasing the PS3. The current generation just hasn't finished its lifecycle yet. Its ok to port assets from a PS2 to an XBox or Gamecube, because the tech is about the same level. A next generation console is another matter altogether - it requires higher poly game art for a start. Why would you develop a game for an XBox2 when you could build a game to run on the current three consoles and sell it across the entire market?

    1. Re:Developing for consoles by evilviper · · Score: 1
      A next generation console is another matter altogether - it requires higher poly game art for a start. Why would you develop a game for an XBox2 when you could build a game to run on the current three consoles and sell it across the entire market?

      Because higher quality games are a big seller.

      Nintendo tried to keep their NES alive for as long as possible (the NES was the whole market at the time), but all that time, the Genesis was quickly gaining ground, because it was such a better system. Technological stagnation caused Nintendo to loose their tightly held #1 position.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    2. Re:Developing for consoles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, that worked in '89 when there was two console players - but Sega tried the exact same tactic again with the Dreamcast in '99 and it didn't wash.

  51. But DVD is obsolete in 10 years by yopie · · Score: 1

    I wonder, if the next X-box will be using DVD, as Bill said that DVD is obsolete in 10 year.

  52. Meh by Simple-Simmian · · Score: 1

    I just got a PS2 2 months ago and I have been playing games on my PC and as many under Linux as I can get to work before that. I will never buy and XBox or any game for XBox. I don't do business with crooks and cheats. So Balmer can go dry hump a lamposts. He isn't getting any more money from me. I don't care how "cool" or must have his console is it won't be in my house.

    --
    If you don't like what I write don't be a CS and mod it down. Refute it.
    Yea I can't spell. So what is your point?
    1. Re:Meh by character_assassin · · Score: 1

      See, this is why I need mod points. Now.

      --

      If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.
    2. Re:Meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in the news: Thanks to Simple-Simmian not giving Microsoft $149 for their XBox, Microsoft had no choice but to file for bankruptcy! A Microsoft representative commented that even though they have $60+ billion in the bank, they had no choice but to declare bankruptcy after Simple-Simmian refused to buy an XBox.

      But seriously dude, I really don't think it will hurt them unless you can get the rest of the world to side with you and dump their products. Unless that happens, a $149 dollars will not be missed, especially by Microsoft.

    3. Re:Meh by Simple-Simmian · · Score: 1

      No I gave Sony 149 instead, and I bought a bunch of games too. I like it so much I will be getting a PS3 and the wife now wants a PSP.

      All because Sony matched price and I decided not to deal with crooks. I don't care how neat and cool XBox is. We are not going to own (or be owned because of) any Microsoft products if we can avoid it. Screw Monkey Boy.

      --
      If you don't like what I write don't be a CS and mod it down. Refute it.
      Yea I can't spell. So what is your point?
  53. Re:Frist Psot by tarunthegreat2 · · Score: 1

    Ok, so that I can take sides in a meaningless debate (and lose some Karma to boot), wtf is a furry?

  54. Disagree! by OrthodonticJake · · Score: 1
    I don't really see any evidence to support Ballmer's prediction. I mean, if current trends continue they will dominate the market in another three or four years, but I don't see anything like that continuing. The reason the XBOX was able to achieve such a market share is because it was only starting out and because it was propelled by a large, virtually endless source of money.

    Now that the XBOX has been in the market for a while and has established it's name, I don't see such a gigantic market share improvement. Sony seems to have a very stable position; it has a lot of games that people love and two systems in the pipe (PSP and PS3). Certainly, any potential market share gains that the XBOX may see will be from Nintendo, whose sales have been staggering lately largely (IMHO) due to lack of interest in their games.

    Additionally, the XBOX may even lose ground. Little is known about either the PS3 or the next generation XBOX so it is hard to judge how each console will do, but it would be easy for the PS3 to be amazingly popular and the XBOX to lag behind; this could be the case if there are too many flaws with Microsoft's console, such as the rumored lack of backwards compatability.

    Steve Ballmer's interests are in the promotion of his company, and if making pompous predictions and generally being gaudy achieve that goal, then I think we should take what he says with a grain of salt.
    --
    I regularly report MSN spam to the Hotmail admins.
  55. Microsoft cant take Nintendo by SetupWeasel · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is losing money hand and fist on XBOX. Nintendo is outselling them AND making money, even though they suffered the same time disadvantage that Nintendo did.

    Exactly what is going to change that? Nintendo's next system should be out in a year and a half to 2 years. They have better first party development teams, and seem to be winning over developers in spite of Sony's dominance. How are they going to beat Nintendo?

    Online gameplay is not as important as people seem to think. Xbox live allows no one to join games in progress (essential for team style games), costs an arm and a leg, and is riddled with sore losers that pull the network cable when they start losing. How will they gain users?

    1. Re:Microsoft cant take Nintendo by Monkey · · Score: 1

      One million people seem to disagree with you.

    2. Re:Microsoft cant take Nintendo by SetupWeasel · · Score: 1

      15 Million XBOX consoles have been sold. That means a whole 7% have active XBOX live. Wow, THAT's what I call market share.

  56. Re:Of course they can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You have to ask yourself how many sales they make from people installing Linux on them, both direct and indirect."

    No I really don't have to ask that question at all. Probably somewhere near 0.000001% of the people that buy the Xbox run Linux on it.

  57. Games library is the limiting factor by Thai-Pan · · Score: 1

    I own a Dreamcast, Xbox, PS2, and Gamecube. Out of those, frankly, the Xbox is the best to play with hardware-wise; the S type controller is practical and comfortable, the internal hard drive is handy, the graphics are great, and a modded Xbox can do so much neat stuff! I use mine to play all those SNES games I wish I'd never sold :(

    However, the major limiting factor for the Xbox is the games library. Let's see, it has some decent sports games, a bunch of movie spinoffs, and that's about it.. Sony and Nintendo both have major players developing for them, and they both have tons of original titles. Xbox's Sega GT, while good, is downright inferior to Gran Turismo for PS2. There are no party games or identifying characters like Nintendo has. Xbox needs more titles which are good for parties, along the lines of Mario Party. Although I doubt I'll ever see it, I would have a blast playing "Bill Gates Party" featuring a cartoony Gates, Ballmer, and Wozniak. Come on Bill! Have a sense of humour about yourself!

    Back to the hardware aspect, I built my own Xbox-USB adapters to use the Xbox controllers on my computer. Unfortunately, I can't use my USB Logitech steering wheel on the XBox; it just doesn't recognize it. I don't understand why Microsoft doesn't make them compatible; if people could buy a new system and reuse their existing controllers, that would be a major reason to pick Xbox over PS2.

    1. Re:Games library is the limiting factor by Monkelectric · · Score: 1
      S type controller is practical and comfortable,

      The S controller is the major weakness of the xbox -- its a complete piece of shit. Why you ask? The buttons are raised *TOO FUCKING HIGH*. You can't glide your thumbs over them quickly. Look at the GC or PS2 buttons -- very low on the controller surface so you can move quickly. Small but critical complaint.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

  58. FTC by bstadil · · Score: 1
    Next time do not post as Anonymous if you want a dialog.

    Selling below cost is Dumping Period. Link

    If you must know I represented the #3 US Semiconductor Manufacturer a few years back at their succesfull Dumping charges filed with FTC against Korean Memory makers

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
    1. Re:FTC by AvantLegion · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      >> Selling below cost is Dumping Period. Link [state.gov]

      Hmm. Explain how both the Xbox and PlayStations have, at various times, sold at a loss in the States?

    2. Re:FTC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Okay cocksucker, I am going to try to use as small words as possible so that I don't lose you. You're really making yourself look stupid here. Let's run with your definition of dumping [the link you provided]

      "It provides a legal remedy to counteract low-priced competition in the
      U.S. market from foreign producers who are allegedly "dumping" -- that
      is, selling goods at prices below those in their own home market (price
      discrimination) or below their fully allocated cost of production (sales
      below cost) -- so as to cause injury to a U.S. industry."

      So, when you said that selling below cost is dumping and put that "period" nonsense on the end to signify that you were quite sure, you were wrong. Selling below cost is dumping if it causes injury to a U.S. industry. Last time I checked, Sony and Nintendo were both Japanese companies and MS was a U.S. company. You cite a case that you supposedly worked on [an obvious lie] where Korean manufacturers were prosecuted. Tell me, you originally stated that the government would go after MS - does that make any sense at all? If MS sells their consoles at a huge loss, a U.S. industry is not harmed and, in fact, the high sell through that the original poster was assuming, is helping a U.S. industry because MS is an American company. I mean, for fuck's sake, everything the link you provided is dealing with foreign producers. You're a fucking moron. Can you not see that you're incredibly stupid here? MS selling at $50 is perfectly acceptable because the dumping link you provide is not talking about sales on the
      home market!! You worked on a dumping case? Didn't get much out of it, did you? MS can sell in the United States at whatever price they want and U.S. dumping laws are not going to apply at all because the U.S. is Microsoft's home market, you fucking toolshed! Jesus Christ, you are the dumbest motherfucker ever.

      Please, don't ever post on Slashdot ever again. You are too stupid. I wish there was an exam to get access to the Internet. YOU WOULD FAIL, MORON!!!

    3. Re:FTC by sirshannon · · Score: 1

      hmm... I would suggest you post as Anonymous if you're going to post crap like this. Not sure if you're dumb or lying, but either way, you should have posted anonymously.

      Or intelligently.

    4. Re:FTC by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      You are too stupid. I wish there was an exam to get access to the Internet. YOU WOULD FAIL, MORON!!!

      You'd fail that test too.

      The 'social skills' part, that is.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    5. Re:FTC by Afrosheen · · Score: 1

      Social skills? Dude, welcome to Slashdot, where you can leave social skills and hygiene behind.

      In cyberspace, no one can hear you scream..with a +2 filter on Slashdot.

    6. Re:FTC by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      In other words, it's okay for Microsoft and not okay for Sony (since Sony is hurting MS and MS is US American...), or what?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    7. Re:FTC by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      well, I suspect Japan got some anti-dumping laws of their own if it should be necessary...

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
  59. Re:Frist Psot by robogun · · Score: 1
    wtf is a furry?

    May God protect you from ever finding out. But if you have to know, somethingawful.com regularly ridicules them on the front page.

  60. Re:I think by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

    I expected it to be the "portfolio" of MS' new marketing girl for Japan (some pornstar). Too bad, if it was it'd actually be on topic.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  61. Re:I guess we'll find out at E3 or GDC or somethin by News+for+nerds · · Score: 1

    Maybe he got upset that by the news in this week he knew PS3 would be premiered before his expectation, and had to say something to hook up losing fanboy interest in Xbox Next?

  62. Memo to microsoft... by RedCard · · Score: 1

    Gates: You have no chance to survive make your time.

    Sony: UR NOT E (with 'E' colored red)

    Remember, For Great Justice:

    1) Include non-cumbersome controller at system launch

    2) Try to keep gross weight of system under one (1) metric ton.

    3) Internet connectivity is good. It should be a pack-in.

  63. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by dafoomie · · Score: 5, Informative

    They are using a different CPU(IBM RISC), a new GPU(ATI) adding there own microcode to the CPU to stop people doing what they have been doing to the current XBox.
    Sony is using a different CPU (Cell), and probably a different GPU, why doesn't the same argument apply to them?

    and then there is Live I would say there will have to re-write most of that as well.
    Why would they have to do that? Nothing that runs on the servers needs to change very much.

    MS has never writen software for RISC in the past and I think that the time frame they have set themself is very unrealistic.
    They wrote Windows NT for the DEC Alpha (a 64 bit RISC processor) and supported it until NT 4, and they have Windows CE which runs on ARM's RISC processors.

    they have partnered up with some good people to bring the PS 3 to life
    Microsoft has "partnered up" with IBM and ATI. Are they not "good people"?

  64. Microsoft's products by sorcium · · Score: 1

    It would be nice if they put as much effort into fixing their IE browser security loopholes as tehy do in making a console

  65. But the great thing about the Xbox by spisska · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Don't forget the best thing about the Xbox -- that Microsoft will sell you $300 worth of computer for $150.

    With a mod chip, an ethernet cable and a Debian disk, your Xbox becomes a great distributor for all you .avi, .mpg, wmv, etc. files through the tv -- and all your mp3s through you home stereo.

    Add an off the shelf 100GB HDD and it's a warehouse too.

    MS's Big Idea(tm) behid Xbox was to lose money on the hardware but make it back on games and Xbox Live subscriptions.

    The best thing you can do is buy an Xbox for yourself and another for your brother/sister, mod it, install MythTV or somesuch, show your siblings how to use it to store .avi, .mpg, mp3, etc, and play them back through gear they already have.

    Every Xbox that sells, MS loses cash; every person who buys an Xbox and doesn't sign up for Xbox live is another loss for Redmond.

    It makes me feel warm and fuzzy to know I can help ruin an evil company by buying their product.

    1. Re:But the great thing about the Xbox by News+for+nerds · · Score: 1

      Your strategy works, as long as you buy them at eBay.

    2. Re:But the great thing about the Xbox by another_twilight · · Score: 1

      Ever consider that the x-box bears a remarkable resemblance to what Microsoft wants to do in the PC arena in terms of hardware verification of software, trusted computing etc?

      Sure, having it make money and chiselling their way into another niche would be nice, but if this is just a research exercise into the viability of some of their ideas then it looks fairly successful. Sure there are plenty of mod-chips, most taking advantage of the 'hack here' points left on the boards. The various projects (legit and otherwise) have exposed some security holes, pointed out vulnerabilities and otherwise provided some hard data that would have been impossible to obtain otherwise - namely how long the 'hobbyist' crowd to hack their secure system.

    3. Re:But the great thing about the Xbox by Mr.+Grimm · · Score: 1

      And it makes me cold and prickly to see someone try to make me pay cost for a console system. You can try to hurt MS all you want, but stay the hell away from my hobbies while you're at it.

  66. Re:I think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there such a thing as GameLube?

  67. Re:Frist Psot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  68. Battle of the Bottomless Pockets by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sony has deep pockets also. Both companies are playing a game of chicken. It will be interesting to see who flinches first. Although MS is wealthier, they are also behind in the race, so it is fairly even. So get the popcorn out, and enjoy the money race. See ya' at the finish line.

  69. This in fact may wind up screwing the XBox 2 by mcc · · Score: 1

    I don't think you're the only one. I think Microsoft is going to have a LOT of trouble convincing people to the XBox 2 is a significant draw over the XBox 1, I think a nontrivial number of people may react to the next console gen with "do I really need a new box, it seems like I just got this one", and I think this is going to be a much bigger problem for Microsoft than the other couple of console manufacturers. For these reasons:

    1. The Nintendo Revolution and Sony PS3 are going to be backward compatible. The XBox 2-- it appears, though this is not certain-- is not. This means the XBox 2 will compete DIRECTLY with the XBox 1, whereas the Revolution and PS3 will be more like an upgrade, and have a sort of synergy with the current gen.

    2. The next console gen will likely provide somewhat diminishing returns in terms of graphical prowess. The current gen has a LOT of potential in graphics, and this isn't often even being taken full advantage of. The N5, XB2 and PS3 will have more polygons, but will developers really be able to DO much more with those polygons?

    2a. This isn't a huge problem with Nintendo or Sony. With Nintendo, Nintendo's been making noises that they are going to be doing some sort of gimmick that will be a "revolution" in gaming. This may or may not turn out to be something that works, but at least they have something up their sleeves. With Sony meanwhile the PS2 was so graphically anemic that the PS3 is going to be obvious as a huge leap no matter what. The XBox meanwhile has to grow up from an already impressive point, and they have to grow up significantly.

    2b. More crucially, pure technological prowess is more of a drawing point for the Xbox2 than other consoles. This means that if the XBox2 can't deliver, and deliver WELL, in terms of improvement in the next console generation, it's in much more serious trouble. People come to Nintendo because they like the tastes-like-the-80s, "it's the games stupid" niche Nintendo's been targetting; people come to Sony because Sony is where the serious developer support is at. In both of these cases, graphics just aren't the drawing factor. With Microsoft, though... well there's definitely a hardcore community that just likes the niche the XBox has been targetting with it's kind of "PC games transcended" idiom, but I think by and large what's been drawing people to the XBox is the tech, the hard drive and XBL and the graphics and all that. If Microsoft can't expand and deliver in that area for the XB2, they don't have a whole lot to fall back on....

    Basically: Have you see the Halo 2 screenshots? There's clearly a lot of room for graphics to expand, especially in terms of things like polycounts and dropoff distances, but I'm not sure if you can really get that much more "ooh ahh" than the Halo 2 screenshots already are. We seem to be reaching a sort of plateau of the "ooh shiny" factor in the gaming world.

    This is of course just my vague opinion, take with a grain of salt.

  70. Bizarro World! by achurch · · Score: 3, Informative

    'We have gone from nowhere to a significant player,' he said

    Welcome to Bizarro World, where the Xbox is a significant player, rather than being challenged in sales by the PS1 and WonderSwan!

    (Disclaimer: I live in Japan, where the Xbox's popularity level is somewhere around "the whowhat?". Is the Xbox doing any better in the West?)

    1. Re:Bizarro World! by abryden · · Score: 1

      Locally the xbox seems to be doing reasonably well ( I live in the midwest in a college town). The PS2 is clearly the dominant player, but their are a lot of people that bought the XBox in order to be able to play Halo.

      I think that if Microsoft can beat Sony to the market by a substantial amount of time and offer a good reason to upgrade, they could come out as an equal player. The primary problem that they could have to deal with is that they will not be able to produce an adequate reason for people to upgrade, and sony will continue to set the standard for console games. Software publishers may include slicker graphics for the xbox 2 but the same games will be available on the PS2, and only when the PS3 come out will developers take advantage of the xbox 2's new capabilities.

      Basically what it comes down to is that until Microsoft has sent in the troopers to "acquire" squaresoft, sony will remain the leader.

      --
      Aaron Bryden

      abrydenREMOVETHIS@gmail.com
    2. Re:Bizarro World! by LordSah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Those stats are just Japan. XBox owns a considerably larger portion of the market in the States and Europe.

      Several posts have suggested that if XBox can't win Japan, they can't really compete in the console market. That's crap: Nokia phones are nearly unknown in Japan, but they sell more wireless phones than anyone else in the world. Japan is just a market, like anywhere else.

    3. Re:Bizarro World! by achurch · · Score: 1

      Locally the xbox seems to be doing reasonably well ( I live in the midwest in a college town). The PS2 is clearly the dominant player, but their are a lot of people that bought the XBox in order to be able to play Halo.

      Maybe that's why the Xbox doesn't sell in Japan--nobody here plays FPS's. I recall reading that Japanese tend to get motion sickness easily from 3D games with rapid motion, which is probably a large factor. Even FFXI came with a warning saying "only move the camera gently to avoid vertigo", and that's hardly a high-motion game.

      I guess I have no problem with Microsoft catering to the Western market and doing well there--as long as they don't proceed to use that leverage to squish Japanese games out of existence. (Ichitaro was the word processor in Japan until MS came along and ordered distributors to preinstall Word instead, and when talking to people who were using computers in that era I haven't heard a single voice favoring Microsoft's heavy-handed tactics. Aside from bulkiness, Ichitaro was designed for the Japanese market, while Word had Japanese support just as an afterthought and was/is consequently harder to use, is the complaint I hear most frequently.)

    4. Re:Bizarro World! by PipsqueakOnAP133 · · Score: 1

      Ah, Nokia phones are nearly unknown in Japan BECAUSE JAPAN DOESN'T USE GSM. Well, there might be one provider of GSM in Japan....maybe. But because of the population density, GSM will get inferior quality of service no matter how you slice it. And hence, nobody will care.

      The problem with why the Xbox might need Japan is because the majority of games that sell the best, so far have come from Japan. DDR, Final Fantasy series, Mario, Gran Turismo, etc.

    5. Re:Bizarro World! by dfj225 · · Score: 1

      The Xbox does pretty well in the west, and from what I've read it can currently be considered in "second place" being a small amount more successful than Gamecube.

      I think the reason for that may be that this console is the only one with a decidedly wester approach to its hardware and software. Pretty much only Xbox has very western RPGs that are outstanding (KOTOR and Morrowind) and plenty more on the way. Also there are many good FPS games as well. Since these two genres are my favorite I enjoy the Xbox. Now I know that in Japan, Japanese style RPGs are probably the most popular for obvious reasons and I'm not really sure how popular western games are over there (although I heard that there is a healthy import market for American games, maybe you can tell me for sure). Also, I heard that the Xbox is much too large for most Japanese people to want in their homes. Is this true? I would imagine that hardcore gamers wouldn't care about the size.

      --
      SIGFAULT
    6. Re:Bizarro World! by achurch · · Score: 1

      Now I know that in Japan, Japanese style RPGs are probably the most popular for obvious reasons and I'm not really sure how popular western games are over there (although I heard that there is a healthy import market for American games, maybe you can tell me for sure).

      There's a market, certainly, but I'm not sure whether I'd classify it as "healthy"--the only place I've seen them is a few (mostly used) game shops in Akihabara.

      Also, I heard that the Xbox is much too large for most Japanese people to want in their homes. Is this true?

      Absolutely. Let me put it this way: in Japan, even the PS2 verges on "kinda biggish". With lots of space already taken up by furniture, TV, VCR/DVD player, and PC, there really isn't any room left over to put an Xbox in unless you have a really big place to live. (My apartment, with two ~100 sq.ft rooms, is "luxurious" according to everyone I've talked to.)

  71. Is that a competition? by higon · · Score: 0

    How come?

    PS2 is currently a dominant in a console market. But I never heard of Sony being a monopoly anywhere. Sony is a huge company but always living with its competitors.

    XBOX is tough, simply because it has nearly infinit amount of money behind to eliminate competitors. If you consider the actual profit XBOX is making, you'll be aware it is doing radiculously poorly. MS will keep doing this until they have slautered all the competitors or until the market has become unprofittable.

    Think about our country where XBOX has gotten a place to sit. There is NO LONGER SINGLE PLACE where the competitor can grow in US. Isn't this a shame?

    Can you say this is "the essence of competition"? If you say "Yes" and not giving a reason, I'll say people like you make world worse.

  72. Oops, I'm on SLASHDOT... by mcc · · Score: 1, Troll

    Hey mcc: Nice bbcode, jackass.

    1. Re:Oops, I'm on SLASHDOT... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hangon, mcc just trolled him/herself according to the mods.

      clever. very clever. i applaud you!

  73. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    > MS has never writen software for RISC in the past

    Not true. NT was originally deveoped for MIPS and each version was ported to Intel, Alpha and PowerPC.

    Of course this was in C, so it wasn't a big deal.

  74. Xbox will gain in the short term by Leknor · · Score: 1

    Given that the Xbox is a more powerful console and the PS2 is starting to show it's age and is much closer to market saturation I predict the Xbox will appear to gain lots of market share until the next generation of consoles appear.

    While that will make nice press releases for MS, it doesn't address the fact that the PS2 has significantly more units out there for which people will buy games.

    I cannot predict what will happen between the PS3, Xbox 2 and the GameCube 2 but I don't think MS's short term gains will be a significant factor on the next gen console's completive advantage.

  75. binary thinking. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Geez, I'd sure like to be bleeded dry with $60 Billion cash. Well, what did we *expect* Ballmer to say, that Xbox2 will be no. 2? No doubt that they're aiming for no. 1, but my guess is that M$ isn't counting on it. Xbox2 isn't going to rule marketshare. Xbox3 will. Xbox4 will continue the dominance.

    The binary thinking still gets a bit thick on this board.

  76. FWIW by Piquan · · Score: 1

    For what it's worth, if Microsoft really wanted to dominate this market:

    Microsoft's cash holdings: 56.41B

    Nintendo's market cap: 15.5B

    Sony Corp's market cap: 33.57B

    1. Re:FWIW by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 1

      Clever! 56.41-15.5-33.57=7 Not much left over for MS to play with though.

      --
      READY.
      PRINT ""+-0
    2. Re:FWIW by Piquan · · Score: 1

      Since when is 7 billion in cash "not much left over"? Oh, since we're comparing it to their 56B before this maneuver, okay.

      Well, they'd have the assets of the companies at that point. Sony has 10.34B in cash, but I don't know about Nintendo. Besides, they don't have to buy the entire outstanding stock supply, just a controlling interest.

      I'm not saying it's likely. The console market just isn't important enough to them. But if they realized that-- for example-- eight of the Supreme Court justices couldn't get enough Zelda, and MS figured out effective forms of subliminal advertising, then it's a possible tack.

  77. Re:I guess we'll find out at E3 or GDC or somethin by Tezkah · · Score: 1

    Nope, the new PS3 launch date of March 2005 is *before* E3, or even by the end of this year!

    Why is this important? Sony had, until recently, said that it would release the PS3 in 2006. Microsoft thought it would be able to get its NeXtbox or whatever it is now out by Fall 2005, and laugh at Sony. Unfortunately for them, they're now screwed. Sure, Sony might not have the support of all developers if they launch it by the end of the year, or in March, but PS2 didn't, and its backwards compatibility kept it selling for quite a while. Xbox2? "Sorry, no backwards compatibility! We were working on it but we had to rush it out the door to compete with Sony!"

  78. If they want to make Xbox 2 successfull by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have more open interface standard like USB-2 and firewire. This allow end users to plug in those PC game peripherals like guns, wheels, keyboard, etc. That and easier home network interface

    1. Re:If they want to make Xbox 2 successfull by chrisranjana.com · · Score: 0

      yes msoft needs to work on it !

      --
      Chris ,
      Php Programmers.
  79. The Furry Defined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    A furry is somebody who wishes they were a animal.
    They sometimes actually beleive they are animals, and if not, at least spiritally a animal in a sudo-native american indian / egyption god / completely bogus bullshit type of way.

    They also get sexually excited by fantasies of twisted half-animal/half-anime creatures fucking each other and often draw bad artwork of this. People with fur, fox heads, tails, and huge detailed penises giving blow jobs to each other. They want to be those creatures.

    That sort of thing.

    Also dress up in full body mascot animal costumes and run around in hotel convention halls and make websites of them dressed up in these fur suites, along with their bad sexual bestiality artwork, and sudo angst/spiritual discussions in rambiling message boards.

    Then they get all up tight when they are made the laughing stock of the entire internet, and considure it persecution by evil "humans" similar to the way that "mother earth" is being "raped" by George Bush, hunters, and large oil companies.

    Basicly the type of people that call god "her" because it sounds more enlightened and it freaks the squares.

    The sort of people that you feel sorry for until they are caught fingering your household pet's anus with their underwear down and no pants on. Then you realise why people hate them.

    And they've found each other. On the internet...

  80. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by PedanticSpellingTrol · · Score: 1
    <tinfoil_hat=1>

    What if XBOX2 is just practice for porting windows to the Power architecture in an effort to undercut Apple, break into the RISC server market, and maybe, just maybe finally put register-starved x86 out to pasture on the desktop?

    <tinfoil_hat OFF>
  81. And bleed more money while doing it? by bastardadmin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Seriously, anywhere else a moneypit like the XBox would have been put down for the greater good.

    I am not saying it is a crap piece of hardware, on the contrary I enjoy it, there are some sweet titles for XBox and the extras you get even on an unmodded XBox vs. the PS2 are great... ...but it bled money, it was always sold at a loss. That doesn't strike me as a stellar business model.

    The real story is: how is MS going to make it profitable? There is money to be made in the console market... what's their angle?

    1. Re:And bleed more money while doing it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, everyone seems to be all worked up over Microsoft *losing* (gasp! they're bleeding cash!) $3B (or so) on the XBox.

      Microsoft *invested* $3B, kids. And what did they get? Well, they got the number 2 console in N. America and Europe, an initial games library that includes most or all of the major players, a subscriber base to XBox Live, and a pretty good exclusive franchise with Halo (of course, no one's going to buy Halo 2, right?). Basically, they got Nintendo, or something that's pretty close in value to Nintendo (in the sense that they are in the same position now that they would be in had they bought Nintendo).

      Now, how much would it have been to just buy Nintendo? $20B? Seems to me like they saved themselves $17B.

      (But I guess that's why they have $60B in the bank and you have, what, $1000?)

    2. Re:And bleed more money while doing it? by bastardadmin · · Score: 1

      My point was not so much that they were losing money, but that they must have some vision of how to make the market profitable.

      What, are you suggesting they did it for the prestige? They are betting that this product will be profitable, I'm just curious how they are going to (attempt to) make it happen.

      No one with $60B (or even $1000) in the bank goes into a market just to become the #2 player and operate at a loss for years.
      Except of course if you started a "built to flip" dotcom, and bailed with all the VC money leaving dozens of unemployed people in your wake.

    3. Re:And bleed more money while doing it? by Monkey · · Score: 1

      Well according to this Microsoft just reached one million subscribers to their Live service. One million subscribers paying on a monthly basis to almost any service amounts to a lot of gravy.

  82. Re:Gmail released? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nope, i just signed up, verified my email etc etc, and then it gave me the "we're still testing this bitch ass service you stanky motherfucker" message... oh well.

  83. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, because Apple is such a dominant power (rolls eyes).

    I think Microsoft would love to have another chip architecture to keep Intel in their place. The real question is if IBM is interested in supporting Windows/PPC, and they probably aren't.

  84. Nitpicking Re:Sad but (maybe) true by bastardadmin · · Score: 1

    Well, Sega has bailed out of the console hardware game, so I would definitely say they won't be keeping Sony honest.

    But man, the Dreamcast is still a glorious piece of hardware...

    The Dreamcast also proved that it didn't matter who was first to market with the sweet next gen console.

    It also raised the bar for console gamers, but it wasn't hot enough to keep Sega in the market.

    1. Re:Nitpicking Re:Sad but (maybe) true by shotfeel · · Score: 1

      One advantage Sony and MS have over companies like Sega is that they can bleed $$$ for a long time on a new console because the game system isn't even their main source of revenue.

      If the Xbox was made by a company that had to rely on its revenue to stay in business, it would have never existed.

  85. probably true by yem · · Score: 1

    The graphics/tech thing will depend on release dates though. XBox came out years after the PS2 - no surprise that it beats PS2 bloody in terms of performance.

    If the XB2/PS3 come out around the same time, it'll come down to games and price. and maybe controller =)

    --
    No, I did not read the f***ing article!
  86. Re:Of course they can... by bastardadmin · · Score: 1

    I would guess the PS/2 gets more linux sales, what with the optional hard disk and linux kit they offer... don't know that it has ever been on the market in the Americas though.

    But now you know why the PS/2 has those 2 forward mounted USB ports, eh?

  87. Re:Of course they can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That'd be one and a half person. Try again.

  88. Re:Gmail released? by BelugaParty · · Score: 1

    it does not give you access to gmail.

  89. But nextgen Xbox will not be as good as first gen by dilvish_the_damned · · Score: 1


    The nextgen Xbox will not be stable at all or will be so damned late that it does not matter. I make this preiction solely based on a rumor I heard that it will not be x86, and we all know how good MS is at porting NT/2000/XP (which the xbox runs). As curcumstantial proof I offer the recent MS statement that console backwards compatability with previous games is overated.

    Can anyone confirm/deny this rumor regarding non x86 for Xbox?
    Sorry, have no time to look up my facts and offer links as would be polite, I must get back to work.
    My prediction seemed like it wanted to be spouted out never the less. Thanks.

    --
    I think you underestimate just how much I just dont care.
  90. Promoting the correct strategy by Roosey · · Score: 1

    He knows what's important for the future of a console system.

    Developers, developers, developers, developers.

  91. mod parent up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ........sdsd......

  92. the rule of threes by the+evaluator · · Score: 3, Interesting

    dont know if anyone has mentioned this, but it usually takes MS three tries to get something functional and somewhat compelling.

    we've seen this in categories like
    desktop OS
    Server OS
    Databases
    Browser
    IDE
    PDA OS
    Smartphone OS

    i'd really be shocked if they got it right on the second try, already it seems like the replacement of the hard drive with RAM seems like a step in the wrong direction.

    this rule is particularly true in enterprise software- and typically factored in when planning long term strategy. with five years of breathing space, you can innovate quite a bit to stay ahead of the curve.

    about 7 years ago, MS bought an Israeli based analytics company, and people predicted the end of ISV's like Cognos, Business Objects, Crystal and others. now, about 7 years later, they're kinda releasing a 1.5 product that people are chuckling at.

    remember SQL server 6.5- no row level locking? version 7, heh, not bad...pretty good bang for the buck...

    as a long time gadget freak, im actually pretty excited about the next generation MS smartphone, the motorola mpx220, which fixes all of the crappiness of the second generation.

    remember great plains software? the basis of the MS CRM strategy? SAP's not exactly quaking in their boots, but you can bet their thinking about that third release in about five years...

    if you believe Eillison's testimony, they're poised to take over the world, and he wakes up nights in a cold sweat.

    of course, when that happens, there are countless nubile young asian women to dab his forehead with hundred dollar bills.

  93. keep it on the down low by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    Shhhhhhh! We don't want those frikkin' Canadians to realize they're really just Americans.

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  94. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by omicronish · · Score: 1

    It also means(and this is what I think)that you will not be able to play XBox games on the XBox 2, they will have to re-write DirectX, build a RISC OS for it and then there is Live I would say there will have to re-write most of that as well. MS has never writen software for RISC in the past and I think that the time frame they have set themself is very unrealistic.

    Actually, Windows NT used to run on a RISC processor, namely the DEC Alpha. Although it doesn't anymore, I'm sure porting it back again wouldn't be difficult since their OS is mostly in processor-independent C/C++. This is assuming they'll be using the current Xbox OS for Xbox 2, but even if they don't, most OS code is processor independent anyway (take a look at Linux and the number of architectures it runs on).

    As for DirectX, I imagine it'd be similar to the DirectX situation on computers where the core DirectX code works across all graphics cards, and hardware manufacturers provide drivers that interface between DirectX and the hardware.

  95. If they were serious... by darekana · · Score: 1

    If MS was serious about "taking" Sony, they should lay down a billion for Square-Enix and buy off the Japanese market with Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest.

  96. Incorrect usage of "generation" by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

    "I am betting that my children will take it up the ass from the children of Nobuyuki Idei."

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  97. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by killjoe · · Score: 1

    "Sony is using a different CPU (Cell), and probably a different GPU, why doesn't the same argument apply to them?"

    Yes and no. The Cell processor is likely to be revolutionary. Everything I read about it screams disruptive technology to me. Time will tell but it seems like sony and IBM are making the next generation of linux workstations as well as game consoles.

    "Microsoft has "partnered up" with IBM and ATI. Are they not "good people"?"

    It depends on what you mean by "partner". Sony is a Partner with IBM because they are developing new technology together. MS is not a Parner of IBM just because they are buying chips from them. They have already backstabbed IBM several times and now are backstabbing Intel. Anybody who partners with MS is just asking for it.

    --
    evil is as evil does
  98. Xbox by retro128 · · Score: 1

    I think Ballmer is forgetting that you need something important which makes or breaks a console. Now what was it? ... Oh yeah, a huge library of good games, which Sony has been pretty consistent at getting.

    So far most of what I've seen on the Xbox is unplayable FPS shovelware. There are, of course, a few good games, like Panzer Dragoon and DOA3. But for the most part, the Xbox library is rent-only.

    Now granted, the Xbox itself has a lot of advantages - Networking, most power on the market, and built in HD. Unfortunately to take advantage of most of that you have to chip it (I've always said mod chips make the Xbox what it should have been), otherwise you have a locked down PC that plays crappy games.

    I think I can say that Sony will have learned a few lessons from the Xbox and they won't be screwing around with the PS3. I'm sure Microsoft has a harder fight ahead of it than Ballmer thinks it does.

    --
    -R
  99. chinstrap by I+judge+you · · Score: 1
    Who didn't expect Microsoft to be a significant player?

    Lot's of people, including much of the game "press."

    And not without reason, given that game history (of which you are obviously ignorant) is littered with remains of large companies' failed consoles.

    judgment: ignorant moron

    1. Re:chinstrap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you telling me that when through a Gazillion dollars at something that you were suprised it had some success?

      When you have enough money to buy EA and Squaresoft (like MS tried to do but was spurned for obvious reasons), you are bound to have some success because some people will sell themselves out for the crappier console because they money is too good.

      Personally, I think the machine is okay but the controller is crap. I also think the games on the PS2 have been nothing short of fantastic but that seems to be dwindling because of the whole multi-platform thing.

      Personally, I don't think MS should be in this market because their product cannot stand on it's own 2 feet without it's massive capital funding.

      To me that is a failure and MS sounds idiotic for touting themselves as a success. I'm sure the investors are really happy about the money being drained out of the company into this uncertain product. I'm hoping that Xbox2 does JUST as well as Xbox1 - and I'm sure it will because MS doesn't seem to listen to their customers unless lawyers are invovled. Fortunately for us, there are viable alternatives.

  100. XBox can be easily replaced by Belgand · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just recently I decided to go out and get a current generation console. Now, I haven't owned a console system since the SNES, but I've kept abreast of the market and played plenty of games with friends. In that time I've largely moved over to the PC for most of my gaming and, quite frankly, I haven't really looked back. I don't really want to turn this into some sort of PC vs. Console flame war, mind you, just setting the picture.

    When I bought a console system I was thinking about all the stuff I wasn't getting on the PC: being able to play a game with my friends in the same room on the same screen, making gaming a bit more of a group activity. Having a fun system to play around with some stuff that consoles actually do pretty well, and playing exclusive titles that I'm not going to get a chance to play on the PC. Given all this and considering that I already have a solid PC for gaming the XBox isn't really that great. My final decision was actually a Gamecube.

    Why? Well, the 'cube has a strong library of very good games that simply won't ever be ported to another system because they're Nintendo properties. If I want to play Legend of Zelda, Metroid Prime, Super Smash Bros., Eternal Darkness, Mario Kart, etc. there's only one system that's going to fill that need. As for multi-platform, but console only games (e.g. Starcraft: Ghost) almost all of them are made available for the Gamecube and with graphics that are often better than the PS2. The PS2 drew me with its large library of games, but nothing really stood out. Many of the best PS2 games (e.g. GTA3) are eventually ported to the PC or to the Gamecube. Online play is nice, but again, most of the games that involve online play are often ports of PC games or sports games that I have no interest in. The XBox, in its favor, often has the best graphics and sound of any of the consoles. It has the very nice feature of an integrated hard drive. Ultimately though any of the games I'd really want to play on it are really just PC games. KOTOR, Thief 3, Splinter Cell... I can't imagine wanting to play these on a console system when I could play them on an upgradable, typically more powerful computer with the added bonus of free online play, easy patching and all the other things that computer gaming means.

    Ultimately this is where I see the XBox. Microsoft wanted to make a console that was more or less a computer and that's pretty much what they've done. The problem with this is that if you already have a computer you probably don't have much need for the XBox.

    1. Re:XBox can be easily replaced by Faeton · · Score: 1
      Soo.. you don't think a $150 console is a good deal vs a $2000 computer?

      A good game is a good game, whatever platform it is (though honestly, FPS is better played on a computer, simply due to the control scheme).

      And GTA3 has NOT been ported to the GameCube. In fact, all the great games you listed available to the GameCube are made (or published) by Nintendo itself. Nintendo is losing 3rd party developer support and in that process, games 6-12 months from now. Not to say that the games Nintendo aren't great, it's just that I would like variety too.

      And now that Microsoft has bought RARE.....

    2. Re:XBox can be easily replaced by Darth+Daver · · Score: 1

      "The problem with this is that if you already have a computer you probably don't have much need for the XBox."

      Bingo! I already have a PC for PC games, and the mouse and keyboard are better for those games than Xbox controllers. My PC also has a better processor, better graphics, more RAM and, unlike Xbox 2, a large hard drive.

      I will not reward Microsoft for creating PC games that won't run on my PC. Why should I spend my hard earned cash on an Xbox? Not for games, anyway. If I got one, it would be for hacking with Linux.

    3. Re:XBox can be easily replaced by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

      And now that Microsoft has bought RARE.....

      What? They release a game for every other XBox release? ;-)

    4. Re:XBox can be easily replaced by ksiddique · · Score: 1

      This is true... GTA3 is not out for the 'Cube. But in case you need a GTA-style fix, I can recommend True Crime: Streets Of LA and Spider-Man 2.

    5. Re:XBox can be easily replaced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That why I want to turn my XBox into a Xbox Media Center :D

    6. Re:XBox can be easily replaced by Belgand · · Score: 1

      Yes, but I already have the computer you see. In fact, I'm willing to bet that a great deal of people who have an XBox also have a computer that would be suitable for gaming. In my mind this is simply spending money to buy a dedicated system to play games that I could already be playing with better controls, graphics and many other improvements in most cases.

      GTA3, while not available for the GameCube is available for the PC where I've played and enjoyed both the original and Vice City. Quite frankly I can't even contemplate playing them with a console due to the control scheme used there.

      As to the games listed... well, that was exactly the point. Nintendo-made games will only be on a Nintendo system. I personally feel that Nintendo has some of the best exclusive games and the ones that will never, ever be ported off to another system.

  101. watch the hands not the mouth by geoff+lane · · Score: 1

    MS will innovate upto the point they dominate the market. At that point they retain their position by other, less ethical, means while the product stagnates but brings in piles of cash either by direct sales or by pre-install licensing.

    The best current examples are IE and Windows.

    Always remember, MS is afraid of change because it is expensive and will always work to stifle a technology while they struggle to catch up.

  102. In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sony president has said that they will not be able to take the Xbox.

    Red hat said they won't be able to take Nowell's Suse.

    Nintendo said they simply give up.

    Steve Jobs throws in the tower and won't be able to take on Long horn.

    And best of all, AMD's Hector said they can't compete with Intel's Pentium line of the product.

    In a not so popular news, Lindows' CEO admit that their Linux is inferior to M$ Windows and can't take it anymore.

    It also was 3 years from today that Mike Tyson said he COULD take on Holifield.

    And last be not least, Steve Balmer and Willy Gates said that their products are less expensive than open source and Linux alike, pointing out that ActiveX have beaten Java in the last decade!

  103. What is being a "significant player" really worth? by Andy_R · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the console market, I'm not convinced that it's worth very much at all. Selling into a market dominated by kids, with a product cycle of about 5 years, a large portion of console buyers are going to grow out of the market, and a large portion are first time buyers.

    Actually, I can't think of any other industry where 'significant players' crash and burn on as regular a basis as the console market - Being a 'significant player' didn't help Atari or Sega, both of whom had at one time or other bigger shares of the market than the xbox does, and it didn't do them any good.

    --
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  104. People's big complaints by TheAdventurer · · Score: 1

    I don't see why winning the Japanese market is so important.

    There are a lot of american game players who, contrary to popular internet belief, don't wish and pretend that they were japanese and who don't enjoy anime and prefer a hard hitting FPS to a more artsy game.

    I think Microsoft has made good strides in the console market, but also some bad moves that, in my opinion (which is almost worth the server space this post takes up), came almost entirely from a marketing standpoint.

    If they would just work hard on their console and say to the gaming world, "Look, we are Microsoft and we really like gaming and would like to perform well at it. We want to add to gaming and make some really impressive and immersive interactive software. We hope you check out what we come up with and enjoy it."

    But no, the marketing department cranks up the volume and screams at you. "Microsoft is going to kick your ass and steal your girlfriend! We are going to rape Sony like a five dollar whore and leave it begging for mercy. We are awesome and you should just suck it down!"

    There are a lot of good engineers at microsoft. I am good friends with a couple of them. They are smart, innovative, and talented individuals and many of them wish the marketing department over there would just shut the heck up.

    Oh, and much of the anti-microsoft vitriol in this thread is grossly uninformed and irrational.

    1. Re:People's big complaints by dammitallgoodnamesgo · · Score: 1

      The Japanese market is important because it's the world's biggest. Then again, console companies have always ignored the world's third biggest (Which, depending on how you want to look at it is either Europe, or the UK, with the rest of Europe at no 4) Microsoft claimed they were going to concentrate on breaking the PAL market, which they seem to have failed to do.

  105. You're too pessimistic by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's not "we are about 17million+ console sales behind Sony", it's "we're only 18 million away from passing them". Think positive man!

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  106. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by PipsqueakOnAP133 · · Score: 1

    The Cell processor is getting majorly overhyped. Basically, it reduces down to getting a bunch of cores probably based off the Power5 series into one die and basically doing the same thing as Sun's throughput computing efforts or the direction of current GPUs.

    On the software side, it'll most likely abstract out into very efficient threading, although each thread might not be that fast (but still fast enough). Kinda like having 100 233mhz processors in a UNIX box. It is far from being a new idea or disruptive. In fact, you might as well say Sega's Saturn, a quad processor programming nightmare would be where this stuff's evolved from, except now we can fit magnitudes more cores into a console than we could 10 years ago.

    Anyhow, I just love the fact that all three major consoles are using PowerPC architectures. :)

  107. Re:But nextgen Xbox will not be as good as first g by PipsqueakOnAP133 · · Score: 1

    And what's wrong with using Windows CE/Embedded?

    In all seriousness, CE has always been better written than NT and also more portable. Moving it to a PowerPC shouldn't be that hard considering they've worked with it before.

    And it not being an x86 just means it'll be faster, cooler, and probably cheaper and easier to design around.

    And yeah, it's pretty much confirmed that they're using a PowerPC. I recall seeing somebody mentioning they're seeding developers using Apple G5s.

  108. 'I am betting we can take Sony' by Snart+Barfunz · · Score: 2, Funny

    'I am betting we can take Sony'
    'Yes, you are. But inside this PlayStation is the most powerful games processor known to man. And you're asking yourself - how many processors are in the box? Is it three? Is it five? I don't even know - we just keep shovelling 'em in. So the question you have to ask yourself is: do you feel lucky today - punk?!'

    --
    --- Yx3 = Delilah ---
  109. I think what he means is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are incapable of innovating. Instead they find a company and absorb it. Or they take current technology and use it.

    The XBox is a scaled down PC with a custom Graphics card (built by another company) with security put in to stop people making their own games easy.

    There is very little innovative about it. Heck MS even bought out game companies rather then innovate to make new games.

  110. This is for the share holders by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is looking at getting cut out of profitable foreign markets (i.e., all those 2nd and 3rd world countries that are getting ready to industrialize). No country in it's right mind would allow critical IT infrastructure to be based on a closed source foreign company's products.

    Meanwhile, their main market (America) is contracting, and will continue to (it's inevitable, as the rest of the world's standard of living rises, America's falls, baring some great technological leap in the next few years).

    Share holders want growth, they want better profits every year. 'Ole Steve gets paid a _lot_ to make sure that growth happens. This is Steve trying to quite his bosses' fears.

    That said, I think this is the beginning of the end for Microsoft. I don't think they can live without the amazing growth they've experienced every year. As old markets dry up and new ones close, they'll have to rape and pillage their locked in customers. It's only a matter of time before those customers wise up. Maybe it won't be linux, but I wouldn't be surprised to see Apple kicking ass and taking names in 5 years.

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  111. Could well be half-right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd be very, very surprised if the X-Box-next were to end up, by the mid point of the next cycle, in a comparable position to where the PS2 is now. However, I wouldn't be surprised if it could end up level-pegging with the PS3 in terms of sales.

    The current X-Box's games focus has been perhaps slightly too narrow for it to show real promise of achieving global domination; in particular, the lack of Japanese-style RPGs has really hurt it and I don't see any signs that this situation is going to change. The PS2's stable of big-titles, including as it does the Gran Turismo and Final Fantasy series, is just too powerful for it to be relegated decisively to second place in the immediate future.

    However, the Xbox made a number of achievements that few (certainly not myself) would have believed possible when it was first launched. It's come from nowhere to level-pegging or even slightly beating Nintendo, the most experienced of the current console manufacturers. It's established a very strong position in the US market and has managed to win quite a significant proportion of non-hardcore PC gamers. It's driven the standard of online console gaming far beyond what any of the rivals can offer. It's also, in a quiet way, been a very robust and innovative console; the Hard Disk is a fantastic idea and the ability to rip and use custom soundtracks really adds a lot to some games. Most importantly, it's been a learning experience for MS; they've corrected initial mistakes, such as the original controller and learned a lot about how to market for the console demographic, including about the types of third-party developers they need to be chasing.

    For Sony, the story of this console generation is of their reinforcement of their successes with the PS1 and the ability this has given them to enjoy the fruits of global domination. For Nintendo, it's been of further self-destruction as the voice of their own hardcore fanboys drives them further and further into a spiral of obscurity and catering to niche gamers (YES! Super Mario Party Sunshine Kart 4! It's innovative!). For MS, it's been the story of the plucky underdog (hardly a traditional role for MS) coming from nowhere to establish itself as a serious contender.

  112. Part of their success headstart /w PC Gamers by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

    MS just saw an opportunity I really don't think they converted anyone and gained much mindshare from other consoles. They took what was left of the PC market and the PC gamers that were sick of upgrading their video hardware ever year or two. Not a huge accomplishment if you ask me, most of the first releases of Xbox games would have been PC games (Halo, Mech Assault, etc) if not for Xbox.

  113. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quoth Parent Poster:

    They wrote Windows NT for the DEC Alpha (a 64 bit RISC processor) and supported it until NT 4
    You know, when I acquired my Alpha it had WinNT 4 on it. I thought exactly the way you did, at the time: wow, MS on a different architecture. But when I installed OpenBSD on it (pretty much immediately after getting the thing) I realized just how much hardware-level (or nearly hardware-level) masking they were doing to make the 64-bit alpha look like a 32-bit 386. It was called the AlphaBIOS. Evil shit. Do a google on it.

    I can't comment on WinCE but I'd imagine that since it wasn't a port (was it?) it would probably be less evil.

  114. Once again, time for the old joke by Flyboy+Connor · · Score: 1
    he said, adding: 'I am betting we can take Sony in the next generation.'

    Ballmer in the footsteps of Bill Gates on his honeymoon: all he did was sit on the edge of the bed and tell her how good it was going to be when she would finally get it.

    The difference: Ballmer does not sit on the edge of the bed, but is busy throwing huge wads of cash at buying dildo's, lubes, leatherwares, and copies of the Kama Sutra. In the meantime, in the bedroom there is only snoring.

  115. History of Ballmer by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
    What's his history, because everything I see of him (the internal memo, "developers, developers, developers", this) makes me think that he's not really the best guy to be in the job he's in.

    To be frank, he seems a bit of an ass. But maybe that's on the surface and someone can tell me that he's much shrewder than he appears.

  116. PS3 in March 2005 by KageMonkey · · Score: 0

    Various sources point to the PS3 being in showable form before March here.

  117. I would not be surprised by KageMonkey · · Score: 0

    Not until MS finds a way to tie XBox 2 to Windows will they be able to "take" Sony. Maybe if they can force users to activate Windows via the XBox? ;-)

    I don't doubt something like that will happen in the future. Expect some smart marketing gimmick from Microsoft on why it is in everyone's best interest to activate Windows via the XBox.

  118. They'd better hope this is true by carcosa30 · · Score: 0

    I think things are very slowly lining up against Microsoft. The one place they still have near-total dominance is in PC gaming. And I'm referring to totally extreme dominance without even any viable alternatives. Their market model is already beginning to crumble. One HUGE reason for this is free software. I can't think of any Microsoft software that doesn't have superior, free alternatives. They have absolutely nothing going for them other than kuretsu, the Japanese for (loosely) market momentum. Once people realize that there are alternatives to Microsoft, alternatives that aren't shitty and don't crash, etc, they're going to start checking out what we have to offer. And hey... Microsoft is quite pricey these days! Right now, XP Professional costs roughly $99 (or more if you don't shop around). That's for a totally bare-bones OS that has numerous security vulnerabilities and is an incredible headache to patch and maintain. Hey, at least it has an uptime greater than a few hours. Until the spyware gets to it. And the Office home edition is FOUR HUNDRED DOLLARS. It really looks as if Microsoft's in the process of trying to reinvent themselves, in some ways the way IBM did in the late 90s. I understand that there have been some pretty stringent cutbacks at Microsoft, and the fact that they're now going to be interoperating with UNIX software in the Longhorn core, supposedly in 2008, means that they've acknowledged that if they don't do this they're screwed. Who are they kidding? I think they're screwed either way... once people see what's out there for free Linux software they won't be going to the store to plonk down a house payment to upgrade their OS. Microsoft's not going to die, but their moment in the sun is nearing its end.

    --
    Intolerance for ambiguity is the mark of the authoritarian personality.
  119. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Koguma · · Score: 0

    Not written software for RISC? You're forgetting WinNT ALPHA. The Alpha chip was RISC, so not only do they have an OS already, they even have DirectX (albiet an ancient version) as well. Doesn't seem like too big an undertaking. As for running Xbox code on Xbox2.. could be done the same way DEC did it back in the day, with code morphing.

  120. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    [Microsoft] will have to re-write DirectX [and] build a RISC OS ... MS has never written software for RISC


    Like HELL they haven't!


    Windows NT has historically run on x86, Alpha, MIPS and PowerPC. Microsoft still makes WinCE which supports ARM, MIPS, PowerPC, SH, and x86 and already has DirectX. It's definately technically possible to include Xbox1 compatibility in the Xbox2 , if M$ is willing to throw a veritable shitload of cash at the problem.

  121. Re:informatijve go4tGoat by thrash242 · · Score: 1

    Thing you I are sense phone appallation make wheel no stick ear police vacuum screen book.

    Suck and sprite floor cheese you wax bug no plane xbox juno pen.

    ^
    This is how much sense you make.

  122. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by benzapp · · Score: 1

    Actually, Windows NT used to run on a RISC processor, namely the DEC Alpha.

    Don't forget MIPS and PowerPC

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
  123. Why people buy sony by cdyson37 · · Score: 1

    When people buy sony, they expect a quality product which will work properly. When they buy microsoft .... okay, point made.

  124. Re:Of course they can... by Schrambo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This will become very difficult with the next gen XBox with the absense of a HDD, so no more storage of pirated games.

    Not only that but there is speculations that the next XBox may feature a new shiny IBM PowerPC processor, (same source architechure as the Nintendo Gamecube) so that reduces the posibility of x86 software and linux development.

  125. Developers Develoeprs Developers!!! by So_Belecta · · Score: 2, Funny

    Unfortunately the interview was cut short, as Ballmer spontaneously decided to hop up onto to the desk, and started shouting loudly "Console market, Console market,Console market,Console markettttt!!!!" while simultaneously "dancing" wildly, much to the chagrin of his handlers.

  126. Re:Of course they can... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it does contain a PowerPc processor, would that make it suitable to run PPC-based linux distros like Yellow dog?

    Just wondering. Maybe it already exists, or maybe Klaus Knopper can make a PPC version of Knoppix... that would be perfect.

  127. Mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The above post isn't insightful, it's wrong. "99% of all successful console games in the past 20 years have been from Japan." I know of a number of successful console games that never even came out in Japan or took a while to localise and were already into high profits before reaching the Japanese market. I'm sure most other readers can list games that aren't Halo that have been successful. Lets start, Tomb Raider, Splinter Cell - infact all of the Tom Clancy franchise, GTA and spinoffs.. naah, I'm bored of this it's too easy.

    "Japan is EXTREMELY Xenophobic" What evidence do you have to back up such a broad statement? Do the Japanese buy in massivley to American culture? Yup, I think they may... Do you think it's impossible for non Japanese consumer goods to take off in Japan?

    There is a global console and games market and Japan whilst being a big market, isn't big enough to make the others insignificant - infact I very much doubt it's as big as the European and Amererican markets.

    Your point 2 may have been valid - in the 80's that may have been all that was required of a hardware manufacturer, however the XBox really has changed the landscape of console development - for the developer. Compared to MS Sony is, unfortunatley very unhelpful and arrogant in their treatment of developers. Frankly they need to wake up and start supporting the developers in a similar way to MS. The XBox toolchain and libraries are where it's at - that's why they're bringing them to PC games development too. If Sony don't have some way to counter that then they're going to find it costs the developer a lot more to get similar results out of their machine. Result; less titles are going to go Sony's way if the XBox2 can get a large enough market share - say it gets a 10-15% market share, that'll be big enough for developers to be profitable doing XBox only without having to have a number 1 hit every time.

    Microsoft has also innovated really well within the console market - XBox live is a fantastic system that people who use it really love and doesn't have an equivalent with any other brand. Live will be being extended and improved for XBox 2 and what will Sony's answer be - not a web cam surley? Eye-Toy was meant to change the way we play games - it's more a gimmick though at the moment.

    Finally it's really clear that Microsoft are very serious about XBox 2, just as they were about XBox (which incedentally has been more sucessful than they predicted - yup but it's still lost money but that was expected).

    XBox 2 was always where it was going to get interesting so this new round of consoles is going to be extremely interesting. I'm very much looking forward to it because with games choice is very important and a monopoly over platform is a really bad thing. Sony have refused many very very cool 2D games, simply for being 2D. As Sony own the platform if you don't have their approval, you can't publish. This stifles innovation and encourages publishers to only create sequels and go for well know and defined genres.

    Hmm, rant over ;-)

    1. Re:Mod parent down by MemoryDragon · · Score: 1

      Actually no, japan was once the biggest single market from a country perspective, except for the us (with germany being in the third place) But even back then this view was immensely wrong. You cant really go for country by country with those numbers.

      Europe at least the western european part of the EU is basically one single cultural entity and (except for localisations to two or three countries) also economywise.

      Now given the fact that the japanese market is a little bit bigger than the german market. Japan basically falls flat in sales compared to the EU or even the western part of the EU. Also countries like China or generally the whole souteast asian region are or will be more important than japan alone.

      Therefore japanese numbers are mere nice marketing numbers for historical reasons (i dont have any clue why this bull**** ever was started, but the sales figures of japan are not really that significant on a worldwide scale to give japan the credits it gets currently.

      I dont really know (and I dont like Microsoft at all) why it is, that a console which fails in japan is considered to be a failure. It doesnt have to be given the percentage of japanese sales compared to the bigger and stronger economical zones. Must be a remnant of the eighties, where japan basically was considered to be the only economic superpower besides the US. Times have changed but journalists simply havent recognized it yet.
    2. Re:Mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm I believe that was my point, sorry if that was unclear - it's a myth that for a console or a game to be successful it has to be a hit in Japan. Unless of course your definition of a success is something that sells well in Japan.

      Sorry to be AC but I'm really tired and I don't want to slip up and say something under NDA about the forthcoming consoles, certainally nothing that could come back and haunt me or my development team. Incedentally I'm tired due to being in crunch time finishing a multi-platform game.

      I don't like Microsoft either particularly - I think they're generally a predatory monopolist which doesn't have the customers best interest at heart.

      However their XBox drive has been a very very good thing IMO, they listen to deveoplers and make a great deal of effort to make building strong and powerful games engines childs play so us developers can concentrate on the gameplay rather than being able to push poly's at the screen. The XBox department at Microsoft seems to really listen to the deveopers and go out of their way to provide support, research, specs and really high quality tools for the developers. Just think the compiler provided by Sony for PS2 is gcc - now a great cross platform compiler I'll agree but not really good at producing top notch optimised code and not very quick at doing so either. To get a decent debugger and IDE for PS2 you have to buy in 3rd party solutions from SN systems or their ilk. MS however provide you with cutting edge toolkits, SDK's compilers and the like. An example of this would be that XBox developers were ported to the Visual Studio 7 compiler backend really early - infact from within the studio 6 environment because it offered us some great advantages.

      I do still find it odd to be enthusing about and defending MS in this manner - it's totally out of character, but credit where it's due - they're doing great things for game developers which will only mean one thing - better and perhaps cheaper games in the long run.

      That's because games developers (certainally all the ones I've worked for) still have only one thing at heart - producing the best games they possibly can. Publishers - now they have other interests, recouping the money spent on development and making profits too. I'm not saying they're (all) not trying to publishing the best games possible too but they have to recoup the upfront development costs otherwise they'll soon go out of business so they are far more money motivated.

      That money comes second to the developer - sure a big royalty cheque would be nice, but the feeling when that paycheck comes in isn't anything compared to the satisfaction of producing a great game that you're proud of, reviewers like, your industry peers like and friends and stranges alike both enjoy playing.

      The feeling of meeting a stranger in a bar and the 'what do you do' conversation comes up and I admit to my geekhood and people are like 'wow what games have you worked on' and you mention a couple and they enthuse about your work better than you ever could. That's the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow!

      Sorry gone totally off topic... must sleep soon;-)

  128. Sony is Entertainment by chx1975 · · Score: 1

    Sony: Walkman, Discman, Sony Pictures (Spiderman), Sony Music. Microsoft: Windows, Office.

  129. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Logicdisorder · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well it was DEC that wrote NT for the Alpha mostly and when MS stopped building it for DEC then most of the guy moved back to DEC and I am pretty sure you will find that the the guys that ported CE to RISC worked for the chip makers(I could be wrong in this case)

    "Sony is using a different CPU (Cell), and probably a different GPU, why doesn't the same argument apply to them?"
    That is easy, Sony never had a problem with people running Linux on the PS 2, that is not the case with MS they went to great pains to try a stop it. The fact that i know quite a few people that have turned there XBox into media center. I think the reson MS has gone for the RISC with there own microcode is to stop people doing what they have been doing to the XBox.

    --
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  130. Re:Bah - a little history lesson... by blakespot · · Score: 1
    Qute a few core UI elements of Windows 95 were very clearly ripped from NeXTSTEP. And for those that don't know, as the framed, promotional poster on my wall reminds me, the first NeXT machines which featured the NeXTSTEP OS was released on October 12, 1988.

    I won't even get into listing the number of innovations that the fabled Longhorn is pulling from OS X.


    blakespot

    --
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  131. what microsoft needs to do by jonwil · · Score: 1

    is to throw chunks of cash at the companies selling the top games (both in japan and in the west) to get xbox exclusives or buy them out completly.

    For example, if Microsoft bought Square Enix and made future titles xbox only, they could really beat sony :)

    1. Re:what microsoft needs to do by forkboy · · Score: 1

      You say that like Sony isn't capable of throwing just as large wads of cash. C'mon man, this is Sony.

      And quit giving microsoft ideas. =P

      --
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  132. Hold on to your cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He probably means something like with longhorn...
    The next generation microsoft products will be better than what our concurrents offer now.
    The next generation microsoft products will be available in twothousand-something.

    Same message overal: don't buy anything until microsoft comes up with something ... euhm... 'better'.

  133. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by blakespot · · Score: 1

    Almost every version of Windows CE, starting with its initial release back in '96, runs on a RISC processor. Very few Windows CE devices use x86 processors - I can recall maybe one HPC Pro that is of such an architecture.

    blakespot

    --
    -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
    iPod Hacks.com
  134. In other news... by darth_silliarse · · Score: 1

    ...Atari announces a Lynx to rival the GBA

    Dance Microsoft Monkey-Boy...

    --
    I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born - Ronald Reagan
  135. Re:Sad but (maybe) true.. but not uncommon by N+Monkey · · Score: 1

    I would think that Sony were probably** doing the same when PS2 first came out.

    **This is an educated guess based on the size of chips when first released and the equipment

  136. But I don't WANT an X-Box by TaxSlave · · Score: 1

    Back when the market was Nintendo -vs- Sega Master System, I owned a Sega. I wanted to own a Sega. Sega fit my attitude much more than Nintendo. Nintendo might have had the greater market share, but I simply did not, and do not, want a Nintendo.

    These days, I love my Playstation2. I don't want an X-Box. I don't care what games are available, or whether there's a hard drive upgrade I can perform, or a chip I can install. I just don't want an X-Box.

    X-Box might be able to "take" Playstation, but not in my mind, heart, soul or home. I'm sticking with the system I prefer.

  137. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Captain+McCrank · · Score: 1
    It also means(and this is what I think)that you will not be able to play XBox games on the XBox 2, they will have to re-write DirectX, build a RISC OS for it and then there is Live I would say there will have to re-write most of that as well. MS has never writen software for RISC in the past and I think that the time frame they have set themself is very unrealistic.

    Are there seperate Internets for Apple and Windows computers? Do you think that hardware architecture changes imply that networking changes have to take place?

    Good gravy! Live is unaffected by a hardware upgrade.

  138. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Refrag · · Score: 1
    will have to re-write DirectX, build a RISC OS for it and then there is Live I would say there will have to re-write most of that as well. MS has never writen software for RISC in the past and I think that the time frame they have set themself is very unrealistic.
    I guess Windows NT for PowerPC was a figment of my imagination, then.
    --
    I have a website. It's about Macs.
  139. Keep going, Microsoft... by haxor.dk · · Score: 1

    ...when you sell a product at a price lower than production expenses, you're bleeding yourself dry. And with the income from office & Windows sales dwindling (users don't need the new features), you're bound for a death spiral.

    Let the market handle Microsoft and it's "monopoly".

    1. Re:Keep going, Microsoft... by kinglink · · Score: 1

      Everyone loses money on consoles. They make it back on the games.

      But they've admited that overall the Xbox has LOST money. The fact they are making an Xbox 2 is the problem. They not only lose money, they drops backwards compatibilty.

      I just hope they make another what was it? 5 billion dollar advertising investment. This and the fact that most people arn't buying a huge collection of games for the xbox (though a few do) will end their life.

      Though I think the backwards compatibilty thing is the biggest problem because now you can't go back and play all your great Xbox games on the new one because now you have two huge consoles on your desk.

  140. So basically by cluke · · Score: 1

    I don't see this as a bullish statement, remove the spin and they are practically admitting defeat in the current generation. "But it will be better next time!"

  141. I have all 3 consoles by wift · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I never had a game machine growing up however my friends had Atari's and intellivisions.... Since I have a good job I thought I'd treat myself and buy the consoles that I wanted. Bought the PS2 first and got a bunch of games, wasn't happy w/ the load times on some. Next, bought the GC for my son where the load times are better but graphics not as crisp. I finally bought the Xbox on the advice of someone who doesn't care Microsoft vs Linux and have been happy w/ the graphics (HD!), sound, load times and of course Halo. I perfer the xbox now and buy only xbox games.

    Do I like Microsoft? Not really but I think limiting myself to just one console/technology isn't a wise attitude. How else can you speak with any authority on a subject?

    --
    ....... Thus ends my attempt at wit or whatever
  142. They're behind the times? by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

    For the XBox 2 Microsoft seem to have taken the Gamecube as their inspiration. In effect it will be like Gamecube technology but at current CPU speeds.

    They're behind then times when Sony are going to be using new technology. Once again though Sony have created a system that is a pain in the butt to program, ease of development will be the XBox2's advantage.

  143. XBox will rule the world by augiAUDIO · · Score: 0

    Execs from both Sony and Microsoft are right. Good games will rule the world and for the next generation the Xbox will win. XNA, Microsoft's new basic programming platform will make game creation for both Xbox and PCs almost parallel. The ability to creat games for 2 platforms(PC and Xbox) for the development price of one will make it a more attractive alternative. Plus, looking at the cell processer, as revolutionary as it is, seems to be a beast to code. This ontop the entry of Xbox2 a year earlier than PS3 will make it a hit.

  144. Re:Bizarro World! (USA! USA! USA!) by gosand · · Score: 1
    (Disclaimer: I live in Japan, where the Xbox's popularity level is somewhere around "the whowhat?". Is the Xbox doing any better in the West?)

    Yes, it is. Because we have it crammed down our throats. (disclaimer: the only console I own is a SNES) My nieces got an Xbox for Christmas because they are impressionable kids. My brother asked me which one he should get them, and I said it was between the PS2 and the Gamecube. For them, I said to go with the Gamecube, but if he wanted to play any of the old PS1 games, to go with the PS2. He went with the Xbox, because he had "heard more about it". What he really meant was he had heard the name Xbox a jillion times. My younger brother got an Xbox too, and when I asked him why, he cited some marketing crap about how the graphics were better. (which they are, but that doesn't mean the console is better).

    Xbox sells as many units as it does here in the US because Microsoft has the money to push the damn thing. I don't know how many contests I heard that were giving away an Xbox. All over the place - TV commercials, magazines, radio. The Xbox is popular because it is presented as being popular. People are generally ignorant, and will believe what they are told.

    That being said, MS now has a foothold in the market, and they have the money to buy up the good game developers. Then you'll see something like the Nintendo strategy of producing games only for their system. Wait until MS purchases a big media company, and they get the product tie-ins to their game console.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  145. DirectX 10 by eples · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has an advantage over Sony because whatever amazing new graphics capabilities get packaged with DirectX 10 (or 11 or whatever) will come with XBox and Sony will be behind.

    Game. Set. Match.

    --
    I'm a 2000 man.
    1. Re:DirectX 10 by forkboy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because good graphics, of course, require DirectX.

      Whatever.

      --
      This message brought to you by the Council of People Who Are Sick of Seeing More People.
    2. Re:DirectX 10 by eples · · Score: 1

      That wasn't what I was saying at all.
      Let me clarify:
      Sony will have to be able to beat any DirectX 10 features (or whichever version the next XBox has) BEFORE IT COMES OUT.

      Comprende?

      --
      I'm a 2000 man.
    3. Re:DirectX 10 by blane.bramble · · Score: 1

      Sony will have to be able to beat any DirectX 10 features (or whichever version the next XBox has) BEFORE IT COMES OUT.

      But couldn't you also argue that Microsoft will have to beat any PS/3 features before it comes out?

      I'm a 2000 man.

      And your kids don't understand you at all?

  146. Re:in Japan & rest of world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Xbox does have a chance to become #1 in North America, but NEVER in the world. Just look at how the Xbox flopped in Japan.

  147. XBOX Great, but not for games by Jagasian · · Score: 1

    I love my Xbox, but I don't use it to play games. I did a software hack on it that lets me run XBox Media Center, which turns my Xbox into the ultimate set-top box: DVDs, CDs, Divx, Xvid, mp3s, etc...

  148. Nonsense! by Donny+Smith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What a nonsense!

    a) From printer companies to gaming console makers, they all "dump" their products and yet does anyone complain? Does Sony complain how Microsoft loses x dollars on every Xbox sold? Do customers complain? So what's the fucking problem?

    b) As far as dumping goes there is no established way to estimate "cost" of software products because it is immaterial.
    You can't say one anti-virus application should cost 50 bucks and the other one shouldn't sell for 48 because 49 is "the cost"!

    By your logic democratic governments worldwide should have sued Red Hat and others for providing (until recently) free downloads of their products (otherwise you claim Linux is worthless).

  149. wrong by pmh009 · · Score: 1

    I've read about "cell" and it seems like a completely retarded idea. In an interview they said that processing power will be shared between all ps3's on the net to make the ps3 1000 times faster than ps2......?!?! This statement is completely obsurd.

    Also, MS has developed for apple and i believe apple uses RISC cpu's.

    1. Re:wrong by Logicdisorder · · Score: 1

      Well that is true but the only thing they write is Office and they build that on to of OS X, they did not write any part of OS X. Wirting an app for a RISC chip and building a OS is very different.

      --
      "The most dangerous creation of any society is that man who has nothing to lose." - James Baldwin, American author
    2. Re:wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is different but actually it should be easier to write an OS for a Reduced Instruction Set Computer, due to the simplicity of the reduced instruction set. CISC's have a lot more instructions to do specialized operations, also some instructions have different lengths, complicating things further. If you can program for a Complicated Instr. Set, it would not be hard to learn to code for a RISC. ...having said all this, lets not forget that this is MS were talking about. In all likelyhood they will buy a small company with an OS already.

      I'm sad to say it but sony better get their act together. All i have is a ps2 now, but if sony honestly thinks they can network ps3's together so that your neighbors ps3 can help with your game, they are dreamers... it aint gonna happen. The bus of a computer is many orders of magnitude faster than ANY internet connection. Reading that crap in playstation magazine or EGM (cant remember which) pretty much sold me on the next Xbox.
      That was a little while ago so i hope they have toned down their predicions of 1000 times faster than ps2, because that kind of talk makes them sound like total assholes.

  150. Halo Toys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work for the company that makes the Halo figures and your comment about all of the Halo branded games hit close to home. Many of the first series of Halo figures are simple repaints; eg. the figure with battle damage.

  151. The rest of us by SilentChris · · Score: 1

    Morality this and that, the rest of us will buy an Xbox 2. Why? Good games you can't get anywhere else, just like GC, just like
    PS. Gamers will buy all 3 (like they did this round) and we'll all be happy.

  152. .a. by mirko · · Score: 1

    A company has costs and revenues, if they obtain these revenues by selling their products for less than it costed them, then they are dumping.

    Yes, I am complaining about this and thus I do not buy gaming consoles nor printers.

    I advice people who want a printer to check the difference between the price of a cartridge and the price of the original bundle, this is scary.
    Some magazines I read even suggest the buyers should change printer every time a cartridge is finished.

    And nope, arguing over the cost of Free Software is bullshit because RedHat didn't produce it themselves, they just compiled it and then sell their subscriptions so, unless they are voluntarily making less than what they offer cost them, they are not dumping.

    Now, if Sony doesn't sue Microsoft, then they either want to hide something similar or are just being plenty idiotic.

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:.a. by Reckless+Visionary · · Score: 1
      A company has costs and revenues, if they obtain these revenues by selling their products for less than it costed them, then they are dumping.

      Get a clue.

      Dumping:

      2. The selling of a product in one market at an unusually low price while selling the same product at a significantly higher price in another market. For example, a firm may sell a product in its home market at a price covering all costs and then sell the product in a foreign market at a significantly lower price covering only variable costs. Source: Wall Street Words: An A to Z Guide to Investment Terms for Today's Investor by David L. Scott. Copyright © 2003 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.

      --
      I think I'll stop here.
    2. Re:.a. by mirko · · Score: 1

      In France, what we calll "dumping" is "vente à perte", so this does not mean the same as in English but validates my point.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    3. Re:.a. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1
      Actually, the only point it 'validates' is that you don't understand English or Economics. Possibly both[1].

      Now, there are various reasons why a product might be (intentionally) sold at a loss, including:

      1. As a loss leader - to attract people to your stores in the hope that they'll buy something else, the profit on the latter making up for the loss.
      2. To make money on another, complementary product. For example, lose on the printer, gain on the ink; lose on the phone, gain on the call charges.
      3. To force a competitor with lower reserves out of business (predatory pricing). You then, having cornered the market, jack your prices up and make more profits in the long run.
      Now, you can argue that 1 and 2 are misleading (especially if you extend 1 into 'bait & switch') and that 3 is anticompetitive. I'd mostly agree.

      But none of them is dumping, which is selling a product in one market at a loss, subsidising it from revenues in a different (usually the domestic) one.

      [1] or even French; my dictionary translates it as 'vente à perte sur le marché extérieur, which is a darn sight more specific and closer to my definition than yours, matey.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    4. Re:.a. by mirko · · Score: 1
      From WordiQ
      Dumping in terms of anti-competitive behaviour has 2 definitions:

      Classically, dumping is a subset of what is known as predatory pricing. Dumping in this sense is the act of selling a product at a loss now in order to drive competitors out of business, with the goal of raising prices when they do in order to recoup the investment. It is illegal in the same way that many other anticompetitive behaviours are. However, in practice, it is enforced far less than other antitrust actions.

      In international trade law however, dumping is defined as simply the act of one country selling a product in another country below the cost of what it takes the makers of that product in that country to make the product.

      People inside a domestic industry who feel they are the victims of this second type of dumping intentionally try to blur the definition between the two kinds of dumping, in order to give the impression that the foreign country is doing something that would be illegal domestically. This is an attempt by them to justify protectionist measures like tariffs.


      I was not mentioning international trade explicitely, so, because you can open a dictionary in order to extract the other half of a definition doesn't make you bettter than me.

      Par ailleurs, "matey", je n'ai aucun problème de français, si ça peut te rassurer.
      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    5. Re:.a. by Donny+Smith · · Score: 1

      >RedHat didn't produce it themselves, they just compiled it

      Just adding a logo (for which they had expenses - design, registration), EULA (lawyer fees), creating an ISO (R&D lab expenses, Product Manager), buying a server (for FTP) and ISP traffic charges are not insignificant. Even if the average cost per download (1GB of data, or more) was just 50 cents, it was a cost and they were giving it away for free.

      While others (SuSE, Turbolinux, for example) did not offer free ISO downloads, Red Hat did, so that was "dumping".

      Or if you claim they gave ISOs away counting they'll make money on service, that again is the razor/blade model that is at work everywhere...

  153. from nowhere to 2nd place not good enough... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We have gone from nowhere to a significant player".

    and yet, if you look at Nintendo and Sony, their initial inroads into the console market were more along the lines of 'we have gone from nowhere to market dominance!'.

    the problem with the xbox isn't the tech. the problem is that, for whatever reason, the xbox just doesn't seem to encourage game innovation the way the other consoles do. aside from halo, xbox hasn't had any killer apps that pull people in by droves...

  154. Backward compatability? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    That is the big issue for the next X-Box. In the console market no one cares if you it has "Intel Inside". The PowerPC cleans Intels clock when it comes to speed per watt used not to mention turned into heat. The rumors of the next X-Box call for a PowerPC cpu, video by ATI, and no hard drive. Will it play Xbox games???? I doubt it.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  155. Entire industry needs a revamp. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't believe that either Sony or Microsoft should win the next-gen console market. If you compare the quality gameplay of titles on the PS1 versus titles on the PS2, the PS1 had a lot more innovation and gameplay improvements.
    I have been very dissapointed in the current systems endless ports with nothing more than graphical updates to old products. I for one am all too tired of seeing version 4,5 and 6 being the only titles worth reviewing each month. I realize this is wishful thinking as, when you get down to it, there are only 5 types of actual games, so why not stick with the ones that have a solid background. But if you play the newest syphon filter or splinter cell, or quake, or need for speed, the controls have the same little bugs the moves are identical, the only thing changing is some minor plot points and the graphics. On the plus side, look at the innovations in ,say, the final fantasy series. Every new final fantasy has a completely different story, completely different level, class, and magic systems, along with the standard graphic and control tweaks. The companies need to concentrate on gameplay before they get any more of my money.

    1. Re:Entire industry needs a revamp. by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, the whole games industry these days is *just* about money-making.

      The thing about consoles is that every company that makes a console prices it at a loss to themselves, on the basis of a gamble that the buyer of a console will buy "x" games a year wherein the loss will be made up.

      This must, in turn, reflect on the types and number of games that are made for a console - after all, does any console manufacturer want an owner of one of their consoles playing the same game for many months on end without either completing it or giving up in a much shorter time period? After all, this means they are then ready to go out and buy the next game title.

      Consequently, the whole games market is no longer based purely upon innovative games (unlike the good old 8- and 16-bit days) but on "estimated sales" and "typical user profiles" - this is why popular titles are re-released with better graphics and why, in general, a large number of games that *should* play longer just don't (even on the PC).

      My only console is a Gamecube with about a half-dozen games but I've noticed that on PC titles, the playing time of FPSes seems to be shortening as time goes on - for example, Duke Nukem & Half-Life took me a week or so to complete but Star Trek Elite Force 1 & 2 I completed in less than 2 evenings each.

      On the basis that "graphics do not necessarily a good game make", this begins to explain why retrogaming is so popular now - sure, there were good and bad titles then also but I'm always amazed how some games that fit on a single floppy disk actually take longer to complete than a modern game that fills up a 4GB DVD!

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
    2. Re:Entire industry needs a revamp. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The biggest shame in all this is the gullibility of the common user. The few games that do innovate get overlooked because of all the brewhaha the industry puts into the KILLER apps. A prime example of this being "Beyond Good and Evil". And while retro-gaming is all well and good(I own an NES, SNES, Colecovision, 3DO, PS1, Dreamcast, and a 2600, with almost any other system emulated on my pc) Most of these games don't have any replay value, and you can only mindlessly shoot asteroids for about an hour a week. With rental programs such as blockbusters flip it and several online netflix style rentals, there is no excuse for people to overlook truly innovative games anymore, and the more informed gamers we have buying games, the less fluff will sell and therefore the game studios will be forced to innovate again. Who's with me?

    3. Re:Entire industry needs a revamp. by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
      We are probably arguing from opposite sides of the fence because you seem to be more console knowledgeable while I come more from a home computer perspective like the Amiga, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum.

      Yes, many of those games on those platforms were direct arcade conversions and therefore "quick fix" type games of blasting everything on the screen.

      However, I can remember games like Lords Of Midnight on the ZX Spectrum occupying me for weeks on end, Elite stealing a large proportion of my life on several platforms, and even early PC/Amiga games like Dungeon Master, Eye Of The Beholder, Sim City etc. all engaging me for very long periods of time.

      I do agree that a high proportion of users are very gullible and, with the number of games magazines, Internet sites and gaming TV shows today, there is no excuse for those people not to be better informed before making games purchases.

      --
      Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  156. I hope.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope we're lucky enough for Microsoft to put a Memory Stick slot on their next XBOX machine. I know that's what sells me on Sony products.

  157. Microsoft long term goal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is just to have a black ms-box hooked to the telly and the internet connection in every home.

    They don't care that much about games.

    And that's why they don't mind loosing money on hardware. (remember ms "saving" the children of the world by donating hardware running windows to various schools)

  158. But... PS9! by HitByASquirrel · · Score: 1

    I don't know how many of you saw that commercial a while back, but Sony's plans for the PS9 look pretty impressive...

  159. Yeah I saw the new xbox by koan · · Score: 1

    It has a seperate keyboard and mouse with a monitor connected to a box like cpu, it's code name is "PC" not sure what that means but it's more than a gaming platform.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  160. I am Doubtful by DaemonGem · · Score: 1

    How many generations has the XBOX gone through since the PS2 came out? It's been at least 2. If Microsoft hasn't been able to catch up in that time, then I don't see why "the next generation" would be any different. Go into any game store ... it's obvious by distribution of amounts of games and the platforms they are for which systems are the most popular, and I don't see this changing unless the system is fantastic.

    --
    "Alle reden vom wetter. Wir nicht." - SDS Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund.
    j00 4r3 3n73r1ng l337 w0r1d.
  161. My favorite DS feature: by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    Wireless gaming. Not just because it's wireless either. It's because only one ONE PERSON has to actually have the game that FOUR PEOPLE can play simultaneously.

    The Atari Lynx was to have this feature but at the last minute, Atari canned it. Had they included it, it might have done far better than it did.

    The way I see it, why the hell not include this feature? Who really loses? The odds of four kids having the same game at the same time are not good (unless it's a top 3 title). BUT, imagine playing with a buddy or two - one of which actually has the cart. Then you go home. There's no doubt in my mind that this ends up being totally free advertising for the software - it sells itself. That gameless kid is going to be wanting to play it at home.

    This isn't something you're likely to see on the Sony (due to sheer software size), or any other platform but I believe it to be the DS's greatest strength.

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  162. Funny... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    I would NEVER have thought to put the words 'success' and 'Word 95' so close together in the same sentence....

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  163. Not that this will matter... by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    ...on the new XBOX since it will be using a totally NEW architecure (READ: Not PC-Based). And it's one very similar to what Sony (and presumably) Nintendo will be moving to.

    Sheesh. Who would've thought that IBM would be the glue that binds console companies together (at least in a loose, hardware fashion)?

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  164. As entertaining as it is to watch Ballmer gibber by stealth.c · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ...I'd rather not see him in the news until MSFT actually does something.

    There have been a lot of words coming out of Redmond lately but almost nothing of a tangible nature.

    Just shut up and do what you're going to do, Microsoft. I'm buying Nintendo's console anyway. (I don't see why these kids keep saucing their pants over HALO. It's not THAT good of a game.)

  165. Why I won't buy an XBOX 2 by agraupe · · Score: 1

    I am a happy XBOX and PS2 owner, with preference to XBOX at the moment. I will not, however, be buying an XBOX 2. Why? My computer only has so many inputs (two). Therefore, I will plug my PS3 into the slot currently occupied by the PS2, and be able to play all of my PS1/2 games. The same isn't possible with the XBOX. Also, one of the things that gave the XBOX an advantage in my mind is their use of a harddrive. I loved not having to fuck around with memory cards. Hey, I started with PS1, I have no trouble moving to Sony.

    1. Re:Why I won't buy an XBOX 2 by DaveCBio · · Score: 2, Interesting

      PS3 does not play PS1 games, only PS2. So if you want to play PS1 games you'll have to keep your PS2.

    2. Re:Why I won't buy an XBOX 2 by agraupe · · Score: 1

      Really? Why? That's disappointing.... I only play one PS1 game anyway, but it's my favorite (Final Fantasy VII).

  166. dear god.... by Transient0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Supressing technology is more evil than lousy working conditions in some third world country."

    someone please tell me that this is not the general Slashdot opinion.

    1. Re:dear god.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this is not the general Slashdot opinion.

    2. Re:dear god.... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Well, if it makes you feel better, I consider that post to be one of the more disgusting things I've ever read, and demonstrates a really twisted set of priorities, IMHO...

    3. Re:dear god.... by PhoenixOne · · Score: 1
      Sounds like somebody needs to put down his mouse and take a "Holliday in Cambodia". ;)

      --
      Spell cheek you've failed me four the last thyme!
    4. Re:dear god.... by Rotting · · Score: 1

      I certainly hope not. If this is truly this persons view then perhaps it is time to get up from the computer, go outside and do something not computer related.

      Anything.

      If you believe that Microsoft is more harmful to people than "lousy working conditions in some third world country" then maybe your anti-microsoft sentiments are getting to be unhealthy.

    5. Re:dear god.... by ultrabot · · Score: 1

      If you believe that Microsoft is more harmful to people than "lousy working conditions in some third world country" then maybe your anti-microsoft sentiments are getting to be unhealthy.

      It's clearly more harmful for me, and people around me. It's often better to deal with your own problems first.

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    6. Re:dear god.... by ultrabot · · Score: 1

      Well, if it makes you feel better, I consider that post to be one of the more disgusting things I've ever read, and demonstrates a really twisted set of priorities, IMHO...

      Then you probably don't read much ;-).

      I admit I took a bit of a provocative angle to the issue, and apologize for the emotional harm done. Other worldwide problems are beyond my reach, but I feel fighting the "evil" of MSFT is quite doable with reasonable allocation of resources.

      (evil in quotes for obvious reasons).

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    7. Re:dear god.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      One could make the argument that the drive to lower the costs of manufacturing computer equipment is in part affected by the large chunk of the price of a new PC Windows takes.
      Hardware manufacturers will jump through hoopes to save 5$ off the price of a board. Since the price of Windows has never gone down, Windows has in effect added to the pressure of price lowering and has an indirect role in the working conditions that exist for electronics manufacturing in Asia.

    8. Re:dear god.... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      If you believe that Microsoft is more harmful to people than "lousy working conditions in some third world country" then maybe your anti-microsoft sentiments are getting to be unhealthy.

      You obviously haven't been reading the news. Microsoft is trying to get poor, third-world countries locked into their proprietary software the same way they've done with most of the first world. These poor countries could be using OSS software instead, which is free, and for which support can be had from the local population; with OSS, no money would be sent over to Microsoft, which already is richer than most of these countries. That money saved can be used to advance the local economies in these countries, and improve the living standards of those people. But Microsoft, instead of allowing these people to use a more cost-effective solution, is lying to them and trying to take that money instead, effectively stealing food from the mouths of starving children. That is evil.

      Therefore, by doing whatever we can to hurt Microsoft (not buying their crap, recommending competing software, getting our companies to use competing products, etc.), we're having a far more positive effect than we could by simply not buying a pair of Nike sneakers.

    9. Re:dear god.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The only way to stop lousy working conditions in some third world countries is to supply them with technology that will replace the labor with cheaper alternatives.


      Suppress technology (and science) and the piss poor countries stay that way. Level the playing field by enabling them to use technology (be it better agriculture and/or better 'hi-tech') and they have a competetive advantage to rise out of the misery.

  167. My 2 cents on the Xbox by skryche · · Score: 1
    I play on buying my first current-generation console, as I've found the hardware requirements of PC gaming to be hassle, and the prices are pretty low. The choice seems obvious: a modded Xbox.

    Why?

    • Watch downloaded tv shows/movies on the TV
    • MAMEox (and many other emulators)
    • XBMP (I have a lot of .oggs)
    • Xbox is graphically more powerful than the PS2 and GameCube (yeah, yeah, Gameplay uber alles.)
    • Sure, there aren't as many great games as there are for the PS2 or the GameCube. But there are a lot of great games for it. I think there are probably enough of them to keep me happy.
    I know, no Xbox Live for me. But I never really got into playing games over the internet.
    1. Re:My 2 cents on the Xbox by Monkey · · Score: 1

      You may want to look around for a used Xbox, or an Xbox manufactured before March 2004.
      The reason being Microsoft got wise to modding and released the 1.6 revision of the motherboard. The Xbox v1.6 has now scattered the points for the LPC header around the motherboard making modchip installation notoriously difficult. Also with the addition of Microsofts proprietary Xcalibur video encoder (older Xboxes use well known Conexant or Focus chips) the current Cromwell Linux BIOS doesn't work on the v1.6.

  168. Re:What is being a "significant player" really wor by nolram · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't see why many people think most people think the console market is dominated by kids etc. The kids demographic may play a part, but everyone needs to know the average gamer is around 30. Do you think kids buy all these games, no.

    Another thing that should be noted, gamers don't "grow" out of any market, if anything there always looking for the next best thing. If a large portion of console buyers WAS infact first time buyers there would only be a marginal increase in console growth, and if you compare it what the console market was from what it is now... it's grown tremoundasly. This closely ties in to the fact that gamers that bought there first nintendo have not grown out of anywhere, and are still buying even more consoles now.

    Atari and Sega made mistakes, huge ones. The console market is a very sensitive one, one blunder and it could cost you everything. Who would of ever thought of playing a sega game on the gamecube.

    The console market is becoming more and more like the film industry. Like it or not, there is money to made there, and HUGE audience... and it only keeps growing.

  169. Pull your head out of your arse by Nintendork · · Score: 1
    Considering that the majority of the games released on the PC market focus on DirectX, I'd have to say that it's the standard. Just because it isn't designed by some open consortium, doesn't mean something with a dominant share can't be considered the standard.

    -Lucas

    1. Re:Pull your head out of your arse by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Considering that the majority of the games released on the PC market focus on DirectX, I'd have to say that it's the standard.


      And all of the Playstation games use Sony's standard (whatever that may be). The point being that Microsoft using a "standard" is not unique.

      If you want to take your argument a step further, consider that Sony's "standard" has more marketshare and titles in the console market. Therefore, Microsoft isn't following "the standard" at all.
    2. Re:Pull your head out of your arse by Nintendork · · Score: 1
      Sony's development platform was not a standard prior to the release of the Playstation 2. Microsoft's DirectX already was a standard and most of the PC game developers out there were already skilled at using it. That's the point of the statement that you criticized, so don't start with the spin.

      -Lucas

    3. Re:Pull your head out of your arse by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1


      Sony's development platform was not a standard prior to the release of the Playstation 2. Microsoft's DirectX already was a standard and most of the PC game developers out there were already skilled at using it. That's the point of the statement that you criticized, so don't start with the spin.


      That's interesting. The origional statement was:

      Also, the Xbox was built to be easy to program, utilizing standard libraries (DirectX) and development environments (Visual Studio).

      There's nothing there about age or accessability of the standard. You'll note that I'm the one who mentions that Microsoft's standards makes it easy to develop for both Windows and XBox - allowing developers to straddle between "PC" and "console" markets.
  170. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by mattACK · · Score: 1
    Well, the Windows NT kernel was originally written targetting an Intel i860 RISC chip. It has been ported to Alpha (by Microsoft), PowerPC (CHRP), MIPS, x86, IA64, and now AMD64. Obviously not in the league of *nix ports, but that isn't the point. Microsoft obviously hires and retains many highly intelligent people (and then shackles them to the company line). Whether they have the expertise in house to write RISC code is a debate only to the ignorant.

    Sony is encouraging folks to use Linux on the PS2 because they want to break into the lucrative productivity PC market (their PCs don't count to them because they give some of that money to Microsoft). Microsoft wants the EXACT opposite scenario. Make no mistake, however: neither one is a benevolent ruler. Both are huge, faceless corporations that would just as soon eat you as treat you fairly. Product loyalty to either one is like the worm picking the prettiest bird.

    --


    "My God, this must be a truly remarkable corn chip, to be so widely and confidently touted."
  171. Three are 3 PS2 development environments by grahamwest · · Score: 1

    CodeWarrior is what most people in North America use. Sony supply a Linux-based port of gcc and gdb but it's really only Japanese who use that. Lastly, SN Systems' ProDG is popular in Europe. That's the Sony ee-gcc and ee-gdb backend ported to Win32 and integrated with Visual Studio .NET via makefile projects.

    None of these is available to you without a Sony developer agreement. Note that the same is true for the Microsoft XDK. Taking an Xbox game to completion requires knowledge of a whole bunch of Xbox-specific APIs you won't find (legally) documented anywhere outside the licensed developer arena. Most people license either Renderware or Gamebyro or another 3rd party cross-platform API or use another Microsoft API; learning DirectX on PC will not give you more than a small headstart on writing an Xbox game.

    Personally there are things I like and dislike about CW and VS.NET - neither is my ideal although both are definitely good enough.

    --
    Graham
  172. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by evangellydonut · · Score: 1

    The company formerly known as Bungie never wrote games for CISC before (until one day, they decided to port over older games like Marathon to Wintel)

  173. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by toriver · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sony is using a different CPU (Cell), and probably a different GPU, why doesn't the same argument apply to them?
    Because they apparently will have "PS2-on-a-chip" to run PS2 games. You know, including backward compatibility without sacrificing current generation features.

  174. Worldwide, it's tied for third with the GameCube. by Thag · · Score: 1

    The rankings are PS2, GBA, and then GameCube and XBox tied for third.

    I can't find worldwide statistics to link to, but I believe the numbers are PS2 70 million sold, GBA 20-30 million sold, and XBox and GameCube with around 10 million each.

    Jon Acheson

    --
    All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
  175. Gamer / Machine interaction - Input Devices by i-Chaos · · Score: 1

    I believe that no matter how powerful these console machines will be, there's still the problem of games becoming stale due to the repetitive nature of current gameplay. It's been two generations since the last small innovation in controllers (Dual Analog sticks). It's time to innovate more (I hope that nintendo will do that).

    And as for the computer - I can only point and click with the mouse so many times until I find it boring. I mean, honestly, the gameplay mechanics in Duke Nukem 3D, Half-Life, and Doom 3 are pretty much the same - Point at baddie, click on baddie. Not much innovation there, no matter how much immersion there is in the game. That being said, Doom 3 is still a kick-ass game because of graphics and immersion, the gameplay just sucks because it's the same as every other shooter (not their fault) :)

    --
    ...I am proof that intelligent beings are not always intelligent...
  176. The argument works both ways... by UncleRage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In all fairness, I actually agree with most of your argument. It's solid, fair and (for the most part) the exact reason I bought an Xbox.

    Last year, three things happened (concerning PC's and games). I turned 32, I built a PC that would meet my required needs for (at least) several years and I bought an Xbox. I realized that while I still enjoy gaming, I do not enjoy the yearly costs incurred by continuing to upgrade my PC for those games.

    For me it simply came down to want I wanted more:

    I've got $150 to blow this week... do I want a mid range graphics card that'll disappoint me by the end of the year or do I want a new set of EMG's that will sound great in my guitar for the next 30 years?

    I've got $300 to blow this month... do I want to replace my CPU and add more memory or do I want to take the wife for a quiet weekend in the mountains?

    I've got a $2000 to blow this year... do I want to build a new kick ass PC or do I want to put a down payment on that Harley... add a deck... buy that nice leather sofa? This year I opted for the sofa and had enough left over to scale the deck down to a mixed stone patio, a new grill and some outdoor speakers. Now, I get to hang out on the patio having drinks, cooking chicken and /.'ing a great afternoon away. =)

    In every single one of those scenarios, I chose the non-PC route -- and I would have to say that I'm happier for it.

    My point is this... I still get to play current "PC" games... only, I play them on my xbox while sitting on my comfy leather sofa staring at the 8' screen that my projector allows for. When friends come over, we can play "group activity games" like Links 2k4, D&D Heroes, Soul Calibur 2 or Trivial Pursuit. In the meantime, since I'm not relying on my PC as my main game machine, I'm not in the constant -- upgrade countdown mode.

    And as I've posted before concerning Xbox modding -- I've also got my entire emulation (MAME, NES, SNES, Genesis, Apple, C64, etc...) collection in the living room -- where it belongs. Not to mention, the modded Xbox makes a nice media player -- especially in combination with a wireless device and browser allowing for playlist selection while out on the patio. =)

    In the meantime, my "still feeling new and powerful" (Shuttle MN31N, AMD XP 2800+, 768 MB Ram, GeForce 5600 FX Ultra) dual headed Gentoo Box doesn't give me any moments of remose or grief -- and if Doom 3 doesn't run that well... I know I'll be playing it on the xbox. ;)

    Sorry for being so long winded and sounding like a fanboy... I just wanted to point out that it always comes down to preference. I'm a gamer at heart (Hell, I grew up playing original Wolfenstein, Ultima ][-VI, Karateka and the like), and I really dig my computers. But it finally dawned on me that MS made a product that actually works for me. Afterall, if I plan on running my old dual MP 200 MHz PII file/web server into the ground... why should I feel any different about my desktop? Even my studio is based around an old G4 400 MHz Mac. I had to face up... my days of bleeding edge tech awe have come to an end (at least for now). If I want to play anything resembling the current PC releases... it's gonna be on my current console of choice, the Xbox which sits right by my last console of choice, the Dreamcast.

    --
    #SickNotWeak
    1. Re:The argument works both ways... by sindarin2001 · · Score: 1

      One of the problems that I've noticed with PC gaming, or perhaps more correctly with PC gamers, is that they feel the need to upgrade constantly to play every game on its highest detail setting at the highest resolution. I, as a PC gamer myself, like to have all of these features, but it's just not practical. But that doesn't stop me from being able to play the games. I just have to sacrifice 1600x1200, antialiased pretties. Just as a side note, I'm gaming on a P4 1.7 Ghz that I bought 3.5 years ago...since then I've upgraded my RAM once, and bought a new video card (which I got two days ago, JOY!!). That's about the extend of my upgrading and I can still play UT2004 and (even more joy!!), worlds of warcraft pretty well.

    2. Re:The argument works both ways... by Belgand · · Score: 1

      You make a reasonable argument, but I do think you're a bit too heavy into the upgrade cycle as I've noticed many tend to be these days. Personally I just completed a major overhaul of my computer and it has been the first one in 5 years. At the same time I've managed to stay more or less on top of recent games without problems. Every year or so I might add something in. Last year it was another hard drive as the old 10 gig drive wasn't cutting it anymore. Year before that I added in some extra RAM. It's all a matter of slow, incremental changes over time. Thus, while a console sits relatively stagnant, a PC will slowly, but surely outpace it.

      I personally don't see spending $2,000 on a new PC, but only because I rarely need to. A few hundred is often more than enough to bring whatever lagging component I have back up to speed.

      Different things satisfy different people though. Glad to know that some people find what I see as flaws to be assets.

  177. Summary of all comments in this thread by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    -We no like Microsoft!
    -We like Linux and Apple!
    -MS no innovate! We no care if most people in the world prefer the MS interface to all the cheap carbon-copies we make!
    -We steal MS Xbox games many times!
    -We rather line pockets of rich Japanese overlords than support American company!

  178. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by streak · · Score: 1

    The IBM RISC processor that you refer to is actually going to manifest itself as dual Power5s in the Xbox2.

  179. Early release is XBox killer by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    To your point that the XBox will continue to have better graphics...

    What makes you think that will still hold true? If Microsoft releases next year, and Sony the year after - why would the PS3 not have the same edged over the XBox that the XBox had over the PS2?

    Then the main problem is this - XBox has been kind of a two-trick pony. One trick was Live which has been a success - but the other trick was better graphics. In the next generation if the PS3 has better graphics, way more games, and is backward compatible, then will XBox be able to stand on one somewhat shaky leg?

    Is Microsoft were smart they would have released after SOny again, which may have worked. Now knowing there's going to be a new XBox next year, with no backwards compatibility - any hope of my buying one now is gone. They have savaged the current market and basically promised hardware to be a bit underpowered compared to the other guys.

    Sometimes being a first mover just means you are the first one to get hit.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  180. Buy PS3 to help Sony beat Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I plan to buy a PS3 and a few games for it when it comes out to help make sure Sony has a bigger market share than Microsoft does. If every other Slashdotter does the same thing, and tells their friends to buy PS3 we can make a difference.

  181. Lawsuits by jazman · · Score: 1

    They're going to get even more interesting with the next-gen lawsuits when Sony realise that Microsoft could be viewed as using their monopoly in the desktop OS market to sell game consoles at a loss. That's illegal, last time I looked. If Ballmer has publicly admitted they sell them at a loss, that's a big mistake.

    1. Re:Lawsuits by Hassman · · Score: 1

      You could apply the same logic to Sony. Sony has many other products than their consol.

      I don't think that would hold up in court. Esp. since sony was supposidly losing money too...just not as much.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
  182. Sony vs MS by Ra5pu7in · · Score: 1

    Three points:

    Sony isn't just sitting back and trying to put out a system that is only a little better. They have been seriously developing (in conjunction with Toshiba and IBM) a processor that could revolutionize computing in more areas than just gaming. However, just for gaming it could pull off something that MS has no chance against. Why? Because MS builds their console out of existing hardware. Sony develops their console by innovation.

    One of the reasons the Playstation rocked was that it was "easy" to program for. This filled the shelves with games -- not all of them worth anything, but a lot of variety. Things a major publishing company would not have funded were released and found to be major fun. PS2 has a problem in that it is harder to program for, but Sony does publish a lot of quirky games anyway. And, yes, quite a bit of that is full-fledged garbage. But there are gems in there that don't pass critics muster while being wonderfully fun to play.

    Looking at the current crop of games for either Xbox, you don't have that kind of wild variety. Nintendo has held onto a niche market by having a much stronger control over the games that get published, but what that did to the N64 they thankfully didn't repeat with the GameCube.

    Finally, MS is so focused on Sony as the competition, they seem likely to ignore Nintendo as "not a threat". However, Nintendo did turn around from N64 to produce the GameCube -- which has held its own, staying neck and neck with Xbox in a market dominated by Sony. I think this is their biggest mistake.

    --
    I was taking one day at a time, but then several days got together and ambushed me. (from a Rhymes with Orange comic)
  183. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

    um , when we swap to 64 nit architecture we wont be that register starved anymore, at least not on AMD

    --
    if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
  184. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by incom · · Score: 1
    "They are using a different CPU(IBM RISC), a new GPU(ATI) adding there own microcode to the CPU to stop people doing what they have been doing to the current XBox. Sony is using a different CPU (Cell), and probably a different GPU, why doesn't the same argument apply to them?"
    Xbox needed the extra points for being hackable and easy to pirate with for many people to buy it. I doubt they would have been nearly as popular without that, even if many don't mod thier xbox, the momentum and "cool factor" that the modders and pirates gave it helped sell alot of units. I know it was the reason I chose it over ps2(and regret that decision now that I see how devoid of RPG's and japanese franchises it has remained). I won't be buying xbox2.
    --
    True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
  185. Microsoft misson statmenet by megarich · · Score: 0

    Our goal at microsoft is to make the best gaming console system possible! We will do this in spite of our buggy os and web browser. And we will prolong longhorn until 2020 if necesarry so long we provide the best damn gaming console in the world...

  186. game censorship and manufacturer lock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I don't like about the game console industry is the manufacturer as censor. Nintendo obviously is known mostly as a kids console but even Sony and Microsoft act as censors. Games with obvious nudity in it are extremely rare and games with sex in it are nonexistent. The artist or game creator must get permission from these game companies for a game to be released. Compare this with the movie industry, book industry, or art in general. These forms of expression don't suffer from manufacturer lock.

    I believe that the game industry should be considered as another art form. Free to be expressed in any way the artist or game creator desires. The concept of manufacturer censorship would never be accepted in the movie industry. It's like if Nintendo made a Nintendo VCR but it gets to decide what movies can be made. Want to make "Basic Instinct" for this Nintendo VCR, sorry but the manufacturer won't give you a licence to make it.

    The game industry is unlike any other artistic industry in that is suffers from manufacturer lock and censorship.

  187. Good! by 1shooter · · Score: 1

    They'll need a new cash cow after the OS and Office products are no longer profitable. It may take a while though.

    --
    6F 9E A9 1E 96 9F 74 27 ED B8 81 6D 0C 4E 1E 78
    My other Sig is a 229.
  188. Re: bah.. by AzraelKans · · Score: 1

    Except that Microsoft's tools are easily accessed and digested. All you need to know is on msdn.microsoft.com

    Sorry but, no.. unfortunaly MS insisted in keeping his COM reference standard in directx and it also uses their WINAPI style standard both are probably the most convoluted, bloated, unuseful and less friendly pieces of code you have ever seen, some of their commands (including parameters) can get over the 255 characters long. (just imagine how a 255 char command looks like)

    They use this weird pre-h syntax which is hardly useful anymore (LP and FP for local and far pointer what utility does that have when you have to use handlers?) and the parameters are so bad designed they actually have something called *PUNK (Pointer unknown) which means its undocumented (you dont know what it does but hey! you have to use it anyway!)
    You probably can do the same in the same number of lines in dx than opengl.. but believe me you eventually understand OpenGL and how to change it, in directx you copy and paste the initial code being very careful not to change anything otherwise it wont run.

    Im not surprised at all that Japanese neglected to use DX instead of opengl and straight asm (which is used in PS2 and Gamecube) I think thats the REAL reason of the japanese failure of the xbox and thats probably the reason why There almost arent any japanese games.

    Xbox 2 wont use DX (exclusively)

    --
    Go ahead MOD my day!
    More opinions here
  189. Sure Ballmer, sure by micro_SUXX · · Score: 1

    See this link - http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=index2&cid=1622&t= 1089896040

  190. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by PantsWearer · · Score: 1
    Uh, Marathon was originally written to run on the 68000 line. In fact, I ran it on 68030s and 68040s for several years.

    68000 line was a CISC line. A pretty darn good one at that.

    Of course, when Apple switched over to the PPC line, Bungie switched with them. I don't really know if they ever ported the Marathon games over, but they ran well under Apple's 68k emulator. I do know that their line of Myth games ran both on the PPC and Wintel boxes. In fact, their most recent Myth release ran under OS X as well.

    Heck, I'm just surprised that they released Halo for OS X after they were bought by MS.

    --
    Be glad life is unfair, otherwise we'd deserve all this.
  191. Re:Of course they can... by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

    SCEA began selling the Linux kit in the US in 2002. You could pre-order it in March of that year. Kits began arriving in late May of that year.I've had my kit for over 2 years. :-)

    They just recently sold the last of their NTSC U/C kit inventory. There are still kits available in other territories like the UK and AU

    The keyboard and mouse only occupy one of the USB ports since the keyboard has a port on it's side for the mouse. I have a USB hub plugged into the second port.for my printer, USB CD drive and, Jumpdrive Trio.

  192. PPP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are looking at purchasing power parity, in real dollar terms China just edged out Italy and is not even close to $2 trillion, China is at the lower end of one trillion dollars for its economy.

  193. Everyone is really missing the point by daringone · · Score: 1

    As a veteran of every stage of the console wars, about a year ago I learned the cold hard truth.

    It's the games that matter.

    I grew up a *HUGE* Nintendo fan back in the days when the NES was king, and Mario and Zelda were knocking the snot out of the competition. I still love Mario and Zelda, but sadly I do not own a GameCube. I sold my GC to buy games for my PS2 that wouldn't sit and collect dust. The fact of the matter was that it sat and collected dust on my shelf because there were no games other than the aforementioned two for the GC that compelled me to buy them. Whenever I could if the same game was offered on both systems, I'd buy for the GC thinking I was "keeping competition alive" somehow. But in reality my $500 for 10 games or so isn't going to make or break a multi million dollar company.

    When I realized this fact, I came to the conclusion that in the next round of console wars I would buy the console(s) that played the games I wanted. It no longer made sense to vehemently support a console because I always have, only to be disappointed when the games I wanted to play didn't come out for that system.

    Bottom line, go for the system that has the games that you will play, regardless of who makes it, and you will be happy.

  194. We need the real inside dish... by madmaxmedia · · Score: 1

    ...from Gupta. I bet he could tell us how the new consoles are really shaping up!

  195. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > The Cell processor is likely to be revolutionary. Everything I read about it screams disruptive technology to me.

    Emotion Engine anyone?

  196. Game consoles suck by DuctTape4Windows · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I don't care, microsoft is starting to corner every market there is! 99.99999999999% of desktops run Windows, i think PS2 and Xbox are even about 50/50, i'm not sure, but Microsoft is still a monopoly. I think everyone forgets that. plus, xbox games suck! If theres a game out there for xbox thats actually any good, you can play it on PC, or PS2. Plus, i'd rather play on a high resolution computer monitor than a low resolution TV. and I'm a big fan of the mouse for games, i like having a mouse for FPS, it provides real time aiming, instead of a joystick. and sitting there for an hour turning around while someone already kills you.

  197. Re:Frist Psot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    While you're at it, you'd better find a homosexual and a person of another skin color than your own too.

    I'm not a homosexual, but I have had sex with another man. However, I draw the line at people who think they are, or dress up as, bunny-wabbits. You are a total and utter pervert and ought to be flayed.

  198. No supprise here. by sn0wman3030 · · Score: 0

    Well of coarse he's going to say that, he's Steve Ballmer.

    --
    Life is offtopic.
  199. It's all about the games by TrekCycling · · Score: 1

    And right now Sony has them and Microsoft doesn't, for the most part. And where do these games, the ones the Japenese (and Americans) play in droves, come from? Japan. They brought us Fire Emblem, Disgaea, La Pucelle Tactics, Final Fantasy, etc. As long as Sony has that in their corner, the XBox will just be another system on which you can play Madden. And *maybe* it will have better graphics. Nothing more.

  200. F*** Japan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares about Japan? Most of their games don't see the light of day here because they suck (or don't match American tastes). Apart from some decent fighting games (which they no longer monopolize) all they give us are games for pre-teens (i.e. Nintendo) and RPGs featuring inane dialogue and girls with oversized eyes. Every decent FPS is from US/Europe. Ditto for sports. Much recent innovation seems to be largely from outside of Japan too (e.g. Tomb Raider, GTA, etc.). I don't see a problem with the game (and console) market fracturing to account for the different tastes of Japan and non-Japan. Maybe we'll finally get some RPGs with normal looking girls.

  201. It's the software... stupid by mabu · · Score: 1

    The last console I bought was the N64. There were a few games introduced on that console that were light years ahead of everything else available at the time (Wave Race, Super Mario World, etc.) Then came a barrage of horrible, often-unplayable titles that made the prospect of buying/trying new games more of a gamble than a fun experience.

    I respect how Sony has maintained backwards compatibility, whereas, with the exception of Game Boy, Nintendo has not. I suspect Nintento's "Apple->Macintosh" strategy has cost them market share. I believe any game manufacturer who alienates their installed base will suffer the same fate.

    After wasting too much money trying to find playable, original titles, I just gave up on consoles altogether. It's easier to play games on my PC.

    While I might not be the target demographic for the console developers, ironically, if they could get ME to purchase a new console, that would be the litmus test IMO of the long-term success of their venture. I see no reason to jump back on that hamster wheel and wade through a sea of crappy titles, or buy the "next big thang" console, only to have 3 decent games available for it.

    I sold my gameboy probably ten years ago. Ironically, I almost regret that because it has outlived many more advanced consoles. The depth of software is what really makes these platforms work IMO.

    In many ways, I understand that these companies are more interested in hardware than software sales. They're compelled to produce a "next generation" console with at least one "killer app" that they use as a means to sell the hardware. Personally, I'd prefer to have them just support the existing hardware, which at this point is underexploited in the first place, and charge three times more for a "killer game" than crank out new consoles and more peripherals and subscription crap that makes the average consumer feel like the main thing they've plugged into their TV is their wallet.

  202. Why purchase a console in the first place? by carn311 · · Score: 1

    Why dont we all just upgrade our PC's to gaming exceptable levels? Because of hype. We all want to be part of the stinking hype. When the new consols come out we all buy at least one and, if your like me, regret it.

    Sure PC gaming has a higher initial cost but in the long run you will pay less or at the very worse the same price as a new game console to keep your PC up to speed. And the bonus?

    You can actually do something with it besides play games and CD's

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  203. They cannot take SONY... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...in the Next Generation.

    In the Next Generation, the Borg always lost.

  204. Just watch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sony will pop out PS3 at $299 and Bill will throw Xbox Next into the ring at $199 with a PlayStation emulator and blow them out of the water.

  205. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by dafoomie · · Score: 1

    "Sony is using a different CPU (Cell), and probably a different GPU, why doesn't the same argument apply to them?" That is easy, Sony never had a problem with people running Linux on the PS 2, that is not the case with MS they went to great pains to try a stop it. The fact that i know quite a few people that have turned there XBox into media center. I think the reson MS has gone for the RISC with there own microcode is to stop people doing what they have been doing to the XBox. The original poster's argument was that Microsoft would struggle with Xbox 2 because they're using a new CPU and GPU, and I responded with my quote, that PS3 is also using a new CPU and GPU, so why wouldn't the same argument apply? I don't see how your reply has anything remotely to do with that.

  206. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by dafoomie · · Score: 1

    Xbox needed the extra points for being hackable and easy to pirate with for many people to buy it.

    No it didn't. It wasn't hackable at all, and not easily hackable for a long time. I should know, I bought one at launch. The first modchips had 29 wires that you had to solder to the Xbox motherboard and didn't come out until 8 months after the launch. The first "softmod" wasn't out until almost a year after launch, and it had all kinds of problems. The hackable and easy to pirate factor is overrated, the Dreamcast didn't even need to be modded to run backups or homebrew apps, AND was a great console and it still died. Xbox sold a lot of units initially for the same reason PS2 killed Dreamcast. Technical superiority, or the perception of it. Xbox Live helps too, seeing as they just had their 1 millionth subscriber.

  207. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by dabraun · · Score: 1

    What, as if Microsoft hasn't already ported the NT platform to PowerPC, Alpha, MIPS, Itanium ... NT was a portable platform from the start - they don't need to practice porting it with a console.

  208. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by killjoe · · Score: 1

    There are a couple of things you did not mention.

    1) The cell will offer massive performance with low power consumption. This will make it ideal for clustering applications.

    2) Sony intends to make high end workstations as well as consoles using the cell processor.

    3) Due to the high volume of PS3 expected to be sold the cell processor ought to be relatively low cost.

    The cell processor presents a very real threat to wintel. Intel looks especially vulnarable as it loses out to both the console market and the graphics workstation market.

    As for windows well low power consumption, cheap, powerful, able to run linux well you get the idea.

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    evil is as evil does
  209. Re:Taking Sony - Not going to happen. Yet by PipsqueakOnAP133 · · Score: 1

    Hold on man. Sure it's great for clustering applications but think about how many apps you have that can actually use this level of thread concurrency.

    Since we actually don't know how many cores they're going to have, we'll have to eval it from both the "tons of cores" and the "not that many cores" viewpoint.

    I'll concede number 3 since that's obvious no matter what the product.

    However, with a lot of cores, say 100. Most people run one app at a time while they're working. If their one major app isn't very parallel, you're just wasting the other cores. Since each core isn't going to run faster than 1ghz nor have the complexity of a PPC750, we're talking something like an old PPC603e or Pentium per thread. On paper, having 100 500mhz Pentiums sure beats out whatever's on th market now, but just having the capibility doesn't mean it can all be used.

    That's the "tons of cores scenerio". The other is just that we have lower power consumption multiprocessing on more computers. That's not revolutionary at all. Sure it makes Intel's life harder cuz their procs have neither the efficiency or sheer power, but that doesn't mean they automatically lose.

    Finally, who said Sony's going to make a high end workstation using Cell? Don't just speculate, back that up. I can't say Sony doesn't have the engineers to do it, cuz they do. But for what reason would they? It'll be quite the divergence from what they do now which is consumer electronics. A high end workstation's also gotta have an OS and application software. Despite the power, it'll totally lose out to Macs simply because Apple can leverage the same processor technology while they already have apps.