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Computer Gaming PCs Try To Stack Up To Consoles

bippy writes "RedAssedBaboon has what I think is the first review of a computer to feature the much lauded DISCover technology. DISCover basically turns a computer into a gaming console, allowing you to drop a PC game into a system and play it immediately on your television. The site reviews a new DHS (Digital Home System) by Alienware which will feature the technology and is due out next month. The article ends with this interesting comment: 'It's high time that the computer stop lurking in the shadows of dusty computer desks in forgotten rarely-used bedrooms. If PC gaming is going to survive it's going to have to do so in the well-lit family rooms and dens of America right along side the GameCube, PS2 and Xbox -- and this looks like a great way to start.'" We previously discussed the DISCover 'Drop And Play' PC gaming system over on Slashdot Games.

32 of 411 comments (clear)

  1. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  2. Useful in a dorm situation by LeahofRivendell · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...To play multiplayer and not have to actually pause and text chat. I always get killed doing that.

  3. Price by ward.deb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its price is way to high...in my opinion. I'd rather build a pc myself (with ultra silent cooling etc.) than buying this expensive crap...

    1. Re:Price by prockcore · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Its price is way to high...in my opinion.

      No kidding. $2000-$2700 Gaming PCs try to stack up to $100-$150 consoles?

      I wonder who is going to win.

  4. Uh... but... by RedRocketRanger · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My monitor is bigger than my TV...

  5. Games on Your Television by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yes, I much prefer playing a computer game on a 30Hz 525x525 blurry display than on a 72Hz 1024x768 display. Anything that can make my $1500 screaming game PC behave more like a $200 console is a welcome change. (that was all sarcasm, by the way)

    1. Re:Games on Your Television by BanzaiBill · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Unless you happen to have a 50" Samsung DLP TV with DVI inputs that runs at 1280x720. I've got a HLN507W which is a beautiful display. If I could just get a PC that's quiet enough for the living room without spending $2000, then I'd be set. Note: I'm not affiliated with Samsung, I just love this TV. It also virtually eliminates the glare from those "well lit living rooms".

      --
      - Think of it as evolution in action -
  6. Survival? by Spua7 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All I have to say is "Lan Party." Games consoles will never have people stringing Cat5 across living rooms to stuff 15 geeks itching to blast each other away.

    1. Re:Survival? by Puff+Daddy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Games consoles will never have people stringing Cat5 across living rooms to stuff 15 geeks itching to blast each other away.
      1. Have you ever heard of Halo?
  7. HD Recording a must by sid+crimson · · Score: 4, Informative

    A friend just spent $5K plus on a "Dell Media Center" computer -- purchased all the extras (against my recommendataion).

    The 24" screen makes a lousy tv. The computer makes a lousy PVR -- because he cannot record HD like the cablebox allows. He cannot tune channels with the computer. And the remote requires lots of programming (very little in terms of autolearning or preprogrammed alt. system remotes).

    -sid

  8. Rarely-used bedrooms? by hrbrmstr · · Score: 4, Funny

    I guess I'm no longer a geek since our bedroom gets *plenty* of use... tho, not for gaming (at least not for computer gaming [grin]).

    --
    Mind the gap...
  9. Oh, great by 0x0d0a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh, lovely. I can play games on a TV.

    Let's see:

    My computer monitor is higher-resolution than my TV.

    My computer monitor is sharper than my TV.

    My computer monitor has a higher refresh rather than my TV.

    My computer monitor has more accurate color than my TV.

    My computer monitor has fewer visual artifacts than my TV (shadowing, faint snow).

    My computer monitor uses a better interface to talk to my computer (using a monitor cable running a VGA signal) than my TV (which uses NTSC).

    My computer monitor can run at multiple resolutions, unlike my TV.

    Really, the only things that TVs have going for them are that they're big.

    Finally, it's not hard to get a sound card and video card that have TV out and audio out from the computer. As far as I can tell, this just loses the advantage of configurability that PC games allow.

    1. Re:Oh, great by Osty · · Score: 4, Informative

      Perhaps you need a better TV. Newer HDTVs fix almost all of the issues you mention. Better refresh rates and higher resolutions are the only real benefits of a monitor now.



      My computer monitor is sharper than my TV.

      My computer monitor has more accurate color than my TV.

      Perhaps your TV needs a calibration? Unfortunately, most HDTVs are setup out of the box to be used in a display room and not a home. The contrast is cranked up into torch mode, red colors are more emphasized, etc, because all of that makes the TV more appealing when alongside other sets at a shop. I'm of the opinion that all TVs should be sold with a free initial ISF calibration, but the calibration fee is cheap enough that you should still do it anyway (give yourself 6 months or so to break in the TV before calibrating, or you'll just find you have to do it again shortly).



      My computer monitor has fewer visual artifacts than my TV (shadowing, faint snow).

      My computer monitor uses a better interface to talk to my computer (using a monitor cable running a VGA signal) than my TV (which uses NTSC).


      Composite connections and even S-Video suck. You should use component (YPrPb) or RGBHV, or better yet DVI if your TV supports it. No more snow, and a much more vibrant picture. Oh, and NTSC is not an interface but a signal format. Snow and other artifacts you're seeing are more often caused by the interface rather than the signal format (of course, compression artifacting is the signal, and not the interface, but that's not what you were complaining about). The interface is RF coax (cable), composite (single RCA jack for video), S-Video (DIN connector), component (three separate RCA jacks for different channels of the video), RGBHV (red, green, blue, horizontal, and vertical all on separate RCA jacks), DVI (duh), and S-CART (for the rest of the world). These interfaces can carry different signal formats like NTSC, ATSC (the format for HD feeds), PAL60, PAL50, etc.


      My computer monitor can run at multiple resolutions, unlike my TV.

      This is true, but HD sets do support several resolutions, from standard 480i/p, to 720p and 1080i (and in some cases even 1080p, though you'll rarely find that outside of high-end projectors). At 1080i widescreen, you're still talking about pushing quite a lot of pixels. In many cases, I'd rather have a widescreen 480p signal and dedicate the hardware to making what pixels I have available look better, rather than try to push as many pixels as possible. You'd be surprised how amazing visuals can look even at such a "low" resolution (see Project: Gotham Racing 2 on XBox, for example)


      Finally, it's not hard to get a sound card and video card that have TV out and audio out from the computer

      While that's true, I've not found any that can give the same visual or audio quality as an XBox. Sound cards that have S/PDIF output are still quite expensive. Video cards that output component signals are almost non-existant (ATI has a component dongle, but no other manufacturer does -- you'll have to get a VGA transcoder for anything else, and in either case you'll have to play with resolutions and refresh rates to get a good picture with little or no overscan).



  10. BS. by dstillz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    'It's high time that the computer stop lurking in the shadows of dusty computer desks in forgotten rarely-used bedrooms. If PC gaming is going to survive it's going to have to do so in the well-lit family rooms and dens of America right along side the GameCube, PS2 and Xbox -- and this looks like a great way to start.'

    BS.

    PC gaming will survive, even if it's a niche market. There will always be college students in dorm rooms with modern computers that they were required to purchase. There will always be IT professionals with the wherewithal to keep up with the latest trends.

    Console and PC games combined do not make up the lion's share of the entertainment market. Neither do cinema ticket sales or DVD purchases. As long as there's room for someone to turn a profit, variety will persist.

  11. Apple may one day solve this... by geek · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...with Rendezvous. I want my mac to be my "digital hub". I should be able to play music and movies on it from anywhere in my home, likewise with games. I see no reason why game controllers can't be made wireless and why the video signal can't be sent to my TV on the otherside of the room or house. All the pieces are here, someone just needs to "make it work". Just imagine pluggin in your Mac/PC and having it autodiscover your TV, Phone, Stereo via wireless ethernet and bluetooth etc etc.

    Someday guys, someday............

  12. What would make this different than a console? by Avoid_F8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Last time I checked, the Xbox was nothing more than a stripped down x86 system that does nothing but play games. Doing this to any other PC would, in effect, make it just like any other console (albeit with customizeable hardware). But why bother?

    I play PC games for three reasons.
    1.) The latest hardware is almost always superior to that of a gaming console
    2.) I have a mouse and keyboard to use, which gives me much more control than a 12 button controller.
    3.) Online play is simply much easier and more popular on the PC and will always stay that way, despite what MS and EA would like you to believe. I think that it's also more fun, because console games generally attract more immature children.

    Doesn't anyone else realize this too?

  13. PC / Console by LaserLyte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While there are many advantages to using a PC as a console (such as expansiblity and the ability to use the system for other purposes), there are a few disadvantages too.

    First, rather than relying on a constant, single-purpose firmware OS designed specifically for the hardware you're running on, you have to rely on a third-party OS (designed to do a lot more than just run games), so it's inevitable that you'll end up with a lot more crashes, etc. Now, crashes and failures on "PCs" are generally accepted and tolerated, but on a consumer appliance, this is probably not the case.

    Second, you also have changing hardware. A developer writing a game for the playstation knows exactly what hardware will be there, exactly what to expect, and (probably) knows the exact hardware specifics. But, introduce the ability to change or upgrade hardware, and the constant environment changes. Also, there's probably not going to be any standard "controller".

    On a different topic, would most people going be using a keyboard/mouse with this,? If so, surely we're going back to needing a desk -- something most console users probably don't use when playing on their console.

  14. Family Participation by powerpuffgirls · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For PC gaming to survive, it must receive acceptance from most family members. So a game that gives endless hours of enjoyment to one person is expensive at $50, but if it entertains 4 people, $50 is actually affordable, and it might even become a household grocery like biscuits or milk that everybody in the house eats or drinks.

    Having said all the above, the problem is not the lighting or forgotten bedrooms, it's the interior design of this computer room.

    If there's a fridge, a couple of lazyboy sofas and a coffee table in this 'computer gaming' room, i'm sure parents might venture in and stay there watching their kids knocking themselves out. In another word, we need a inviting gaming room.

    I have a 'movie' room, which is dark (for projector), a couch and some beverages, and everybody can't wait to go in there.

  15. Warning: Console Gamer Bias by dancingmad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I guess that's a reasonable first step but for me (a console gamer since I was a kid) it's not enough, for a number of reasons:

    The PC is suited to different kinds of games than a console, most notably RTSes and FPSes.

    You still have to upgrade computers (I know my 1.47 Athlon would need a huge upgrade to play Doom, my video card's a POS). With the consoles I can buy a machine and play any game that comes out for it (the console cycle is beginning to go more quickly, which is bad for the industry, but that's another submission entirely).

    It just works - I don't have to tweak framerates, graphic modes, whatever - console games just work. PC games have to be tweaked because they have to deal with weird (and sometimes misconfigured) hardware.

    My PC is usually doing something else - on IM, downloading, whatever, so this instant on feature doesn't help me much in that regard.

    --
    "There is no time, sir, at which ties do not matter," Jeeves, (Jeeves and the Impending Doom)
  16. biggest problem with pc games by Bauguss · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ok. I like pc games typically better than console games.

    But, the reason I haven't bought a new pc game in over 6 months is because I'm sick and tired of having to upgrade something on my computer. I love consoles. I can get any new games that come out. I can play them without worrying about performance. It is really just that simple. And for the price of a new video card to play the latest pc games, or a new motherboard+cpu, I can quickly buy the latest console and a game or two.

    That is the biggest hurdle for pc games. If they could come up with a standard where they say all new games must be playable on this minimum requirements without the minimum moving every 3 months then they might start doing better. They could quite easily control the industry to say the games must work on X until Y date when we upgrade the minimum standards)

    Just my opinion.

  17. Go figure. This is news? by foxtrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The last four video cards I've purchased, dating back to 2000, all had TV-out. Getting gaming on my TV's easy: plug up an S-Video cable, turn on the PC.

    Is it just that someone's figured out how to market the stuff we've all had (admittedly, some of us unwittingly...) for the past half a decade or so?

    That said, I don't use S-Video out for gaming. I use it for movies...

    -JDF

  18. It does to much by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Before you flame:
    With an Alienware DHS system, you can record and play live TV, burn music, create digital slideshows, download movies, surf the web, and much more, all from one incredible system quietly situated in your living room.
    Now I'm sure it can record more than 1 stream of video... right? Anyways, imagine this: Dad (the guy who bought this) has a show recording & Junior strolls in to try and play a game. Probably not going to work very well is it? Or the reverse, Junior is playing his game & the DVR functions kick in. The game starts lagging, because even with hyperthreading, the hard drive heads can't be in two places at once.

    I'm assuming a hardware digital tv tuner & mpeg encoder because they aren't using ATI's AIW. You've got internet access on your TV, we all know how messy that can get. Sister is reading e-mail & chatting and Junior wants to play games.

    This is just a setup for disaster if there's more than one child present. I'm sure families will use the fast-user-switching feature, what if it crashes? Shouldn't they wait for SP2 before shipping these out? God help you if there are porn popups while your parents watch TV.

    Imagine how much of a mess it'll be trying to kick someone off the computer so you can watch tv. This is a great idea w/fast hardware.... but it's not going to work for everyone.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  19. Mod Down by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful
    How does trash like this get moderated up? You didn't even form an argument. First off, there's more going on here than meets the eye. They're not using AIW so they've got an independant tuner & mpeg decoder (they should, I hope they're not going to do mpeg in software.) It's a small form factor, has a remote & to top it off, it comes with a slot loading DVD drive that does everything. +R(W), -R(W), and RAM.

    Nobody doubts that it can be done on your own, but it won't come out looking as good, you won't get 1 year of 24/7 tech support, you won't get replacement parts (that you can reinstall yourself w/o voiding the warranty) and last but not least AlienWare will send a tech to your door who knows the whole setup inside out.

    No twiddling Linux to get it working. No driver hassles. You're buying a top notch product, tech support and it's not priced excessively higher than a similarly equipped PC.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Mod Down by Rew190 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The BOTTOM LINE is that you pay over 2 grand to play computer games on an essentially ghetto-rigged system. Why not just buy a middle-of-the-road computer with a nice video card for half that much? Is it an argument that people don't play computer games because they want to sit in their living rooms on a sofa?

      I think consoles thrive on (comparatively) simple games that don't require too much futzing about. Simple controls, simple setup. Computer games tend to be much more control-hungry, with many games using an entire keyboard. I can't see myself sitting awkwardly with a keyboard on my lap while watching low-res TV (yes, HD, blah blah blah).

      Besides, most guys I know love console games because you can sit down with your buddies and blow the piss out of each other on one TV. There aren't too many PC games with this functionality.

  20. Re:Stay away from the light!! by RTPMatt · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's high time that the computer stop lurking in the shadows of dusty computer desks in forgotten rarely-used bedrooms.

    Really now? that sounds like the perfect place to play doom 3 =)
    A well lit room will just not do for such a game...takes all the scare right out of it!

  21. Re:Space and weight... by Kirby-meister · · Score: 5, Funny
    And have you ever tried to drag a 28'' TV with you to a LAN? And tried to find room for 10 or more of those?

    Yes. Anything to get my game on.

    You seriously underestimate the will of a console gamer. Go look in a dorm hall - you'll see people like us willing to find a couple TVs and take over a lounge for game time.

  22. Um... not quite by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "If PC gaming is going to survive it's going to have to do so in the well-lit family rooms and dens of America right along side the GameCube, PS2 and Xbox"

    No, if PC gaming is to survive it needs to have good games that are written right the first time and don't require you to own hardware that only came out just last week to run them.

    Console gamers don't do PC gaming not because the installation process frightens us, it's because we don't consider it worth the time and money. Just because the games are plug-and-play and hook up to a television doesn't make them good. Just ask Acclaim.

  23. PC Gaming is already there by Vacuous · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't get this. PC gaming is already extremely mainstream and is far from a niche market. Even my freaking grandparents are PC Gamers, and it isn't like console games are grossly outselling PC games. The comment about bring PC gaming out to the family room instead of in a "computer room" is moot, who really cares if you play games in the family room or not? I am sure the gaming companies don't. Another point that has already been made by many slashdotters is that PC games are superior graphically on a monitor than on your standard TV.

    This is just Alienware trying to make a demand for something when there really is none.

  24. The strategy is all wrong by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok, I'm confused here... who is their target market supposed to be? I don't personally know anyone who would justify spending $2,000-$3,000 on a pc based game console that will be rendered obsolete well before the sub-$200 consoles will.

    Granted, they added features like Tivo style functions and the ability to surf the web and what not, but look at the history of such all-in-one devices in the past. When was the last time you bought a combo vcr/dvd player or a TV with dvd/vcr built into it?

    No sane person would buy into such gimmicks. if one part breaks, the entire unit will likely has to be replaced. At $2,000-$3,000 a pop to keep $500+ worth of hardware in one neat box, I just don't see what incentive they are offering to make it worth the extra $1,500-$2,500 in the price. (I do know I'm not that concerned about hiding a couple wires.)

    If they want to pitch this item as a game console, fine... then price it competatively with rest of the console gaming systems. If they don't want to lose the profits, then promote it as a niche market item, instead of confusing the consumers.

    While I don't want to discredit the "Discover" technology, I do predict this system will ultimately fail. No one is going to buy something that cost more than your average PC, just to play the latest games at NTSC resolutions.

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
  25. out of the closet by pbjones · · Score: 4, Interesting

    all of our home computer are in the areas where people live. 2 are in the lounge rrom for viewing DVDs, writing, gameing, browsing etc. We moved away from the TV as our central entertainemnt medium and now use our computers for a whole lot more of our recreational time, i.e. cold nights...

    --
    There was an unknown error in the submission.
  26. Re:This is good. by Trogre · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Perhaps.

    But when I'm playing my first-person shooter at 1280x1024 on my flicker-free 21" monitor, getting 100fps at 100Hz refresh... ... well let's just say you can keep your little game console.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  27. The Death of Gaming Redux by Mulletproof · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "If PC gaming is going to survive it's going to have to do so in the well-lit family rooms and dens of America right along side the GameCube, PS2 and Xbox"

    Whoops, PC Gaming vs. Console Gaming misconception #1: "PC gaming will die off because consoles will eventially have the same horsepower for a lower price."

    WRONG.

    It's an utter falicy that the PC needs to fight for it's life against a console in the gaming world for one simple fact-- Gaming on the PC is completely different. First, consider the kind of games you play on the PC versus those you play on a console. It's all an issue of complexity, and half of that is the input devices availible to you. Information management is where the console falls flat on it's face, into the mud and stays there. And it's not likely to get up anytime soon because of the fundemental philosophy behind it-- All information must be accessed through a gamepad in order to make gaming as brainless as possible. Even in comparible (and simpler) games, like FPSs, you will never find a device equal to a mouse, and it's something that console makers give a wide berth in favor of the formentioned philosophy.

    Also, the PC is the home of grass roots gaming. With a PC, you can become the next Counter Strike of gaming. Speaking of which, what was the last count of people playing that mod? Yeah, keep telling me PC gamin is in trouble 9_9 The PC will also always be the home of cutting edge gaming, since developers don't have to wait until the next full out console release 3 years down the road to push the envelope a little further. If it's good, people will upgrade their hardware right the and there just to buy your product, royalty free I might add. No console barons, specialized code/hardware required.

    But I guess we have to break out The Death of Gaming myth just to keep things lively now and then, right?

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano