Sony Pins Hopes on E-Distro
Ars Technica reports on Sony's plans for their online service. As previously discussed, they'll be offering online play for free. They hope to make money via an e-distribution system. From the article: "Yet it is unclear what Sony intends to sell. While the 60GB hard drive in the premium console is spacious, it would not be large enough to hold a collection of HD video, although the company could sell storage add-ons in the future. We believe that Sony will initially sell other content, including music and standard definition video, as well as gaming content such as that available today in the Xbox Live Marketplace."
Sony has an online service they charge over 250 bucks a year for. That adds over a thousand bucks to the cost of a PS2. (SOE online pass for EQOA for those of you wondering just where I pulled the numbers from)
That's an inetresting bit of information but irrelevent since the whole article this Slashdot story is based on said that the online matching service was free.
But the other thing they might do.. since you ask so nicely.. is to release some MMORPGs on their service. They could just buy the rights to AC or AC2 and port them to the 360. (a lot of the "exploit/macro/botting" problems can go away when you move to a console after all)
They don't go away at all. They just change forms. Online console play is rife with cheating and many controllers offer extensive macro options making that aspect even worse (since it's harder for most people to macro PC games, no as easy to set up as a controller that features macros).
In other words, there are a lot of things MSFT might do and even though we are all supposed to rabidly hate MSFT, some of us still would not mind seeing Sony take it good and hard for all the ways they screwed over their customers in their neverending effort to achieve total media lock.
And what would those be? Are you sure you hate Sony gaming, or could it be your real enemy is Sony/BMG? Be careful to pick the right target.
I will not buy msuic from Sony/BMG because of the whole rootkit fiasco and general cluelessness when it comes to media. But I have no problems supporting Sony Gaming and the PS3, which seems to be to be trying to make a decent attempt at following a path of openess - every PS3 shipping with Linux and so on.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
There is one big flaw with your argument. You are assuming that Sony is not going to charge for their online service.
That would be a big flaw indeed if the main article itself had not quoted Sony as saying they were not going to charge for online matchmaking services. It's kind of hard to read "not going to charge" any other way unless you think it means they'll not take Visa.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley