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MS Portable Not A Game Player?

Though Microsoft's 'Argo' (now known to be bearing the name 'Zune') is most assuredly a shot at the iPod, it may not be going after the handheld gaming market. Gamespot explores rumours stating that the 'Zune' is simply a first step on Microsoft's road into that particular sector of the games industry. From the article: "The Zune could also just be the first step towards something bigger. People are already speculating about Xbox 360 integration with the device, beginning with streaming audio, like the iPod currently does. But add a few buttons, a thumbstick, and a little more horsepower, and the Zune could soon be singing gamers' tunes." I'd imagine we'll see some simple Xbox Live Arcade style games, which will impact your Xbox gamertag via Live Anywhere. With Vista pushed out to January, they've got to have something to show this Christmas.

9 of 81 comments (clear)

  1. Something wrong with the priorities by SchwarzeReiter · · Score: 4, Funny

    They have spare engineers for this, but they can not finish Vista?

    1. Re:Something wrong with the priorities by Osty · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They have spare engineers for this, but they can not finish Vista?

      Do you really think that everyone at Microsoft works on Windows? What would you expect a bunch of hardware guys to be able to do with a software project, anyway? This argument is silly. Adding more people to Vista won't necessarily make it ship any sooner (and more likely would cause even more delays), and that's assuming Microsoft would move the developers anyway. They have many projects in many markets, and they're not going to sacrifice that just because the bread-winner OS is struggling (there's still Office to bring in the cash).

      Should everybody at Sun work on Java? Should everybody at IBM work on WebSphere? Should everybody at Google work on search? Should everybody at Sony work on PS3? So why should everybody at Microsoft work on Windows?

    2. Re:Something wrong with the priorities by hey! · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As the old saying goes, hire one boy to mow they lawn, you get one boy. Hire two boys, and you get half a boy. Hire three boys and you get none.

      Why: because it's work dealing with colleagues. Or maybe play, but either way your get less productive time per person because of interaction overhead.

      Similarly, if ten engineers can finish a project in a year, it's almost certainly the case that 120 engineers won't be able to finish the project in a month. Some problems can't be cleanly decomposed, which means the limiting factor is going to be a sequence of such prblems that require a irreducible quantity of time on a lead engineer's brain. In fact, in a less than perfectly administered project, 120 engineers might take longer than a year, as your most experienced engineers find more and more of their time eaten up with supervisory issues and meetings. A perfectly managed project that could be done in a year by ten engineers, but had 120 at its disposal, might take a hundred of the surplus engineers and put them in a different building, occasionally sending them a problem to work on but not seeing them on a day to day basis. Or maybe it would break the 120 enginers up into six or more teams and let them work independently, and see who succeeds first.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  2. Yeah, right by WedgeTalon · · Score: 5, Insightful
    But add a few buttons, a thumbstick, and a little more horsepower, and the Zune could soon be singing gamers' tunes

    Probably would also require some ergonomic reworking of its case and such.

    So in other words, if you completely change the Zune, it would be perfect for video games! Woohoo! PSP and DS killer, HERE WE COME!
  3. Re:How nice iz zat? by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 4, Funny

    Zee firzt game for the Zune will be Duke Nukem: Real Zune Now. Zis iz exziting newz!

    --
    It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  4. Little rhyme to keep them straight by Kesch · · Score: 4, Funny

    30 days hath September, Argo, Zune, and November.

    All the rest might be released sometime in the next century.

    (Except for DNForever, which will never make it).

    --
    If this signature is witty enough, maybe somebody will like me.
  5. Give me this by the+computer+guy+nex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dear Microsoft:

    Make an MP3 player with a slick interface that plays Xbox Live Arcade games and has public development kits for homebrew. I'll buy 2.

  6. Didn't we do this already? by InfinityWpi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Weren't we all amazingly shocked that Origami wasn't a portable game player, even tho they never said it was? Now we're all shocked that this thing isn't a game player, even though they never said it was? Are we really waiting for their first game player -that- -much- that we keep jumping the gun on it?

  7. Surprised it took so long by TaggartAleslayer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What we're looking at is the beginning of a new product line. We all know how Microsoft does things -- piece by piece.

    This round it's more likely than not that we'll get a very high profile, seriously marketed, media player with a few minor games and the potential for expandability within their overall product line and future focus.

    Microsoft really wants focus to be on the 360 this year. They have a major battle to win, and diluting their own market would be a serious mistake. I expect it will be mid-way through this console generation that we'll see them making serious portable gaming moves.

    Many of us drew the same conclusions as this article, days ago.