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PS3 Problems Cause Sony Stocks to Slide

eldavojohn writes "Gamespot has an article describing PS3s operating erratically at conference demonstrations.' In its defense, Sony said the PS3 failures were caused by unusually high temperatures created by having many of the next-gen consoles operating in close proximity to each other. 'It's not a problem with the PlayStation 3 unit itself,' Sony spokeswoman Nanako Kato told the AP. 'For a normal player at home, there shouldn't be any problem.' As a result, Sony's stock slid 2.75%. I guess they should have thought first before releasing five times the number of kiosks as they did with the PS2 — they're causing each other to overheat. There goes my PS3 beowulf cluster idea!" Update: 10/04 20:40 GMT by Z : anti-human 1 wrote in to mention a GamesIndustry.biz article, with a flat denial of overheating issues from Sony. "As could be seen on the TGS floor by the tens of thousands of media and public attendees, both the hardware and software worked flawlessly."

19 of 238 comments (clear)

  1. What about the cabinet? by brunes69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Geez, if these things are that heat senseitive they probbaly are not going to work in a closed-door stereo cabinet.

    I currenrly have my DVR, my Xbox, and my reciever all in a stereo cabinet with a closed door. All work fine with no overheating. Is Sony trying to say that if I want to get a PS3 I need to buy a new stereo cabinet too?

  2. I don't buy this argument. by LoudMusic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Overheating demo game console units is no reason for stock of one of the largest electronics manufactures to slip. I'd bet it has more to do with exploding batteries.

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:I don't buy this argument. by zstlaw · · Score: 4, Informative

      Except that the analysts specifically mentioned concerns about the "entertainments division".

      We have adopted a cautious view of the impact of the [Sony] game business on the electronics business this term,'' Goldman Sachs analyst Yuji Fujimori told Bloomberg. Fujimori downgraded Sony's rating from "buy" to "neutral" citing "confusion over the release of PlayStation 3 and concerns [about] disappointing sales of [the] PlayStation Portable,

    2. Re:I don't buy this argument. by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 3, Funny

      Or just overall piss-poor ideas being pushed out. $500-600 videoga- I mean, Linux supercomputer. Rootkits on CDs. Assploding batteries. So-so Blu-Ray. So-so PSP performance (not doing terribly bad but it's not exactly printing money)....

      Then there's Krazy Kenny's PR talking that's just kinda... oooooOOOOOOoooooooooooooo~

    3. Re:I don't buy this argument. by avirrey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Does anyone here even play the market? Who care if the argument makes sense? If Fujimori 'downgrades' Sony, the stock WILL go down. Same is true for every other company listed. Downgrade = immediate stock decline. Upgrade = immediate stock rise. If you don't think Fujimori is justified, then go buy the stock now that it's down 3%... if you're right, you'll make your 3% back...

      ===== All above forward looking statements are non-legally binding and are simply projections based on known... oh who cares.

  3. About that Xbox... by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Something I've always wondered: How come people on Slashdot are normally of the mindset: I would never use a Micro$oft product ever unless I had to, my entire home setup is based around Linux even where that reduces convenience, if you help Micro$oft, you are a terrorist, Bill Gates is a cyborg , but then, no one bats an eyelid when someone castually mentions their Xbox -- a completely unnecessary Microsoft purchase?

    Think about it.

    1. Re:About that Xbox... by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, I read Slashdot and I think those anti-Microsoft people are jerks.

    2. Re:About that Xbox... by Y-Crate · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Something I've always wondered: How come people on Slashdot are normally of the mindset: I would never use a Micro$oft product ever unless I had to, my entire home setup is based around Linux even where that reduces convenience, if you help Micro$oft, you are a terrorist, Bill Gates is a cyborg , but then, no one bats an eyelid when someone castually mentions their Xbox -- a completely unnecessary Microsoft purchase?
      I think it may have something to do with the fact both Sony and Nintendo have thrown their respective weight around the gaming market to the detriment of consumers and developers, which renders any value judgments regarding Microsoft's tactics in the console arena to be mostly null when it comes to selecting a system.

      If all three major players have had a history of the same thing, then it really comes down to purchasing the console that will have the most value to you. JRPG fans should buy a PS3, action gamers often find the Xbox/Xbox 360 to be a good fit, while the fans of quirky games and Nintendo's established franchises might want to hold out for a Wii. Which is not to say that anyone is restricted to a particular platform if their finances permit.

      For the fanboys who can't stomach what I just said, I'll translate that statement into trollspeak:

      If you want to sit around and watch cutscenes all day, buy a PS3. If graphics are the only thing you consider when buying a game, go for a 360, if you want kiddie games for mongoloids, put down a pre-order for a Wii.
  4. It's probably both. by jchenx · · Score: 4, Informative

    If there weren't such a huge recall of Sony batteries over the last few months, then a news item like this probably wouldn't have affected Sony's stock all that much. But I imagine analysts are worried now about the general quality of Sony products.

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    -- jchenx
  5. Sounds like good news to me! by ectal · · Score: 5, Funny

    Part of my decision whether to purchase a PS3 will be based on the amount of heat produced by the console and the amount of power it drains per hour. If the PS3 does not cause a significant increase in my average monthly power bill and a noticeable increase of my living room's temperature, I will not buy one.

    I need to know the PS3 has power. I need to be afraid that it might drain my bank account. Or set my room on fire. Or hurt me in other more subtle ways. Only then will I respect it.

    --
    http://nerdcartoons.com/
  6. Wait a minute... by norminator · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Wii has never had this sort of problem and it costs less than half as much as the PlayStation 3 does.

    Hey, I'm all for the Wii too, but isn't it a little silly to say that an unreleased product that has not been tested by the public has never had any one specific problem? (The hardware at E3, from what I recall was not necessarily the final hardware, nor was it actually packed in the Wii cases... which is a big deal when it comes to overheating issues.) I think we can guess that the Wii won't have those issues since it's not intended to be a super-ultra high-res mega-spec console. But it is in a tiny box, so we won't know until real people actually use it.

  7. fusion reactor by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 4, Funny

    There goes my PS3 beowulf cluster idea!

    Goodbye beowulf cluster, hello fusion reactor core!

  8. Defense by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 5, Insightful
    In its defense, Sony said the PS3 failures were caused by unusually high temperatures created by having many of the next-gen consoles operating in close proximity to each other.

    Fortunately, most consumers are quite diligent when it comes to ensuring that their game consoles are properly positioned in a well-ventilated area with adequate clearance on all sides. I don't predict much trouble with people laying the damn thing on the carpet; butting the air vents up against the wall; setting it next to the radiator; cramming it into their entertainment center's shelf between the TiVo, XBox, and a bunch of DVDs; putting stuff on top of it; or anything else that your typical consumer would simply never dream of doing to a game console.

    Big. Honkin'. Red. Flag.

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  9. George Foreman grill addon anyone? by Mullinator · · Score: 5, Funny

    You are all noobs, everyone knows this is happening because Sony is keeping the George Foreman grill addon for later. Just spend another $300 for the Blu George Foreman grill ray in January and all your overheating problems will be over... As long as you are using it with Sony brand eggs and bacon. Just remember though that the Sony brand food will only work with Sony brand hardware!

  10. Re:We're buying "potential" by mrchaotica · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bah, why would they need to dig? They could just drill a few holes and toss in some of their laptop batteries!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  11. Re:There is no problem with the PS3 by iocat · · Score: 5, Informative
    I was at TGS and a) it was about 1000 degress inside; b) the PS3s were in tiny plexiglass containers with no visible ventilation; c) it was pre-release software; d) it's probably running on test kits, which aren't notoriously reliable; and e) I was in the sony booth, looking directly at games, for >90 minutes and saw one crash only.

    This a) compares favorably with E3, and b) is in line with what you'd expect from beta software, especially since the last bugs you find are the kind of crazy tiny 'soak-test' memory leaks that tend to come out when you play the game constantly for 8 hours w/o rebooting, as you see at TGS.

    IMHO, this whole thing is FUD; some analyst who saw a game crash and is trying to justify his trip to Tokyo.

    --

    Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

  12. The trouble with fanless systems by Animats · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They made it "fanless", right? Fanless electronic devices with significant heat loads are inherently vulnerable; if the external environment is worse than the design spec, they die. Hot weather or tight shelf space, and you're dead.

    Worse, if some systems are failing early in life due to cooling problems, more are very likely to fail later. ICs that run hot has a reduced lifespan; there's a well-understood relationship for this. So if demo units are failing when new, this is serious.

    Somewhere at Sony, I suspect that engineers are frantically trying to tweak the heatsink, airflow, and case hole design before shipping. It's very late for that.

    There will probably be aftermarket fan kits. Liquid cooling would be overdoing it.

  13. Interesting...Playstation 2s didn't overheat by gevmage · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Glitching because of overheating would be interesting, if true.

    The PlayStation 2 cluster that we built at NCSA had 65 machines in a rack, tightly packed, with the fans of the machines at the front and the back of the shelves pointing at each other. They ran like that for on the order of 15 months, and I'm not aware of any heat related issues.

    --
    Craig Steffen
    http://www.craigsteffen.net
  14. No. by MaestroSartori · · Score: 4, Informative

    Disclaimer: although I work for Sony, this isn't official.

    They weren't overheating. Some pre-release software was crashing. Imagine that! The shock, the horror...