Ad Viewing Required For Free Zune HD Games
UnknowingFool writes "In releasing the Zune HD, Microsoft decided not to open up software development on the new Zune to third parties yet. Today, Microsoft released a handful of free games for the Zune HD: Texas hold 'em, Sudoku, Space Battle 3, Shell Game, Of the Future, Hexic, Goo Splat and Chess, as well as calculator and weather apps. Users, however, are required to view an ad (up to 30 seconds in length) while the game starts up. While ad-supported free games are also on other platforms, like the iPhone, the difference here is that those iPhone games are from third parties and not from Apple."
Reader Rock3t notes related news that the Zune HD will be getting 3D games.
A Zune? Never heard of it. Oh it's that brown turd you can only buy in the US and Canada?
As the iPod Touch and iPhone turn into gaming devices and their marketshare appears to soar ever higher the response from Microsoft is somewhat strangely to stay behind the curve. "Will be getting 3D games"? Unlike the iPhone/Touch which already have them you mean? No 3rd party development... like the iPhone had at launch.
Sometimes I get the feeling that Microsoft aren't really trying here, the question is when they clearly aren't trying to out innovate why are they continuing to spend money in this space? Is it purely because they "must" compete with Apple? It feels as if their product meetings go
MS PM: What does the current set of Apple products do
MS Marketroid: Well they have apps
MS PM: 3rd party apps?
MS Marketroid: No that is banned
So they then spend 18 months developing the product at which place they are closing the gate against a horse who is already 20 miles down the road.
You haven't been paying attention, really, have you? :) They're not opening up their app store for 3rd party software. I believe this was mentioned on /. 1 or 2 days ago, maybe. Or rather when asked they said something like "we might in the case that there is a situation where it is desirable to possibly have an opportunity like this that we may or may not perhaps consider blablablabla..." Which essentially meant "Nope", or else they would've just said so.
Hope I remember correctly now... :)
Here's the secret to immortality:
Yes, but if you're using apple, you don't like freedom in the first place, you just like what Jobs likes.