Geohot Brings Other OS Support To PS3 With Custom Firmware
suraj.sun tips news that hacker Geohot is following through on his promise to fight Sony's removal of the "Install Other OS" feature on the PS3. He posted a video of the work he's done so far that shows a PS3 console booting into Linux. Quoting Engadget: "While it's not available to the public just yet, Geohot's 3.21OO custom firmware will apparently be simple to install and, as you can see in the video after the break, it works just as you'd expect and simply restores the 'other OS' option to its previous place. Geohot even says that the custom firmware might actually enable the other OS feature on the PS3 Slim, but he hasn't yet had a chance to try it out."
Say hello to 3.21.01 counter-updates from Sony soon. The battle doesn't end.
I always considered the decision to enable installation of other operating systems on the PS3 a proactive and productive move by Sony to both enhance the appeal of the PS3 while also diminishing the desire to compromise the system to enable homebrew software. It was like Sony finally "got" it. Now that they've gone in the other direction, Sony has only succeeded in providing the incentive for people to do what Sony'd rather they didn't.
In 3.... 2....1.....
You know it's comming. It's sony after all.
PS3 is a GAME CONSOLE, not a COMPUTER.
I will be completely surprised if this works on the PS3 slim.
I understood that one of the ways Sony cut the price and reduced the size for the slim was that they did not include the IBM hypervisor that made the whole thing possible.
(see:
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-linux-ps3-1/
http://www.osnews.com/story/22073/Why_No_OtherOS_Option_on_PS3_Slim_Sony_Answers
for a few more details)
Without the hypervisor, its just not possible.
Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seus
I hope you are happy Sony.
You made it this far without people building custom firmware. Now you've forced people to find ways to put custom firmware on the PS3. Next up is "indie" games followed by pirates followed by the game industry going back to PCs or over to other consoles.
Too bad. I actually liked by PS3. Hopefully something new will come along soon so I won't have to buy an xbox...
It says FF:FF:FF etc in the info screen. Thats not right. I wonder if his "firmware" has any side effects he's not letting on about.
Do you work for Apple?
The poster said its the private RSA key for the IPL ROM that boots the supervisor.
http://pastebay.com/91827
Maybe someone can have a look at this.
Enjoy
From his blog:
http://geohotps3.blogspot.com/
Hivemind harvest in progress..
I don't know if America has anything like the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission but if you do, I'd urge you to raise this issue with them (and if you're in Australia, please get onto the case).
This is a simple case of a company changing the specs on a product that you have bought, after you've bought it and changing it in an adverse fashion. It is removing a feature that you have paid for and have possibly had for years, without offering any workaround or compensation.
Sony claim that the update is not mandatory, and that it is entirely your choice if you wish to install it or not, but the simple fact is that by not installing the patch, you lose even more functionality than if you do install it. No PSN. No Playstation Store. On online gaming. No access to new games that require this or a newer firmware. No access to bluray content that requires this or a newer version of the firmware. Etc.
Here's the text of the submission I made to the ACCC (you're limited to 1500 characters)
Specialist Mac support for creative pros, Melbourne
I bought PS3 mainly because of OtherOS. Now they remove it. Can I get my money back, the product does not have the features I paid for and wanted? Oh well. Probably there is a paragraph in sony EULA that allows them to do this. There's probably few lines about my soul too..
Sony has just issued a firmware update[1] that disables the "OtherOS" support that is used to run alternate operating systems such as Linux on the Playstation 3 (PS3) game console. This was an advertised feature of the PS3 and was a factor in my decision to purchase the product. The firmware update is effectively mandatory; the PS3 will not support online play or game updates/downloads via the Playstation network without it (these are also advertised features).
That a major consumer electronics company can unilaterally remove advertised features from a product that I have bought and paid for is chilling to say the least and appears misleading and deceptive in the classic "bait and switch" style. I request that the ACCC investigate this matter.
[1] http://blog.us.playstation.com/2010/03/28/ps3-firmware-v3-21-update/
Reply from the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission:
This is why you can't have nice things.
That's obviously a fake, as they didn't sign off with the obligatory:
"Get a dog up ya, mate"
Specialist Mac support for creative pros, Melbourne
The American equivalent is the FTC, Federal Trade Commission.
You can complete a complaint form at https://www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov/
Not sure the best address to use on the form, but here is one of them:
Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc.
919 E Hillsdale Blvd 2nd Floor
Foster City Ca 94404-4247
Appropriately, the PS3 blog considers FTC to be a swear word.
Complaining to the BBB is pointless. SCEA already has an F... I don't think they can get an F-.
anyone who played PC games might notice that there is no standard location for save files
Any PC game that doesn't put saved games within in %appdata%\(publisher)\(title) or %userprofile%\My Documents is not following the Windows file system hierarchy standard and thus is not a conforming Windows application.
different folder locations for different companies, and in some cases different file locations for save games from the save company
In the %appdata% model, each company's saved games are supposed to be in different folders.
Also with couch gaming you can get single screen multi-player a feature which is never implemented on PC's.
Never is a strong word. Sonic Kart apparently has it, as do Serious Sam, Left 4 Dead, and Lego $movie. But I agree that single-screen multiplayer is not as widespread in major-label titles as the hardware allows, especially now that every PC has inputs for multiple gamepads (since USB in 1999) and nearly every new TV has inputs for VGA and HDMI video signals from a computer (since HDTVs took over around 2007). It's a chicken-and-egg problem: major labels don't make HTPC games because people don't have gaming HTPCs, and people don't have gaming HTPCs because major labels don't make HTPC games. Perhaps the way to break the cycle is to develop indie HTPC games.
One common goal - Exactly what you've Keed to be Kreskin stagnanth. As Linux
Now the question is whether Geohot is careless enough to actually release a custom firmware to the public, which would be an obvious violation of Sony's copyrights. He probably will, considering how eager he's been to make a name for himself. Sony's lawyers must be licking their chops.
Filed a complaint with the FTC. Thanks for the link.
"Don't buy their products" is hardly a useful response this long after the fact! Most people I know with a PS3 purchased it YEARS ago, and are just now dealing with this firmware issue.
And furthermore, I don't *care* if piracy "convinces a corporation that stricter anti-piracy measures are the answer". The fact is, eventually, that whole "cat and mouse" game ends somewhere. Either the company tries the "let's get tough on them!" thing, pumping huge amounts of money in it, only to find it keeps failing them and they change strategies, OR they come up with something that's genuinely effective at curbing the piracy and the would-be pirates move to greener pastures.
For an example of this, look at the satellite TV providers. After years and years of "back and forth", both Dish and DirecTV now have a system that's considered "unbreakable" by the TV pirates. (It would be interesting to see how many basic subscriptions they completely lost though, since with many of the old methods of hacking their receivers, keeping at least a basic subscription was needed so the access card's ID was shown as "active" in their system.)
In this particular situation, Sony has done something pretty indefensible, because they removed a legitimate feature from their product to block THEORETICAL piracy. (GeoHot hadn't even released anything allowing PS3 software piracy. He just showed how Linux could theoretically be useful to hack into the system.) And frankly, I'm still not sure why someone can't create a bootable Linux image on DVD that runs completely from the disc a a "live distro" for a PS3, even with this "boot other OS" menu option stripped out?
Sony completely jumped the gun on this, out of nothing but fear of a potential hack -and alienated a big part of their existing customer base in the process.
Dumb move.
from "It only does everything" to "It no longer does everything"?
Does this mean Sony can no longer sidestep EC import taxes?
Twinstiq, game news
You're really not accomplishing anything with these posts. Just because you install a bunch of "unusual" features [...] does not suddenly make it not a computer anymore.
Then allow me to rephrase: A PC is a computer because it has no cryptographic lockout against the owner of the product. The fat PS3 was also a computer prior to Sony's recent actions. But a PC is not a consistent 3D gaming platform because of the unacceptable performance of Intel onboard video. And the major PC game publishers don't consider it well suited for some game genres because of path dependence related to the unaffordability of large PC monitors prior to around 2007.
Build a PC with a faster CPU, more RAM, bigger hard drive in a Media Center case, buy a XBOX 360 game controller (either USB or buy XBOX wireless receiver for PC), plug it in (or use wireless) and play 99% of the games out there.
Street Fighter IV is a worthwhile traditional fighting game, but some people prefer platform-fighting games like Power Stone or Super Smash Bros. Can you recommend one of those for the PC?
Most of the games out there come out to PC sooner or later.
Some genres tend not to. What's the closest thing on PC to Mario Party series? Or Animal Crossing (cartoon social simulator)? Or Katamari (platformer based on absorbing scenery)? Or Amplitude (abstract music game)?
I think I agree with you that making it easy for hobbyists mitigated their efforts to design something that would have inevitably be used for unauthorized copies.
On that philosophy, their locking down access to the GPU was a critical mistake, because PS3 loses a lot of flexibility without that.
If the platform were fully open in all capabilities, with game-elected DRM, I suspect the DRM would have lasted much longer than it will.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
"Don't buy their products" is hardly a useful response this long after the fact! Most people I know with a PS3 purchased it YEARS ago, and are just now dealing with this firmware issue.
Sony has a history of screwing with their customers. This history began before the PS3. People decided to buy a PS3 anyway.
And frankly, I'm still not sure why someone can't create a bootable Linux image on DVD that runs completely from the disc a a "live distro" for a PS3, even with this "boot other OS" menu option stripped out?
I'm sure it's because you'd still have to modify the PS3's boot loader to check if there's a bootable DVD in the drive... but isn't that what the "OtherOS" option is managing for you (except for doing it on the hard drive)?
Mine was pretty similar to yours. Haven't heard back yet.
Sony is gonna' take to this the way Palm took to iTunes as in WHACK!!