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Nintendo To Cancel Weather, News, and Other Built-In Wii Apps In June

damn_registrars writes "Nintendo has announced that at the end of June it will be canceling the services of several of the channels that are built in to the original Wii, including the Weather, News, Everybody Votes, and Mii Contest. This will also affect the WiiConnect24 services, though should not affect the Wii shopping channel. They added: 'Exchange of Wii messages on the Wii Message Board, exchange of Mii characters on the Mii Channel and message/data exchange within some games will be disabled.'"

15 of 175 comments (clear)

  1. #dealwithit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    this is the future of gaming if the publishers get their way.

    1. Re:#dealwithit by Golddess · · Score: 4, Informative

      this wouldn't have happened if Sony had been harmed by removing OtherOS.

      Why is that? This is more like Sony turning off the servers for $multiplayer_game than it is them removing OtherOS.

      Not saying it's right, only that it is a different scenario.

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  2. did people really use them? by alen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    i had a wii years ago and after setting these up out f curiosity i never used these services
    the GUI for anything but gaming is pretty limited by the controller

    1. Re:did people really use them? by sootman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I had a surprisingly good time spinning the globe and looking at weather around the world, and zooming in and out and learning a little geography along the way. I spent a good amount of time with it, to be honest. That was the great thing about it -- it was just a really nice 3D-ish/VR-ish globe that you could zoom in and out of, like Google Maps, and the weather was a hook or a bonus. That said, the Wii has spent the last few years in a kid's room so I haven't been on it much since the first few months after Christmas all those years ago.

      The apps are already built and they just need a source of data -- I wish they'd partner with Yahoo or someone and keep them going. The older kid just moved out and the Wii just made its triumphant return to the living room. I'm genuinely sad about this news. I'm not, like, all broken up about it, but it's like when a show you like gets cancelled, or when the lead singer of a band dies.

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    2. Re:did people really use them? by AngryNick · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm genuinely sad about this news

      My kids will be crushed, especially with the Mii contest going away. The spend as much time inventing and sharing Miis as they do playing the games.

  3. Translation ... by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since nobody actually uses these things, we're turning them off.

    Back when I had a Wii, in order to get these network services, you essentially had to set the device to never turn off. And that was something I deemed as pointless and a waste of power.

    And, really, who needs to get the weather and news on the Wii?

    But, somehow everybody seems to keep acting as if the game console is going to become your internet hub.

    --
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    1. Re:Translation ... by Isca · · Score: 4, Funny

      Maybe they are built on top of Google Reader? :)

  4. Welcome to the cloud by green1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I see various posts on here talking about how nobody used those features, or how this is normal EOL, or even berating Nintendo for doing this. But this is not an issue specific to the Wii, Nintendo, or even to consoles in general. This is the future of cloud based computing combined with locked down devices.

    As long as we allow the manufacturers of devices (whether it be a gaming console, a tablet, a phone, or even a desktop PC) to control what software we run and what services we connect to, we do not own the device. The manufacturer does, and they can (and have repeatedly proven they will) remove features at their whim.

    Unfortunately people haven't learned from the many, many examples in the past, and they keep lining up to thrown money at companies who are actively hostile toward their user base. Until that stops, nothing will change.

    If you want ANY feature on a device, you better be sure that you have enough control of the device, and of the service supporting it, that the manufacturer can't remove it, because if they can, they will. It's only a question of when.

  5. Re:Is Nintendo starting to close up shop? by neurojab · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Outdated? You could still buy a new Wii through normal retail channels in 2012 (maybe you still can). Less than a year of support is the standard now? That's shameful. Not that I know anyone who uses a wii for news and weather, but still.

  6. Re:So essentially on June 28, 2013..... by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

    None the less your point is an antiquated view of the current state and direction of consoles

    Not antiquated, just different from yours.

    I won't connect a game console to the internet, because that brings absolutely no benefit to me that I've been able to discover.

    The XBox and EA have shown me the future of network connected gaming consoles, and it involves advertisements and DRM.

    I don't play any on-line games because I don't want to, because I have no need to have my ass handed to me by a 9 year old, and because I only game a little.

    You can feel free to provide an advertising platform, an opportunity to monetize all aspects of game play, and have EA tell you how and when you can use your video game, not to mention the trove of personal information they probably tie to your online account.

    But they've already demonstrated that networking quickly turns into a negative feature. I'm not paying full price for a game and paying for my internet connection so they can put ads into the game console. I value my privacy and peace a little more than that. MS and EA already showed me that it's all about them and maximizing revenues, not giving me the best gaming experience.

    In fact, I don't believe a single one of my friends has their XBox of PS3 connected to their network. Either because they've got modded consoles, don't want to see ads, or don't play games online.

    --
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  7. "Nintendo to cancel weather, news" by SkimTony · · Score: 4, Funny

    For a moment, I seriously wondered whether they could do that. But if anyone could cancel the weather, and the news, it'd probably be Nintendo.

  8. Re:Is Nintendo starting to close up shop? by AvitarX · · Score: 5, Informative

    The voting was fun though.

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  9. Re:Is Nintendo starting to close up shop? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    You are interested in a Wii U yet you call the Wii outdated...

    You do realize the Wii U is simply a Wii with 720p and a overpriced external screen that does nothing except show you what is on the TV.

    By which you mean a Wii with a better CPU and GPU, 1080p, and an external screen that can act independently of what's shown on the TV, right? I know, I know, it's a common mistake to get absolutely everything wrong. Must be your crippling Alzheimer's.

    Bro, do you even troll?

  10. Re:Is Nintendo starting to close up shop? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 5, Funny

    You do realize* the Wii U is simply a Wii

    With an updated CPU and GPU and a lot more RAM.

    with 720p

    1080p.

    and an overpriced

    Says you.

    external screen that does nothing except show you what is on the TV

    ...or anything else the system wants to show, and is also an input device.

    I was going to get one until I realized it offered nothing at all over the Wii.

    It may not offer enough for you, but it's just being churlish to suggest that that equates to "nothing." You sound like Grandpa Simpson when he said that a fax machine is nothing but a waffle iron with a phone attached.

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