Archive for May, 2005

Xbox 360 controller connectivity proprietary

Extreme Tech asked a M$ veep what wireless technology will be used in the Xbox 360 controllers (wi-fi, bluetooth, etc.). Here’s what the company man said:

It’s a proprietary technology that we developed. In order to do great games in a wireless fashion, you want to make sure you address some latency issues and some bandwidth issues. So we developed a proprietary technique in order to do that.

You don’t say. Microsoft has piss-poor developers, but hawk-like brand managers. They’ll take a popular technology developed by someone else, tack on a few random bits of code or hardware to make it incompatible with the tech on which it’s based, and sell it as their own.
Case in point, the controller ports for the original Xbox are USB. They changed physical shape of the connectors from rectangles to ovals. For the 360, expect them to take bluetooth, cripple a component that’s not critical to work most of the time, then brand it “ActiveNoWires”.

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Breakin: the review

breakin7 ic
Our good friend, Electro Rock (aka Kid Angry), registered here last week. His chosen user name was in reference to the bad guy crew in the movie, Breakin’. Having not thought about that movie for some time, I decided to take a stroll down memory lane and see what I could dredge up on the topical flick. I found that someone actually wrote a review. I like how it starts:

Breakin’ is one of those films that do not translate well into a review.

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Wee Game Boy

Wee Game Boy
Need a GBA you can hide in your mouth? The Nintendo Micro is 4″ x 2″ x 0.7″

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GreaseMonkey for Firefox is the shite

The reasons why Firefox kicks ass are many and well documented, but the one relevant to this topic is its extensibility. GreaseMonkey is one such extension. Wired has a good article on it, but if you’re lazy…
GreaseMonkey allows Firefox users to use site-specific scripts to alter the look or behavior of websites that they visit. For instance, if you use Netflix, but you like to read about movies on IMDB, you can enable a script to display a “Add to my Netflix queue” link on each movie page on IMDB. Another script bypasses the interstitial ad pages and in-content ads on IGN.com. Well done geeks!

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CD + DRM = BSoD

Looks like the DRM that was tacked onto the most recent Dave Matthews CD crashes Windows machines. And the music industry can’t figure out why we’d rather download music than buy CDs.

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Xbox 360 backward compatibility

There has been much speculation on whether the Xbox will be backward compatible. Reuters says “yes”:

Microsoft Corp. said on Monday its new Xbox 360 will run video games developed for the earlier generation of its gaming machine, an enticement to get fans who have already spent hundreds of dollars on older Xbox games to purchase new hardware.

Shacknews says “somewhat”:

Xbox 360 will have limited backward compatability. Only the most popular Xbox games will be supported, through an emulator.

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E3 Sony unveils PS3

PS3 E3
Sony unveiled their PS3 at E3. AnandTech has the deets.

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E3 Also playing… Nintendo

Nintendo Revolution
USA Today is by no means the pinnacle of video game reporting, but they did break it first:

Nintendo, whose GameCube sales have lagged, hopes to gain ground, particularly among the fast-growing older-gaming market. Revolution is about the size of a stack of three DVD cases and has no visible knobs, buttons or ports for joysticks. The system will use only wireless controllers, and it sits flat or stands vertically.

There were rumors for a while that the GameCube was going to be Nintendo’s last non-portable console. It is well agreed upon that you buy a Nintendo console for two reasons. Either you’re a kid, or you want to play their exclusive first-party titles like Mario, Zelda, Metroid. The conventional wisdom says if you make good games, but are losing money on the console, get out of the console business and publish your games for other platforms. Sega rightly did it, but Nintendo tenaciously resists. They see a future where they are once again the leading platform. Hey, Nintendo… good luck with that.

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