surprisingly, Raytheon Missile Systems engineers are behind some of the guts of this monster handheld system
http://www.edge-online.co.uk/
you should recall the Rogue was first shown last year, as this:
video
http://www.sl-interphase.com/Rogue_web_movie_high_res.wmv
at $1500, it makes Rogue the NeoGeo AES of handhelds. but on second thought, no, the Rogue is really more like the 'Phantom' of handhelds, cause it's simply PC-based like the Phantom.
If some company were to come up with a $500 handheld based on proprietary hardware and had exclusive games, and full internet features, it might be worth concidering--that is, worth concidering over say, the PSP, for instance.
this Rogue is seriously not going to sell more than 10 units :lol wow what an install base.
cool concept though.
http://www.edge-online.co.uk/
Putting The 'Table' Back Into Portable
Arizona Newspaper the Tucson Citizen has the scoop on the latest contender in the portable console wars, only this time its bigger than the GameBoy or the PSP. No, not in terms of reputation or potential: physically bigger. Its a monster.
The SL-Interphase Rogue, a handheld being developed by two Arizona residents (and Raytheon Missile Systems engineers, suggesting that perhaps creating a portable console really is rocket science), puts even Atari's fondly remembered Lynx handheld/blunt trauma weapon firmly in the shade. Boasting a massive 8.4-inch LCD screen and priced at $1,500 (£835), the device is essentially a tablet PC, but with a focus on gaming.
"We developed new hardware to help the CPU do its job," reports Dyster, SL-Interphase's vice president and still a Raytheon engineer in Tucson. "We've taken some of the more tedious tasks the processor has to do and it is handled by the new hardware so it (the CPU) has more available for playing the game."
The company still need $20m (£12m) to get the device onto (hefty) shelves across the world. Even if the capital is found, whether it will be able to stir up the sluggish tablet PC market is another matter.
you should recall the Rogue was first shown last year, as this:
video
http://www.sl-interphase.com/Rogue_web_movie_high_res.wmv
at $1500, it makes Rogue the NeoGeo AES of handhelds. but on second thought, no, the Rogue is really more like the 'Phantom' of handhelds, cause it's simply PC-based like the Phantom.
If some company were to come up with a $500 handheld based on proprietary hardware and had exclusive games, and full internet features, it might be worth concidering--that is, worth concidering over say, the PSP, for instance.
this Rogue is seriously not going to sell more than 10 units :lol wow what an install base.
cool concept though.