Bitch Pudding
Member
Exactly. and it's common sense to understand that.
So, what u are saying is, that at a certain point, there will be a fundamental (hence not: incremental) change of hardware. Or in other words: A generational leap.
Like, XBOX 3.1 instead of XBOX 2.3 (3rd upgrade of XBOX 2).
Doesn't that contradict the incremental innovation concept mentionend in the OT?
Besides, how long should each generation carry the forward compatability burden of its first SKUs? 3, 6, 9 or 12 years? I call those numbers because some people here mentioned an upgrade every 3 years would just be fine.
Then again, will people with a XBOX 2.3 be bothered to buy 3.1? I mean, they just spent money for yet another upgrade, why switching to the new one? And what's the incentive for developers here? Spending resources for optimiziation of 2.3 games which just a minority owns? Shouldn't they focus on the standard SKU?
EDIT
If I was Sony I'd release PS5 one year after MS launches XBOX 2.3, making it dead in the water and giving Sony a 2 year head-start of it's newest generation.
The second reason I believe this is a bad avenue for Microsoft, is for the same reason you never announce a slim model months in advance. I already know one person who was planning on buying an Xbox One, but who now is holding off until Microsoft announce more details. Multiply that incertitude by 100 million. The net effect is you have people with perpetual cold feet, not knowing if a more powerful unit is around the corner. Meanwhile, PS4 continues to fly off the shelves.
Good point, indeed. I believe we'll see first results of that very early announcement quite soon within the sales threads.