Zoe said:I think the Wii usage is more interesting.
How is it more interesting?
Gaming dominated Wii usage, accounting for 69 percent of all time on the system
I think a game console used mainly to play games is less interesting.
Zoe said:I think the Wii usage is more interesting.
Gaming dominated Wii usage, accounting for 69 percent of all time on the system
onipex said:How is it more interesting?
I think a game console used mainly to play games is less interesting.
The industry needs to take note of this. PS3 is sold and marketed as a device that does it all, and so there is a definitely chunk of gaming time being cut into by movies. Movies don't make anyone in the game industry any money.The survey--conducted on a general US population sample of unspecified size--determined that PlayStation 3 gamers aged 13 spent an average of 49 percent of their time with the system playing games. The largest share of nongaming time was accounted for by watching movies on DVD or Blu-ray (27 percent), with downloaded and streaming movie watching accounting for another 13 percent.
Gaming accounted for 62 percent of time spent using the Xbox 360, with DVD viewing trailing at 11 percent and downloaded/streaming services totaling another 16 percent of usage time. Gaming dominated Wii usage, accounting for 69 percent of all time on the system. While the system lacks DVD playback capabilities, movie watching was still a prominent secondary activity, thanks to streaming services such as Netflix that accounted for 20 percent of usage time on Nintendo's console.
Dave Long said:The industry needs to take note of this. PS3 is sold and marketed as a device that does it all, and so there is a definitely chunk of gaming time being cut into by movies. Movies don't make anyone in the game industry any money.
The more that Sony and Microsoft push toward convergence, the faster gaming will become marginalized, homogenized and settle into the realm of fewer and fewer publishers. That's why Nintendo has always pushed gaming and gaming alone on their systems with all these other things as completely ancilliary and mostly unmarketed features.
Dave Long said:The industry needs to take note of this. PS3 is sold and marketed as a device that does it all, and so there is a definitely chunk of gaming time being cut into by movies.
They would, but the easier you make it to have that content competing right there on the same screen (and worse, able to be accessed via download instead of inserting a disc you had to go get from the store), the more games will be losing out over the long run.Zoe said:If that were the case, shouldn't the Wii's playtime be higher?
I think people would be watching that alternative content whether it's on their gaming system, standalone player, or DVR.
LosDaddie said:Yes, a clear sign. Even worse is that Sony is preaching to the choir since it's on THE PS BLOG. :lol
Disagreed. Gaming isn't threatened by gaming boxes doing other things. Smart phones and PC gaming is just fine and the multi functionality Xbox has a higher software attach rate than the gaming only Wii.Dave Long said:They would, but the easier you make it to have that content competing right there on the same screen (and worse, able to be accessed via download instead of inserting a disc you had to go get from the store), the more games will be losing out over the long run.
Azih said:Disagreed. Gaming isn't threatened by gaming boxes doing other things. Smart phones and PC gaming is just fine and the multi functionality Xbox has a higher software attach rate than the gaming only Wii.
jcm said:Where else would they put it?
Dave Long said:That's why Nintendo has always pushed gaming and gaming alone on their systems with all these other things as completely ancilliary and mostly unmarketed features.
PopcornMegaphone said:Convergence will expand the industry, not shrink it. The iPhone is a good example of this. iPhone found a new market of gamers. Long-term the smart companies will embrace convergence or die.
charlequin said:Nintendo pushes gaming and gaming alone because they're only a gaming company and only make money on gaming, while Sony and Microsoft are huge companies with diverse holdings in other fields that they can profit off of using their gaming business as a lever. It has nothing whatsoever to do with protecting the industry.
PopcornMegaphone said:Convergence will expand the industry, not shrink it. The iPhone is a good example of this. iPhone found a new market of gamers. Long-term the smart companies will embrace convergence or die.
Lonely1 said:The iPhone is a good example on success on Convergence. But the iPad is a good example of success in specialization.
Huh? Wasn't this Apple answers to netbooks? A netbook can do everything the iPad can and more, but the iPad can do a few things better.Ashes1396 said:?
Not really. Is it an ebook reader or a web browser? I think it's basically an update to the tablet, Apple Style, just like the ipod was an update to mp3 players/walkman, Apple style.
Lonely1 said:Huh? Wasn't this Apple answers to netbooks? A netbook can do everything the iPad can, but the iPad can do a few things better.
Vinci said:So you're suggesting there's no value in specialization?
RedStep said:Well, first they wouldn't make it in the first place, because it's retarded and desperate.
But if they did make it, they would make it an ad that would be seen by somebody that isn't already one of the PS3 faithful. Maybe Better Homes & Gardens, Popular Mechanic, or O Magazine.
Lonely1 said:Huh? Wasn't this Apple answers to netbooks? A netbook can do everything the iPad can and more, but the iPad can do a few things better.
PopcornMegaphone said:Not unless it provides a significant tangible benefit to most consumers. Specialization for the sake of specialization gets you nothing.
For the record I agree with Pachter's statements regarding iPhone vs PSP2 vs 3DS. So yeah.
Ashes1396 said:Yeah. But's not a netbook though. It's a touch screen tablet.
edit: This supports my point more than it does yours though, right? Ipad carved the ipad market out by converging not specialising.
Sho_Nuff82 said:The PSP2 and DS do literally offer a tangible benefit to consumers - buttons and analog joysticks. There are games that will never make sense on that platform because of the control limitations. If both the PSP2 and 3DS have touch screens, on the other hand, every game possible on Iphone will be possible on some level on those two platforms.
Lonely1 said:Converging what? A netbook is a more capable device than an iPad. A Tablet Laptop is also a more capable device than an iPad. But the iPad focuses on doing less things but with better ergonomics/"user experience".
jcm said:Where else would they put it?
RedStep said:But if they did make it, they would make it an ad that would be seen by somebody that isn't already one of the PS3 faithful. Maybe Better Homes & Gardens, Popular Mechanic, or O Magazine.
Zoe said:How is that specialization any more than an iPhone? A netbook is multi-functional.
Ashes1396 said:Ebook-multimedia-web- mobile applications for students at uni<<< That's how it's marketed as.
A Netbook can do anything a laptop can. Is just a less powerfull/cheap laptop.Ashes1396 said:A netbook is just a less functional laptop, cheaper even.
The fact that is eating netbook market share is an argument for specialization. A netbook can do Ebook-multimedia-web- mobile applications too, but arguably the iPad can do those things better.Ashes1396 said:It get compared to a Kindle more than netbook over here in the uk, although it's eating up netbook sales quicker than anybody has predicted. Is it different where you are?
Lonely1 said:The fact that is eating netbook market share is an argument for specialization. A netbook can do Ebook-multimedia-web- mobile applications too, but arguably the iPad do those things better.
Sho_Nuff82 said:The PSP2 and DS do literally offer a tangible benefit to consumers - buttons and analog joysticks. There are games that will never make sense on that platform because of the control limitations. If both the PSP2 and 3DS have touch screens, on the other hand, every game possible on Iphone will be possible on some level on those two platforms.
see5harp said:It seems like you guys are arguing over technicalities. The iPad is both a convergence device AND specializes in a few areas simply because of the OS. You both win.
see5harp said:I certainly feel you both...the iPad is a hard device to categorize because it doesn't do much much different than the iPhone other than form factor (with the same OS to boot). At the same time, it's a device that gets a ton of use. Honestly, if I could accept bricks and wooden boards in the Farmville app, I'd use my Macbook even less than I do now.
Ashes1396 said:It's form factor makes it a viable ebook reader. That by itself is a big enough reason for it to be called a genuine ebook reader.
I mean ipads are not unique to the convergence device movement or whatever it's officialy known as. You can read ebooks on a lot of devices, ds lite even.
Ipad would be for me one of the many converger devices, like the 3d bluray players with access to the internet; x360/ps3/wii with their multimedia functions, heck even the way this stuff is sold is grouped together these days, at least where I am. You can get the same company providing, broadband, home networking, cable satellite, telephone and mobile/cell.
I think you should re-read this because your last line contradicts what you're saying.charlequin said:Nintendo pushes gaming and gaming alone because they're only a gaming company and only make money on gaming, while Sony and Microsoft are huge companies with diverse holdings in other fields that they can profit off of using their gaming business as a lever. It has nothing whatsoever to do with protecting the industry.
Ashes1396 said:The Psp launched almost 5 years after the ipod I think, and it was sold as a multimedia device. I wonder what sony plans to do with psp2 now?
I'm not talking from a games point of view, it'll have games. I'm wondering whether it'll have 3g.
will it have 3d?
It'll have comics, will it have books? google's bookstore?
I think it's a good idea to leverage google's software credentials to compete against Microsoft.
And on that note, Microsoft looked at wii's casual sales and wanted a piece of that pie. They must be looking at the king on top, the ds lite. They simply must.
Dave Long said:Nintendo's industry is videogames. They are protecting the industry by pushing gaming and gaming alone because it's the only industry they're in.
Ashes1396 said:I think he meant that Nintendo's primary interest is self serving, which has nothing whatsoever to do with proctecting the industry.
And I wouldn't worry about Microsoft's commitment issues with gaming. Not when they've just invested half a billion this fall just marketing their new device.
Dunlop said:If that was the case, they would have made their platform more accessable to third party studios as it would be in their best interest to keep the entire industry healthy, instead it is their stable of IP's that flourish on their systems as usual.
Nothing wrong with that but there is no Nintendo higher calling to champion and protect the industry
Nintendo likes when third parties are happy, but they are not and cannot be in the business of selling their games for them. They have enough of their own titles to worry about and the way they execute on most of them should tell you all you need to know about how important gaming is to Nintendo.Dunlop said:If that was the case, they would have made their platform more accessable to third party studios as it would be in their best interest to keep the entire industry healthy, instead it is their stable of IP's that flourish on their systems as usual.
Nothing wrong with that but there is no Nintendo higher calling to champion and protect the industry
Vinci said:Actually, I'd argue that they do everything they can to protect the industry since it is completely self-serving to have the industry in good shape.
Dave Long said:So that's why they will spend ludicrous sums to both produce and/or market certain third party titles.
Dave Long said:I think you should re-read this because your last line contradicts what you're saying.
Ashes1396 said:I think he meant that Nintendo's primary interest is self serving, which has nothing whatsoever to do with proctecting the industry.
Vinci said:Actually, I'd argue that they do everything they can to protect the industry since it is completely self-serving to have the industry in good shape.
Vinci said:Actually, I'd argue that they do everything they can to protect the industry since it is completely self-serving to have the industry in good shape.
charlequin said:It's really not, though. There are many conceivable scenarios in which the revenue of the industry as a whole is down but the revenue of Nintendo in particular is up. In fact, that's pretty much precisely the scenario in Japan over the last six years, and we've seen quite clearly that Nintendo does not consider that to be a problem.