Which was their previous forecast?So did they cut their forecast on PS3 sales?
edit: I see they dropped it to 14 Million.
Which was their previous forecast?So did they cut their forecast on PS3 sales?
edit: I see they dropped it to 14 Million.
Thanks for the insult. no problem with comparisons on marketing standpoints on why MS is selling more 360's then Sony is with PS3's, however, the comments in this thread are nothing more then stupid statements that do nothing but go "lol MS is better then Sony!".
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DVD has not backfired on 360 at all. Sure its forced some multi disc issues but it certainly hasnt done harm to the console.
Blu Ray on the other hands took a profitable division and erased 2 console generations worth of profits alone.
it established Bluray as the next gen standard and opened up a new revenue stream which in the end is far more important than the few bucks saved if they had opted for something cheaper.
From a consumer point of view there's even less debate whether it was a good choice or not.
But all you added to the discussion before this post was:I just think it's petty to come into a discussion and start up console war asininity over a financial report. Leave that fanboy bullshit to the side and let's have an actual discussion like how Sony is on track to hit their goal of 15m PS3s sold by the end of the fiscal year or what will Sony have to restructure to make up some of the losses? There is plenty to talk about.
Good numbers for the Oct-Dec quarter but that net loss, ouch.
This I believe too. But is Kaz willing to do what needs to be done? Thats the big question mark for me.
PS3 hitting 62m means all 3 current gen consoles have outsold the 3rd gen leader NES, along with every other previous gen console bar PS1 and PS2. PS1 sold 102.49m, I wouldn't exclude the possibility of all 3 consoles ending up close to that either. PS3 and X360 will have to stay relevant for a few more years to achieve that though.
It´ll be interesting to see if 360 and PS3 will be able to catch the PSP, too.
If they finally get to $/150 (including Kinect for 360), I can see them selling tons more this gen. The cheapest PS3 is still 250 here, Xbox about 200 without Kinect.PS3 hitting 62m means all 3 current gen consoles have outsold the 3rd gen leader NES, along with every other previous gen console bar PS1 and PS2. PS1 sold 102.49m, I wouldn't exclude the possibility of all 3 consoles ending up close to that either. PS3 and X360 will have to stay relevant for a few more years to achieve that though.
Then again he has to run all of Sony, not a single division.
So is there are reason why Sony doesn't scrap the PS name and start something new? Nintendo did that and got lots of success, I don't see why Sonyshould still keep the Playstation brand that has been on a downhill since the PS3 was released
I think at some point you have to put your foot down and accept a loss of marketshare if it means keeping your head above water financially. If MS/Nintendo drop to $199/$99 this year, I think Sony is going to have to grin and bear it, the PS3 is never going to be in 1st place.
revenue is the most misused word on neogaf. Bringing in a lot of revenue means absolutely nothing.It still brings in a lot of revenue, though. There is just too much competition from the Korean companies like Samsung and LG.
The situation isn't that bad yet.
PS4 is definitely not going to be the over-engineered, overpriced mess that PS3 is just as it is highly unlikely that it will be seen as the most powerful compared to its peers.
it's time they begin charging for PSN, that simple. Just that thing costs them a few hundred million usd. get of yor high horse. .
What is hilarious is that 360 had 1 year head start and barely beats PS3. So much for being a dominant console in 2, may be three countries.
It's bad for Sony, but didn't Nintendo play a bigger role here in stealing the casual gamers, who last gen purchased a PS2 and now a Wii?What I see is Microsoft effectively stealing half of the PS2 userbase from Sony this generation. Even if the PS3 ends up winning marginally, you can't spin this to be anything but a bad thing for the playstation brand.
The TV division is vital, considering what type of company Sony is. That's the main reason why they are tolerating all the losses. If that division is healthy, it will be extremely profitable.revenue is the most misused word on neogaf. Bringing in a lot of revenue means absolutely nothing.
That is simply not going to happen any time soon. Most of their divisions can be made profitable, but it will take time. Something like an earthquake and strong Yen really makes it difficult to do that, but I think they will be profitable in a few years.It's getting pretty damn close if they can't figure out a way to start making a profit. Look no further than American Airlines who lost money for years and ended up declaring bankruptcy despite the huge amount of assets.
It's bad for Sony, but didn't Nintendo play a bigger role here in stealing the casual gamers, who last gen purchased a PS2 and now a Wii?
Kaz Hirai is set to become Sony's new CEO on April 1. But he was already in the spotlight today at Sony's quarterly earnings briefing.
According to Mantanweb, Hirai declared Sony's intention to claim the number one position in digital imaging and games.
Hirai listed digital imaging (which includes digital cameras), games and mobile as areas that Sony hopes to strengthen as core businesses. He hopes to use profits from PS3, PSP and PS Vita as investment into the company's mobile business.
In the third quarter (October 1 through December 31), Sony Corporation saw a net loss of $2,038 million on sales of $23,370 million.
The quarter saw sales of 6.5 million PS3 systems, bringing the system to 62 million units life to date, and 2.4 million PSP systems, brining the system to 61.3 million units life to date.
This is the most important point that you found about in this financial report? There's two (2) participants in this awesome HD console race. How do you think it makes any difference to anything which one is second?ps3 growing and its the only console not getting below 200$(wii/360arxade) longterm,so its still has a long life.maybe when all is said and done to be the best selling hd console selling of this generation....
So what other technology should they have used instead? It's easy to say that it was expensive but what where the alternatives?
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=395262
Unless Sony released fake MS numbers on their FY09 report, then at least in 2009 the myth that MS is the juggernaut of software sales was indeed false.
ps3 growing
Don't know if this deserves a topic but might as well post this here:
Sony's New CEO Aims For Top Position in Games Market
http://andriasang.com/comzuc/hirai_games_number_one/
He intends to move Sony beyond focusing on its past successes and get more involved in software and services, telling the WSJ that "We can't just continue to be a great purveyor of hardware products." Hirai's goal is to centralize and unify decision making on new products rather than allow individual units to make their own decisions.
How hard will this change be? Hirai gave what can only be called a blunt assessment of the work ahead of him: "It's one issue after another. I feel like 'Holy s, now what?'" He also noted that it will be difficult to overcome the institutional inertia that has kept Sony from innovating as aggressively as it needed to for the past few years, noting that "I don't think everybody is on board" yet.
"There will be situations in which we will be required to choose, make a decision, or implement very painful issues that cannot be avoided for the future of Sony," Hirai told reporters on Thursday.
"But we can't take a step forward if we are afraid of this."
They aren't tolerating the losses, the stock price has tanked over the last year and they have shaken up the executive structure along with taking a huge loss to hopefully stop bleeding money on TV's.The TV division is vital, considering what type of company Sony is. That's the main reason why they are tolerating all the losses. If that division is healthy, it will be extremely profitable.
That is simply not going to happen any time soon. Most of their divisions can be made profitable, but it will take time. Something like an earthquake and strong Yen really makes it difficult to do that, so but I think they will be profitable in a few years.
Antsy? Nah, man. (For the record, I'm an XBOX fan and not so much an MS fan. ) Just trying to sweep the hardware geek fantasy into the gutter where it belongs. The reality is that hardware superiority, unless facilitated almost effortlessly and at little cost for the developer, will be mostly ignored by the time the first year's sales tallies come in. The marketing angle of superior technical capability has simply provided no discernible value to Sony whereas core featuresets aimed at the primary buyer have proven worth investing into as a focus, just as Live, Kinect, and the Wiimote have shown. Sony, on the other hand, have tried and failed to successfully parlay their uber box's value proposition into a highly competitive market and financial success and, instead, will live for years with its direct losses and those more intangible effects attributed to its lack of effective strategy.A lot of MS fans seem antsy to make this point after recent Xbox 3 rumours...
I don't agree, but that's because I'm not one of those who believes that Sony will be able to justify the cost, whether from internal R&D or just from the cost of off-the-shelf parts, and the distance to profit-making for the next platform which all investors will be watching with both the PS3 and PSP's (and soon, Vita) downward slide for the product line in mind. Sony is under the gun and PS4 is just not going to go balls out in any way that isn't already well matched by MS and/or Ninty and/or another entry into the console space. It's not difficult to imagine a PS4 that totally decimates PS3 on all fronts, but I just don't see how they'll be given the rope to go toe-to-toe with MS.I'm not sure it really matters, but I don't think whether PS4 is more powerful than its competitors depends on how much they sink into their own hardware r&d. They can not put as much money into their own r&d and still have a very powerful, or even most powerful, system. This is exactly what they did with Vita - wrt processing guts they pretty much entirely leveraged r&d costs sunk by other companies, while packing a lot of power into that system. It depends far less on bespoke r&d costs than it does on a) timing and b) target cost per unit relative to competitors.
I think there is a pretty reasonable chance Sony's timing and their competitors' target costs per unit relative to theirs may favour Sony being able to stick more in their box if they want to. They seem to be coming no earlier than their competitors, at least, and their competitors seem to be either more cost-conscious (Nintendo) or splitting their budget among more variables (Kinect build-in in Xbox 3?). In fairness, though, we have zero visibility on Sony's plan - we could assume they'll go a certain route, but for all we know they might go in some completely different direction, with their own 'extra' features that eat into their box budget etc. But I do not think the choice to go with a powerful box, or not, depends on making a PS3-style r&d spend.
Don't know if this deserves a topic but might as well post this here:
Sony's New CEO Aims For Top Position in Games Market
You mean shrinking. They sold less FY 2011/12 then they did FY 2010/11.
Antsy? Nah, man. (For the record, I'm an XBOX fan and not so much an MS fan. ) Just trying to sweep the hardware geek fantasy into the gutter where it belongs. The reality is that hardware superiority, unless facilitated almost effortlessly and at little cost for the developer, will be mostly ignored by the time the first year's sales tallies come in. The marketing angle of superior technical capability has simply provided no discernible value to Sony whereas core featuresets aimed at the primary buyer have proven worth investing into as a focus, just as Live, Kinect, and the Wiimote have shown.
I don't agree, but that's because I'm not one of those who believes that Sony will be able to justify the cost, whether from internal R&D or just from the cost of off-the-shelf parts, and the distance to profit-making for the next platform which all investors will be watching with both the PS3 and PSP's (and soon, Vita) downward slide for the product line in mind. Sony is under the gun and PS4 is just not going to go balls out in any way that isn't already well matched by MS and/or Ninty and/or another entry into the console space. It's not difficult to imagine a PS4 that totally decimates PS3 on all fronts, but I just don't see how they'll be given the rope to go toe-to-toe with MS.
I hate to see Sony lose money. They've been losing money for a while now and I can't imagine a market without Sony.
I hate to see Sony lose money. They've been losing money for a while now and I can't imagine a market without Sony.
Just remember it before Sony.
They should go 3rd party like Sega did.
Here is a brief look at my electronics purchases:
Sony Walkman ----------> Apple Ipod
Sony PS2 ----------> Microsoft 360
Sony TV -----------> Samsung TV
Sony laptop ------------> Apple Macbook Pro
I hope they can turn things around.