Vormund said:Possible. Considering they own the chipset this time round, it wouldn't be a bad idea to recoup costs.
choplifter said:Xbox 360 itself is not very future proof
1.) no Blu-Ray or even HD-DVD
2.) you cannot upgrade the CPU, GPU and probably not even the RAM
3.) narrow 128-bit bus
4.) no HDMI support
5.) no practical, feasible support for 1080p
but Xbox 360 software is future proof because 360's successor will be 100% fully backwards compatible![]()
---- said:2.) But you can easily upgrade the DVD drive to an HD or Blu Ray drive to allow the system to play HD movies. This would be no different than the numerous tweaks and hardware changes that the PS2 has undergone in the past generation.
---- said:1.) HD movies are still possible. See all of the 720p movie trailers on Live. I think it's an assumption that consumers are going to embrace either HD-DVD or Blu Ray especially when you've got crap like HDCP to contend with.
---- said:2.) But you can easily upgrade the DVD drive to an HD or Blu Ray drive to allow the system to play HD movies. This would be no different than the numerous tweaks and hardware changes that the PS2 has undergone in the past generation.
---- said:4.) HDMI support can easily be added with a new av cable accessory (MS says doesn't make sense to support since so few have it
Ghost said:Larger hard drives + internet delivery = future proof
open_mouth_ said:4) Video chat (this is confirmed already)
Bill said:The X360 is future proofed
bunker said:agreed, I could see them moving to that business model in the future. But I think it is all dependent on broadband infrastructure. Delivering a 7 GB game at today's broadband speeds would take you quite a while to download, but with new technologies like Verizon's FIOS service in the US offering greatly improved download speeds, I could see this happening.
truffleshuffle83 said:hard drives fail, optical media such as dvd/blue ray do not. id hate to have my hard drive fuck up after downloading movies and games cause i gurantee MS wont be replacing your data
truffleshuffle83 said:hard drives fail, optical media such as dvd/blue ray do not. id hate to have my hard drive fuck up after downloading movies and games cause i gurantee MS wont be replacing your data
Ghost said:So DVDs dont get scratched now? Must have missed that development.
Ive gone through a lot more DVDs than i have Hard drives (and i look after my DVDs), Hard drive storage does NOT have a reliability issue. And why does it matter if Apple cant keep track of what you've bought properly, that doesnt mean MS hasnt done it (ive heard of no problems with it so far).
Phoenix said:You can't future proof a static piece of hardware.... what is it going to morph into whatever standards get adopted in the future? Foolishness. I can't believe anyone would actually believe that.
truffleshuffle83 said:ive gone through 3 hard drives in my computing life time none of which were my fault. if you scratch dvd's thats your own fault
truffleshuffle83 said:i have NEVER had a dvd drive scratch a dvd.
truffleshuffle83 said:ask apple about redownloading songs after your hard drive corrupts ..............SOL even though it attaches what music you downloaded to your username
Blaster1X said:360 was built for the future. That's all I can say at this point.
m0dus said:Not if the ad-on is designed in such a way that it allows for a harddrive to be installed (like a daisy-chain), or contains its own hardrive or flash memory within.
MaestroRyan said:guys, can someone please promise me that there will not be a new version of 360 that fucks us totally? like, i have a premium pack now, and i don't want to be seen with one when they release "xbox360: teh megapwnzors edition!"
http://gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=13623Microsoft shoots down talk of HD-DVD equipped Xbox 360
Tom Bramwell 10:18 15/12/2005
"No plans" to add next-generation DVD player to Xbox 360 spec
Microsoft has cleared up speculation regarding possible HD-DVD functionality in future versions of the Xbox 360, saying that it currently has no plans to release an Xbox 360 equipped with a next-generation DVD player.
The unusually direct statement is a straightforward denial of a report from a Japanese news service yesterday, which claimed that the company planned to launch an HD-DVD compatible Xbox 360 in 2006.
"Microsoft, in both America and Japan, has not announced anything regarding the possibility of a next generation DVD drive being placed in the Xbox 360," a Microsoft spokesperson told IGN. "There are currently no plans to release an Xbox 360 equipped with a next generation DVD player."
Speculation over whether such a device might be forthcoming originated with comments made back in August by Bill Gates himself, who said: "We are looking at whether future versions of Xbox 360 will incorporate an additional capacity of an HD-DVD player or something else."
And just last month, Microsoft's Japanese Xbox chief Yoshihiro Maruyama said, "it's a possibility" although he did add that it wouldn't have anything to do with games. "If the Xbox 360 uses a next-generation DVD drive in the future, it will only be used for watching movies that run on next-generation DVDs," he said.
As well as allowing high definition movies to be viewed on the system, the topic of high-capacity storage is also of interest because of concerns that standard DVDs - even dual layer versions that can store around 9GB of data - may not be enough to hold all the necessary game data developers want, particularly later in the console's life as programmers and artists come to terms with the machine's capabilities.
However, as Maruyama's comments indicate, there is probably no way for Microsoft ever to move the Xbox 360 to using HD-DVD based games, since by doing so they would render some software incompatible with the original versions of the Xbox 360, which would not be able to read the HD-DVD discs.
Pimpbaa said:Future proofed...until spring 2006.
BlueTsunami said:You never know with Blaster1X, he may have edited for our sake, for the sake of planet earth.