Azih said:By Jove I think we have a consensus! Wireless controllers that charge by plugging into console in the traditional manner! Well almost a consensus, stupid Dr_Cogent....
Well with DVD playback, MS had to get consumers to pay for it seperately because of DVD consoritum fees so it's not quite the same situation.border said:Just like with DVD playback, you will buy it separately. That way they'll be turning a profit on wireless...
Mrbob said:I'd just like to chime and say I hate the PS2 analog stick and I hate the dual analog placement on the pad. It sucks.
Sony needs to get with the times and place the analog sticks in a similar position to where they are on the controller S. And tighten those damn sticks so they don't feel so loose.
border said:It's exactly the same thing -- a cost issue. It costs extra to include wireless, just like it costs extra to include DVD movie playback.
MS also made you buy extra cables if you wanted an optical-out....even though the PS2 had one standard. If they can make you pay extra for a feature they will.
border said:If you believe that then you swallowed MS's PR hook, line, and sinker. They just didn't want to pay royalties to the DVD Forum for the MPEG2 codec. They wanted to sell you a piece of plastic with DVD software in it for a whopping thirty bucks so that they could make up for the massive losses they took on the console itself.
DVD players were less than a hundred bucks in fall 2001. The danger of the $300 Xbox being seen as a "cheap DVD player" was pretty low :lol
I don't know if I've ever seen you go on record as believing a rumor. Any rumor. For example, judging from what I've seen you post you think Xbox will not have a hard drive, not be backwards compatible, not have wireless controllers by default, etc. Skepticism always wth you!border said:I still think it's all horse-pucky...
Okay, so it's a $30 dongle that prevents them from paying royalties for MPEG2 playback. Still works to show that MS has no qualms about sticking people with high-margin add ons after selling them no-margin consoles.Dr_Cogent said:The remote control doesn't do any DVD decoding at all. That would be silly, and pretty much impossible anyway.
The lack of a hard drive and backwards compatibility are the popular rumors. My assumption that they're true would mean that I do believe them, right? I talked with Fishie yesterday about flash memory and if it is as cheap as he claims then I have basically no doubt that they will toss it into Xenon rather than using a hard disk.I don't know if I've ever seen you go on record as believing a rumor. Any rumor. For example, judging from what I've seen you post you think Xbox will not have a hard drive, not be backwards compatible, not have wireless controllers by default, etc.
They pimped it as having a built-in Dolby Digital encoder, so as to enable 5.1 sound in nearly every single game on the market. Oh but wait, if you want that you're going to have to (you guessed it) buy some extra stuff from them.MS never pimped the Xbox as a DVD player
border said:Okay, so it's a $30 dongle that prevents them from paying royalties for MPEG2 playback. Still works to show that MS has no qualms about sticking people with high-margin add ons after selling them no-margin consoles.
PC Gaijin said:Wireless first-party controllers:
Atari offered some back in the early 80s. They used the standard Atari plug, so they worked in the 2600, 7800, and 8-bit computer line. I had a set of these joysticks; they worked fine but were difficult to use because the base of the joystick was quite large. Nonetheless, they were the first wireless first-party controllers that I am aware of.
For Japanese manufacturers: I seem to recall reading somewhere that Sega offered some wireless pads for the Mark III or Master System. NEC had a wireless pad for the PC-Engine. And Bandai offered wireless controllers standard on the Playdia. All long before the Wavebird.
Four controller ports:
Atari offered four controller ports (and four player games) back in 1979 with the debut of the 8-bit home computer line. The original 5200 (which was a re-cased 8-bit computer) had four controller ports.
Last I checked this wasn't a complaint. It's just the reason why I don't think they will start giving away wireless controllers....they are a capitalistic company based on the idea of making money.Dr_Cogent said:Last time I checked Microsoft was a capitalistic company based on the idea of making money.
border said:Last I checked this wasn't a complaint. It's just the reason why I don't think they will start giving away wireless controllers....they are a capitalistic company based on the idea of making money.
border said:It's a summary of their strategy thus far. Quit being so sensitive....every console manufacturer does it.
border said:Huh? I already gave you a second example -- must buy Advanced AV pack for surround sound support. You could essentially apply it to any accessory that doesn't come in the box.
border said:Huh? I already gave you a second example -- must buy Advanced AV pack for surround sound support. You could essentially apply it to any accessory that doesn't come in the box.