About Technology

update technology ,more fast more smart...

Sony Introduce New 40GB PlayStation 3

Written by oneself on 5:38 PM

Hamish Hayward

Sony have been losing money on their 60GB PS3 since it was introduced in the UK. Volume of sales has been lower than anticipated - with one significant factor being the high launch price. The pattern has been much the same in other countries worldwide.

The new 40GB PS3, released in the UK on October 10 2007, is the result of some significant cost cutting efforts on the part of Sony. A lot of the changes were made after discussion with PS3 users. Sony advises that it has made the changes after "feedback from thousands of existing PS3 owners as well as research into future potential PS3 owners."

Possibly one of the most controversial decisions was the lack of backward compatibility with both PS1 and PS2 games. However, Sony's research seems to suggest that this is not an important factor for new users. Presumably, anyone who has a lot of PS2 games also has a PS2 console on which to play them. The backwards compatibility with PS1 and PS2 games was one of the more expensive items to implement on the earlier PS3 version.

Here's a nice quotation form Ray Maguire, the MD of Sony Computer Entertainment UK:

"As we approach our first PlayStation Christmas, it is satisfying to be able to offer UK consumers the choice of two PlayStation 3 packages both now representing remarkable value"

And there's no doubt about it - it does look like a better deal for consumers. It seems like a very aggressive marketing strategy by Sony in the run up to Christmas.

It is worth noting that Sony intend that, in future, only the 40GB PS3 will be available in the UK. The price drop on the 60GB model is intended to boost their sales between now and Christmas and use up the existing stock. After the current stocks of 60GB PS3 consoles are depleted only the 40GB version will be available to the public.

Sony also admit that they have been losing money on the 60GB consoles sold to date and, more surprisingly perhaps, admit that this will continue, even on the reduced cost 40GB console. They will lose less money than before, but they will still lose.

Another factor which will help sales between now and Christmas is the increasing number of PS3 games becoming available.

Current game console market leader, Nintendo, advised that there were no plans to cut the price of the Nintendo Wii. According to George Harrison, senior vice president of Marketing for Nintendo America: "We are still selling everything we can make."

Microsoft's XBox 360 had a recent price cut in August of 2007. With the release of the latest offering in the hugely popular Halo series, imaginatively titled "Halo 3", which is currently only available for the XBox 360, a cut in the Xbox price seems unlikely in the near future.


Hamish Hayward

PS3 Review

Review your latest PS3 options online.

Discover the key criteria you must consider before getting involved in any business opportunity. Now available in free e-book format.

Read More......

Will there be a winner in the video games console war?

Written by oneself on 4:17 AM


By:Adam Singleton

Home video games consoles have been around since Magnavox first released the Odyssey console in 1972. Since that time, the video game console has overcome its share of adversity, surviving two periods of uncertainty and market crashes in 1977 and 1983, which cast doubts over the future of the industry.

In recent years however, the video games console industry has gone from strength to strength, and the competition between developers is fierce. New technologies have driven games consoles away from the game cartridge format, as used by such consoles as the Nintendo SNES and Sega Megadrive towards a compact-disc format as used by today's generation of consoles - a technology pioneered by Sega's Saturn system. However, it was the launch of Sony's Playstation console in Japan in 1994, and Europe a year later which really made home video gaming popular.

Since then, there have been three major developers in the games console market. Nintendo are perhaps the most well-known of the three, having been designing and developing games consoles since the 1980s. From their SNES and N64 systems through to the Gamecube and today's Wii console, Nintendo have earned a hardcore following among video gamers and are perhaps the dominant entity in the handheld console market since the launch of their Gameboy system and more recently the Nintendo DS.

Having seen phenomenal success with their Playstation console, Sony has become almost synonymous within the video game consoles market. Their Playstation 2 console was released in 2000 and has been the most commercially successful and fastest selling home console in video game history, with over 120 million units shipped worldwide by May 2007. Following a delay, Sony released their latest console - the Playstation 3 - in March 2007, and it became the fastest-selling home games console in the UK, selling around 165,000 consoles in its first two days of availability.

The third company, Microsoft, are seen as the newcomers in the video games console market, having launched their Xbox console in 2002 as a competitor to Sony's Playstation 2. The Xbox was seen by many to bring desktop computing and games consoles together, with the console being the first to employ an internal hard-drive for storage instead of removable memory cards, as well as other similarities with its hardware specifications when compared with a personal computer. Although it proved popular, it was unable to make much of an impact against the Playstation 2's market share. In late 2005, Microsoft launched the new Xbox 360 into the marketplace.

For many, the latest 'Console War' has only just begun and it is not yet possible to determine which, if any, of the three major consoles - Sony's Playstation 3, Nintendo's Wii and Microsoft's Xbox 360 - will come to dominate this new generation. The Xbox 360 has gained an early lead in terms of market share, but this is due in no small part to having being launched a year before its rivals. Sony's Playstation 3 has Blu-ray capabilities, which allow it to show high-definition video, and both consoles appear to have been aimed towards the hardcore gamer.

At the expense of cutting edge graphics, Nintendo's Wii console utilises a wireless, interactive controller which can detect motion and rotation in three dimensions. The controller also plays sound and includes force feedback, allowing the user to experience vibrations that mimic feelings experienced during the game. Despite some quarters dismissing the Wii as 'gimmicky', Nintendo have found themselves being unable to make consoles fast enough to satisfy demand. Since January, it has outsold both the Sony and Microsoft consoles due to its mass appeal among casual gamers, as well as its ease of use.

The audience for games is bigger than ever, with the game industry enjoying a record year. In the U.S, revenues during 2006 increased by 20 per cent to $12.5 billion, with predictions for 2007 rumoured to outstrip that figure. Even so, it's too soon to tell how the latest 'console war' will fan out.
------

Read More......