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Forums - Sony - Sony Announces $150 No Blu-ray PS3

NJ5 said:
Munkeh111 said:
NJ5 said:

Well, it would actually be a good idea, as long as they didn't lose too much money on the hardware... It would pave the way for online distribution of big console games, and it would be quite ecological.

Some people are saying you wouldn't be able to play games which are already released, why is that? They could easily put those games online too.

 


 

1 Problem: how long is it going to take to download one of these games

another problem: Ratchet took up 22GB, you have an 80GB HDD. MGS 4 is going to take up another 50GB, so how many games are you going to be able to store?


You're right about storage (there would have to be a bigger hard drive). In terms of download time, it could easily work in Europe. Fast connections are pretty cheap around here (in Portugal and Sweden you easily can get a 24 Mbps connection for, at the very most, 50 € per month).

People already download multi-GB demos these days, so it's not really such a big problem.

 


 Well in the UK, Virgins new fibre obtic service could do the job, but that only serves a small part of the country. However if you are looking at  50 € per month, then that is a lot more than you would normally pay for broadband, so you are paying extra to be able to download these games, which would probably cost 50 €(10 is off is fair). So it is not really cost effective. Of course, if there was a also an HD movie download service then it would certainly be more attractive, but it would have to have a several hundred GB hard drive



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I have updated my post, as a 24 Mbps connection actually costs between 30 and 40 € in Sweden and Portugal. It usually includes phone service (often with unlimited free calls to landlines), and sometimes TV channels too.

I believe it's very cost effective, especially when you consider that more and more people are getting those connections even without needing them for downloading games.

PS: I think they should have games cost at most 40 € with online distribution, with much lower distribution costs, and no retailer middleman costs.

 



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PS360ForTheWin said:
Blaiyan said:
" You may have heard about a new FCC approval Sony was awarded. We reported on it yesterday morning, and we began to speculate what the new SKU could be. It it the Ceramic White PS3? Perhaps the Metal Gear Solid 4 PS3 bundle? Nope, it's neither. Sony has officially announced that the on-going rumors of a PlayStation 3 machine without a Blu-ray drive are true.

On August 12, Sony will launch a PlayStation 3 that will retail for $149.99. Again, this unit will not feature a Blu-ray drive, and if you're wondering how you play games on it, Sony has a simple explanation for you. "The broadband world has expanded considerably," says Aperelli Doorichka, Public Relations Coordinator for SCEI, "nearly 85% of our PlayStation Network users and PlayStation 3 owners access the internet via high-speed cable or high-speed DSL service."

"After extensive research, and witnessing the immense success of full-fledged downloadable games like Warhawk and Gran Turismo 5: Prologue, Sony will be launching a PlayStation 3 unit that'll allow owners to download a catalog of all currently available PlayStation 3 games via PlayStation Network. It's just one of many ways that Sony offers gamers the ability to pick and choose what suits them best."

Sony goes on to explain that the newly launched/redesigned PlayStation Network will boast an infrastructure that is far more advanced than their competitor's, allowing all broadband users to take advantage of their connections, quoting download speeds at a minimum of 1MB per sec (many DSL users will fall into this range), and as high as 30MB for those with blazing fast connections such as Verizon FIOS, and so on.

As far as file sizes will go, Sony cites Gran Turismo 5 Prologue as an example of what they can achieve. Where as the game takes up 6GB on a Blu-ray disc, it is only a 2GB download from the PlayStation Store. How the downsizing happens is simple: the developers leave the videos off of the main download, and instead give you the option of downloading them or streaming them later on. Additionally, "padded space" is also removed, which helps tremendously. In case you're wondering, padded space is filler placed on a disc to help improve load times for a game, obviously it's unnecessary when a game runs off a hard drive.

Sony says that aside from the Blu-ray drive, this PlayStation 3 SKU will boast all of the features of the 80GB model, including the 80GB hard drive (which can be upgraded, of course), the card readers, USB ports, and so on. Lastly, in the event that you lose a game, would like to delete a game, or the file is corrupted, Sony will keep a record of everything you purchase, and will allow you to re-download anything that you lose".

http://www.psxextreme.com/ps3-news/2822.html

___________________

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 How i know this is a joke - 80gb Hard Drive for $199, right, the hard drive alone is woth $100+, No Blu-Ray - only if sony has lost all hope, if ps3 sales were less than 5m it might have fooled me.


 I have a 400GB HDD sitting next to me, plugged into my computer, that cost less than $100 brand new.

It's a Western Digital. Y'know, top-of-the-line, best hard drives out there.



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