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Forums - Sales - Genuine Playstation 2 sales total

Yes it's a fantastic number and nearly as many as the DS will sell :0P



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dara5000 said:
highwaystar101 said:
Wikipedia is not a reeliable source by any means, honestly the data is 50% bullshit, 15% hearsay, 25% propaganda and 10% truth.

Seriously, do yourself a favor, never rely on wikipedia because it is all crap. Vgchartz is he most likely reliable source by a long way.

 

I know its not reliable. Only because the number is taken from an offical sony quote did i take it seriously. Also this number has been there for ages.

good luck for 3rd in the league by the way!

 

Well thank you for the compliment, I think Aston Villa have done brilliantly this season. It is really good for once, to think a couple of seasons ago we were staring the wrong way at a relegation battle.

Well you see, that figure on the wikipedia page comes under the 'propaganda' area in my opinion I'm afraid. I didn't mean to cause offense anyway, sorry.



Well, I can tell you that Wikipedia gets things wrong.

It lists 3M for the Intellivision, when if you read the source cited, is is 3M pre-crash PLUS 3M post-crash.

 

From Wikipedia

Over 3 million Intellivision units were sold and a total of 125 games were released for the console.[1][2][3]

From Classic Gaming (source (1) cited in Wikipedia) http://classicgaming.gamespy.com/View.php?view=ConsoleMuseum.Detail&id=17&game=9

Despite Mattel's awful marketing, the Intellivision sold over 3 million units. ... The company went bankrupt later that year, but had managed to sell three million systems during its run—no small accomplishment in the face of Nintendo's market dominance.

(The other two citations say 3M total sold --by the Intellivision programmers. However, I hae read elsewhere where they have stated they only have records pre-crash).

Mike from Morgantown



      


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Sony shipped 133.8m PS2s through September 2008. Through December, the total should be approaching 140m shipped.

Kaz said 140m in an interview in August - but I think he was misquoted or mispeaking. Sony's financial report for March 2008 said they were at almost 130m PS2s shipped. So in the quarter ending June 2008 they topped 130 million - and Kaz would have been referencing that for August figures which means he should have been reported/cited as saying 130m not 140m.

PS2 is available in far more countries than Wii/PS3/PSP/DS/360 are at the moment as well, and it has been available far longer as well, so the build up in retail inventory is greater than for the other systems.



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When there are more laws, there are more criminals.

- Lao Tzu

thanks for the clarification mate. makes sense!



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mike_intellivision said:

Well, I can tell you that Wikipedia gets things wrong.

It lists 3M for the Intellivision, when if you read the source cited, is is 3M pre-crash PLUS 3M post-crash.

 

From Wikipedia

Over 3 million Intellivision units were sold and a total of 125 games were released for the console.[1][2][3]

From Classic Gaming (source (1) cited in Wikipedia) http://classicgaming.gamespy.com/View.php?view=ConsoleMuseum.Detail&id=17&game=9

Despite Mattel's awful marketing, the Intellivision sold over 3 million units. ... The company went bankrupt later that year, but had managed to sell three million systems during its run—no small accomplishment in the face of Nintendo's market dominance.

(The other two citations say 3M total sold --by the Intellivision programmers. However, I hae read elsewhere where they have stated they only have records pre-crash).

Mike from Morgantown

http://www.theonion.com/content/node/27836

 

Factual Error Found On Internet

May 22, 2002 | Issue 38•19

LONGMONT, CO—The Information Age was dealt a stunning blow Monday, when a factual error was discovered on the Internet. The error was found on TedsUltimateBradyBunch.com, a Brady Bunch fan site that incorrectly listed the show's debut year as 1968, not 1969.

Enlarge Image

The shocking error.

Caryn Wisniewski, a Pueblo, CO, legal secretary and diehard Brady Bunch fan, came across the mistake while searching for information about the show's first-season cast.

"When I first saw 1968 on the web page, I thought, 'Wow, apparently, all those Brady Bunch books I've read listing 1969 as the show's first year were wrong,'" Wisniewski told reporters at a press conference. "But even though I obviously trusted the Internet, I was still kind of puzzled. So I checked other Brady Bunch fan sites, and all of them said 1969. After a while, it slowly began to sink in that the World Wide Web might be tainted with unreliable information."

Following up on her suspicion, Wisniewski phoned her public library, the ABC television network, and the office of Brady Bunch producer Sherwood Schwartz—all of whom confirmed that "Ted's Ultimate Brady Bunch Site" was in error.

Attempts to contact the webmaster of "Ted's Ultimate Brady Bunch Site," identified as Ted Crewes of Naugatuck, CT, were unsuccessful. The page has been taken offline by its host, Cheaphost.net, which released a statement Tuesday.

"We at Cheaphost were deeply saddened and disturbed to learn that one of the millions of pages we host contained a factual discrepancy," the web-posted statement read. "Please be assured that we are doing everything within our power to ensure that nothing of the sort happens again. We will not rest until the Internet's once-sterling reputation as the world's leading source for 100 percent reliable information is restored."

Paul Boutin, senior editor of Wired, said the error is likely to have a profound effect on how the Internet is perceived.

"Will we ever fully trust the Web again?" Boutin asked. "We may well be witnessing the dawn of a new era of skepticism in which we no longer accept everything we read online at face value. But regardless of what the future holds, one thing is clear: The Internet's status as the world's definitive repository of incontrovertible fact has been jeopardized."

Peter Luyck, 30, a Dallas-area graphic designer and frequent Internet user, was crestfallen.

"If it happens once, it can happen again," Luyck said. "I shudder to think that, one dark day in the future, misinformation could again make its way online. In fact, it may already have. How do we know that trusted sites like the Drudge Report and Fucked Company are as accurate as we instinctively trust them to be? Can we blindly trust that SpideyRulez.com is correct in its reportage that the upcoming Spider-Man sequel will feature Christopher Walken as Dr. Octopus? Pandora is out of the box."

Though the Brady Bunch error is the first confirmed instance of false information on the Internet, scares have occurred in the past. In 1998, an e-mail sent to a woman in Warner Robins, GA, made an unverifiable claim that she could earn thousands of dollars from an initial $5 investment. The claim was never conclusively proven false, and no charges were filed.



The 140 million number was manufactured units. That includes retail display models, testing kits, giveaways, in house use, warranty replacements, etc...

The 134 million number is shipped (sold to retail).

The 123 million number is VGC's tracking in the markets they cover.



The rEVOLution is not being televised