its like comparing their music CD players with the Walkman.
one plays Disk and the other plays files.
its like comparing their music CD players with the Walkman.
one plays Disk and the other plays files.
| Xoj said: game will be bigger. for consoles. digital download its not here yet for games that are 25-40gb. for some it would take a week to download it. DD for portables it's more doable, games are 1.6gb max. |
yea just looked at what happened to T-MOBILE'S side kick and the data loss from the Microsoft server's that T-mobile uses
cloud computing has a way to go
example:
Bad Day For Microsoft (And Cloud) Following T-Mobile Sidekick Snafu
By Chad Berndtson, ChannelWeb
9:20 AM EDT Mon. Oct. 12, 2009 Microsoft (NSDQ:MSFT) and T-Mobile have egg on their faces and it's another dark day for cloud-based services following word from T-Mobile that users of Sidekick -- the T-Mobile smartphone that gets software and online services through Microsoft's Danger subsidiary -- would not be able to recover personal data following a week's worth of Sidekick service outages.
T-Mobile confirmed over the weekend that user data such as contacts, stored photos and other information is probably gone forever, due to a technical glitch with Microsoft's servers. In a message posted to its Web site Saturday, T-Mobile admitted that any data not stored locally on users' Sidekicks has "almost certainly" been lost.
"Our teams continue to work around the clock in hopes of discovering some way to recover this information," wrote T-Mobile in the statement. "However, the likelihood of a successful outcome is extremely low."
T-Mobile didn't confirm how many of the 1 million or so Sidekick users have lost data in the outage. A T-Mobile spokesman told The Wall Street Journal that "we don't think it's a majority of the customers." A Microsoft spokeswoman further told the newspaper that it is an "extraordinary situation" and that Microsoft and T-Mobile "understand that and are working to do everything they can for customers."
Microsoft has more public face to lose than T-Mobile following the Sidekick glitch and will now face continued criticism that its mobile services -- particularly as they relate to the cloud -- aren't up to snuff with rivals like Google and Apple (NSDQ:AAPL). More broadly, however, the glitch lends more ammunition to those who question the stability of cloud services.
Google (NSDQ:GOOG)'s services, for example, have been called into question following multiple Gmail outages in recent weeks. Google itself admitted in a 10-Q filing that its cloud is "not fully redundant."
http://www.crn.com/mobile/220600251;jsessionid=D34DPDWKKDOWRQE1GHRSKHWATMY32JVN

I AM BOLO
100% lover "nothing else matter's" after that...
ps:
Proud psOne/2/3/p owner. I survived Aplcalyps3 and all I got was this lousy Signature.
Physical copies are always better IMO.
If we go DD only in the future, companies will try making their games as small
as possible which means no 50Gig games or higher. Imagine a world with know
MGS4...