Doh...! You're completely right.But backups don't restore onto a different PS3!
Sorry about that..
On the positive side, you've saved me from wasting time doing a backup each month!
Cheers,
Dean
Doh...! You're completely right.But backups don't restore onto a different PS3!
Hmm.. interesting. We've got an entire studio of people (60-70-ish), and a *lot* of people got 60GB PS3s at launch. And I've only heard of one breaking (BD unit failing to recognise disk insertion)..I don't know Dean each member at my former place who bought a 60 has had red/yellow or drive failure and gotten a replacement. I haven't seen/heard a single 40 (Shifty may have had a 40 can't remember) or 80 have problems but I know I intentionally stayed away from the 60s when buying my PS3.
Doh...! You're completely right.
Sorry about that..
On the positive side, you've saved me from wasting time doing a backup each month!
Cheers,
Dean
I didn't really say anything that contradicts your points raised in this post. As I replied to JPT, Sony's position is valid and understandable. I don't disagree with it, but Sony should be clearer when they mention backups. It was certainly a waste of time for me when I did it! And they also don't clearly explain the need and method to unlist you PS3 hardware from your PSN account. I didn't find out about that until the PS3 was gone, so that's one of my 5 hardware's down. Not that that'll really be an issue, but still, it's bad form.I think you are taking his situation and applying it to all PS3 users, which is a bit unfair.
Well, if you have media on the PS3, that's true. Save data is far quicker to backup on its own. Themes are only an issue if you have lots instead of one or two choice selections. Game-data like patches must be very hit-and-miss; none of mine was restored and I had to patch everything from scratch. User profiles is kinda irrelevant. Didn't restore PSN account info or local settings. It didn't backup my PSN US account at all. So all it did was have a couple of names in accounts, nothing else. It's not that hard to add a new account and retype the name!This is not correct. Being on my 3rd PS3, I can confirm that the following is restored onto multiple PS3s
o Save Data
o Some Game Data (installs, some DLC, etc)
o Photos
o Music
o Videos (Content not purchased from the PS Store)
o Themes
o User Profiles (does not always restore PSN account information)
o User Settings (Display, Audio, Network, etc)
It's more than worth it if you want to save time.
And it has to remain that way. The whole problem here is piracy. If an HDD could be restored to any PS3, pirates would offer HDD clones full of content. What Sony need to do though is offer a service to transfer content from one PS3 to another, which they can keep tabs on without breaching their security.
I'm still of the opinion the backup tool was aimed almost exclusively at people upgrading the hardware and not on replacing hardware, because there is no specific functionality to facilitate that.
Yes, reports of PS3 failures aren't as uncommon as they were. I thought with XB360 the service is a return-to-base one, so you get your HDD or content back, but it's a 2+ week wait? Whereas Sony apparently make a doorstep replacement, so there's no delay, but the issue with HDD's then rears its ugly head.
I think the only option is to contact Sony directly explaining your position and hope they can make an exception, which isn't an issue for 99.99% of PS3 owners who can download their content again.
That's a relief, I was getting scared reading through this thread.This is not correct. Being on my 3rd PS3, I can confirm that the following is restored onto multiple PS3s
o Save Data
o Some Game Data (installs, some DLC, etc)
o Photos
o Music
o Videos (Content not purchased from the PS Store)
o Themes
o User Profiles (does not always restore PSN account information)
o User Settings (Display, Audio, Network, etc)
It's more than worth it if you want to save time. Doing a restoration can save you anywhere from an hour, to a few hours. While the games themselves may not be restored, a lot of the other data is, and it's far easier (and faster) to simply restore that data via a backup, than it is to try and reinstall all those themes and put all your media back on your PS3.
PSN games can be shared on up to 5 boxes, so they are not an issue at all. You can always redownload them, or even share some of your purchases (!)
Purchased videos are tied to hardware but you can call Sony up to transfer the license to a new machine (Once a year I think since PS3 is pretty robust). Rented videos will be gone in 24 hours or 14 days. You probably have to call them too if your PS3 fails half way.
Game saves are the problematic ones because you're the only source. That's what we are talking about above. Plus...
deepbrown's "press games" are one-off specials. Would be hard to get a new promo code for them.
I read that PS3 caps the HDD size to 500Gb. 1Tb won't run beyond certain firmware version. Try google for the info.
I thought with XB360 the service is a return-to-base one, so you get your HDD or content back, but it's a 2+ week wait?
With the X360, you're allowed to transfer all your license keys once every 6 months (or is it a year) to a different 360. If they send you a replacement console for a broken one, its done automatically. It allows you to play everything on that console without having to be logged on. Otherewise, any content that you've bought can be redownloaded to any console as long as you're logged in with that gamertag. Also, you're only allowed to have your gamertag Live on one console at a time.
Ha! The painful irony of that is I went to backup my LBP savefile so I wouldn't lose my creations in case of tragic failure. Selected the USB device, save over the existing one...oops! That's all my hard work gone! I should have triple-checked, but it was surprisingly easy to muddle up restoring from USB and saving to USB!Yeah, moral of the story is: backup game saves often.
I think you are taking his situation and applying it to all PS3 users, which is a bit unfair.
With the XB360, you can detach your HDD, keep it, and play that content whenever you like. That is their fix to a failed console.
With the PS3, you can back up your data, or, conversely, re-download everything onto the new console.
For the average user, both situations are manageable, but not ideal. In his case, he cannot redownload the press builds of these games, but that situation does not transfer to all PS3 users. If they were standard builds of games that were purchased, a redownload would solve all of the problems (well, all except the save data issue, for which a backup utility is provided).
Honestly, if Sony provides standard users with all of the tools to ensure their data can be kept safe and up-to-date (via the backup feature) I fail to see what needs to be addressed, other than the management of press builds of games and the users who may have them.
That said, the backup is still usefull, as it will restore user data, save data, install data (meaning once you back up you will not have to reinstall data from disc based games). The only thing that cannot be restored from a backup save onto another PS3 are downloaded titles, which can be re-downloaded for normal users.
Ha! The painful irony of that is I went to backup my LBP savefile so I wouldn't lose my creations in case of tragic failure. Selected the USB device, save over the existing one...oops! That's all my hard work gone! I should have triple-checked, but it was surprisingly easy to muddle up restoring from USB and saving to USB!
Yeah, moral of the story is: backup game saves often.
That's a sh*t moral. The moral is - I should be able to get my data, when a supposedly reliable piece of hardware fails from no fault of my own. SIMPLE AS.