Not particularly excited about Facebook or Twitter on my 360 account. I hate twitter with a passion, and I'd prefer to keep my Facebook separate.
That's exactly my point: waggle. Waggle is not the future, it failed to make any meaningful imprint beyond something that you did in Wii games in lieu of an actual button press. Nintendo's own efforts in Wii Sports notwithstanding.
The Wii has demonstrated that peripherals can sell if the applications are there to back it up.If the camera is bundled, it can be a moderate success.
If it is given out for free to everyone who already owns a 360, it can be a much larger success.
Otherwise, it's essentially meaningless to this console generation outside of enthusiast gamers.
That's exactly my point: waggle. Waggle is not the future, it failed to make any meaningful imprint beyond something that you did in Wii games in lieu of an actual button press. Nintendo's own efforts in Wii Sports notwithstanding.
yes and this is an evolution of that tech concept, perhaps bringing it to fruition.
of course my point was .75 million people/month thought enough of waggle to buy one for the last 3+ years.
I don't believe they said anything about it being included in SKU. Just that it would be supported by every Xbox 360 console & every console going forward.
No mention of it being bundled so far. I imagine it will be at some point, otherwise there's no point. Of course, they could go the Wii Fit approach and have a bundle for every single title that uses the camera.
I think it will be hard for this to do well, since it isn't included in every box.
The Wii has demonstrated that peripherals can sell if the applications are there to back it up.
Yeah, seriously. Why the hell would anyone care about it? It seems pretty damn pointless to me. I can get excited about games and controllers, but Facebook and Twitter? No.
$200? I can't see that. The tech they based this off was demoed at CES last year and the company who was talking about it pitched it as much, much cheaper.Nintendo has proven that peripherals under $100 can sell well if the applications are there to back it up.
This thing is rumored to cost $200 (NY Times). Granted, costs may come down, but if it's a dime over $60, it will fail terribly.
There is simply no market for it. The folks who want simple motion control have Wii. They understand that they have a controller, they swing it. This gesture based system simply cannot succeed in a market where the Wii has already been a success, especially not if it's price is high.
It's nice, I'm excited for the technology, but the timing is wrong. This project would have been better off getting more development time and waiting until the next console cycle. As it stands right now, it's just a giant "me too". A joke, if you will (as much as the Sixaxis controller is).
Well, I think my write-up is as good as any.
If you are on facebook and also Live you dont have to disconnect your experiences... not logging off to facebook.. you just facebook through live there are people who essentially live on facebook.. that plus face recognition opens alot of avenues to an MS based interactive web lifestyle... makes sense to me...