Microsoft are pretty confident about the Xbox One and their hardware choices. More fuel to the fire....The jury is still out on whether hindsight is going to say Microsoft made a bad bet.
We won't know until devs really get into exploiting the next gen platforms and the tools and general knowledge mature.
The decision to forego a GDDR5 bus might have given them 10-20 Watts of power they didn't need to dissipate, were free to dedicate to other things, or some additional leeway in how the chip clocks or yields.
Conversely, having that kind of power hanging around your neck might make some choices less tenable.
I think using that particular urban legend is more informative about the person using it than what they applied it to.
It's frequently a sign of a "I personally don't know the reasons for X, so it must not be necessary" thought process.
Major Nelson mentioned a few things on Reddit supporting Albert Penello's theory about the capabilities of Xbox One hardware. He wished the truth to come out in the future.
Read more at -it has some other replies from Hryb-:As I said above, Albert is one of the most amazing people I work with - that's why I invited him on my podcast a few weeks ago.I jab him a bit about posting on 'GAF (fact: they would not approve my account of there) but he's smart and driven. He's also right: We have some of smartest programmers in the world working on Xbox One. I am very much looking forward to the next few months (and beyond) as the truth comes out.
http://www.reddit.com/r/xboxone/comments/1lt48f/albert_penello_there_is_no_way_were_giving_up_a/cc2nezu
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