Exactly. Despite all the faults and failings of Sony, people still wanting PS3. Give them a chance to buy one and I'm sure they will.
Meh, all the PS3 needs is a price cut.
Exactly. Despite all the faults and failings of Sony, people still wanting PS3. Give them a chance to buy one and I'm sure they will.
the last round of 360 pricedrops killed PS3 sales, and if I'm correct the number of months the PS3 actually sold more than the 360 can be counted on one hand.
I wouldn't be surprised if Sony starts focussing more on the Media Center aspect of the PS3 instead of games.
Indeed, they brought the sales levels back from dead (PS3 levels) to life (where they are now)Weren´t it that the last round of 360 Pricedrops brought the 360 sales back to life? I don´t seem to recall that the PS3 stopped selling.
Home entertainment system, a cheap media box if you must.Media Center? i don´t get it
The PS3 is expensive everywhere, maybe the $-Yen makes it a bit harder on the US?Besides the obvious point that the PS3 is expensive, how come that only USA can´t afford the PS3?
Home entertainment system, a cheap media box if you must.
Cheap Media Box, i don´t get it, not at all
The PlayStation has lost market share, absolutely. The total number of PS3s sold at the end of this gen will be less than if Sony had launched at $400 and price dropped to $250-300 by now or even less, without a doubt. I disagree though that the PS brand has been knocked for six, holds little value, and all Sony can do now is mop up a few sales up from the outskirts of the market, in contrast to people like neliz who talk as though Sony have killed the PS brand. PS3 doesn't need a complete makeover and slurry of varied titles to kickstart a second wind. A price drop is, IMHO, all that's needed to reinvigorate PS3 sales and over the next 5 years, it could do very well considering its beginnings.Isn't there going to be a point, though, where enough people have already committed to one of the other two options that the number of people who want/need a PS3 is going to have to be affected?
Blu ray is the third rail here ... it all depends on your opinion of what success is this generation.
I'll still stick with my opinion that the PS3 would have done far far better had it launched without BluRay and thus at a similar cost to the X360.
No one can say whether it still would have sold better or not due to it being hard to develope for relative to the X360. It's quite possible that lack of games might still have held it back.
However, I'd contend that at a similar price point and without the delays in launch needed to get enough of the blueray laser crystals (remember there was a shortage at the time) that it quite possibly could have launched closer to the X360 launch and at a similar price. Although being hard to develope for it's possible that the delays were inevitable regardless in order to actually have some games at launch.
Had that happened, it would have absolutely wiped the floor with X360 and todays HD console landscape would be completely different. The X360 is a good console, but so is the PS3. The only advantages that X360 has IMO is that it's quite a bit easier to develope for and has a lower price point.
So yes, it's only an OPINION. Not a fact. I'm not claiming it as a fact. But it is my opinion that BlueRay is the major failing of the PS3 not currently leading the X360.
The fact that by including BlueRay may have helped Sony win the HD player war against HD-DVD is irrelevant to that point.
Regards,
SB
A similarly priced PS3 would have sold incredibly well in comparison rendering the easy to program nature of the X360 moot. Similar to PS2 versus Dreamcast. The PS3 would have sold enough consoles that it wouldn't really matter if the X360 was easier to program for...
I agree.
The X360 can do everything media wise that the PS3 can do with the exception of Blu Ray and surfing the web.
Surfing the web mostly sucks on the PS3 for me, but it is something that the X360 does not have.
The PlayStation has lost market share, absolutely. The total number of PS3s sold at the end of this gen will be less than if Sony had launched at $400 and price dropped to $250-300 by now or even less, without a doubt. I disagree though that the PS brand has been knocked for six, holds little value, and all Sony can do now is mop up a few sales up from the outskirts of the market, in contrast to people like neliz who talk as though Sony have killed the PS brand. PS3 doesn't need a complete makeover and slurry of varied titles to kickstart a second wind. A price drop is, IMHO, all that's needed to reinvigorate PS3 sales and over the next 5 years, it could do very well considering its beginnings.
Can a 2.5 hdd be attached via usb to see films directly ?
don't know to be honest, but I don't see why not.
I believe it is true for both systems. Also, aren't the files limited to 4GB?
I may buy an big cheap external hard drive for my movies and format it to FAT32 for when I travel.
Anyone know of any free formatting apps? The ones I know of are all limited to a fairly smallish size hard drive.
Can a 2.5 hdd be attached via usb to see films directly ?
Yes. I have done this so many times. While both the 360 and PS3 can do this...the limited number of video types (and not supporting external subtitle file) just make the whole experience not as rewarding as HTPC.
Exactly. Despite all the faults and failings of Sony, people still wanting PS3. Give them a chance to buy one and I'm sure they will.
Indeed, and there will be a price cut this year. That may change the market significantly.
The Playstation brand still holds much more cachet than the Xbox, (which also suffers from association to MS).
These days consumer sales of the 360 are price driven (since all the core Xbox gamers, have long since bought their 360's), the PS3 is being bought for more aspirational reasons. It's not healthy for a console to be the bargain basement offering on the market.
or didn't think the PS3 was worth the extra price.
I don't think my anecdotal evidence is any more definitively accurate than your beliefs, BTW, when trying to understand the behavior of the entire market. I just want to point out that you are making a lot of assumptions about consumer thinking that are completely at odds with my personal experience.