Originally posted by: Dacalo
To my knowledge:
PS3 - yes
Wii - no
360 - no
Originally posted by: mugs
when you factor in warranty costs though, who knows.
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: mugs
when you factor in warranty costs though, who knows.
Yeh, the three year warranty against RROD combined with the RROD rate will probably dent their profit margins on the hardware. Did they not give refunds to people who had proof that they had their 360s repaired for RROD as well before the extended warranty started?
Originally posted by: Sadaiyappan
No one but the console maker knows for sure. Other third parties like to speculate, they say Sony loses money on each console it sells. My guess is that depends on the model, I think they break even on the 40GB and lose money on the 60/80 GB.
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: Dacalo
To my knowledge:
PS3 - yes
Wii - no
360 - no
I assume you're answering the question "Is console X selling for a loss?" Which is pretty much the opposite of what the OP asked. 😛
Topic Summary: or are they losing money on each console sold?
Originally posted by: Dacalo
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: Dacalo
To my knowledge:
PS3 - yes
Wii - no
360 - no
I assume you're answering the question "Is console X selling for a loss?" Which is pretty much the opposite of what the OP asked. 😛
Topic Summary: or are they losing money on each console sold?
I assume OP would have common sense to know which part of his question I was answering. :lips:
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: Dacalo
To my knowledge:
PS3 - yes
Wii - no
360 - no
I assume you're answering the question "Is console X selling for a loss?" Which is pretty much the opposite of what the OP asked. 😛
Wii has sold for a profit from the start. 360 started off selling for a loss, but after a year or so started selling for more than cost of goods sold... when you factor in warranty costs though, who knows.
Originally posted by: Kromis
Nintendo makes about $25 or $75 for each Wii sold. I forgot which it was.
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: mugs
when you factor in warranty costs though, who knows.
Yeh, the three year warranty against RROD combined with the RROD rate will probably dent their profit margins on the hardware. Did they not give refunds to people who had proof that they had their 360s repaired for RROD as well before the extended warranty started?
Originally posted by: CasioTech
man, wise up they never lose money on anything they make. If they say they do, it's complete BS.
Originally posted by: CasioTech
man, wise up they never lose money on anything they make. If they say they do, it's complete BS.
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: CasioTech
man, wise up they never lose money on anything they make. If they say they do, it's complete BS.
When the PS3 came out, analysts calculated the hardware cost to be nearly $900 for the 60 GB. Even if that was a high estimate, do you really think it was $300 high?
Originally posted by: CasioTech
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: CasioTech
man, wise up they never lose money on anything they make. If they say they do, it's complete BS.
When the PS3 came out, analysts calculated the hardware cost to be nearly $900 for the 60 GB. Even if that was a high estimate, do you really think it was $300 high?
I think when they calculate 'hardware cost' they would price a state of the art processor to cost $300 when in fact it costs less money than an obsolete processor which they value at $30.
One of the biggest things are they also factor in R&D into the price of hardware and most likely base the prices it will cost the 'average' consumer to build a machine not a company which makes millions of units using plants and technology which are completely paid off and developed in house.
Basically, if I bought the ps3, it should cost me $900 for Sony to make the usual 300-400% markup, so even if they sell them at cost, that is not to say they ever or ever will lose money on any hardware or device.
No company wants to lose billions of dollars and if they say they have it's 'potential' money which they expected to make and haven't but hardly loses of any kind.
Originally posted by: ric1287
Originally posted by: CasioTech
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: CasioTech
man, wise up they never lose money on anything they make. If they say they do, it's complete BS.
When the PS3 came out, analysts calculated the hardware cost to be nearly $900 for the 60 GB. Even if that was a high estimate, do you really think it was $300 high?
I think when they calculate 'hardware cost' they would price a state of the art processor to cost $300 when in fact it costs less money than an obsolete processor which they value at $30.
One of the biggest things are they also factor in R&D into the price of hardware and most likely base the prices it will cost the 'average' consumer to build a machine not a company which makes millions of units using plants and technology which are completely paid off and developed in house.
Basically, if I bought the ps3, it should cost me $900 for Sony to make the usual 300-400% markup, so even if they sell them at cost, that is not to say they ever or ever will lose money on any hardware or device.
No company wants to lose billions of dollars and if they say they have it's 'potential' money which they expected to make and haven't but hardly loses of any kind.
You should start your own company, you seem to have this whole "business" thing down.
Sony is _losing money_ in their games division right now. It's right on their quarterly earnings report. Read it, and be informed. The things you're discussing are related to opportunity cost, which is generally not on the balance sheet.Originally posted by: CasioTech
No company wants to lose billions of dollars and if they say they have it's 'potential' money which they expected to make and haven't but hardly loses of any kind.
Originally posted by: ric1287
Originally posted by: CasioTech
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: CasioTech
man, wise up they never lose money on anything they make. If they say they do, it's complete BS.
When the PS3 came out, analysts calculated the hardware cost to be nearly $900 for the 60 GB. Even if that was a high estimate, do you really think it was $300 high?
I think when they calculate 'hardware cost' they would price a state of the art processor to cost $300 when in fact it costs less money than an obsolete processor which they value at $30.
One of the biggest things are they also factor in R&D into the price of hardware and most likely base the prices it will cost the 'average' consumer to build a machine not a company which makes millions of units using plants and technology which are completely paid off and developed in house.
Basically, if I bought the ps3, it should cost me $900 for Sony to make the usual 300-400% markup, so even if they sell them at cost, that is not to say they ever or ever will lose money on any hardware or device.
No company wants to lose billions of dollars and if they say they have it's 'potential' money which they expected to make and haven't but hardly loses of any kind.
You should start your own company, you seem to have this whole "business" thing down.