- Aug 26, 2010
 
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I seriously doubt that the next generation of Xbox consoles can survive using the regular DVD format.  So my question is, what do you guys think they will use in the new system?
			
			This is kind of what I thought. I doubt they will want to pay to use Blu-Ray, but DVD just doesn't have enough space anymore.I would guess no rotating media, and some internal flash based storage. And a USB 3.0 interface for USB 3.0 thumb drives.
I'd say no way that a SSD is going in there. Even with two more years SSDs are going to still be expensive, and aren't we talking about solving coming space issues here? They're going to want a 500GB drive at least I would think.
I don't think abandoning physical media can happen now or even in two years. Maybe outside the USA, but the US is a huge market. Some statistics on the percentage of xbox 360s that actually connect to xbox live more then once every 6 months would be of interest here. I suspect that a large portion of them are connected to low bandwidth connections or never connect at all. Try selling a lot of games when you have to push 8+ gigs or something over a DSL connection. I wouldn't be surprised to see a steam/cloud like system as an option but unless they have no competitors they'd be giving up a lot of sales going on digital distribution.
That said, I'm not sure what a better physical media choice would be. $7 a bluray sounds pretty expensive honestly. I don't know what wholesale prices on flash memory is but I can't imagine it being a much better deal than bluray. If you stuff a huge hard drive in the console I actually don't know how much of a burden installing from multiple DVDs would be. Didn't a lot of games in the 90s use CD swapping, and that was a lot worse situation than installing to a hard drive once.
Is it possible to still use HD-DVD like some one suggested? Cram a bluray/HD-DVD combo drive in there.
My guess is flash drives, probably of a proprietary design. I would think they would still want a bluray drive though because they seem to want to sell the xbox as a media device, not just a game console.
its 7$ per console not per BR diskThat said, I'm not sure what a better physical media choice would be. $7 a bluray sounds pretty expensive honestly. I don't know what wholesale prices on flash memory is but I can't imagine it being a much better deal than bluray. If you stuff a huge hard drive in the console I actually don't know how much of a burden installing from multiple DVDs would be. Didn't a lot of games in the 90s use CD swapping, and that was a lot worse situation than installing to a hard drive once.
I don't think BR is a big deal, but I don't see a lot of people being happy switching discs in the next generation. I just think that they will need a way to sell their games using something other than a regular DVD.i don't think BR matters that much. xbox seems to be doing ok with netflix/hulu and zune videos.
i don't think BR matters that much. xbox seems to be doing ok with netflix/hulu and zune videos.
its 7$ per console not per BR disk
a 16GB USB thumbdrive costs ~$15 - and games are only getting larger. sure they would get a bulk discount but its still a signifigent cost
putting a SSD in the console is pretty pointless, HDD read loadtimes are really not an issue its the disk read times that really slow things down.
And yes if MS wants to market it as anything other then a pure gaming device it will have to have a BR player in it IMO
weren't blur ray drives similarly expensive when sony incorporated them into PS3? In two years, I think SDD @ 50 cents/gig is attainable, making a 500gb SSD $250, similar to a blue ray drive @ PS3 launch, no?
I think Microsoft might go with some sort of semi-proprietary format based on Blu-Ray (or maybe HD-DVD) technology but that doesn't require licencing the entire suite of patents.
Unlike pretty much every other computer technology, flash memory doesn't have long term history of steady price declines. There not a lot of reason to believe SSD prices will decline that much in the next two years. It's possible they could even go up in price.
I think the only real question is what sort of optical media a hypothetical new Xbox console released in the next couple of years would use. The capacity limit of DVDs haven't been much of a problem throughout the Xbox 360's history, but it has become more of an issue lately. I think Microsoft might go with some sort of semi-proprietary format based on Blu-Ray (or maybe HD-DVD) technology but that doesn't require licencing the entire suite of patents. Microsoft really doesn't like to be feature deficient with respect to their competitors, but I think they're still going to be reluctant to hand even a small victory to Sony by licencing Blu-Ray in its entirety.
I don't know the legal ramifications, but what if Sony says no to letting MS use Blu-Ray in the next xbox? Can they legally do that?
What makes you think SSD prices will go up? I'm not exactly sure how much they cost when they were first released by surely they were more expensive than $1/gb no? Haven't we already seen a nice decline in prices?
I don't know the legal ramifications, but what if Sony says no to letting MS use Blu-Ray in the next xbox? Can they legally do that?
So, from a strategic stand point, why wouldn't Sony just say no to cripple the competition? I am sure MS could throw HD-DVD in the new system, just to use the extra space on discs, but it wouldn't be Blu-Ray.Yes, of course they can.
