Or Xperia.
From what I understand Xperia performs quite decent in Europe, or at least in Scandinavia.
Or Xperia.
No. The IPhone has widespread appeal outside of America.
The cycle with relation to the period between refresh is important, every 3 years is a better sell to me than every 1 or 2.
3rd year is usually when the consoles start to suffer.
I'm sorry - suffer in what way? Year 3 is typically when we see the fruits of developers gaining mastery over writing specialized code towards a particular piece of hardware. In fact, games tend to look better & better on consoles as years go by. Will there be drawbacks? Absolutely. But part of the benefit of writing code towards a fixed box for a long period of time is seeing how much power you can truly wring out of it.
Like the iPhone model does not equal exactly the iPhone model.Sure, why not, people went crazy when it launched in Japan.
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Ok, seriously, we all know how it really went, it struggled outside US on Day 1 and annual updates wont do XBOX any good. It's not an iPhone and never will be. Same goes for PS4.
Can the Xbox become the iPhone?
I feel like we've discussed this to death in the other thread, but basically, no. At least, not in the way most people are thinking of. Xbox couldn't pull this off as a closed-box platform. They would have to be wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy more open, and depending on what sort of sales they could pick up, they may end up losing support for the new models unless they can get the userbase to move over.
Considering it took them over 2 years to hit 20 million, I don't think that userbase is going to convert to a new piece of hardware anytime soon. And if we did get 5-10 million core Xbox users to go ahead and buy the new machine within the first 12 months, those are just users who are no longer purchasing software on their old box that I then have to continue supporting. It won't work.
I can't believe that people are now comparing the iPhone to the XO. They have widely different purposes, and smartphones are almost vital for some people for communication purposes. A home game console isn't for productivity purposes. Everyone I know has some sort of a smartphone, but I can't say the same about owning a gaming console. See the difference? Upgrading a console every two years is just not feasible financially.
Smartphones are very personal products(I would say almost like a toothbrush) that are used and abused on day to day basis, so the can't last for more than three years.
Nope , console users do not change hardware every 2 years.
Smartphones are very personal products(I would say almost like a toothbrush) that are used and abused on day to day basis, so the can't last for more than three years.
Didn't the Xbox Live indie Arcade get shutdown?
From what I understand Xperia performs quite decent in Europe, or at least in Scandinavia.
Xbox brand doesn't have worldwide appeal like iPhone or a PlayStation.
No. The IPhone has widespread appeal outside of America.
No. The IPhone has widespread appeal outside of America.
New CEOIs the Windows brand more appealing than the Xbox brand? At one point it seemed Microsoft felt the opposite.
I think trying to put consoles on a faster, more iterative, upgrade cycle is a bad idea.
Phone upgrade cycles were heavily assisted by carrier subsidy plans that were structured around 2 year cycles. If you kept your phone beyond two years you were throwing money away.
The batteries in phones degrade pretty quickly. When people notice that their phone dies earlier in the day than it used to, they upgrade to fix it.
Also Phones often need to be replaced prematurely due to damage. I don't think people are as likely to drop a console in the toilet.
I would also point out that the iPad's sales numbers flatlined after a few years of constant new models. People hold on to the old models because they are good enough. The only thing that has spike iPad sales recently was the iPad Pro, which adds substantial new hardware features.
From everything I've heard Spencer say it's mainly sounds like they want to avoid a 360 scenario where its sticking around for 8-9 years while great new progress in tech is out and available.
8-9 years is an eternity for consumer tech. Sounds like they just want to able to refresh when it makes sense.
It also helps that the plan is to be forward/back compatible from now on too.
This is one of the major reasons why I'm skeptical about the idea of any hardware manufacturer spending billions on R&D to ship a new console every 2 to 3 years.
There comes a point where technology is "good enough" for some people regardless of how unsexy it may be compared to the latest more powerful hardware. The Xbox 360 is a great console even now if you want to play a large variety of great games. It may be from last generation but as long as new games are still being released for it that, for the most part, are available on Xbox One, why upgrade?
Of course there are many different and valid answers to that question. For Sony and Microsoft, they have to be careful not to make their current consoles too good to the point that it hinders early adoption of the next generation. That's a very real danger when we start talking about shorter hardware cycles. No console manufacturer in the world can afford to keep putting out slightly improved hardware revisions without significant adoption rates and they will have to convince consumers that their current consoles are no longer "good enough." (They will also have to convince retailers to carry the various hardware.)
Ironically, I believe that by continuing to release the latest games on the older hardware, that actually can justify NOT upgrading to the latest hardware. And if the latest games stop being released on the older hardware, now you have an expensive piece of hardware whose value is limited to 2 to 3 years of games instead of our normal 5 to 7 year cycle. At that point, the hardware cycles are no different than the past except now, the financial burden is on the developers and consumers to keep up with the rapid development in hardware.
My two cents anyway. We'll see what happens.
These threads are getting ridiculous. Can we at least wait for something more concrete?
But no, it's can't. Yearly console updates are dumb. Even two years is dumb. They would have to do something pretty special to make this appealing to people.