Sony PS3 Review ***pic's & info***
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Sony PS3 Review ***pic's & info***
The PlayStation 3 system will be available with two different hard-drive options in Japan and the United States in November 2006, and in Europe and Australasia in March 2007. The later date for the European and Australasian launches (as well as those planned for Russia, the Middle East, and Africa) has been blamed on delays in blue-laser diode production. The console will hit Japan first on November 11. The 20GB model will sell for 49,980 yen (about $429), roughly $85 lower than the 59,800 yen price Sony originally announced for the console at the Electronic Entertainment Expo 2006. Sony will let Japanese retailers name their own price for the 60GB version. The PlayStation 3 will launch in the United States on November 17. In the US, the 20GB version will retail for $499, and the 60GB version will retail for $599. In Europe, the 20GB version will retail for 499 euros, and the 60GB version will retail for 599 euros. In Australia, the 20GB version will retail for AU$829.95, and the 60GB version will retail for AU$999.95.
The new PlayStation 3 console has an elegant design featuring clean lines and pleasing curves. In contrast to the Xbox 360's puckered "inhale" shape, the PS3 sides expand outward, barely containing the hardware inside. Designers had to build the case around the advanced cooling system built to handle heat output from the Cell processor, the Nvidia GPU, and the system power supply. PC or even Xbox 360 owners would expect a system with as much power as the PS3 to sound like a small aircraft on power up, but the system is actually remarkably quiet. "When it starts to notice a heat issue, it can ramp up the fan RPMs, but in general, it's as quiet as the PlayStation 2 was," according to Sony's Richard Marks.
The 60GB PlayStation 3 will have chrome trim.
Early prototypes showed consoles in white, black, and silver--but initial models will only be black. Sony used material choice to add extra sophistication to the console design. The console exterior appeared to be a glossy, opaque black in official preview images, but the system casing is actually a very dark, semi-transparent black similar in style to the PSP's exterior. The curved top of the console suggests that the PS3 will need to sit at the very top of your equipment stack if placed horizontally. The console will weigh in at a solid 11 pounds. In comparison, the Xbox weighs 8.5 pounds and the Xbox 360 weighs 7.7 pounds. The PS3 measures 12.8"(W) x 3.8"(H) x 10.8"(L), which is in line with the other consoles.
Like the Xbox 360 and the Nintendo Wii, the PlayStation 3 will be able to stand vertically or sit horizontally on an AV rack. PS3 owners will be able to reposition the console while the system is running without worrying about accidentally damaging a game or movie disc. "We've been doing that for six years now, I think, so we're confident that we'll have no issue with that," said Marks.
PlayStation 3 60GB
- Price: $599
- CPU: Cell Processor
- GPU: Nvidia RSX
- System Memory: 256MB XDR
- Graphics Memory: 256MB GDDR3
- Hard Disk: 2.5" SATA 60GB
- Optical Drive: Blu-ray
- USB 2.0: 4-ports
- Flash Memory Slots: Memory Stick, SD, Compact Flash
- Ethernet Port: Yes
- Wi-Fi: Built-in 802.11 b/g Wi-Fi
- Bluetooth 2.0 EDR: Yes
- Bluetooth Controllers: Yes
- Resolutions: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p
- HDMI Port: Yes
- Digital Optical Out: Yes
PlayStation 3 20GB
- Price: $499
- CPU: Cell Processor
- GPU: Nvidia RSX
- System Memory: 256MB XDR
- Graphics Memory: 256MB GDDR3
- Hard Disk: 2.5" SATA 20GB
- Optical Drive: Blu-ray
- USB 2.0: 4-ports
- Flash Memory Slots: None
- Ethernet Port: Yes
- Wi-Fi: None
- Bluetooth 2.0 EDR: Yes
- Bluetooth Controllers: Yes
- Resolutions: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p
- HDMI Port: Yes
- Digital Optical Out: Yes
The 60GB console features a front-slot-loading Blu-ray optical-disc drive and four USB ports, as well as memory stick, compact flash, and SD card reader support to provide for an absurd level of media connectivity. The 20GB PlayStation 3, in comparison, won't have memory stick, compact flash, or SD card ports. The 60GB version will also come with Wi-Fi built-in, but the 20GB version will only have the Ethernet port.
The Blu-ray optical-disc drive can play games and movie discs. Each Blu-ray disc can hold up to 54GB worth of data, which should virtually guarantee that games won't be left wanting for extra media space. Games will be region-free, but movies will still have region locks preventing multiregion playback. The Blu-ray spec has North America, South America, and Asia (except for China) in region A. If the spec doesn't change, that means your US PlayStation 3 should be able to play those Blu-ray Godzilla movies imported from Japan. The first 500,000 PS3 units will ship with a full-length Blu-ray movie, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby. The PS3's Blu-ray drive will also support many of the older disc formats, including CD-ROM, CDR+W, DVD, DVD-ROM, DVD-R, and DVD+R.
The 2.5" portable hard drives supply the system with much-needed storage space for PlayStation Network downloads, applications, and media files. Games will use the hard drive for game saves, and it will cache game files for decreased load times. During the Gran Turismo HD E3 2006 demonstration, Sony's Kaz Hirai boasted that load times would be reduced to two to three seconds. The game took around six to seven seconds to load during the E3 demo, but loading times will likely drop once developers have more time for game optimization. The 60GB PS3 will be more useful than the 20GB version if you wish to take advantage of the system's media functionality, but Sony has stated that upgrading the hard disk will be as simple as dropping a larger capacity 2.5" SATA notebook hard drive into the system.
The new PlayStation 3 console has an elegant design featuring clean lines and pleasing curves. In contrast to the Xbox 360's puckered "inhale" shape, the PS3 sides expand outward, barely containing the hardware inside. Designers had to build the case around the advanced cooling system built to handle heat output from the Cell processor, the Nvidia GPU, and the system power supply. PC or even Xbox 360 owners would expect a system with as much power as the PS3 to sound like a small aircraft on power up, but the system is actually remarkably quiet. "When it starts to notice a heat issue, it can ramp up the fan RPMs, but in general, it's as quiet as the PlayStation 2 was," according to Sony's Richard Marks.
The 60GB PlayStation 3 will have chrome trim.
Early prototypes showed consoles in white, black, and silver--but initial models will only be black. Sony used material choice to add extra sophistication to the console design. The console exterior appeared to be a glossy, opaque black in official preview images, but the system casing is actually a very dark, semi-transparent black similar in style to the PSP's exterior. The curved top of the console suggests that the PS3 will need to sit at the very top of your equipment stack if placed horizontally. The console will weigh in at a solid 11 pounds. In comparison, the Xbox weighs 8.5 pounds and the Xbox 360 weighs 7.7 pounds. The PS3 measures 12.8"(W) x 3.8"(H) x 10.8"(L), which is in line with the other consoles.
Like the Xbox 360 and the Nintendo Wii, the PlayStation 3 will be able to stand vertically or sit horizontally on an AV rack. PS3 owners will be able to reposition the console while the system is running without worrying about accidentally damaging a game or movie disc. "We've been doing that for six years now, I think, so we're confident that we'll have no issue with that," said Marks.
PlayStation 3 60GB
- Price: $599
- CPU: Cell Processor
- GPU: Nvidia RSX
- System Memory: 256MB XDR
- Graphics Memory: 256MB GDDR3
- Hard Disk: 2.5" SATA 60GB
- Optical Drive: Blu-ray
- USB 2.0: 4-ports
- Flash Memory Slots: Memory Stick, SD, Compact Flash
- Ethernet Port: Yes
- Wi-Fi: Built-in 802.11 b/g Wi-Fi
- Bluetooth 2.0 EDR: Yes
- Bluetooth Controllers: Yes
- Resolutions: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p
- HDMI Port: Yes
- Digital Optical Out: Yes
PlayStation 3 20GB
- Price: $499
- CPU: Cell Processor
- GPU: Nvidia RSX
- System Memory: 256MB XDR
- Graphics Memory: 256MB GDDR3
- Hard Disk: 2.5" SATA 20GB
- Optical Drive: Blu-ray
- USB 2.0: 4-ports
- Flash Memory Slots: None
- Ethernet Port: Yes
- Wi-Fi: None
- Bluetooth 2.0 EDR: Yes
- Bluetooth Controllers: Yes
- Resolutions: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p
- HDMI Port: Yes
- Digital Optical Out: Yes
The 60GB console features a front-slot-loading Blu-ray optical-disc drive and four USB ports, as well as memory stick, compact flash, and SD card reader support to provide for an absurd level of media connectivity. The 20GB PlayStation 3, in comparison, won't have memory stick, compact flash, or SD card ports. The 60GB version will also come with Wi-Fi built-in, but the 20GB version will only have the Ethernet port.
The Blu-ray optical-disc drive can play games and movie discs. Each Blu-ray disc can hold up to 54GB worth of data, which should virtually guarantee that games won't be left wanting for extra media space. Games will be region-free, but movies will still have region locks preventing multiregion playback. The Blu-ray spec has North America, South America, and Asia (except for China) in region A. If the spec doesn't change, that means your US PlayStation 3 should be able to play those Blu-ray Godzilla movies imported from Japan. The first 500,000 PS3 units will ship with a full-length Blu-ray movie, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby. The PS3's Blu-ray drive will also support many of the older disc formats, including CD-ROM, CDR+W, DVD, DVD-ROM, DVD-R, and DVD+R.
The 2.5" portable hard drives supply the system with much-needed storage space for PlayStation Network downloads, applications, and media files. Games will use the hard drive for game saves, and it will cache game files for decreased load times. During the Gran Turismo HD E3 2006 demonstration, Sony's Kaz Hirai boasted that load times would be reduced to two to three seconds. The game took around six to seven seconds to load during the E3 demo, but loading times will likely drop once developers have more time for game optimization. The 60GB PS3 will be more useful than the 20GB version if you wish to take advantage of the system's media functionality, but Sony has stated that upgrading the hard disk will be as simple as dropping a larger capacity 2.5" SATA notebook hard drive into the system.
#5
Originally Posted by Supra_RZ
The PlayStation 3 system will be available with two different hard-drive options in Japan and the United States in November 2006
#6
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GTcars - Post God !
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Originally Posted by rabbitman
That's all I needed to know. I'll be buying one in the spring, when the price drops. Can't wait for the new GT5, and GTA. Bring em on.
#7
Originally Posted by Supra_RZ
GTA is my favorite video game so far...hopefully the next one comming out will be better than GTA Liberty City Stories .
#9
**** GT5.
I guess you guys havent heard the news of GT5.
Apperantly what Polyphony is doing is setting up a Pay as go system for the next Gran Turismo game.
what they are doing is gonna release 2 version of GT, one simple version, only 3 cars and 1 track and another premium version, with 30 cars and more tracks.
and if you want more cars, you buy them online, .50-$1 per car, and $1-$2 per track.
Now let see, there are over 200 cars in GT4, so for simplicity lets say .50 per car, and lets say 200 cars.
that $100 right there. and forget the tracks.
Now I dont know about u guys, but I hate this capilitism bullshit.
making me pay for each car is utter lunacy and madness. and besides, GT isnt even a real simulator.
Thanks but I think I'll go play
LFS and R-Factor, both games are much better and dont have 50+ variations of the same ****en car (Skyline)
I guess you guys havent heard the news of GT5.
Apperantly what Polyphony is doing is setting up a Pay as go system for the next Gran Turismo game.
what they are doing is gonna release 2 version of GT, one simple version, only 3 cars and 1 track and another premium version, with 30 cars and more tracks.
and if you want more cars, you buy them online, .50-$1 per car, and $1-$2 per track.
Now let see, there are over 200 cars in GT4, so for simplicity lets say .50 per car, and lets say 200 cars.
that $100 right there. and forget the tracks.
Now I dont know about u guys, but I hate this capilitism bullshit.
making me pay for each car is utter lunacy and madness. and besides, GT isnt even a real simulator.
Thanks but I think I'll go play
LFS and R-Factor, both games are much better and dont have 50+ variations of the same ****en car (Skyline)
#12
Originally Posted by Hellbent
**** GT5.
I guess you guys havent heard the news of GT5.
Apperantly what Polyphony is doing is setting up a Pay as go system for the next Gran Turismo game.
what they are doing is gonna release 2 version of GT, one simple version, only 3 cars and 1 track and another premium version, with 30 cars and more tracks.
and if you want more cars, you buy them online, .50-$1 per car, and $1-$2 per track.
Now let see, there are over 200 cars in GT4, so for simplicity lets say .50 per car, and lets say 200 cars.
that $100 right there. and forget the tracks.
Now I dont know about u guys, but I hate this capilitism bullshit.
making me pay for each car is utter lunacy and madness. and besides, GT isnt even a real simulator.
Thanks but I think I'll go play
LFS and R-Factor, both games are much better and dont have 50+ variations of the same ****en car (Skyline)
I guess you guys havent heard the news of GT5.
Apperantly what Polyphony is doing is setting up a Pay as go system for the next Gran Turismo game.
what they are doing is gonna release 2 version of GT, one simple version, only 3 cars and 1 track and another premium version, with 30 cars and more tracks.
and if you want more cars, you buy them online, .50-$1 per car, and $1-$2 per track.
Now let see, there are over 200 cars in GT4, so for simplicity lets say .50 per car, and lets say 200 cars.
that $100 right there. and forget the tracks.
Now I dont know about u guys, but I hate this capilitism bullshit.
making me pay for each car is utter lunacy and madness. and besides, GT isnt even a real simulator.
Thanks but I think I'll go play
LFS and R-Factor, both games are much better and dont have 50+ variations of the same ****en car (Skyline)
what is LFS and R-FACTOR?
#13
LFS- Live for Speed and R-Factor are the best driving simulators available in the market today,
both are for the comp, and both are un-playable with just a keyboard, u need a proper wheel for them, something like the Logitech G-25.
hell, when BMW had their Formula-1 driving simulator at Best Buy one day, it was R-Factor they where using.
R-Factor = rFactor | The Future of Race Simulation
and LFS= Live for Speed - Online racing simulator
LFS is sells for 24 pounds, which is what, about 50 canadian, still cheaper than GT4 when it came out.
and R-Factor sells for $48 canadian.
Trust me, get yourself a good wheel, buy these two games and watch your time disappear from getting hooked.
as for the wheel, this will be my next one.
Wheels > Logitech® G25 Racing Wheel
yes I know its $300US for it, and so far, the only games that support the clutch are these 2 games, but just wait till PS3, when they use it to..
plus learning how to heel-toe on a simulator is better aint it.
both are for the comp, and both are un-playable with just a keyboard, u need a proper wheel for them, something like the Logitech G-25.
hell, when BMW had their Formula-1 driving simulator at Best Buy one day, it was R-Factor they where using.
R-Factor = rFactor | The Future of Race Simulation
and LFS= Live for Speed - Online racing simulator
LFS is sells for 24 pounds, which is what, about 50 canadian, still cheaper than GT4 when it came out.
and R-Factor sells for $48 canadian.
Trust me, get yourself a good wheel, buy these two games and watch your time disappear from getting hooked.
as for the wheel, this will be my next one.
Wheels > Logitech® G25 Racing Wheel
yes I know its $300US for it, and so far, the only games that support the clutch are these 2 games, but just wait till PS3, when they use it to..
plus learning how to heel-toe on a simulator is better aint it.
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