Some have questioned the wisdom of Microsoft launching its Xbox 360 so soon in order to get a lead on the competition. That was in November of 2005. The debut of the game console proved to be rather dubious as there were less than enough machines to go around.
People have accused Microsoft of launching a game machine that was not fully ready to be released. Case in point: the ubiquitous occurrences of the dreaded Red Ring of Death, which stops the Xbox 360 dead in its tracks.
Robbie Bach, boss of the Entertainment and Devices Division at Microsoft, not only defended his company's former position, but also added that he would love to see Microsoft launch its next Xbox ahead of the competition once again.
All we can say is that if Microsoft plans on being first to launch again, we hope they'll release a game console that will last more than 9 months before breaking. Bach said of the Xbox 360's launch:
"The last cycle for the original Xbox was a little shorter than typical (at four years). We started way late. If you take the question of whether it was the right thing to try to be first [with Xbox 360], the answer to that is definitely yes. It has given us a leg up in a number of places that are super important."
He said that although he can't say when the next gen Xbox will launch, he's hoping that it will be the first next gen on the block, just as it was with the 360.
"It has given us a leg up with game developers. It has given us a leg up from an economics perspective. It helped us expand Xbox Live quickly. At a strategy level, if you asked if we wanted to be first again, I would say yes."
So if yes, when?
"We start thinking about the next generation before we shipped the Xbox 360. It doesn't start with a date. It starts way upstream with silicon development. From that comes a series of data points. You start making early technology choices. It's an evolving thing. Stuff doesn't become concrete until you get inside a window of when you have to ship, more than 18 months or so out."
So in other words, wait and see. But the problems associated with the 360, and presumably because of the rush to get the game console out, have left a bittersweet taste in the mouths of Xbox supporter because of extensive reliability issues. So just as Bach has given a wait and see statement as to when the Xbox 720 will launch, some gamers may also give him a wait and see response in buying the next iteration of the Xbox at launch.
Until Microsoft proves that its next game console is solid and dependable, a lot of people will be sitting on the sidelines until these points are validated. After all, who wants to go through the agony of turning in their game consoles every few months to get it repaired?
[via venturebeat]
Huh, I actually read the development thread of that case mod in that very pic you used....
lol. It must be synchronized brain waves or something.
i'm not very surprised
I won't buy it until I know it is a stable console. I spent too much repairing my 360 due to my game library. That won't happen again. I doubt they will make the same mistake 2 times, though.
it all depends on the games for me... if its got more good games that i want to play then i will buy it...
my question will be about xbox live and how they will manage to transfer all of the downloadable content over to a new machine (more specifically will i be able to play my games that i downloaded on my 360 on the next gen xbox...)? to me that sounds like it will be a significant amount of bandwidth that microsoft probably won't pony over lightly...
why buy it when they put so little faith in there system only a 5 year shelf life they should make one to last all ten years not rush something only one out of the three were meant to be a 10 year console and you can guess who.
yeahs, ps2 got like 7 more months and its ten years old.
If they release anything before 2012, I'm giving up console gaming. I can't even afford to buy 360 games at this point in time, so why would I want to go out and purchase another console after maybe 3 years? And yes, I work two jobs so it's not like I'm poor or anything. Bills are just more important.
hopefully they learned their lessons about contracting their hardware and buying cheap components.
Clearly, spending a few extra bucks initially for decent hardware and a solid architecture offsets the massive repair bills they footed down the road. Here's hoping they aren't retarded enough to repeat that same mistake...
what makes me laugh is that sony is saying all this stuff about the PS3 about to take he lead, but by the time they do that, the 720 will already be about to be released