PlayStation 3
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</div>- "PS3" redirects here. For other uses, see PS3 (disambiguation).
| PlayStation 3
<tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center;">Image:PS3 at CEATEC 2006 (vertical).jpg</td></tr> | |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Sony Computer Entertainment |
| Type | Video game console |
| Generation | Seventh generation era |
| First available | JP November 11 2006 NA HK TW |
| Media | BD-ROM DVD-ROM CD-ROM Super Audio CD <tr><th style="background-color: #eeeeee; whitespace: nowrap">Online service</th><td>PlayStation Network</td></tr><tr><th style="background-color: #eeeeee; white-space: nowrap;">Units sold</th><td>Japan: 156,400<ref name="PS3 Japanese week 3 sales figures">2006 November 20th - November 26th weekly software & hard cell through ranking. Media Create. Retrieved on 2006-11-28.</ref> (as of November 26, 2006)</td></tr><tr><th style="background-color: #eeeeee; white-space: nowrap;">Top-selling game</th><td>Resistance: Fall of Man (as of November 22, 2006)<ref name="top game">Gibson, Ellie (November 22, 2006). Sony still planning to ship 1m PS3 units before the end of the year. GamesIndustry.biz. EuroGamer Network. Retrieved on 2006-11-13.</ref></td></tr><tr><th style="background-color: #eeeeee; white-space: nowrap;">Backward |
The PlayStation 3 (Japanese: プレイステーション 3, Pureisutēshon Surī?) is Sony's seventh generation era video game console, third in the PlayStation series. It is the successor to PlayStation and PlayStation 2 and competes primarily against Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Nintendo's Wii.
The PS3 was released on November 11, 2006 in Japan, and on November 17, 2006 in the United States, Canada, Hong Kong and Taiwan. It will be released in March 2007<ref name="palrelease"/> in Europe and Australia. It is available in two initial configurations.
Contents |
Overview
History
Sony officially unveiled the PS3 to the public on May 16, 2005 during an E3 conference. A functional version of the console was not present at E3 2005 nor the Tokyo Game Show in September 2005, although at both events demonstrations were held on devkits (e.g. Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots) and comparable PC hardware, and video footage based on the predicted PS3 specifications was also shown (e.g. Mobile Suit Gundam).<ref name="gameprerender">Shilov, Anton (2006-06-06). Developers Use Personal Computers to Show PS3 Advantages. xbitlabs. Retrieved on 2006-07-24.</ref> It was not until E3 2006 that games were shown on actual PlayStation 3 systems. At E3 2005, Sony claimed the PlayStation 3 would have numerous input/output connections, such as dual HDMI and three Ethernet ports, which were later dropped.<ref>Broken Promises: A Closer Look at the PS3. GamePro.com. Retrieved on 2006-11-20.</ref> In preparation for launch, Sony demonstrated 27 playable PS3 titles during the Tokyo Game Show in September 2006 on final hardware.<ref name="IGN">Sony announces 27 playable titles for the September Tokyo Game Show.. IGN (2006-08-16). Retrieved on 2006-08-16.</ref>
| Feature | Basic | Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Upgradeable hard drive | Yes, 20 GB | Yes, 60 GB |
| Blu-ray drive | Yes | Yes |
| HDMI port | Yes<ref name="pr 20GB HDMI">Sony Computer Entertainment (2006-09-22). PLAYSTATION®3 HDD 20GB EQUIPPED WITH HDMI AS STANDARD. Press release.</ref> | Yes |
| Bluetooth controller | Yes | Yes |
| Chrome trim | No | Yes |
| Built-in Wi-Fi | No | Yes |
| Flash card readers | No | Yes |
System configuration
The basic configuration of the console has a 20 GB internal hard drive. The "premium" version of the PlayStation 3 comes with an internal 60 GB Serial ATA 2.5" hard drive, IEEE 802.11b/g Wi-Fi connectivity, and multiple flash memory card readers, and features a brighter silver-colored trim.<ref>http://www.us.playstation.com/PS3/specs.html</ref> Both consoles now feature a silver-colored logo. The hard drive is upgradeable, using the standard Serial ATA interface. Memory card support can be added to the basic configuration through adapters,<ref>Gibson, Ellie (2006-05-16). 20 GB PlayStation 3 will be upgradeable, says Sony. gamesindustry.biz. Retrieved on 2006-05-16.</ref> but there is no official Wi-Fi adapter. However, as both models feature wired gigabit Ethernet capabilities, wireless networking could be added through the use of an external third-party wireless LAN adapter. <ref name=nowifi>Bramwell, Tom (October 31, 2006). No Wi-Fi upgrade for 20GB PS3. Eurogamer. Retrieved on November 1, 2006.</ref>
Release data and pricing
| Region | Expected pricing at release | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | Premium | |||
| Local | US$ | Local | US$ | |
| Image:Flag of Japan (bordered).svg Japan | JP¥49,980 <ref name="pr 20GB HDMI" /> | $420 | JP¥59,980 | $508 |
| Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States<ref name="pr_na" /> | US$499 | US$599 | ||
| Image:Flag of Canada.svg Canada<ref name="pr_na" /> | C$549 | $480 | C$659 | $580 |
| Image:Flag of Hong Kong.svg Hong Kong<ref name="HK price">Hong Kong Sony Playstation site. Retrieved on 2006-11-01.</ref> | HKD$3,180 | $409 | HKD$3,780 | $486 |
| Image:Flag of the Republic of China.svg Taiwan<ref name="Taiwan price">Taiwan Sony Playstation site. Retrieved on 2006-11-01.</ref> | NT$14,980 | $451 | NT$17,980 | $542 |
| Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom<ref name="UK GI">Gibson, Ellie (2006-07-21). UK likely to get both versions of PlayStation 3 - Sony. GamesIndustry.biz. Eurogamer Network Ltd.. Retrieved on 2006-07-25.</ref> | TBC | GB£425† | $680 | |
| Image:European flag.svg Eurozone<ref name="pr_euro">Sony Computer Entertainment Europe (2006-05-08). PLAYSTATION®3 LAUNCHES ON NOVEMBER 17, 2006 ACROSS MAINLAND EUROPE AND AUSTRALASIA. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-05-18.</ref> (excluding Finland) | €499 | $550 | €599 | $660 |
| Image:Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark<ref name="den">Danish retailer gamebits.dk.</ref> | 4295 DKK† | $720 | 5495 DKK† | $925 |
| Image:Flag of Finland (bordered).svg Finland<ref name="pr_fin">Sony Computer Entertainment Europe (2006-05-08). PLAYSTATION®3 JULKAISTAAN 17. MARRASKUUTA 2006 MANNER-EUROOPASSA JA AUSTRALAASIASSA. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-05-18.</ref> | €550 | $600 | €650 | $710 |
| Image:Flag of Norway.svg Norway<ref name="nor">PS2 ikke dyr. forbruker.no.</ref> | TBC | 5000 NOK† | $750 | |
| Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden<ref name="swe">Förhandsboka din PlayStation 3. www.nordichardware.se/nyhet,10679.html.</ref> | TBC | 5999 SEK† | $650 | |
| Image:Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland<ref name="pr_swiss">Sony Computer Entertainment Europe (2006-05-08). PLAYSTATION 3 kommt in Europa, Australien und Asien am 17. November 2006 auf den Markt. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-08-17.</ref> | CHF 749 | $550 | CHF 899 | $660 |
| Image:Flag of Australia.svg Australia<ref name="au_cnet">Ramsay, Randolph & Asher Moses (2006-05-09). Australian PS3 launch date locked in. CNET Networks Australia. Retrieved on 2006-05-18.</ref> | A$829 | $650 | A$999 | $780 |
| Image:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand<ref name="NZ 60 GB price">PlayStation 3 Console. Gameplanet.</ref><ref name="Pre-order PS3 console price price">Playstation 3 Console. Dick Smith Electronics.</ref> | NZ$999† | $590 | NZ$1199.95† | $700 |
| Image:Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico[citation needed] | MXN$7,999 | $640 | MXN$9,499 | $760 |
† Price not confirmed as official suggested retail price
David Wilson, Head of Public Relations at Sony Computer Entertainment UK, stated that both models will likely be sold in the UK market, but both may not be available at launch.<ref name="UK GI" /> Previously, Sony Computer Entertainment UK Marketing Director Ray Maguire had stated that only the 60 GB version would be available at launch.<ref name="UK GameSpot">Report: PlayStation 3 to cost £425 in UK. GameSpot (2006-05-19). Retrieved on 2006-05-19.</ref> Sony announced on September 6, 2006 that the PAL (European and Australasia) launch has been delayed until March, 2007 due to a shortage of diodes used in the Blu-ray drive.<ref name="PAL delay">Sony Computer Entertainment Europe (2006-09-06). Sony Computer Entertainment Europe Announces New March 2007 date for European Launch of PLAYSTATION 3. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-09-06.</ref> Sony has said that they will take legal action against anyone selling imported consoles to EU consumers.<ref name="Sony blocking imports">"Sony to 'block PS3 Euro imports'", BBC News, 2006, October 23.</ref>
In Japan, Sony has opted to go with an open pricing scheme for the 60 GB model, allowing retailers to set a price point themselves. Rakuten, one of the biggest Japanese online retailers, has set their price point at ¥71,800, or ¥75,390 with taxes added (about US$675).<ref>【楽天市場】SONY Play Station (プレイステーション):アットワールドオンラインショップ (Japanese). Rakuten. Retrieved on 2006-05-22.</ref> Sony announced that the HDMI cable will not be included,<ref name=hdmi>Playstation 3: HDMI cable not included (English). Engadget (2006-08-01).</ref> instead Composite video cables will be included.
The high launch price of the PS3 has been subjected to much criticism from analysts<ref>Analyst: PS3 To Slow Industry Growth, Nintendo & Microsoft Could Capitalize. Gamasutra. Retrieved on 2006-11-10.</ref> and developers<ref>PS3 price must drop in 2007, says Ubisoft boss. GamesIndustry.biz. Retrieved on 2006-11-10.</ref>, especially in Denmark, where the converted price is US$720, the highest price for the unit. Sony executive Phil Harrison has defended the price by citing its Blu-ray support and overall value.<ref name="phil_gamepro">Exclusive: Sony's Phil Harrison Tells All on PS3, Peter Moore, Nintendo Wii. GamePro (2006-05-14). Retrieved on 2006-05-24.</ref> The production cost is estimated to be US$805.85 for the 20GB model and US$840.35 for the 60GB model.<ref name="loss IGN">Goldstein, Hilary (2006-11-16). Sony Losing Almost $250 per Console. IGN PS3. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> A drop in Sony's stock price following its fourth-quarter earnings report has been speculated to be in part due to uncertainties about the company's game business; analysts have voiced concerns about the viability of the PlayStation 3.<ref name="sony_stock">Kageyama, Yuri (2006-04-28). Sony stock falls after earnings report. MSNBC.com. Retrieved on 2006-05-23.</ref>
Marketing
In what could be the first big advertising campaign, the PlayStation 3 was featured in the advertising boards of 16 stadiums across Europe, during the Matchday 1 of the UEFA Champions League 2006-2007 Group Stage, on September 12 2006 and September 13 2006. However, on the other matchdays the advertising has been replaced by a PSP, perhaps as a result of the system's launch delay. Television advertisements also began airing in the United States, carrying the slogan "PLAY B3YOND - l l l 7." The 3 that replaces the E in "BEYOND" (an example of leet) hearkens back to the launch slogan of the PlayStation: "u r not e".
Three ads have aired for the console, playing up the high anticipation but, for the most part, not showcasing actual games. One simply featured a baby doll staring at the PS3 and making disturbing gestures and sounds. Another had the PS3, in the same white-walled setting, sitting across from a Rubik's cube which suddenly levitated, solved itself, and exploded into colors on the four walls. The third ad used the same white backdrop and, unlike the other two ads, portrayed the motion sensing controller by showing eggs rolling across the floor. There were also two ads between one and two minutes long, which used the same backdrop as the others, focusing on the capabilities of the Cell microprocessor and the Blu-ray disc.
Launch
The PlayStation 3 was released in Japan on November 11 2006 at 0700. At Bic Camera's Tokyo flagship store more than 1,000 customers queued up for launch, with staff and police having to keep control.<ref name="bbc-ps3">"PlayStation 3 sells out at launch", BBC News, 2006-11-11. Retrieved on 2006-11-12.</ref><ref name="kotaku-darkside">Foreigners And Fights, PS3 JPN Launch's Dark Side. Kotaku (2006-11-11). Retrieved on 2006-11-12.</ref> Furthermore there were reports that the launch was disorganised with many of the initial consoles being obtained by businessmen who paid mainly Chinese nationals to buy the console without any software<ref name="kotaku-darkside"/> to resell on eBay. According to Media Create, 81,639 PS3 systems were sold in the the 24-hours of its introduction in Japan.<ref>週間ソフト・セルスルーランキング. Media Create Co.. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.</ref>
The PlayStation 3 was released in North America on November 17, 2006. During its first week of release in the United States, PlayStation 3's were being sold on eBay for more than $2300 USD.<ref>EBay limits PlayStation 3 sales. CNN (2006-11-15). Retrieved on 2006-11-15.</ref> Reports of violence surrounding the release of the PS3 include a customer shot,<ref>1 Shot in Conn. Playstation Waiting Line. abc News (2006-11-17). Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> campers robbed at gunpoint,<ref>Camping PlayStation gamers robbed at gunpoint. KMTR. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> customers shot in a drive-by shooting with BB guns,<ref>Four People Shot While Waiting for PlayStation Console, Including 27 NEWSFIRST Reporter. WKYT News (2006-11-16). Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> and 60 campers fighting over 10 systems.<ref>Playstation3 Crowd Gets More Than It Bargained for in Tysons. WTOP News (2006-11-17). Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> One man was sent to the hospital for an injury when a stampede began after a Wal-Mart reportedly placed 10 chairs outside of the store and told 50 people to try to get in one of the chairs for a chance to buy one of the 10 systems the store received.<ref>Man hurt in game race. Wal-Mart manager reportedly made buyers run to get a PlayStation 3. JSOnline. Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> Two gunmen robbed a GameStop store the night before the release, taking several PlayStation 3 and four Xbox 360 consoles,<ref>Gunmen Rob Local Game Store For PS3s. CBS13 (2006-11-16). Retrieved on 2006-11-17.</ref> though later investigations proved the armed robbery to be a fake, pulled off by 2 GameStop employees to cover up their own theft of the systems.[1]
Ken Kutaragi has stated that the PlayStation 3 will launch in Europe in March 2007.
Games
- Please help rewrite this section into prose (and not just a prose-list). You may find the old list here. [2]
The PlayStation 3 launched with 15 titles by November 17. After a 5 days, Resistance: Fall of Man had sold the most units. Several planned launch titles were delayed, such as F.E.A.R. and The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. All PlayStation 3 games are region-free<ref>GDC 06: Region-free PS3. IGN (2006-03-22). Retrieved on 2006-11-12.</ref>; developers at Insomniac use the Blu-ray disc for language data.[citation needed]
Backward compatibility
Sony stated every PlayStation and PlayStation 2 game that observes its respective system's TRC (Technical Requirements Checklist) will be playable on PS3 at launch. SCE president Ken Kutaragi asked developers to adhere to the TRC to facilitate compatibility with future PlayStations, stating that the company was having some difficulty getting backward compatibility with games that had not followed the TRCs. It has been confirmed (image) that initial PS3 units include the CPU/rasterizer combination chip used in slim PS2 (EE+GS) to achieve backward compatibility.<ref name="ps2chip ign">Gantayat, Anoop (2006-06-05). Sony Bundles PS2 With PS3. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-06-06.</ref>
The PlayStation 3 does not include interfaces for legacy PlayStation devices, though IGN.com tested a legacy controller using a PS2-to-USB adapter, finding that it is compatible, though most other devices (such as the Guitar Hero controller) may not be compatible.<ref name="PS2-to-USB">Guitar Hero II Compatible with PS3?. IGN.com (2006-11-10). Retrieved on 2006-11-18.</ref> USB devices for PlayStation 2 may be compatible with PlayStation 3. The PS3 supports both the USB Eye Toy camera/webcam and SOCOM Headset for video and voice chat. A memory card adapter is available so users can save their PS/PS2 data on to a virtual memory card in the hard drive.<ref name="ps1/ps2 data">Playstation 3 Supports PS2/PS1 Memory Cards. Console Watcher (2006-08-11). Retrieved on 2006-08-12.</ref> The PlayStation 3 can also use Memory Sticks to store save data for PlayStation and PlayStation 2 software.<ref name="PSM 2005-09">Elle Cayabyab Gitlin (2005-08-01). More PS3 details emerge in print. Ars Technica. Retrieved on 2006-07-19.</ref>
At least 3% of the games from the previous generations of the PlayStation had problems at launch such as dropped audio<ref>PS3 Backwards Compatibility Issues. IGN (2006-11-12). Retrieved on 2006-11-18.</ref>, freezes or controller malfunction<ref>PlayStation 3 Unable to Play Some of Sony’s Earlier Games. Associated Press (2006-11-15). Retrieved on 2006-11-15.</ref>. Popular games reported to have this glitch include Final Fantasy, Tekken 5, and Gran Turismo. As of 2006-11-16, a firmware upgrade has been posted online by Sony that is intended to address some of these issues.<ref>PS3 Backwards Compatibility Issues. IGN (2006-11-12). Retrieved on 2006-11-13.</ref>
Game development
The PlayStation 3 is based on open and publicly available application programming interfaces. Despite earlier rumours of programming being difficult,<ref>http://igo.ampednews.com/platform/ps3/news/3521/</ref> IGN reports that they were told that the dev kit "seemed extremely adaptive and easy to program for".<ref name ="PS3_DevKit">Final PS3 Dev Kit Tidbits. IGN (2006-04-28). Retrieved on 2006-08-19.</ref> However many developers have noted the difficulty in coding under the PlayStation 3's Cell microprocessor. Sony has selected several technologies and arranged several sublicensing agreements to create an advanced software development kit for developers. In addition, in 2005 Sony purchased SN Systems, a former provider of Microsoft Windows-based development tools for a variety of console platforms; including PlayStation 2, GameCube, PSP and Nintendo DS to create additional GNU development tools.
The open standards are specified by the Khronos Group, and are intended to work with nVidia's Cg programming language. Scene data are stored with COLLADA v1.4, an open, XML-based file format.<ref name="collada">Hirohiko Niizumi (2005-06-30). COLLADA approved as an open standard. Gamespot. Retrieved on 2006-08-22.</ref> Rendering uses PSGL, a modified version of OpenGL ES 1.0 (OpenGL ES 2.0 compliant except for the use of Cg instead of GLSL), with extensions specifically aimed at the PS3.<ref name="psgl_slides_7">Arnaud, Rémi. PS3 to include parental controls (English). Khronos Group. Retrieved on 2006-05-24.</ref> Other specifications include OpenMAX, a collection of fast, cross-platform tools for general "media acceleration," such as matrix calculations, and OpenVG, for hardware-accelerated 2D vector graphics. These specifications have GPL, free for any use, and/or commercial implementations by third parties.
Sublicensed technology includes complete game engines, physics libraries, and special libraries. Engines include Epic's Unreal engine 3.0. Physics libraries include AGEIA's PhysX SDK, NovodeX,<ref name="novodex">Sony Computer Entertainment, Inc. (2005-07-21). Sony Computer Entertainment Enters Into Strategic Licensing Agreement With AGEIA. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-08-23.</ref> and Havok's physics and animation engines.<ref>Strategic Licensing Agreement with SCEA. Retrieved on 2006-08-01.</ref> Other tools include Nvidia's Cg 1.5 (a C-like shading language, which HLSL was based upon), SpeedTree RT by Interactive Data Visualization, Inc. (high-quality virtual foliage in real time), and Kynogon's Kynapse 4.0 "large scale A.I.".<ref name="kynapse">Kynogon (2006-01-25). Kynogon joins SCEI’s “PLAYSTATION®3” Tools & Middleware program. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-05-18.</ref>
Sony has considered using IPv6, the next generation of the Internet Protocol.<ref>Juniper Networks on IPv6 and MPLS networking in Asia – Part I. DigiTimes Publication. Retrieved on 2005-06-10.</ref>
System software
Firmware
Similar to the PlayStation Portable, Sony has added the ability for firmware updates to be downloaded and used on the PlayStation 3. The updates can be installed via System Update, HDD, or a Game that requires a firmware update. The first update of the firmware is 1.10. It was made available on November 11 2006. It includes support for the PlayStation Network, ATRAC, Full Screen Video, PlayStation Store, Online User Manual and more.<ref>Sony interview reveals PlayStation 3 details. ps3land (2006-11-11). Retrieved on 2006-11-29.</ref> An 'Account Management' icon was added under 'Friends' on the XMB bar with the 1.11 update.[3]
Default interface
The PlayStation 3 version of the Cross Media Bar (Xross Media Bar) includes 8 categories of options. These include: Users, Settings, Photo, Music, Video, Game, Network and Friends. The PS3 includes the ability to store different user profiles, explore photos, play music and movies from the hard drive, compatibility for a USB Keyboard and Mouse, a full Internet browser and a Friends menu. Also, the PlayStation 3 adds the ability to multitask in ways such as listening to music while surfing the web or looking at pictures.<ref>About XMB (XrossMediaBar). Sony Computer Entertainment. Retrieved on 2006-11-10.</ref> The PlayStation 3 cross media bar supports a variety of file formats (audio, image, video), with additional file formats under Linux[citation needed]. In a separate demo Sony presented the "Marketplace" where users can buy and download music. The PS3 reserves 64 MB RAM at all times for XMB functions.
Q-Games Ltd, a small development company based in Kyoto, Japan, developed the graphics technology behind the XMB, its stylized background, and the built-in music visualizers. The PlayStation 3 uses a version of the NetFront browser by Access Co. as its internal web browser. It is the same browser used in the PSP (Sony-branded NetFront 2.81) with the same interface, menus and virtual keyboard. Its user agent string is cloaked, falsely reporting as Mozilla/5.0 (PLAYSTATION 3; 1.00). Sony has also worked with Stanford University to bring the Folding@home project to the PS3.<ref>Williams, David (2006-09-19). PlayStation's serious side: Fighting disease. CNN News. Retrieved on 2006-09-21.</ref> When downloaded, the program will run when the system is idle.
Linux
| Because we have plans for having Linux on board [the PS3], we also recognize Linux programming activities… Other than game studios tied to official developer licenses, we'd like to see various individuals participate in content creation for the PS3. |
Originally Sony stated that they were going to pre-install Linux on the PS3's hard drive, but current units shipping do not include Linux pre-installed. Instead, Sony has made an option in the XMB menu to install other operating systems [4]. When installation is complete, the startup operating system can be changed.<ref>Default System. Sony Computer Entertainment. Retrieved on 2006-11-10.</ref> The system can be easily booted back into the cross media bar by holding down the power button while restarting.<ref>Chang, Vincent (2006-11-30). Linux on the PS3: First Encounters. hardware zone. Retrieved on 2006-11-30.</ref> Sony has set up a web page which will list compatible operating systems.[5] Fedora Core 5 [6] and Gentoo [7] have been run on the PS3; however, Fedora Core 5 has not been optimized for the relatively low amount of RAM. The Sony-sponsored Yellow Dog Linux for the PS3 was released on November 27, 2006 to the YDL.net community, and will be released on DVD on December 11, and finally as a publicly available image in late December.<ref>Boyes, Emma (2006-11-27). Yellow Dog Linux launches for PS3. gamespot. Retrieved on 2006-11-30.</ref>
PlayStation Network
In response to Microsoft's successful Xbox Live network, Sony announced a unified online service for the PlayStation 3 console at the 2006 PlayStation Business Briefing meeting in Tokyo. Sony has confirmed that the service will be always connected,<ref name="PNP always on">Posted May 16, 2005 3:43 pm PT. GameSpot.com.</ref> free and include multiplayer support. However, developers are permitted to charge a subscription fee, as is common with MMO games.
The Xfire client is integrated into some games to provide various match-making facilities. Xfire CEO Mike Cassidy clarified: "Xfire is not part of the PlayStation Network Platform."<ref>Luke Smith. Sony's Answer to Xbox Live Revealed. 1up.com. Ziff Davis.</ref>
At the Tokyo Game Show on September 21 2006 it was revealed that users will be able to download some of the thousands of PlayStation 1 and PlayStation 2 titles from the PlayStation Network Platform for a fee, starting with those with the smallest game data. The reason to allow this kind of functionality is that Sony wants to allow the users to choose the games of their preference. Ken Kutaragi also announced functionality with other consoles, similar to Nintendo's upcoming Virtual Console, including confirmed Sega Genesis and TurboGrafx 16 functionality. However, Sega has replied that Sony has been too hasty with calling it a fact. Sega is currently reviewing the possibilities, but have not yet made a decision on it.[8]
PlayStation Portable connectivity
The PlayStation Portable can connect with the PlayStation 3 in many ways, including game connectivity, such as Formula One 06 shown at E3 2006 which uses the PSP as a rear-view mirror. Sony also will allow the PlayStation 3 to send PlayStation 1 games to the PSP that will be able to be used on the PSP's PlayStation 1 Emulator, which will be released alongside the PS3. <ref>http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=19488</ref>.
Sony has also demonstrated the PSP playing back video content, including 1080p content from the PlayStation 3 hard disk across an Ad-Hoc wireless network, it has also been rumoured it is capable of playing movies on the PSP, from the PS3's Blu-Ray drive. This feature is referred to as Remote Play<ref>IGN: PSP and PlayStation 3 Play Together</ref>.
Hardware summary
Unless otherwise noted, the following specifications are based on a press release by Sony at the 2005 E3 Conference,<ref name="pr_specs">Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. (2005-05-16). SONY COMPUTER ENTERTAINMENT INC. TO LAUNCH ITS NEXT GENERATION COMPUTER ENTERTAINMENT SYSTEM, PLAYSTATION®3 IN SPRING 2006. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-05-26.</ref> and slides from a Sony presentation at the 2006 Game Developer's Conference.<ref name=gdcslides>Slides from Sony's 2006 GDC Presentation. Game Watch. Retrieved on 2006-05-25.</ref>
The PS3's 3.2 GHz Cell processor, developed jointly by Sony, Toshiba and IBM ("STI"), is an implementation to dynamically assign physical processor cores to do different types of work independently. It has a PowerPC-based "Power Processing Element" (PPE) and six accessible 3.2 GHz Synergistic Processing Elements (SPEs), a seventh runs in a special mode and is dedicated to OS security, and an eighth disabled to improve production yields. The PPE, SPE's and other elements ("units") are connected via an Element Interconnect Bus which serves to connect all of the units in a ring-style bus. The PPE has a 512 KiB level 2 cache and one VMX vector unit. Each SPE is a RISC processor with 128 128-bit SIMD GPRs and superscalar functions. Each SPE contains 256 KiB of non-cached memory (local storage, "LS") that is shared by program code and work data. SPEs may access more data in the main memory using DMA. The floating point performance of the whole system (CPU + GPU) is reported to be 2.18 TFLOPS<ref name="pr_specs" />. PlayStation 3's Cell CPU achieves 204 GFLOPS single precision float and 15 GFLOPS double precision. The PS3 will ship with 256 MiB of Rambus XDR DRAM, clocked at CPU die speed.
The Cell microprocessor allows programmers to assign SPE's different work by running individual programs on them. Programmers may also arrange data flow in different ways, for example using parallel, pipelined or streamed processing data flow models. As an example for parallel processing performance gains, one core could work on decoding and multiplexing audio, another core may perform computations on realistic projectiles ballistics, while another might govern the activities of the main character. The programmer still has three more cores not yet assigned but the only remaining tasks are to collect the work performed and display the results on the screen. Since the program code on each SPE core is executed from its local store memory, much more Element Interconnect Bus bandwidth is available to transfers of work data. An obvious downside to this is that there is a 256 KiB size restriction on SPE programs, which may present a challenge for certain programming tasks.
The Graphics Processing Unit is based on the NVIDIA G70 (previously known as NV47) architecture, which focuses on maximizing per-pixel computation in favor of raw pixel output. The GPU will make use of 256 MiB GDDR3 VRAM clocked at 700 MHz. The GPU has access to the XDR main memory as well.
The PS3 supports standard and HDTV resolutions (up to 1080p60) and connectivity options (such as HDMI 1.3 <ref>Press Releases. hdmi.org. Retrieved on 2006-11-20.</ref> and component video)<ref>Video Output Settings. Sony Computer Entertainment. Retrieved on 2006-11-10.</ref>. In terms of audio, the PS3 will support a number of formats, including 7.1 digital audio, Dolby TrueHD, and others. For the optical drive, a wide variety of DVD and CD formats are supported, as well as Blu-ray Disc. A 20 GB / 60 GB 2.5" SATA 150 hard disk is pre-installed. In the 60 GB configuration, flash memory can also be used — either Memory Stick, CompactFlash, or SD/MMC. For communication, the PS3 will have one gigabit ethernet port, four USB 2.0 ports, and will support Bluetooth 2.0 EDR.
Compared to the prototype version, the console has many more ventilation holes, and uses heat pipes; Sony claims the system is as quiet as a PlayStation 2 SCPH-70000 series. Physically, the PlayStation 3 is approximately 5 kg (11 lb), 9.8 cm × 32.5 cm × 27.4 cm (3.9 in. × 12.8 in. × 10.8 in.). The power supply is built into the console and a standard 3-pin IEC connector is present at the base of the console. The current Japanese console is marked as 100v externally, but internally as Universal 100V-240V and works within Europe and worldwide. Rumors about the power consumption, based on the peak capability of the power supply (380 watts), were spread through generally reliable sites such as cnet, which claimed the Cell microprocessor was the culprit (the Cell microprocessor uses approximately 40 watts [9]).
Accessories
Image:PS3 controllers at CES 2006.jpg The PS3 SIXAXIS<ref name="pr accessories">Sony Computer Entertainment (2006-10-03). ACCESSORIES FOR PLAYSTATION®3 BECOME AVAILABLE. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-10-03.</ref> is a controller that is nearly identical to that of the predecessor's DualShock. The SIXAXIS features finer analogue sensitivity,<ref name="pr_control">Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. (2006-05-09). SCE ANNOUNCES NEW CONTROLLER FOR PLAYSTATION®3. Press release. Retrieved on 2006-05-24.</ref> more trigger-like R2 and L2 buttons, a PS button, and a USB mini-B port for charging the internal battery and use for wired play. The PlayStation 3 supports up to 7 simultaneous controllers over Bluetooth.<ref name="specs page">PlayStation.com - PLAYSTATION®3 - Specs:. Retrieved on 2006-09-22.</ref> The SIXAXIS is named for its ability to detect motion in the full six degrees. However, unlike the previous DualShock, the new controller has no vibration feature. The controller will retail for US$50.
The PlayStation 3 Memory Card Adaptor is a device that allows data to be transferred to and from PlayStation and PlayStation 2 memory cards and to the PlayStation 3's hard disk. The device is a cable that connects to the PS3's USB port on one end, and features a legacy PlayStation 2 memory card port on the other end. The adaptor will be available for purchase simultaneously with the console's launch, at a price of JP¥1500 (including tax) in Japan, and US$14.99 in the United States.
Using Bluetooth, the PlayStation 3 BD Remote allows users to easily control videos and music on Blu-ray Disc and DVD. In Japan, the device will be available starting December 7, 2006, and will cost JP¥3,800. The device will be available in North America in December for US$24.99.[10] However, the PS3 will accept signals only via its Bluetooth Remote and not through the standard IR spectrum, disallowing the use of universal remotes with the system. The Blu-ray Disc movie Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby were to be included with the initial 400,000 release copies of the PS3 in North America.[11]
Official PS3 HDMI cables will retail for US$50. No HDMI cable is included with the PS3 system.<ref name=hdmi/>
References
<references/>
External links
Official sites PlayStation 3 home pages for English language countries
- Official US PlayStation 3 Site
- Official Australian PS3 site
- Official European PlayStation 3 Site
- Official UK PlayStation 3 site
PlayStation 3 auxiliary sites by Sony
- PlayStation 3 Hardware Press Images
- Sony Computer Entertainment HQ (English)
- PlayStation Products Page
- PS3 features and promotion site
- PlayStation 3 User's Guide
- Open Platform for PlayStation 3
Unofficial
- IGN.com - PlayStation 3 Coverage
- Gamespot.com - PlayStation 3 Coverage
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