You refering to the HMDI connector? cause composite comes standard with the normal 360 and thats your HD in right there... i've been wondering though... the Elite version... what kind of rear conenctor does it use? Is it a HMDI out only? or does it use the standard propreitary connector with an HDMI cable for HDMI? but it will work as normal with the original cables? Enlighten me.
Xbox dashboard update tips upTurn on, tune in, downloadBy Wily Ferret: Thursday 10 May 2007, 10:19Click here to find out more!MICROSOFT has finally released its much-vaunted 'Spring Dashboard Update' for the Xbox 360.The update adds a dedicated 'blade' for Xbox Live Marketplace, cross-platform integration with Windows Live Messenger, improved VGA performance, and support for H.264 and MPEG-4 codecs.If you're using your Xbox online, you'll have to download it or be booted off.Interestingly, Microsoft has used the update to jump on the eco-friendly bandwagon. If you're downloading a large game or demo from the Marketplace, the console will effectively switch itself into 'low-power' mode, where almost everything besides the net connection and the hard disk are inactive, enabling you to download overnight with the minimal power requirement. The console will even switch itself off when it's done.Saving the world one Xbox at a time. µ
Xbox 360 could beat PS3 in FoldingMicrosoft has to think outside the boxBy Theo Valich: Thursday 10 May 2007, 09:24Click here to find out more!IN AN INTERVIEW with the San Jose Mercury News Peter Moore, corporate VP of Microsoft's entertainment business unit admitted that Microsoft was somewhat caught out by Sony's PS3 Folding@Home client. He said even Bill Gates had a conversation about "applying philanthropic processing power to big problems".But he souldn't resist a jab at Sony's endeavour. "I’m not quite sure yet whether we’re seeing real tangible results from the PlayStation 3 Folding@Home initiative," he suggested.Microsoft knows all the deficiencies of IBM's sluggish in-order triple-core PowerPC that is built inside its own console, and does not want to get soundly beaten by IBM's Cell. However, it is unclear whether the Vole of Redmond is aware that it has something far more powerful inside its own boxes.The Geforce 7900 inside the PS3 is no match for Xenos in the Xbox. Even the Sony Cell would probably end beaten by 48 vec4+scalar units hidden inside Xbox's 360 graphics chip. Folding@Home is Stream Computing at its finest, and six/seven/eight SPE units can flourish in the CPU. But when compared to the GPU, the Xbox 360 GPU would probably run in circles around Cell CPU.And then Microsoft's marketing machine might get interested in touting Folding@Home for the Xbox 360 console, since it would no longer be a race between a snail and a rabbit, as far as protein folding performance is concerned.The next question would then be, could Brook get set up running on a Xbox 360 GPU with all the limitations that Microsoft environment is using? µ
"I can't comment on failure rates, because it's just not something -- it's a moving target. What this consumer should worry about is the way that we've treated him. Y'know, things break, and if we've treated him well and fixed his problem, that's something that we're focused on right now. I'm not going to comment on individual failure rates because I'm shipping in 36 countries and it's a complex business."
"f we truly believe that we can in some way marshall the resources of a much larger installed base of Xbox 360 owners, with a processor that's of equal power to the PS3, then you have my commitment that we'll look at that. And if we believe we can add value to solving a gnarly problem such as the medical problems and the health problems that Folding@home seems to be doing, then we'll certainly look at that very strongly."
"One thing I've seen -- and I've been going to Tokyo now for eight years, probably 50 times in the last eight years -- is there's a more global outlook now from Japanese publishers than there has ever been. Capcom (is) the best example of that with Dead Rising and Lost Planet, with which they've done incredibly well. They realize the Japanese domestic market is insufficient to sustain them without globalizing, and, quite frankly Westernizing the way that they go to market. Konami, Sega, Capcom, Namco -- all doing that same thing. And that bodes well for us, because obviously they see our strength in the Western world and they're becoming great partners of ours."