E3 Schedule Released

-from gamewad
E3, or at least the shadow of the former expo, “min-E3,” will be held this year from July 11th to the 13th at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California. The ESA recently released a schedule of events for the show on the official E3 website.

Microsoft will get things started this year with their pre-E3 conference at 8:30pm on July 10th. Nintendo will be up next, hosting their conference at 9:00 the next morning. Sony will take up the rear with a conference at 11:30am on the 11th.

Third parties will be granted conference time, as well. The full show schedule follows:

7/10/07:

* 8:30pm – Microsoft Press Conference

7/11/07:

* 9:00am – Nintendo Press Conference
* 9:00am-5:30pm – Meeting suites open at the Fairmont Hotel
* 11:30am – Sony Press Conference
* 1:00-6:30pm – Barker Hanger open to view games
* 2:00pm – Electronic Arts conference
* 3:15pm – Activision conference
* 4:30pm – Midway conference
* 5:45pm – Konami conference

7/12/07:

* 8:00am – Take-Two conference
* 9:00am-5:30pm – Meeting suites open at the Fairmont Hotel
* 9:15am – THQ conference
* 10:30am – Ubisoft conference
* 1:00-6:30pm – Barker Hanger open to view games
* 1:00pm – Namco Bandai conference
* 3:30pm – Disney Interactive conference

7/13/07:

* 9:00am-3:30pm – Meeting suites open at the Fairmont Hotel
* 11:00am-3:30pm – Barker Hanger open to view games

On the hangar floor, booths will be set up for over 30 companies. Some notables who won’t have formal conferences include Capcom, Square-Enix, and SEGA, among others.

*Eddie R Inzauto – Senior Editor, GameWad.com

The 120gb HDD

So I apparently stayed up too late or something last night, because I slept through all my classes,lucky I can now read more news and RSS for today. So as I read one storyabout the 120gb HDD for the 360 I was surprised to find out that Microsoft is making the transfer very frustrating. Get this the transfer from one 20gb to the 120 gb is only one way and deletes everything on both HDD, before replacing it with the copied data. Also anything you could think to do with it is impossible, unless we end up modding the some how, but for now it only works once and one way.

News from the Front

News from the Front

Xbox Live is back up and from what I’ve heard the halo 3 is still unavailable, I’m, going to try it tomorrow after all my classes, so I’ll just edit this one with my attempt at it, unless you readers beat me to the punch.
Next I have heard about Microsoft making some kind of announcement yesterday and today.
From the announcement yesterday: The Xbox 360 Elitehas been confimed.Now on to the details

  • It’ll cost $479.99 to be released on the 29th of April
  • will have everything that you need to play it straight out of the box so that means HDMI and Component.
  • It’s not known whether it supports PCM 5.1, TrueHD, etc.; it will obviously support 1080p, though.
  • There also will be an adapter so if you haver optical surround sound or 5.1 you’ll be able to split the audio cables.
  • The 120 gb HDD will be released for $180 ($179.99) with cables to transfer all your stuff from your original.
  • There is no price cuts with the other two versions of the consoles
  • The marketplace will begin to release Paramount and News Line
  • It will have everything the others came with including a black plug and play charge kit

If you hear any rumors about say Halo 3 only come out for the Elite or that Microsoft will do something to make you upgrade, laugh at them in the face please. But really, they claim that they will continue to see most of the market still as just people who have the 20 gb premium version. Now if you are some one who will go out and trade away your old 360 for a fancy black one, then according to Microsoft they are working on a way to transfer data between boxes, I would assume that it will be almost similar to the HDD transfer cables, using the USB drive. More to come as this story develops.

Halo 3 Beta Possible Release on 3/27?

-from My Arcade Planet

Gamers have been waiting for the day of the Halo 3’s Beta release, since registration of the Halo 3 Beta is closed expect for buying Crackdown with the beta invite, gamers have been wondering when the beta will be released. Now spring time, and with an upcoming Xbox Live Maintenance which will take 14 hours. Rumors, hints, and evidence help prove that after the maintenance the Halo 3 Beta will finally be released.

Possible Hints

Xbox.com has released an Official FAQ of the 14 hour Xbox Live Maintenance, a fan of the community on the Bungie forums have posted up a possible hint between this and the Halo 3 Beta. This is his complete post he made,

“Dear Bungie.net Members,

If you have browsed through xbox.com recently you might have noticed a link referring to the Xbox Live Maintenance for 14 hours on March 27, 2007. A lot of people are probably wondering what the update is for and it is not stated clearly in the article. It says it is not a dashboard update, just a maintenance. The question is could this maintenance be preparation for the launch of the Halo 3 Beta. The download is expected to be over 1 GB, so maybe a maintenance is required to allow more “bandwidth” so Xbox Live won’t crash when thousands of players are downloading it at the same time. Who knows? If you want to read the Xbox Live Downtime Newsflash click HERE!

-Lucky Sniper 08-

THREAD FAQ UPDATE (Last Revised: 03.24.07)

Q. What details have been given about the Xbox Live Downtime?

A. The Xbox Live Downtime is expected to start at midnight, Pacific Daylight Time, on March 27, 2007 and last for approximately 14 hours. During this time, xbox.com will be off line and unavailable as well. A message saying we are currently down for maintenance will appear on the website and over Xbox Live.

Q. What is the maintenance for and will there be an update?

A. The maintenance is just supposed to be a regular checkup and an update for the servers. A notification was sent out through a message over Xbox Live on March 23, 2007. As far as a required update that you would have to download, I am unaware of at this moment. However, it is not a dashboard update.

Q. Is the Xbox Live Downtime related to Halo 3 in any way?

A. Maybe. There is no information that has been officially announced saying that it is or isn’t related to Halo 3 or the Halo 3 Beta. This update for the servers could possibly be to allow more bandwidth and better connection for the Xbox Live Marketplace. Keep this in mind because Microsoft may be afraid that their servers may shutdown if thousands of gamers all over the nation are trying to download the Halo 3 Beta as soon as it is released.

Q. Will the Halo 3 Beta be released on March 27, 2007 after the Xbox Live Downtime?

A. Possibly, but it is most unlikely. Usually Bungie.net gives us information regarding scheduled releases in advance. I don’t think they would plan to release the Halo 3 Beta without telling us prior in the Weekly Update. However, they may do this so that there won’t be a huge “rush” of downloads happening simultaneously.

Q. Why would they shutdown Xbox Live for 14 hours if it wasn’t related to Halo 3?

A. I know for us, Halo fans, that is the only thing that is running through our minds especially during the spring. However, the maintenance could be related to other issues such as the following.

* The Elder Scrolls® IV: Oblivion™ (Shivering Isles Expansion Pack)
* Halo® 2 (New Map Pack for Spring)
* Security Update (Help Servers prevent hackers)
* Excessive New Content (Movies, Videos, Demos, Other Game Content)
* Nothing (Allow the server to rest and maybe fix other technical problems)

POSSIBLE HINTS FOR HALO 3 BETA

Posted by: Xbox.com Newsflash

2. Cruise Pacific City. Have you found all 500 Crackdown™ Agility Orbs? Yeah? How about all 300 Hidden Orbs then? Check out tips on how to find ’em all.

6. Study up on March 27 history. Here are some examples of momentous events that occurred on 3/27:
* 1884: The first long-distance telephone call was made, between Boston and New York.
* 1958: Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet premier and first secretary of the Communist Party.
* 1964: A 9.2 magnitude earthquake hit 80 miles east of Anchorage, Alaska, killing 117 and producing a 50-foot tsunami that traveled over 8,000 miles.
* 1973: Marlon Brando refuses his Oscar for The Godfather in protest of Hollywood’s treatment of Native Americans.

10. Get experienced. Register for the Old Spice Experience Challenge. It’s part of the Xbox Rewards program, and there are still cool prizes to be won! After you’ve done that, go check out the redesign at Bungie.net!

When more information is released I will add it to this FAQ. Thank you.”

There is also other news reports from a forum user from Xbox.com Forums have posted up a threat containing possible proof that it will be released tomorrow, he does have reasonable proof as well.

“Ok look I know that everyone is curious about the Halo 3 beta being launched on March 27. I have a reason that this may be the date. Now before everyone goes why??? I will tell the reasons from the http://youtube.com/watch?v=fTGyK0zr6dg Halo 3 alpha video. If you look carefully at 1:01-1:02 a guy pops up from his friends list and if you look very carefully the guys name is SirLagsAlot711. You cannot clearly read it but you can tell it is that from the legnth. Now obviously this guy knows the alpha guy. Well I know SirLagsAlot711 very well. I have talked to the halo 3 alpha guy a while back like in februaury or late january and he does have the alpha. This guys uncle supposedly works for bungie and that is how he got the alpha. I did not believe him, but after seeing the video I know it is true and SirLagsAlot711 told me he did. Now about a month ago I was talking to SirLagsAlot711 and I was like “Man, I want the beta so bad!” and then he said to me March 27 is when the alpha guy’s uncle says. I did believe him because SirLagsAlot711 doesn’t lie. Now that the servers will be going down on March 27 I think that is perfectly reasonable and that it could be true. I am not saying that it is but I think it could be a strong possibility. So hopefully this guy is right and it comes out tomorrow.”


“Uploaded By koldskillit From Putfile.com”

Also there have been small reports from Crackdown users that when they go to the download section to see the option to download the Halo 3 beta is not grayed out yet you still can’t download.

Update: Seems Crackdown users when putting in their Crackdown games have been recieving a message of a new download but there is nothing new to download, possible sign of the Halo 3 Beta launch tomorrow?

More information on this as it progresses.

Xbox 360 Elite spied in production

-from engadget
Look, we know it’s coming and all, but that doesn’t mean we can’t have fun getting ourselves all excited over spy shots and the like. A forum member over at the China’s TGFC has managed to sneak some shots of the Xbox 360 Elite in production, and it sure is looking… black and silver. We’re not sure how “Wangsososos” got the shots, and we sure hope his machine-translated statement doesn’t mean what we fear it might: “As mobile phones, cameras can not be brought into plants. The key to reaching the buttocks no plans, joy!” But we digress. For some up close and personal pics of that 120GB drive, peep the gallery.
HDD
top
the wall of themside shot

Boot linux on the 360

-from MydediBox
Here is a crappy help to boot linux on the 360.

First, you need :

– 360 xbox with an exploitable kernel (4532 or 4548).
– Dvd drive flashed with xtreme firmware.
– Serial adapter (http://mydedibox.homelinux.com/1.jpg).
– King kong patched.
– Xell loader (thanks tmbinc).
– A powerpc toolchain (http://kegel.com/crosstool/)

– Install NFS server on your linux box, and make a share available for the 360 linux kernel to load the filesystem (eg. /tftpboot/x360). You also need portmap installed.
For help if needed :
http://tldp.org/HOWTO/NFS-HOWTO/server.html
http://www.google.fr/search?hl=fr&q=nfs+server+howto&btnG=Recherche+Google&meta=

– Now we need to make the filesystem, i choose ubuntu 6.10 powerpc64 livecd iso (ubuntu-6.10-desktop-powerpc.iso), mount it, install squashfs-tools then extract the compressed livecd content :

ninux$ sudo mount -t squashfs -o loop,ro ubuntu-livecd/casper/filesystem.squashfs mnt/
ninux$ cp -a mnt/. /tftpboot/x360

Note that there isnt enough device copied from the ubuntu compressed file system to our nfs root file system to boot correctly. Copy your current “/dev” folder to the nfs share :

ninux$ cp -a /dev/. /tftpboot/x360/dev”

– Edit the .config file from tmbinc (http://mydedibox.homelinux.com/downloads/x360/.config) so the kernel find the filesystem on your computer ip : “root=/dev/sdb1 ip=10.0.0.204 video=xenonfb console=tty0 nfsroot=10.0.0.1:/tftpboot/x360”

– Recompile the kernel (of course with the xenon patch applied) :

ninux$ alias smake=’make ARCH=powerpc CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu-‘
ninux$ smake

– Now upload the Xell loader via serial to boot your newly kernel (either by tftp or cdrom, i prefere tftp), it should load the filesystem from your NFS server. You can then chroot an usb disk from there so you dont need the NFS server anymore (a lot tricky).

– I had a probleme with the password from the livecd to pass the prompt so i added the option “single” to the kernel config line (“root=/dev/sdb1 ip=10.0.0.204 video=xenonfb console=tty0 nfsroot=10.0.0.1:/tftpboot/x360 single”) so i can change the root passwd then removed this option.

Now i should look to make an initrd so my usb disk will be available when the kernel is booting. It would prevent all this tricks.

Edit : You can also install linux on your 360 hard drive, so you dont need the nfs part anymore. Note that its not sure that you will be able to use it again after format it to a linux filesystem.
Anyway if you want so, mount the “filesystem.squashfs” file under your nfs share (“/tftpboot/x360/mnt/fs” for exemple) so it is available under your 360 linux box.
When logged on the 360, use cfdisk for exemple to make a partition on your 360 hdd (/dev/sda), format it with mkfs.ext3.
Mount it (mount /dev/sda1 /temp) then copy the filesystem on it (“cp -a /mnt/fs/. /temp).
Now recompile your kernel with this option : “root=/dev/sda1 video=xenonfb console=tty0”. You now have linux installed on your hdd !
Finnish the work .. (edit /etc/fstab, /etc/hosts, /etc/network/interfaces etc …).

Microsoft To Announce The Xbox 360 Elite

-From The Mercury News Interactive
By Dean Takahashi
Saturday, March 24th, 2007 at 2:15 pm in Dean Takahashi, Gaming, General.

Rumors have floated in the past month that Microsoft will launch a new high-end version of the Xbox 360. It’s true that Microsoft is preparing to announce the Xbox 360 Elite, a version of the game console with black plastic and advanced features. Several sources confirmed Microsoft plans to add this box to its product line.

The new box will go on sale in limited quantities soon for $479. The details may not be precise here, but I believe it will have an HDMI connector so that you can connect at the highest speed to a high-definition TV. It will come with a 120-gigabyte hard disk drive and will have IPTV capability.

Bill Gates announced in January that the Xbox 360 was capable of serving as a set-top box for IPTV, or Internet Protocol TV, which phone companies such as AT&T are using to offer high-definition movies and scores of channels in competition with TV.

The Xbox 360 Elite will apparently not come with a built-in HD-DVD drive, which will remain an option for playing high-definition movie disks. In the spring, the new machine will be available in limited quantities and it will reflect a redesigned motherboard. Tina Conley, an outside spokeswoman for Microsoft, declined to comment on Saturday. How solid is this information? Some details may be wrong. I’m not looking at any press release right now that describes it all. The details will be announced soon enough.

I’ve been waiting for Microsoft to make a move like this. The company has scheduled a motherboard redesign and cost reduction for every year, but this is the first major change to take the costs out of the inside of the Xbox 360. By the fall, the company will also implement a chip redesign, shifting from 90-nanometer production to 65 nanometer production. That will bring costs down fairly dramatically and will enable Microsoft to make the box in larger quantities by the fourth quarter.

Every other year, the company plans to shrink the size of its chips. It is overdue for a shift from the 90-nanometer chips that it started with in 2005 to the 65-nanometer chips commonly in production elsewhere. That transition isn’t yet complete but it should be by the fall.

Why is it important to miniaturize a chip? When you make the width between circuits in a chip (the difference between 90 and 65), the technology gets better. The electrons travel shorter distances, the circuits are more reliable, defects can go down, yields go up, and you can fit the same chip design in a much smaller area. Since chip costs directly relate to how much material you use, a smaller chip is cheaper to make.

Every console maker will have the opportunity to reduce the costs of its chips. But how the console makers capitalize on that decision depends on strategy. Michael Pachter, an analyst at Wedbush Morgan, said in an email that he believes Microsoft will launch its elite box, but he isn’t sure how it will position the other boxes, especially the Core unit. I expect the Xbox 360 with the 20-gigabyte hard disk drive will continue to sell for $399 and the Core unit, which has no hard drive, will sell for $299.

At $479, the Xbox 360 Elite will still be cheaper than Sony’s $499 20-gigabyte PlayStation 3 and the $599 60-gigabyte PS 3. But it will match the Sony box with the HDMI connector feature. The Sony box is not yet capable of IPTV.

It is interesting that Microsoft hasn’t added the HD-DVD drive as a permanent feature. The format war with Blu-ray is still going on, and that drive would add considerable cost. Microsoft sells it separately for $199.

The larger hard drive on the Xbox 360 Elite will make it much more useful for downloading movies and serving as a digital video recorder, which is one of the primary uses of an IPTV set-top box. High-definition movies can take up five gigabytes or more, while standard movies take about a gigabyte of storage space. Hence, 120 gigabytes is enough for, accounting for 10 gigabytes used by the system for other things, about 22 HD movies.

In any case, this is going to put some pressure on Sony and it will enable Microsoft to patch some holes in the technological capability of the Xbox 360. It will enable Microsoft to please the relatively small group of hardcore gamers who care about having the highest-end technology in the living room. It’s those gamers who are most tempted by the PS 3. HDMI, for instance, will enable someone to view games and movies the way they were meant to be seen in either 720p or 1080p resolutions.

News from the frontlines of the console wars

well I just heard that Devil May Cry 4 and Ace Combat 6 are headed over the to 360 now, which would make the good exclusive, in my opinion, Metal Gear solid 4. This hoilday season wll be Sony’s make it or break it time, because if they fail here it’s over.

PS3 or beer? Microsoft poses the ultimate question

-From Engadget

While we might’ve put down a few of Microsoft’s last night Europe exploits as a tad immature, we aren’t going to deny the genius here: Microsoft’s message to gamers is that the Xbox 360 = the PS3 + £146 in beer money. Of course, such a mental exercise is nothing without a bit of illustration, so Microsoft carted in just that much beer to the offices of the UK’s CVG magazine (above) and Auckland, NZ’s GamePlanet store (pictured after the break). Naturally, Sony will have the last laugh when its utterly sober fanboys use keen rhetoric to destroy their tipsy MS fanboy opponents in the comments section following this post.

[Via Joystiq]

Apple TV vs. Xbox 360: Media Center Showdown

-from Gizmodo
Apple TV vs. Xbox 360: Media Center Showdown

Apple TV
Walt Mossburg said in his review that “Apple TV’s most formidable competitor is the Xbox 360 game console from Microsoft, which, in addition to playing games, can also play back content from Windows computers on a TV.” The Times’ techmeister David Pogue also calls up the 360 Media Extender in his review, as well some other gadgets.

In our head-to-head, we took Vista Ultimate and used a 360 as a Windows Media Extender. With this setup, we came to the conclusion that the hulking white box ekes out the slimmer, shorter Apple TV—unless you have a standard XP computer with Media Center, or copious amounts of Apple iTunes DRM’d content. Why?

Setup
Both are easy as pie, quite frankly. Turned on the 360, my Vista Media Center found it instantly. Same for iTunes/Apple TV. One catch here, however, is that if you want to wirelessly stream to your 360, you’re going to need a dongle than runs $100 for the official one, which is quite frankly, obscene. Apple TV’s lack of cables isn’t much better. Both the 360 and Apple TV provide a code for you to punch into your Media Center and iTunes to authenticate, not long after which you can start moving content. Woohoo. The 360 warns you if you’re moving content wirelessly on both ends, however, recommending that at least your computer be hardwired to the network.

Apple TV
Interface
Both have attractive interfaces, obviously. Apple TV looks simply fabulous in HD, with crystal clear text and vivid icons. Granted, this is a downside if your album art sucks, as mentioned before. Media Center’s no slouch either, with a heavy emphasis on live previews. Text-wise, I prefer Apple TV, simply because I find white text on a black background easier to read than light blue and white on dark blue, which dominates the interface.

Apple TV is also much snappier—Media Center felt sluggish both on my laptop and on the TV itself. When that sluggishness is paired with scrolling in four directions, I found it to be a bit awkward to get where I want to go. That said, both use a modified “folder metaphor” as its major schematic, and I’m not overly fond of it. It takes too long to access content. God forbid you ever have to the onscreen keyboard to get anywhere with either of them. (You don’t really, as of yet.) I don’t know what the solution is, but surely there’s a better way to make content and options more quickly and easily accessible. Live previews are excellent, I do know that.


Moving Content
Media Center lets you customize which folders you want it to “watch” to import into your library. That content you can then stream to your “Media Extender,” the 360. If for some reason the 360 won’t play a video in your library, it won’t give you a thumbnail preview, which is a nice way to let you know. Apple TV, because it syncs (ports content to its hard drive) from your main computer rather than simply streams, thankfully it has a fairly customizable set of syncing options. It still annoys me that you can’t manually delete or add content, though. Be warned, just because iTunes will play a video doesn’t mean that Apple TV will, as you can see in the screenshot below.
Itunes error

Apple TV plays H.264 and protected H.264, iTunes Store purchased video and MPEG-4, whereas Media Center handles MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and all WMV. Not being able to grab content straight from the iTunes store is a bummer, especially since it pulls trailers from the intertubes directly, so the 360 one-ups it here with its built-in direct access store. So both use proprietary formats in some manner. Bleh. But Media Center gives you more options than Apple TV does, so a check for the 360 setup.

Apple TV also does not stream photos—meaning you can only store them on the drive, you can only pull pictures from your main computer. Media Center, since it only streams, obviously streams photos, but I prefer the way it presents them, actually. No problems loading up my music library, which is comprised entirely of MP3s, and the corresponding album art, on either system.

Media Center
Playing Content
I find the Apple TV remote to be a little crummy. Sometimes fast-forwarding and rewinding was a little wonky, getting ahead of itself. Using the Xbox 360 controller (not remote) wasn’t better, largely because there’s no dedicated pause button, though I appreciated using the triggers as FF and RW. Weirdly, when you go back to the menu in Media Center, a live thumbnail preview keeps playing, and there’s no easy way to shut it off, which was kind of frustrating when I wanted a video to stop playing.

Otherwise, both played beautifully (if they were able to play the content), with no hiccups when streaming with either, despite using wireless G networks in both tests. (If you’d like to donate to the Giz wireless N fund, let us know.)

Conclusion
If you use iTunes as your primary media software and want to get your content on your widescreen TV, it’s not a bad way to do it, but that’s all it does (for now). If you already have a 360 and don’t mind Media Center, I see little point in blowing $300 on Apple TV if all that concerns you is bringing content stuck on your PC to your TV. You already have a $400 machine that does more than port media, it plays games. Great ones. And soon it’ll be an IPTV box to boot.

Apple TV is a bit more elegant in its presentation, I think, and it’s slightly easier to get to content with it, but it could do better. More importantly, it doesn’t do what it does so much better than the 360/Media Center setup that it warrants a separate purchase if you already have a 360, or even plan on getting one. Value-wise, the 360 is the winner here, at least for now.

But there are better convergence solutions on the horizon, so if you don’t need one of these now sit tight, because things are only going to get better. – Matt Buchanan

Apple TV [Gizmodo]