Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: hands on with the u.s psp

                  
   
  1. #1
    DCEmu Newbie
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    62
    Rep Power
    0

    Default hands on with the u.s psp

    ony PSP US Edition Impressions


    The official North American release date for the Sony PSP may be March 24, but we managed to get our hands on a US Sony PSP a week early.
    By James Yu
    Posted Wednesday, March 16th 2005

    The official North American release date for the Sony PSP may be March 24, but we managed to get our hands on a US Sony PSP a week early. We looked at the Spider-Man 2 movie and sampler universal media disc, tested out how the region locking worked for movies and games, and we also checked out the new networking features enabled in the US version.

    screenshot
    Everything you get in the $249 US Sony PSP Value Pack.

    Here's the deal on the US launch in case you've been hiding under a rock for the past two months: The Sony PSP will be available in a $249 Value Pack when it hits store shelves next week. The Value Pack will include the PSP, battery pack, charger, carrying case, wrist strap, headphones with wired remote, 32MB Memory Stick Duo, cleaning cloth, and a UMD sampler disc, which contains movie clips, music videos, and sample game footage. You won't be able to buy the PSP without the bundled accessories at launch, but we wouldn't be surprised if Sony released a basic pack at a future date.

    The first million Value Pack units shipped in the US will also include a full-length Spider-Man 2 movie UMD. Our retail box had a sticker that stated our "limited edition package" included the Spider-Man 2 movie and a "game/music/movie video sampler disc." We found both UMDs in the box in small cardboard sleeves. It was disappointing not to get full plastic cases for the discs, but, as with other hardware products, bundled software most often comes in no-frills packaging.

    The sampler disc includes new movie trailers for: Stealth, XXX: State of the Union, The Longest Yard, Lords of Dogtown, Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo, King Fu Hustle, and Are We There Yet? Unfortunately, the game demos only consist of nonplayable gameplay videos. The disc includes demo clips for: Wipeout Pure, Ape Escape, World Soccer Tour, NBA, Twisted Metal: Head-On, Gretzky NHL, Hot Shots Golf Fore!, ATV Offroad Fury: Blazin' Trails, Lumines, Untold Legends: Brotherhood of the Blade, and Ridge Racer.

    We were particularly interested in the Spider-Man 2 movie because we wanted to see how the region encoding worked between our Japanese and US PSP units. Sony had stated in the past that games would not be region locked, but other media, such as movies and music, would be. It appears that Sony was true to its word--we were able to play Japanese PSP games on our US unit and vice versa; we weren't able to play the Region 1-encoded Spider-Man 2 UMD on our Region 2 Japanese PSP.

    Sony launched the PSP in Japan last November without the "infrastructure" wireless networking enabled. All PSPs can connect to each other wirelessly in a local, "ad hoc" network, but the infrastructure mode is the wireless mode that allows the PSP to connect to the Internet through a wireless router connection. Our US unit has the "infrastructure" mode fully enabled.

    screenshot
    The first million PSPs include Spider-Man 2 and a UMD sampler disc.

    We were able to configure our network settings and immediately log onto our internal wireless network. The network-configuration options are fairly robust. Anyone who has configured a PC with a wireless card will recognize all of the available options. The unit also offers an "easy" configuration mode that allows the PSP to automatically detect and connect to an open wireless network. Our CNET office building offers free wireless connectivity, but as with most public hot spots, you first have to click through a terms and conditions HTML page before getting Internet access. Using the PSP, we were able to reach the page and click on the "I agree" button.

    We were able to get onto the Web, but it appears that Sony doesn't yet have its servers up for online PSP play. We couldn't find any game-matchup servers ready for PSP traffic, but we were able to reach a "coming soon" splash page when we tried accessing the downloads area for Wipeout Pure. Overall, the PSP's online capabilities look very promising, and we can't wait to see how the service fills out as we get closer to launch day.

    Visit our GameSpot Sony PSP Launch Center for all the latest Sony PSP news, previews, reviews, and hardware updates.

  2. #2
    DCEmu Pro leggy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    England - don't forget we invented the English language!
    Age
    56
    Posts
    832
    Rep Power
    73

    Default

    It's a real shame that the movies will be regionalised!

  3. #3
    DCEmu Newbie
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Posts
    82
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    am i right in reading that Jap PSP wont be able to play online via wireless lan?

  4. #4

    Default

    andrew can you give me more info on how the connection connectivity works and is it easy to set up infrastucture

  5. #5
    DCEmu Newbie
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    62
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    just go to www.gamespot.com its all there for you

  6. #6

    Default

    thanx andrew for that site its pretty sick but i couldnt find any thing about the actual internet connection and stuff, do you think you could give me a link to an actual article?

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •