I thought the Ps2 was a pretty good system. In fact its the only system I play now (Guitar hero :])
But I dunno if the PS3 will be priced what people think is affordable. Competing wise I don't think Sony will ever outsell the Wii. I could definitely be wrong though. Sony COULD pull out a remote like controller from their bag of tricks. :] Lets just hope the PS3 will fail on the market though. :]
I'm definitely not a fanboy either. I thought the whole handheld war was a bit too serious. :| I hated seeing a bunch of nerds fighting over what system was better while carving "DS RULEZ!!" In the demo psps.
Actually, it has everything to do with gaming. From the kid in their room crying about Kingdom Hearts, to the kid in the mall feeding their Nintendogs on their ds, emo is the role we play.
Emo=society as a whole and trend followers, as far as I'm concerned. Because most people have nothing better to do than watch other peoples lives on reality tv or play video games(rpg fantasy garbage).
PS3 is the only next gen system i've seen out. The Wii is only a gamecube with a wand. And the 360 is just an xbox-and-a-half.
oh and i don't play my psp or ds, i just hack them!
Its not over yer, S0nNy!
http://australianit.news.com.au/arti...nbv%5E,00.html
SONY BMG has agreed to settle charges that it secretly embedded potentially damaging anti-piracy software in some of its CDs, the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) said.
The settlement requires Sony BMG, a joint venture of Sony and Germany's Bertelsmann, to make further disclosures, to allow consumers to exchange the CDs at issue and reimburse consumers for up to $US150 ($194) to repair any damage to their computers, the FTC said.
"Consumers' computers belong to them, and companies must adequately disclose unexpected limitations on the customary use of their products so consumers can make informed decisions regarding whether to purchase and install that content," FTC chairman Deborah Majoras said in a statement.
The FTC said Sony BMG violated the law by embedding some music CDs with software that installed itself on consumers' computers without their consent and restricted the number of times the audio files could be copied.
It also was used to help send them marketing messages, the FTC said.
The software was "unreasonably difficult to uninstall" and created security vulnerabilities that could allow hackers and other third parties to gain access to consumers' computers, the FTC said.
The software at issue was included on millions of Sony BMG CDs sold in 2005. The agency charged that it was deceptive because Sony BMG failed to disclose adequately that software would be installed.
"We are pleased to have reached this agreement with the Federal Trade Commission," Sony BMG said in a statement. The company declined to comment further.
Last month, Sony BMG reached a nearly identical settlement with 41 states and the District of Columbia. The company no longer includes the software on its CDs
Reuters
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