Yeah, but these days people have to be told to use their common sense so the don't void the warranty or something.Nouw said:Isn't it common sense for not to move a console while it's still running?
Thank-you. You've just helped me figure out why MS designed their console to be vertical. After decades of consoles being horizontal, MS was the 1st to come up with the *bright* idea of making theirs vertical. That never made sense to me. We never saw a vertical VCR, DVD player, or any other home theater component. Why a vertical game console??? Now, I see it's the perfect design to get gamers everywhere with children and pets to buy the same game more than once. Even if it was covered by warranty it'd inflate the number of games sold, which is good for their reputation. MS is following this train of thought by making a new 360 that's not compatible with the old 360's hard drive, power brick, or even memory cards.Eruanno said:Argh, why would anyone move any console while it's operating? I usually take the habit of turning off my console and taking out any DVDs inside before moving it, just to be sure.
And speaking of ungodly noise, I got Need for Speed: Underground for PS2 as an Xmas-gift a few years back. Our two cats of course decided that running really fast and bumping my console so it fell from vertical to horizontal smack into the floor was a really good idea. (The sound was something like what I imagine two robots having sex sounds like) and the disc got massively fucked. Fortunately, the customer service was nice and I got a new copy, no extra charge.
.."slot-in" cd-roms solved this for "high speed" drives in 2001. You have tray players with the same solution as well. ..a clamp with rotating parts on both sides of the disc, more or less, instead of just a spindle. Then they'd have a mechanism for stopping the read if it was interrupted, spinning the drive back safely, etc.VanityGirl said:Isn't this a rule for erm... all consoles? I mean I've never moved my Wii, 360 or PS3 because it just seemed like a bad idea to move it with a disk in it.
..well, at least it doesn't spin out of the box and decapitate people by accident.WanderFreak said:No good can come of that. It's not a design flaw. You can screw up your DVDs if you move a DVD player, you can bugger up ROMS if you bang your tower around. It's a loose spinning object.
Common sense.
microsoft no longer supports wired controllers. In fact the old official ones are relics.joshuaayt said:I heard children play with this console every now and then. Imagine this scenario, Microsoft- quite common. A child is playing a game, using a wired controller. Maybe it ran out of batteries, and he wants to play it while it is charging, or something silly.
So, he's sitting on his bed. Uh oh! the cord is too short.
Well, he says, surely I can simply move the big noisy machine just a leetle bit closer to... to... what's that noise?
Grind, chew, broken, mommy and daddy break up due to financial difficulties resulting from child's attempt to replace the device. Typical ending to a typical story.
I'm not suggesting you spend all of your money making some revolutionary disc stabilising mechanism, but it has to be possible to find a way to allow for slight shifting.
My bad, I edited that. Never be awake for 48 hours at a time kids.The_root_of_all_evil said:Freudian slip much?AzrealMaximillion said:Any other console, you can pretty much do a full Waltz with while the console is on, and the dick will be fine.
The wii does fine with simple accidental movements too. Just though I'd add that.unoleian said:The only two consoles in my memory that could be moved while a disc was spinning was the PSX and the Gamecube.
Not moving the console is frickin' common sense, people.