I paid AU$40, but it was on sale, add in a Digital TV/DAB tuner for AU$70 (but I could have got a cheaper one) and there is nothing that nextBox can do that my living room PC cannot (except kinect, but my living room is too small for kinect anyway).RhombusHatesYou said:Naw, you're not thinking it through... they're offering a game console (or at least, we assume it will still play games... hard to say with all the other shit they're shoehorning in) that can also be used as a DVR so you can 'time-shift' (legalese for 'record and watch later') tv shows.Kargathia said:It's not you they're aiming at, but people who'd buy it as a tv receiver you can play games on.loa said:They sure do seem obsessed with the idea of a "media center" that does everything instead of keeping it simple (which might make the thing less like a giant brick).
I can get behind dvds but why the heck would I want to watch TV through my gaming console?
Doesn't sound like something they'd really be interested in... except for when those HDDs inside the start getting full-as-fuck (and people who own DVRs will tell you that doesn't take anywhere near as long as people think it will) and people want bigger and bigger HDDs... which microsoft will be more than willing to sell them at a grossly inflated premium.
Actually, even at a discount they're still not a viable alternative unless the PS3 offers you other things you're interested in... because it will be a loooooong time before a PS3 is discounted to be price competative with a low end, el cheapo BR player.Much along the same lines as that a PS3 on discount is a perfectly viable alternative to a blu-ray player.
That doesn't even count people who use a PC as their media centre, who can grab a BR drive for their system for AU$50.
I'm looking forward to the next generation of consoles hitting the market. My NAS server runs more RAM than the 512Mb in the Xbox and PS3. I can't wait for devs to be finally be able to build games that will take advantage of even a moderate gaming PC.