PREVIOUS ARTICLENEXT ARTICLE
NEWS
By 23 September 2010 | Categories: news

0

Following the unveiling of the latest Mac Mini earlier this year, Steve Jobs has reportedly addressed a Mac user’s concern over its lack of Blu-ray integration by taking a swipe at the high-end optical medium.
 
Now Microsoft has also followed suit as the UK Xbox head, Stephen McGill stated during an interview with Xbox 360 Achievements that Blu-ray is going to be passed by as a media format.
 
“People have moved through from DVDs to digital downloads and digital streaming, so we offer full HD 1080p Blu-ray quality streaming instantly, no download, no delay,” McGill said. “So, who needs Blu-ray?”
 
Microsoft recently updated the Xbox 360 console, but decided to stick with its DVD player as opposed to Sony who released its PlayStation 3 with a Blu-ray drive in 2006.
 
This latest comment follows in the wake of other self-assured assertions by Redmond, such as Microsoft Game Studio’s manager Kudo Tsunoda stating that first-person shooting games “are all about the console”, during an interview with GameInformer.
 
“Halo did an awesome job of building a first-person shooter exclusively for the console, and now hardly anyone plays first person shooters on the PC anymore.”
 
Tsunoda has also stated that the Xbox360’s controller-less, motion-based gaming add-on, dubbed Kinect, is going to be a runaway sales success following its 4 November launch in the States in an interview with gaming blog Gamasutra during the Tokyo Game Show.

USER COMMENTS

Read
Magazine Online
TechSmart.co.za is South Africa's leading magazine for tech product reviews, tech news, videos, tech specs and gadgets.
Start reading now >
Download latest issue

Have Your Say


What new tech or developments are you most anticipating this year?
New smartphone announcements (44 votes)
Technological breakthroughs (28 votes)
Launch of new consoles, or notebooks (14 votes)
Innovative Artificial Intelligence solutions (28 votes)
Biotechnology or medical advancements (21 votes)
Better business applications (132 votes)