gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

November 25, 2006

Get your skins on: Wii, PS3, Zune, Xbox 360, PSP

Filed under: Nintendo, PSP, Playstation3, Sony, XBox, XBox 360, microsoft, playstation 3, ps3, skin, wii, xbox360, zune — Ryan Block @ 11:53 pm

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Cookie cutter gadget? Passe. It’s all about skins, even the kind that may or may not ruin the shiny new finish on your valued consumer electronics. Submitted for your approval: tons of skins for your rare and lustworthy devices. Ok, so the 360 isn’t much of a skin, but we find the literal use of the term rather amusing, and when was the last time you saw a fake-fur faceplate?

P.S. -Big ups on the Xbox 360 and Eames-inspired PS3 and Wii skins above.

[Via Joystiq, thanks Craig]

Read - PS3 skins
Read - Wii skins
Read - Zune skins
Read - PSP, Xbox, etc. “skins”

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Finally, on the fly WMV transcoding for the Xbox 360

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We realize the fall update’s only been out a few weeks, but it seems like an eternity for those of us that have been waiting since last November to stream media to our Xbox 360s without the need for a Media Center PC. A new TVersity patch allows users to transcode video to WMV — now in real time — for immediate distribution to their 360 over Windows Media Connect without the pain of duped files and finding a good WMV encoder. A little fuss, a little muss, and a few minor niggles to keep this from being a prime time solution, but still, there isn’t exactly a plethora of ways to get your DivX onto your Xbox, so be grateful you’ve got at least something for now as the hardworking hacker front actually gives the people what the people want, whether or not it fits into Microsoft’s digital media business plan.

[Via Joystiq]

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 24, 2006

Xbox Live Video Marketplace downloads stalled by glitches

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The two biggest questions since Microsoft announced its Xbox Live Video Marketplace have been: 1. does anyone still has enough space on their Xbox 360’s 20GB hard drive for movie downloads in high definition? and 2. does anyone — even the guys at Redmond — have enough bandwidth to feed the HDTVs of millions of Xbox Live subscribers? Since launching two days ago those questions have been answered with a yes and resounding no, respectively. Users have complained of slow downloads that time out, receiving different files than the ones they requested and being charged twice when trying to complete timed-out rental downloads. Major Nelson has chimed in on the issue, letting us know that the company is aware of the problem and will refund Microsoft Points to all those who call 1-800-4MYXBOX for assistance. Good luck with that, though, as at least one person was told there aren’t any managers available to refund customers until after the holiday weekend. So while network engineers and management sleep off yesterday’s turkey and camp out for cheap plasmas, you may want to hold off trying to download Clash of the Titans in 720p ’till things get straightened out.

[Thanks, WiFiSpy]

Read - My Xbox 360 video rental nightmare
Read - Video Marketplace Status

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 22, 2006

Xbox Live Video Marketplace goes live

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Surprise, surprise, it’s November 22nd (happy birthday Xbox 360!), and Microsoft has taken its new Xbox Live Video Marketplace live. The biggest mystery at this point was price, which turns out to be $2 for SD TV shows, $3 for HD, while movie rentals will run you $3 for SD and $6 for HD. This is all converted from the various, confusing MS Points involved in each purchase (80 Points = $1), which we’re sure we’ll all be well sick of after a couple months of using the Marketplace — if not already. The current word on selection is 48 movies and 50 TV shows available for download, and we’re sure that’ll be growing — though V for Vendetta is already available as a HD rental… what more could you want?

[Thanks, TexRob]

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 19, 2006

GamerBUS provides mobile Xbox 360 LAN parties

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If you’re incensed about wasting your weekend (and part of last week) cruising around in futility trying to locate a Playstation 3 or Nintendo Wii, the GamerBUS can provide the ultimate painkiller — provided you live around the Virginia Beach area, that is. If you’ve got 63 friends or so, and you’re not claustrophobic, you can pack your posse into the 37-foot customized RV and get your game(s) on. Sporting a bevy of comfortable seating options, sixteen Xbox 360 “gamer stations” (pictured after the jump) with their own 23-inch Philips HDTV, and all the CAT5 cable / electricity you could ever need, this redefines the party on wheels. Essentially offering a mobile gaming LAN, the bus operators will gladly wire up a 16-person system-linked round of Halo 2 (or a variety of other titles) while you provide the Cheetos and air fresheners. Although weekday hours boast an understandable discount, weekend rates range from $125 to $150 per hour, depending on how long you occupy the vehicle. Notably, no connection has been drawn between this newfangled gaming service and the Va Beach entrepreneur trickster hitting it big on vulnerable ATMs.

[Via Digg]

Continue reading GamerBUS provides mobile Xbox 360 LAN parties

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 14, 2006

How-To: Turn a standard Xbox 360 video cable into a VGA cable for make benefit your wallet

Filed under: XBox 360, cable, how-to, microsoft, vga, xbox360 — Benjamin Heckendorn @ 1:26 pm

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Every so often, that console-modding Benjamin Heckendorn wanders away from his lair at benheck.com to share some interesting projects with Engadget.

Recent Xbox 360 updates have allowed the system to spit out resolutions up to 1080p, and with the new HD DVD add-on drive there’s more reason than ever to use a high quality VGA signal instead of the more standard 3-cable component. However there’s a bit of a catch — VGA cables for the 360 cost about $40. According to my calculations, that’s about 2 pizzas and a case of beer less to game with. WE don’t know about you, but we find that a pretty scary proposition — yours buddies that swing over for game night probably do too.

In this How-To we’ll describe how you can turn your existing Xbox 360 video cable into a “multi-out” device capable of VGA. You don’t even need to hack inside the Xbox itself, just the cable. Total cost is around $7, including the Radio Shack project box shown above. Ready to save some cash? Let’s get in there!

The following mod allows you to use a standard Xbox 360 cable to create a special VGA cable that would normally be purchased separately. The reason we can hack the standard cable in this way is because Microsoft was kind enough to put every pin in the normal connector, even ones the cable doesn’t use. Standard plugs on other systems (notably the PS2 and Gamecube) only have the pins the plug needs.

Thank you Microsoft.

Main Tools You’ll Need:

  • Small pair of tweezers (very useful).
  • Metal cutting pliers, tin snips, something along those lines.
  • Soldering iron. A lighter powered, 15 watt range one is best.
  • Solder… WITH lead works best. We know that sounds awful but it’ll help you “convert” the lead-free solder inside the Xbox connector and make it much easier to work with.
  • Multimeter, with circuit testing option. The kind where if you touch the two probes it beeps to indicate a connection.
  • Hot glue. Oh yeah, that’s right! Don’t leave home without it.
  • Small, thin flat-bladed screwdrivers, a larger flat-bladed screwdriver.
  • X-Acto Knife
  • Desoldering iron (optional, see instructions).
  • Dremel (optional, see instructions).

Where is the “Parts I need” section, you ask? We’ll cover them specifically later on, depending on which type of VGA cable you’d like to build. (Breakout box, as shown, or straight VGA cable depending.)

Alright let’s get going on this sucker.

Step 1 - Take Apart Your Xbox 360 Video Cable

The Xbox 360’s video cable assembly doesn’t use screws but luckily it’s still pretty easy to take apart. Here’s how:

  • Insert a small, thin screwdriver at the seam shown in the above photo.
  • Press in and towards the label (also as shown) to get around the inner lip.
  • Once you breach the lip you should hear a crack. You’re in!
  • Make a few more breaches like this next to each other, then insert a larger screwdriver as shown below. Twist it and the casing should pop open nicely.

Next, insert the big screwdriver at the seam near the main cable, and twist the case open at this place as well. You can now pull off the bottom portion of the plastic, and then pull the guts out of the top portion. The “TV / HDTV” switch will fall out at this point, save it if you ever plan to revert the cable to its original form (which is becoming less and less likely as this progresses).

Use your small screwdriver to pry up the metal near the TV/HDTV switch, as shown below.

Now pry the metal up and right off the optical audio jack, and bend it down on the right side, as shown below. You can now pull the main piece of shielding metal up away from the rest of the jack. Snip the shielding free of the main cable using your metal cutters.

Now you should come across a piece of material that looks amazingly like electrical tape. (Don’t worry, we’re sure it’s certified next-generation electrical tape.) Remove it and the jack should now look like the below photo. On the left you can see the little circuit board containing the optical audio port and TV/HDTV switch, on the right is the connector itself with all the wires going to it.

Next we need to remove the circuit board from the metal. It is held down by 3 tabs. You can desolder the tabs with a desoldering iron, or wedge your small screwdriver under the board and pry up as you heat the tabs with the regular iron. Since everything on the Xbox 360 uses that lead-free solder, it might help to mix some fresh (ahem leaden) solder onto joints to help them melt. Once you get to the side with 2 tabs (near the TV / HDTV switch) you’ll need to snip the metal shielding free of the cables before you pry up the PCB.

  • Once the circuit board has been desoldered from the tabs you can unplug the little connector on it and pull it from the main assembly.
  • Finally, take your thin screwdriver and stick it between the black plastic and the thin top shielding as shown below. (Sorry the photo’s a bit blurry, bigfoot musta been nearby.) Pry the metal up a little and you’ll be able to pull the black plug out from the shielding. Be sure to save this piece of shielding for later.

The plug pieces should now look like the following.

Finally, cut the end portion off the metal shielding and lay down some electric tape inside it as shown below:


Step 2 - Make the wiring connections

Before we start making the wiring connections you’ll need to carefully remove the glue stuff covering the pins, as shown below. Use your tweezers and be sure not to pull the blank pins up with the gunk. If they do bend up, simply push them back down. The glue is pretty easy to remove.

With the glue removed you can remove all the wires from the plug. Simply heat up the solder on each wire until it easily pulls free.

At this time you should put a small bit of fresh, new solder on each of the pins. This will make attaching new wires much easier.

Shown below is the end view of the now wireless plug and a drawing of which pins we’ll be using for this VGA mod. Keep in mind this pinout refers to the WIRE end of the plug, looking at it from behind as it would go into the console. The numbering might look a bit weird but it refers to how the connections are labeled on the 360’s motherboard.

Note how every pin is either long or short, and almost every other pin goes to ground (GND)

Before we go any further, here’s the wire-end view pinout of a VGA port. Pins that we don’t need for this project are simply called N/C (no connection). Most VGA-type ports also have the pin numbers etched into the plastic for your added reference.

Download a large PDF version of these pinouts, suitable for framing.

Since we’re going to start re-attaching the wires to the connector, you should now decide what sort of VGA cable you’d like to build…

  • Breakout box type adapter. As shown at the beginning of this article. Requires buying a few parts (the aforementioned seven bucks worth) but is more useful in the long run.
  • Single cable coming off the Xbox. For this you can use an old VGA cable. Slice off the computer end of the plug so you can connect the wires directly to the Xbox 360 video connector. You’ll also need some left and right audio cables, plus a yellow cable if you’d still like the option of using composite video.

Figure out which is best for you (I recommend the breakout box ’cause it’s cooler, but that’s just me) and use the directions below:

Method 1: Soldering wires to the connector port for a straight VGA cable (sort of like the one that costs $40 at Best Buy)

Parts you’ll need:

  • 2 position selector switch (if you want the cable to switch modes). You can use the Radio Shack Catalog #275-409, or just desolder the switch from inside the Xbox component cable.
  • Left and right RCA phono plug audio cables, such as those from a stereo system. You’ll need these since the VGA plug doesn’t carry audio. If you plan to just use the optical audio, we’ll describe how to wire it in the breakout box section.
  • Yellow composite (crap) video RCA phono plug cable. You’ll only need this if you want the cable to switch modes. A great source for both this and the audio cables are old PS1, N64 or GameCube cables.

What to do:

  1. Cut off the computer end of the VGA cable if you haven’t already. Strip the main coating off to reveal the wires inside. The main connections you’ll need are red, green, blue, horizontal sync and vertical sync. They may or may not be color coded. H and V sync may be a shade of white. Put a little solder on each wire to keep the strands together. This will also help when attaching it to the Xbox connector.
  2. Using the multimeter, test which wires in the cable go to the correct pins on the end of the VGA cable and connect them to the Xbox connector accordingly. (Use the above VGA pinout for reference.) Please note, they’ll be several wires inside the VGA cable that you won’t need to connect to the Xbox, such as the data lines used for monitor ID detection. (Labeled N/C in the pinout drawing.)
  3. All the shielding around the wires you find inside the cable is ground. Also note that a lot of the pins on the VGA connector are ground.
  4. Solder the wires from the VGA cable to the Xbox 360 connector using the pinouts provided to match up the signals. You can connect all the VGA ground shielding to a single ground spot on the Xbox connector to make it easier on yourself.
  5. Strip the ends of the audio cables to reveal the inner wires and copper shielding. Attach the inner wires to the left and right audio spots on the Xbox connector (pins 16 and 15) and the outer shielding to any ground.
  6. If you’re attaching a composite video option, strip and attach the composite (yellow) video cable in the same way to pin 7 of the Xbox connector.
  7. The selector switch (either the Radio Shack model or the one from the connector itself) has 3 leads on it. Connect the center lead to ground and the side leads to pins 20 and 24 on the Xbox connector. The switch can now “ground out” one of those two connections to set the video mode. Pulling pin 20 to ground sets the Xbox to VGA mode, putting 24 to ground sets it to composite.
  8. If you don’t want the cable to select a video mode and just be VGA, connect pin 20 to any ground. This can be done by simply blobbing solder from it to pin 18 or 22 (they’re both ground)
  9. Note: You HAVE to select a mode regardless, if you don’t the Xbox won’t boot and you’ll get 4 red lights as a “Video Cable Missing” warning. (Strange that 3 lights is worse than 4, but whatever.)

You can now insert the black plastic Xbox connector back into the metal shielding we removed earlier and plug everything in to see if it works. (See “Setting the Xbox to VGA”, below.) If you have a problem, check out the Troubleshooting section at the end of the article.

Method 2: Making a VGA/Composite Breakbox Box

Parts you’ll need:

  • Breakout Box. I used Radio Shack Catalog # 270-1802 cause it was the smallest and cheapest.
  • D-sub 15 female connector (VGA port). Radio Shack Catalog #: 276-1502, Digi-Key: T815FE-ND Mouser: 523-G17S1510110EU If you have an old PC video card you can desolder one off that if you wish. But a new one is pretty cheap and easy to use.
  • 2 position selector switch, if you want the box to switch modes. You can use the Radio Shack Catalog #275-409 or just desolder the switch from inside the Xbox component cable.
  • 3 RCA phono jacks, for the audio and composite video. This is the type found on the back of DVD players. Radio Shack Catalog #274-346, Digi-Key: CP-1413-ND (red) CP-1414-ND (white) CP-1415-ND (yellow) Mouser: 161-4319-E. As with the VGA port you may have some old electronics you can pull these off.
  • Shielded wires from inside the Xbox video cable.
  • Some standard thin wire. Old floppy/IDE drive cable works great and is, best of all, free. Free is great — it saves you money for things that aren’t. Like beef jerky.
  • Standoff screws from a PC. These are the type with a “screw within a screw” that are often used under the motherboard.
  • Some drill bits. Sizes of 1/8th, 3/8th, and 1/4th-inch will be helpful.

Supplier websites:

www.radioshack.com
www.mouser.com
www.digikey.com

Start by slicing open your Xbox video cable. Remove the main metal shielding to find the individual shielded wires inside:

The shielded wires from the Xbox 360 cable, or as I call them “Buck Rogers Spaghetti.”

These will work great for the inside wiring of the breakout box. Cut each wire to about 6-inches long for now, we can trim them shorter later as needed. You’ll need 8 of them.

Start by sliding off some of the shielding and stripping the end of the inner wire. Dab a bit of solder onto it to lock all the strands together - this is called “tinning” and will make soldering it to the connector much easier. You can also put a little solder at the end of the shielding to keep it from fraying apart.

Solder a shielded wire to each of the following pins on the Xbox connector, or a regular thin wire as noted. Attaching them in the order specified works best, or reverse if you’re left handed.

Top of connector:

  1. Red (pin 3)
  2. Composite video (pin 7)
  3. Horizontal Sync (pin 11)
  4. Right audio (pin 15) — shielding not essential
  5. Optical audio data (pin 25) — use a regular thin wire for this.
  6. Optical audio ground (pin 27) — regular wire
  7. Optical audio +5v (pin 29) — regular wire

Bottom of connector:

  1. Green (pin 4)
  2. Blue (pin 8)
  3. Vertical sync (pin 12)
  4. Left audio (pin 16) — shielding not essential
  5. Set VGA (pin 20) — regular wire
  6. Set Composite (pin 24) — regular wire

When everything is wired the connector should look as shown below:

Now you can slide the black Xbox connector inside the metal shielding. Be sure there’s a layer of electric tape inside in case any connections hit the metal shell.

Step 3 - Install ports in your Breakout Box

With the wires soldered to the connector we can get the breakout box itself ready.

  • Set the connector against the lid of the box and trace the outline of it with your knife. About 1/4 of the way from the side is best, as shown below.
  • Cut out the hole using either a Dremel or by making several deep cuts with an X-Acto knife and then “popping” the shape out by pressing on it with a screwdriver.

The lid of the project box with the trapezoid connector hole.

  • Stick the connector through the hole and see how it fits. Adjust the hole as needed. Test this rig by plugging into the Xbox 360 and adjusting the tilt of the lid to the curve of the Xbox, as shown.
  • Once it fits fully into the Xbox 360, put some hot glue (yes!) on the inside of the lid to temporarily secure the connector in place. (Don’t worry about the hot glue, your 360 is fully accustomed to heat.) Once it’s cool and secure, remove the whole shebang from the XBox.
  • On the bottom of the main portion of the box carve and cut a hole for the VGA port. Once the hole’s big enough stick in the port and drill 1/8th” holes in the plastic to match its mounts. Then you can screw in some standard PC motherboard-style screws to hold down the VGA port, just like on a computer. For added security screw on somes nuts on the inside (or just dump in a bunch of hot glue if there’s no room for that).
  • Drill (3) 3/8th-inch holes for the audio and video RCA ports. Space them evenly.
  • Be sure to keep these ports on the side of the box away from the Xbox 360 connector. That way you know they’ll be enough room inside.
  • Desolder the optical audio port from the small circuit board from the connector. It may help to “freshen up” the solder first before you try to remove it.
  • Make a square hole for the port on the opposite side of the box from the VGA port. This can be done by drilling a 1/4th-inch hole and then carving corners from it.
  • Insert the optical port as shown below. The pinouts of the 3 center pins are also provided for when you attach it to the main connector. The two side tabs of the optical port don’t need to be connected.
  • Secure the optical port using… get this… hot glue! Hey, it works.

The business end of the optical audio port. We actually think it’s called a TOSlink but optical audio port sounds more… um, universal. TOSlink sounds like some dude from Lord of the Rings.

  • Drill a hole between the optical port and the audio ports that will fit the shaft of the selector switch. A 3/8th-inch hole will work for the Radio Shack switches mentioned above, or a slightly smaller one if you’re using the switch from inside the connector itself.
  • Install the switch using yet more hot glue. Of course be careful not to cover the 3 pins of the switch. Even though it’ll be near the Xbox connector this switch isn’t big enough to cause a space problem.

The inside of the breakout box should now look like this, give or take 5 pounds of hot glue. As you can see I’ve wired the grounds of all the ports together.

We can now wire the Xbox connector to the various ports on the breakout box using the pinout charts located several stories above. Some notes:

  • Place the pieces of the box together as shown and begin by wiring up the optical port. Cut the wires as short as you can so it’s easy to stuff everything in the box.
  • Connect ground to the center pin of the three pin selector switch, pin 20 of the Xbox connector to one side, and then pin 24 to the other. This allows the switch to select between VGA and composite modes.
  • Connect audio (pins 15 and 16) and composite video (pin 7) to the middle pins of the RCA ports next. The outer rings of the RCA ports should all connect to ground.
  • After wiring the RCA ports cover the connections with electric tape. This keeps them from shorting out on all the shielding around the main VGA wires.
  • Speaking of that, connect the 5 VGA wires next. Red, green, blue, H-Sync and V-Sync. Check the above VGA port pinout for reference.
  • You can now close up the box. Smush the halves together, arranging the wires as you go to make sure everything will fit.
  • Screw the case shut — you’re done!

Step 4 - Setting the XBox to VGA

  • Ok, plug in the breakout box, or cable, or whatever you ended up making, to your monitor / VGA-enabled TV and Xbox.
  • Make sure the selector switch is to “VGA” (pin 20 grounded)
  • Switch all your stuff on. You should see the Xbox boot up (it might take a hair longer than usual). If not, skip ahead to Troubleshooting.
  • Once you’re in, go to Dashboard, then goto the System blade and hit “Console Settings”, and “Display”
  • You can now select a resolution and aspect ratio to fit your screen. The 360 works best with widescreen displays although you can still make it work with square monitors as well. Strangely enough it’ll letterbox the game whilst the dashboard and message panels will take up the whole screen. Weird, huh?
  • Boot up Gears of War or some other awesome looking game and drool 50% more than usual.

Just think — now you might be able to read the text in Dead Rising.

Addendum - Troubleshooting

Oh noes! You followed all the instructions but something isn’t quite right - is it any of the following by chance?

  • 4 red lights (but not of death). Since we’ve all heard of the dreaded “3 lights of death” a whopping FOUR lights could cause instant heart failure. But don’t worry, it’s actually just a “Video Cable Missing” warning. Check that the Pin 20 and 24 connections are correct. If neither of them are switched to ground the Xbox doesn’t know what video mode to use and assumes there’s no cable at all.
  • Inversed, Andy Warhol-esque colors. Suddendly the Dead or Alive girls all have blue skin… Anime? A strange STD? Nope, you just got your some of your RGB wires mixed up. Now we bet you’re glad you didn’t slather all the connections in hot glue yet - right?
  • Ghosting. If you see some ghosting of images on the screen you probably have insufficient shielding. Make sure all the shielding is connected to a ground someplace. If you use a decent VGA cable this really shouldn’t be a problem, unless you live in the Bermuda Triangle or something.
  • Optical audio problems. Be sure you have the ground, +5v and data pins wired to the connector correctly. Is the Xbox set to output this type of signal?

Alright well sorry if this how-to seemed a bit long, we just wanted to make sure you knew exactly what to do. Enjoy your sparkling new, crisp, hi-def, life-like (insert your own superlative here) video!

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 11, 2006

PlayStation 3 vs. Xbox 360 vs. Wii

Filed under: Nintendo, Playstation3, Sony, XBox, XBox 360, microsoft, playstation 3, ps3, wii, xbox360 — Ryan Block @ 12:58 am

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Well, here we are. 2006, and perhaps the last console launch of the decade. And here they are, all decked out n’ pretty. Go ahead, debate it. Just be nice, ok? At the end of the day the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Wii, they’re only video game consoles, and we love our babies the same. Oh, catch some more flame-stoking conversation-inspiring pics after the break.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 9, 2006

Xbox HD DVD hands-on

Filed under: HdDvd, XBox, XBox 360, hd dvd, xbox360 — Ryan Block @ 2:09 pm

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Well looky looky here, we landed an Xbox HD DVD drive. We’re already all well aware of what it can and can’t do; we just know you want the pics of the unboxing, it sitting next to the Xbox, and maybe a few bonus shots next to a real life HD DVD player. Hell, we’ll even throw in some pics of it next to the competition (you know what we’re talking about). Click on, enjoy!

Ah, that familiar sight.

There we go, that’s what we were looking for.

The back.

The top, sorta.

Crack that one open, too!

Remote! Adapter! USB cable!

Stacked up on top.

The hardware in the box, unpacked.

Okay! Now, we’re SO not taking responsibility for that sticker up on the back. Normally we just leave stickers on while photographing (unless it’s on the facade, like that white one) but for whatever reason our unit came with the remnants of some badge, torn off and sticky gross, unable to be removed. We’d assume your retail unit probably won’t have the same issue.

Flipped.

USB ports and WiFi adapter groove.

Facade sticker removed.

Ruh roh!

That’s a big HD DVD player.

The shot we know you’ve been waiting for.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 8, 2006

Transcode and stream videos to your Xbox 360

Filed under: Joystiq, XBox 360, how-to, stream, transcode, xbox360 — Cyrus Farivar @ 1:53 am

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Besides bricking some Xbox 360 consoles, the recent Xbox 360 Fall Dashboard update did provide a few positive benefits too. One bonus came in the form of enabling gamers to stream WMV files via Windows Media Connect from an XP PC to their Xbox 360. Previously only Windows Media Center could stream to the 360, but if you had a DivX or XviD file you wanted to play, you had the option of using Transcode 360 to convert non-WMV files on-the-fly. However, until someone updates Transcode 360 so that it will run over Windows Media Connect, you’ll have to transcode your DivX or XviD files manually. It’s a pain in the neck, but it’ll do the job. But, thanks to our buddies at Joystiq, we’ve got a series of step-by-step instructions on how to transcode your DivX or XviD videos and watch them easily on your Xbox 360. We won’t go over every single point, but basically, it involves using the free and open-source program VLC followed by the helping hand of a batch script. The script turns your video files into WMV that’ll play nice with your Xbox 360, allowing you to enjoy your vids (in the example, a recent episode of “Lost”) in full, converted HD. But as you probably already know, if you’re starting out with a not great DivX file, you’re going to end up with an even worse WMV file that won’t look too hot, 1080p or not. So if you want to try it out, follow the read link for all of the step-by-step instructions.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 6, 2006

Report: Microsoft not down with third-party 360 wireless peripherals

Filed under: GuitarHero, RedOctane, XBox 360, guitar hero, microsoft, red octane, videogames, xbox360 — Evan Blass @ 7:41 am

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In case you haven’t been following the virtual rock and roll scene lately, videogame publisher Red Octane recently revealed that there would be no wireless ax for the Xbox 360 version of Guitar Hero II — even though owners of a “last-gen” console, PlayStation 2, will be able to jam out sans tether. Now since the 360 already ships with wireless technology on board, it would seem relatively simple to implement a cable-free controller for this particular deployment. Not so fast, says Red Octane. According to the studio, Microsoft isn’t actually allowing third-party manufacturers to make anything using its proprietary wireless standard — so while the capability is there, the all-important green light from Redmond is not. It’s not clear at this point why a year-old system is being stifled by this seemingly arbitrary restriction, but with the PlayStation 3 offering developers Bluetooth out of the box, it seems that Microsoft either needs to change its tune or risk losing the small-but-vocal “rocker wannabe” demographic to the enemy.

[Via Joystiq]

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 2, 2006

Xbox Live to offer HD movie downloads?

Filed under: MovieDownloads, XBox, XBox 360, XboxLive, movie downloads, xbox live, xbox360 — Ryan Block @ 11:13 pm

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There are wild rumors, and there are interesting rumors, but here’s a doozy for ya: Xbox Live could soon start vending HD movie content, according to one freshly minted Wordpress blog (take that for what it’s worth). According to Shsibae (huh?), over 1000+ hours of video will make its way onto Live for rental at about $4 a go, or for purchase (at an unstated price). Hard to imagine Xbox 360 doing for PC-free online movie downloads what all the other companies couldn’t or haven’t (we’re looking at you TiVo, Netflix, iTV, etc.), but then again Microsoft did start up with that Xbox Live music video download thing last year. Seriously though, what a coup would that be if Microsoft swooped in to make the Xbox 360 the premier digital content hub — with or without HD DVD — right underneath Sony’s nose at the eve of their PlayStation 3 launch? We just hope Microsoft would have a larger drive waiting in the wings if this one turns up roses though, our 20GB is already packed to the gills with game demos.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

October 22, 2006

Lease an Xbox 360 for only $1,917*

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*Price includes Tom Clancy’s G.R.A.W., NHL ‘07, Live Arcade Volume 1, three-month Xbox Live Gold membership, 1,250 Microsoft points, a wireless modem, and three years of Sympatico high-speed internet from Bell Canada.

With “next-generation” consoles being released every three to four years nowadays (save for Sony’s PlayStation 3, which has a stated 10-year life span), some people (read: parents and spouses) are a little hesitant to throw down upwards of $300 for a system that will probably be gathering dust in the attic even before the