Quote: "i ended up buying a new ps2 slim edition and it seems to work great.. very silent, and reads everything nice and quickly.. I can only assume they fixed the dvd rom problem."
yeah, our new one should arrive from game by Thrusday/Friday aparently. only time will tell if it'll fixx the problem, but yeah this really is another chalk up to 'poor hardware'
i mean within like a few weeks of getting the console i remember was playing something that use the LR buttons alot, ended up breaking my R2
the same game though using my PSOne controller is still played without any damage done to it.. alot of the PS2 just felt 'low-quality', not something you want when your paying £399 for it!
Quote: "In response to your first question, You should probably get an Xbox now if you really want one. I think IGN said that there already some titles for Xbox 2/next/Xenon/whatever-the-heck-Microsoft-is-calling-it-now, and I think the regular Xbox 2/look above won't be compatible with Xbox one games because it hasn't got a hardrive. The version with the hardrive will probably be more expensive.
Whose idea was releasing three different versions of the same console anyway? Seems kinda stupid to me."
Each version is cheaper, and expandable.
Basic Xenon ~$200 (20GB HDD)
Game Xenon (with Pre-Loaded Halo 2.5) ~$300 (80GB HDD / Broadband Modem / Live! Kit & Subscription)
Media Center Xenon ~$400 ( Keyboard / Mouse / 120GB HDD / Extra 256MB Ram / DVI-VGA outputs / Broadband Modem / HDD-Drive include DVD-RW Abilities / Windows XP Media Center 2005 Edition )
You can always upgrade each one in a similar fashion to how the N64 upgraded itself. Snap-out given areas, and swap/insert components.
Effectively a way of upgrading the system with what you feel you need, rather than being stuck with a single design.
The Processors have TCPA, as to prevent piracy; and GameDiscs are masked from being viewed when inserted.
That is all provided i'm remembering correctly what I was told.
They'll all have 'Triad' 2.2GHz PowerPC Processor, and R520 Video Processor. As well as a combined 256MB that runs via a PCI-Express bus, so along with ATi's HyperMemory or whatever the heck they called it in the end, provides alot more power for less actual Ram.