So there won't be such a thing as a games console because we'll all be using online-enabled set-top boxes to play HD games with fancy graphics.
That'll be "games consoles", then. We might be getting all our games over the net via an equivalent of the Virtual Console, Live Arcade or the PSN, but if it is a machine that plays games on a telly, then it's a console. The 360 already lets you download movies to watch, and there's a Freeview PVR adaptor on the way for the PS3, Both those formats can (well, could given there aren't many HD-DVDs left) play disc-based HD films. So the convergence is there already.
Whether you call it an STB that can play games, or a console that can play TV is a marketing issue, not a technical one.
Yes, and the internet will never take off, pc's will die{out} by 2005, everyone will have their own jetpack by the 21st century etc etc etc.
When will these technological nostradamuses learn to keep their big gob's shut? why try and predict the future when the only thing that can happen is that you end up looking like an arse?
What I think is most likely to happen in the future is that console releases will get further apart, or that the console manufacturers will morph their consoles into other things (like set top boxes). OMG - i'm doing it now!
mines the one with the arms tied together at the back...
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 31st March 2008 12:53 GMT
Now who would have thought that someone who would benefit enormously from the disappearance of the console would be predicting its demise. I'm sure that is an impartial observation </Sarcasm>
Blimey - people complain about input lag to monitors sitting on their desktop. Now he thinks that people will be happy to send mouse/keyboard/wavey stick thing controls across teh intarweb, wait for everything to be processed in the "Cloud" and sent back to their screens?
By Bruce LeydenPosted Monday 31st March 2008 12:59 GMT
This contrasts with articles I've read recently which state that the "static" hardware platform provided by consoles (as opposed to the ever-changing capabilities and ever-increasing complexity of the PC platform) along with several other factors like consolidation of the games industry, "cloud computing" and games as a service would cause developers to focus more on consoles, to the detriment of PC's.
By Robert GrantPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:05 GMT
Just curious :)
On another topic, I think a possibly viable future (at least for MMOs) could be a TV channel dedicated to a game, and you have a box which wirelessly connects to your controller(s), and that uploads your control input to a server, which then renders the game world accordingly, and transmits it back to you via your TV. Of course, it's much more likely that that won't happen, because it probably never needs to.
Before there was home computing - there was GRANDSTAND #
By NeilPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:05 GMT
Well I remember my Grandstand gaming console back in 1978 I loved it. That was 4 years before I got my first computer. So I say poppycock. Consoles have been around for much longer that home computers. So why is that going to change now? Are MS scared of loosing a market and so will close it down before its taken away.
By Edward NoadPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:06 GMT
I seem to recall someone mentioned all the talk about PC gaming being dead too. So, if PC gaming is dead and consoles will be out in a decade, do we have to hand in all our hardware to be recycled into PDA's or what?
We buggered up this generation again, the best we can do now, is try and convince everyone that gaming consoles will disappear anyway, and it was part of out plan all along..
Paris, because you would have to be as stupid as her to not see through this BS.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:16 GMT
He is just having a cry because Blu-Ray killed MS's HD-DVD, and MS's new backup agenda is online downloads, and because he knows the PS3 will eclipse the XBox360 too.
By alistair millingtonPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:25 GMT
Then again none of the current machines are stand alone games machines anymore. ps3 is a blu ray player, all of them have internet functionality and xbox does media sharing and the online commuity which the wii has.
So even now the games systems aren't just games systems.
All we will see if the convergence between all the different things.
Pc's will become home media centre's and play games, game systems the same with attached storage devices (hd dvd for example or the clip on HDD) NAS boxes performing the library of your chosen game, film or music and running windows media centre or similar.
We won't need stand alone DVD players or set top boxes as they will either be in the pc or the TV as you can get free view in TV's now.
both have a niche and the merging will just open up choice for the end user and how they want the end product to look.
That shuttle PC with the blue flashing light and the sleek looking black box or the sleek black number PS3 / xbox with the erm... blue flashing light....
And how they will work, a pc with media centre where you can type and work on like a pc or a games console where you can erm... type and work like a ... erm... pc.
...until all PCs (and similar) can give as good quality graphics and game-play for the same price to the average consumer (not Joe Geek who I'm sure can get all sorts of fancy wizard graphics stuff and power from a PC for £200)
By Richie MPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:36 GMT
Will the Trolls (Mark & 1st AC) please read the article before before posting!
The guy does not work for Microsoft! Typical Troll posting.
As has already been pointed out; what a surprise, a guy sets up a business that would benefit greatly from console's demise, is prophesying the demise of consoles - why are these people given news space?
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:38 GMT
A former employee who left and makes a comment about games consoles dying and everyone bashes Microsoft.
He doesn't work there. Read the article.
Sounds like the death bell for Game, HMV and other Games retailers to me. Been coming for a while. As one of your commentators quite rightly put it. Playing via a games machine that plays TV or a TV STB that plays games is purely marketing semantics.
Games developers will start producing games that they can upsell online and cut out the retailers.
COD 8
Download basic game for free.
Basic gun £5
Basic explosives £5
Basic Camo £5
Wider play area £5
Online play £5
Advanced Guns £5
Advanced explosives £5
Game hosting £5
Other specials £5
Anyway you get the picture. No distribution costs other than an online portal, no retailers taking 40% margin and no returns.
By Hans MustermannPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:52 GMT
Actually, way I see it. He _was_ at MS's console division, left it, formed his online gaming company. And what does he say? Consoles are dead, online gaming is TEH FUTURE!
Is anyone really that suprised there?
I mean, seriously, if I were to leave the X business and make a Y company instead, that's probably what I'd try to tell the investors too: well, see, X is as good as dead, any day now, Y is TEH FUTURE! Gimme some venture capital already.
For him, X is consoles and Y is online gaming. It could be anything else. Apples and oranges, gizmos and doohickeys, whatever.
Now maybe he actually believes that, or maybe he's just trying to get a chunk of money and then get bought by MS or Sony for an even bigger chunk. It doesn't matter. It's nevertheless what I'd _expect_ him to say. "This new thing I'm making, it's TEH FUTURE!"
I'd be more surprised if he _didn't_ make exactly that prophecy.
By Nick ClarksonPosted Monday 31st March 2008 13:57 GMT
[QUOTE]
Blimey - people complain about input lag to monitors sitting on their desktop. Now he thinks that people will be happy to send mouse/keyboard/wavey stick thing controls across teh intarweb, wait for everything to be processed in the "Cloud" and sent back to their screens?
Not for a lot longer than 5-10 years, methinks[/QUOTE]
So that'd be Citrix then? Citrix does exactly that - bar the wavey thing :) over internet/intranet. OK, so it's a stretch to think it'll be applied to games, and I think this is a biased opinion, but it's not inconceivable with all the virtualisation of hardware/apps around. Just my 2p.
Oh, and set-top box or console...same thing if it's playing games isn't it?
There will be 4.3" 800x 480 portable game consoles with power of PS3 / Xbox360 that can drive ordinary TV or HD 1080 lines.
There will be Media Boxes that make a MS Media Centre look stupid (It's dead already). Basic Sat / cable boxes won't be game consoles, but things like PS3 with add in Sat or DTT tuners... Oh.. You mean that's already a PS3 accessory?
Game players is a small percentage of Setbox users. The majority of set boxes will never have more than they do now game wise.
Given that some games are a box load of DVDs, I'd not see serious game downloads replacing disk/cartridge sales. More as well as.
By HighlanderPosted Monday 31st March 2008 14:36 GMT
So, just who do you suspect might benefit from the migration of games to download friendly set top boxes? Company name begins with M and ends with T, has a couple of Os in there too?
Come on, Microsoft can do better than this. They've been trying to push things in this direction for years and so far apart from a sadly large number of sheep in the US few people are falling for it.
The Microsoft model is as follows.
Commodity hardware running Microsoft software. Microsoft software locks users in to Microsoft online experience. Microsoft online experience funnels all revenue to Microsoft. Games will be broken up into components under the pretext of offering gamers ultimate choice. Now you will be able to buy only those portions of the game you want. So you'll be nickel and dime'd to death. EA has already shown this with their Need for Speed ProStreet game. EA sold you codes for cars that were already in the game, you simply had to purchase a code from them that would unlock that car in the game. That's double dipping in my mind, you already paid for the disc and what's on it, why have to pay a second time for something you already bought?
But that's the way. Microsoft wants us all to be hooked up to their network so that they can sell us downloads of all kinds.
Personally I find this kind of pronouncement has about as much going for it as the statements by Nokia that N-Gage is the new wave of mobile gaming. You just have to wonder how they think that they can oevrtake the PSP, nevermind the DS.
By IshkandarPosted Monday 31st March 2008 14:43 GMT
...he has certainly caught the Microsoft disease - making pronouncements like he heard them direct from God !! I think it's called the False Prophet Syndrome and has no known cure !! He is doomed for life !!
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 31st March 2008 14:48 GMT
Yes Citrix (and VNC and Microsoft Terminal Services) does allow you to operate a remote session, but the experience isn't suitable for gaming over a WAN. It doesn't matter how much bandwidth you've got, the main problem is latency (lag between pressing a key and seeing its effect on the screen) which can't be cured by current network technology (i.e. available in your home in the next five years); maybe the way games are delivered to people will change in the near future, and most consoles are already equipped for this, but there isn't a technology that will allow HD games to be run on a remote computer (Sony and Nintendo shareholders breathe a sigh of relief).
but, while i'm more than happy using Citrix to admin and fix issues on the servers at work while i'm at home, there's no way i'm going to play GTA IV or UT3 or Killzone over that kinda setup
he does have a point though - very soon there'll be little need for the physical media - GT5P came out this weekend and I bought and downloaded it on sunday. sure, i'll run out disk space and probably delete it in 6 months, but then after 6 months, i'd be unlikely to put the phsyical disk back in my ps3 either, so no loss.
OK, here's how it works... mum and dad come to Christmas time and look at consoles. They see the new XBox, but spot that it needs a broadband connection to function. Ooops! Granny and grandad never got broadband! And that wee holiday cottage in the Scottish highlands doesn't have broadband either. And the son's best friend's dad doesn't want to share their wireless security settings with you, so the son can't take his new toy over his best pal's house. Oh, and thanks to network congestion the thing won't run at full graphics resolution/speed between 6pm and midnight. Ah well, just get the latest Wii instead - it works out cheaper in the long run anyway.
On-line virtual gaming consoles are like Vista or the Air - they offer no value-for-money additions for the average consumer that you can't already get whith current systems. Why is someone going to give up being able to play their old games, give up being able to trade games in at Game or borrow their pals' games just because some guy says the future of gaming is on-line?
At the moment 'on-line' seems to be the future of pretty much everything, but just because you CAN do something entirely on-line doesn't mean that most people will WANT to do it online, or even that it is a good idea to do it on-line from a technical perspective. I mean, VoIP is still a niche market despite the concept going mainstream four years ago with Skype. Having all the graphics processing done on-line just means there is extra stuff to malfunction and stop your gaming.
Mines the one with copies of Amiga Format, CU Amiga and AmigaActive still in the pockets!
Convergence? We don' need no steekin' convergence... #
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 31st March 2008 15:32 GMT
So if every console has to include set top box/PVR/media centre functionality in case it's the only console, what room will there be for a novel console idea which just does console gaming well (for a given value of "in a popular idiom")? Y'know, like the Wii...
By Daniel B.Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:36 GMT
"A former Xbox executive has declared that dedicated games consoles, such as the PlayStation 3 (PS3) and Xbox 360"
Dedicated? Most of the anti-PS3 stance is that the thing is "a Blu-Ray player with processing power more suitable for a low-end server that poses as a games console". So I doubt the PS3 would "die".
As for web services, I'm sure as hell not running games communicating through SOAP. I'd love to see the kind of latency THAT would have!!! I'd bet even Quake 1 back in 1996 performed better on my dialup connection than any SOAP-based "web game" would perform with my 1Mbit ADSL.
By Raymondo BPosted Monday 31st March 2008 15:54 GMT
We won't be going all download in Britain anytime soon as we simply don't have the infrastructure. The bigger ISPs are already throttling connections like mad and it will only get worse in the future.
By Oliver BurkillPosted Monday 31st March 2008 16:23 GMT
Two reasons why I think physical media wont die out soon.
Emerging markets, We may well have the infrastructure in this country for most games to move online, but their are huge potential markets where that does not exist. India, China and eastern Europe.
Gifting, A large percentage of game purchases are gifts, many people will be resistant to virtual gifts.
By Grim2o0oPosted Monday 31st March 2008 18:15 GMT
Hmm, sounds like a dead horse already.
As someone mentioned above, the UK and many other countries ISP's are already starting to throttle connection because they use too much bandwidth. With IPTV and other media based web services the need to download well over 100Gb a month will be required; how will people manage on their lame 5Gb a month package from 'insert lame ISP here'.
Never gonna happen unless ISP's/Backbone providers update their networks to support an even vaster amount of traffic.
I can also remember BT saying something along the lines of "people don't need more than 8Mb connections" - and with excuses like that coming from providers you can see that this everything-online-games-movies-tv thing just won't happen anytime soon.
When all's said and done, I'll retreat back to my SNES for hours of joy.
I couldn't imagine playing only PC games, especially online! No way am I paying $80 a month for a high speed connection, $1000 for a nice computer, $x a month for whatever online fees there would be, and another $20 for a decent controller so I don't have to use the keyboard and mouse.
See, I remember hearing this future talk years ago about how in a short time all the consoles would be gone and we'd all play games in virtual realities like the Matrix...
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 31st March 2008 23:14 GMT
"Sandy Duncan, who worked in Microsoft’s European Xbox division before leaving to co-found an online gaming business, recently said that “I hope dedicated games devices…will die [out] in the next 5 to 10 years”.
By Joe CooperPosted Tuesday 1st April 2008 00:08 GMT
The network isn't new. Flashback to 1991.
You have a modem that downloads 1 kilobyte per second. An SNES game would weigh in at 4 megs, as would a three-floppy DOS RPG or two-floppy copy of Doom. That's a 1 hour download. Those are Big Games.
Back to the present, 2008. How long does a big modern game take on Steam? In a country with good infrastructure, a few hours. In a country like Poland, much much MUCH longer.
Common. Everyone knows by now that the local processing power and local demands grow much faster than the network does. The network grows slow. The last huge sudden growth in network speeds was back in the late 90s with the introduction of broadband and it has grown incrementally since. In a lot of places like here in Poland the infrastructure is pretty shitty still anyway and it's not reliable.
When is the next sudden boost? There's some thing called Internet2 that only universities have that we've been hearing about forever. But by the time all the infrastructure is upgraded so we have it in our homes, games will have expanded further.
Ironically, Microsoft was just pushing the HD Era of video games only a year ago. With HDTVs comes demand for dramatically larger textures, video files and fillrates. Suddenly all those demands go way way up and the magical network we have can't cope anymore and won't cope until it's seriously upgraded.
By then, computers will be much faster and guess what, people will ~have invented~ something new for home systems to do that just won't fit over the network.
By Wayland SothcottPosted Tuesday 1st April 2008 10:25 GMT
It died at about 10 years old so the prediction is correct but hardly surprising. But people will by new hardware.
I think the concept of the games console is a device that can play games branded for it. There are several brands.
The PC on the other hand allows programs of all types to play on it. Anyone is allowed to write programs for the PC and the PC runs anyones programs.
The games console has one excellent advantage in that it is very simple to use. There is no reason why an open 'games console' could not be published. It would be just like any of the others only anyone could make them and anyone could write for them.
I think the hardware is mature enough that the only inovations required would be in software and peripherals. If hardware never got faster for 10 years we would probably see some real improvements in computing.
Nowadays, paying big bucks for a fat box sitting under your desk doesn't make much sense anymore. Before, it was a must if you wanted to play online, but now that the vast majority of console games let you play online, it's not worthwhile to invest in a PC that you will have to upgrade every 6 month to be able to run the latest games. As far as business is concerned, sexy laptops like the MacBook Air will eventually dominate the market.
I believe that within a couple of years, most people will mostly use online productivity software like the very promising Google Apps instead of Gigabyte-hungry office suites, since this doesn't require much bandwith.
As far as games are concerned, the Playstations and Wiis are there to last since the games' size grows much quicker than the available bandwith.
Comments on: Exec sounds death knell for games consoles
Microsoft... that's rich #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 12:37 GMT
Funny definition of "dead", then #
By Iain Posted Monday 31st March 2008 12:45 GMT
pish #
By AliBaBa Posted Monday 31st March 2008 12:53 GMT
Revelation #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 12:53 GMT
Laaaaaaag #
By Chris Posted Monday 31st March 2008 12:55 GMT
Not what I've read elsewhere #
By Bruce Leyden Posted Monday 31st March 2008 12:59 GMT
Does James Sherwood know what a web service is? #
By Robert Grant Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:05 GMT
Before there was home computing - there was GRANDSTAND #
By Neil Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:05 GMT
Gaming is officially over #
By Edward Noad Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:06 GMT
Typical Microsoft response. #
By Mark Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:13 GMT
Yeah right.. #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:16 GMT
The Future #
By peter Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:18 GMT
technically he is right, #
By alistair millington Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:25 GMT
They won't die out... #
By Iain Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:33 GMT
10 years? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:35 GMT
Microsoft Trolls #
By Richie M Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:36 GMT
Why bang Microsoft? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:38 GMT
the fools! #
By Trent Hawkins Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:44 GMT
follow the money #
By Hans Mustermann Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:52 GMT
So will all this internet accessed content #
By Michael Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:54 GMT
It *could* happen...maybe...one day #
By Nick Clarkson Posted Monday 31st March 2008 13:57 GMT
games without disks #
By pctechxp Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:04 GMT
Divergence #
By Mage Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:17 GMT
Hmmm...I see. #
By Highlander Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:36 GMT
Microsoft run out of bullets? #
By Mark Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:36 GMT
Ex-Microsoft or not... #
By Ishkandar Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:43 GMT
Evolution #
By Neil Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:47 GMT
@ Nick Clarkson #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:48 GMT
citrix #
By jai Posted Monday 31st March 2008 14:55 GMT
Re: the fools! #
By Steve Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:14 GMT
Play it again, Sam. #
By Shabble Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:16 GMT
@Neil, RE: Evolution #
By Shades Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:23 GMT
Convergence? We don' need no steekin' convergence... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:32 GMT
Console death? Yeah, sure. #
By Daniel B. Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:36 GMT
No way, jose! #
By Raymondo B Posted Monday 31st March 2008 15:54 GMT
physical media will not die #
By Oliver Burkill Posted Monday 31st March 2008 16:23 GMT
@Richie M #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 16:24 GMT
Fantasy #
By Eduard Coli Posted Monday 31st March 2008 17:12 GMT
Not gonna happen #
By Grim2o0o Posted Monday 31st March 2008 18:15 GMT
Meh #
By Jach Posted Monday 31st March 2008 19:55 GMT
Here I fixed it for you #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 31st March 2008 23:14 GMT
What short memories #
By Joe Cooper Posted Tuesday 1st April 2008 00:08 GMT
Ah yes... #
By Dave Posted Tuesday 1st April 2008 10:06 GMT
My Original PlayStation is dead #
By Wayland Sothcott Posted Tuesday 1st April 2008 10:25 GMT
Desktop PCs will die first #
By calagan Posted Tuesday 1st April 2008 14:36 GMT