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Standalone apps wouldn't need the network.
Totally.
I've got two of the original XBOX consoles running XBMC and other homebrew... since Microsoft cutoff XBox Live for the old XBOXes now, there is really no major reason *not* to modchip them.
Many view this type of situation as a challenge... for me, it was an opportunity to pick up a couple cheap consoles (~$7 for one, free for the other), and some cheap modchips (~$40/each) and do something fun with them, which my entire family can enjoy.
As a bonus, they still play legally-obtained used games and I don't have to worry about Microsoft "banning" or "bricking" the console in the future.
Exactly!
If only there were companies out there which had enough vision to see this as an *opportunity*.
In other words, they can see that there are people wanting to tinker around with hardware, and they'd think "ok, now there's an opportunity here. This could be an interesting market. How can we build on this? How can we help them out and grow the market?"
In other words, a bit like the Lego Mindstorms approach, as it were. Ok, that was built specifically for programming and mods, but you get the general idea.
If Sony were to take the Mindstorms approach with the PS3, allowing people to tinker with it, that would seem to be more productive.
Such companies seem to be rare, unfortunately.
Edited 2010-09-08 00:43 UTC





Member since:
2007-05-12
Yes indeed.
And as for PSN (Playstation Network), I'm sure there'd be a few people out there who would have no interest in their network - they would just want the hardware. The PS3 itself.
Standalone apps wouldn't need the network.