Final Words

Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony are all trying to change the rules of the game for the next generation of consoles. Five years ago we were eagerly awaiting the arrival of the Xbox 360 and today we are still left without a replacement. Microsoft and Sony want to push the current cycle of consoles through 2012 in order to recover investment dollars. Thankfully despite the age of these consoles, the quality of titles only seems to be improving.

The Xbox 360 slim is often referred to as what the first 360 should have been. It is smaller, quieter and hopefully much more reliable than what Microsoft first shipped five years ago. If it is indeed using 40nm components from TSMC I wouldn't expect a quick ramp. It may be that the slim remains at the $299 price point for a while until Microsoft can get enough silicon back to bring it to lower price points. Update: It looks like the CGPU is made at Chartered, now Global Foundries at 45nm. We may see a quicker ramp than I first assumed as a result.

Coupled with Kinect and some exciting titles due out later this year and next (not to mention the 360's media streaming capabilities), there should be enough life in the 360 to make an investment in the new box today worthwhile.

That being said, I really do hope that we see just as many eager game developers take advantage of the tremendous increase in CPU and GPU horsepower we've been given over the past five years. When the 360's CPU was first announced no desktop CPU could manage 6 threads, today we can have twice that paired with over 12 times the amount of cache on the 360's CPU. Today's GPUs are similarly impressive and are going to be even more affordable this year, and faster next.

Just as the high end grows more powerful, so will mobile gaming devices. We are not that far away from having the power of an Xbox 360 in a smartphone. An in-order triple core CPU should be doable in an SoC within 4 years, and the GPU within a similar amount of time. And there are companies working on both. Eventually the 360's library may be the "arcade classic" titles you'll be playing on your smartphone.

Sweet.

The Motherboard
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  • Huggy_Bear - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    I cannot believe nobody has talked about this yet!?
    Blu-ray drive anyone?
    Is the DVD drive plain old SATA/standard form factor? In which case one could theoretically replace it w/ an off-the-shelf SATA blu-ray drive?? Now, OS support and blu-ray playback might be the main issue here...
  • tipoo - Sunday, June 20, 2010 - link

    You answered your own question there, even if it uses standard connecters the OS probably would not recognize the new drive.
  • Gamerguy1020 - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    Does anyone know if this new 360 has gigabit ethernet, as opposed to the 10/100 on older xboxes?
  • Finally - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    If Valhalla is the place where Vikings get to when they die,
    does that mean that this new XBOX will die once it gets to you?
  • Finally - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    Or does it mean that this new XBOX represents Valhalla and YOU have to die to get one?
  • Finally - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    As it seems, all of the above is inccorect as only certain body parts of yours have to die in order for Valhalla to enter your house:

    Needless to say, I wasn’t terribly happy about purchasing a sixth Xbox 360


    If I had to imagine a picture that shows over-exaggerated self pity plus stupidity all at once I would make a video with some fat nerd uttering this statement. Seriously...
  • Ninjahedge - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    It is nice to have a smaller form factor, but being one of those people that actually has the money for a stereo w/surround and optical input attached to my HDTV, it would be nice if they considered ME in their form factor.

    I HAVE an AV cabinet! I would LIKE a box to be a nicely sized component I can stack in there, complete with internal BR and PS. It could even be slightly LARGER than that original (the horizontal footprint would have to be) so long as I had something that would look like a wicked system component capable of/posessing:

    Gaming (duh)
    Internet Access (limited) and Video
    Net/Internet Streaming and Custom Codec installation
    Blue Ray/DVD playback
    Unlimited USB connectivity
    Limited video RECORDING (C'mahn! TiVo should not be the only one!)
    Front LED display

    I would like a combo Gamer/Vid/Media center. They could get away with charging slightly more for something that would only cost $400 but take the place of an UNLICENSED HTPC + Proprietary gaming system.

    But no. We all know adults do not play games.
  • jeremyshaw - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    Just a note, it's also likely MS used Global Foundries (since they bought off Chartered, the IBM Xenon CPU fab location MS chose), if the CPU and GPU have indeed been unified into a monolithic IC.
  • ajlueke - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    With what is shown here, I would consider getting one of these to replace the Xenon based 360 I purchased in December of '05. Yes, I purchased and original run 360 and it has not to this day RRoD on me.
    However, it still has only the 20Gb HDD and a lack of HDMI, as well as the external 802.11g wireless adapter a purchased years ago. Not to mention over twice the power consumption of the new model. May be time to upgrade.
  • Krakn3Dfx - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    "some exciting titles due out later this year and next"

    Besides Halo Reach, Gears 3, and an unnamed Crytek exclusive, their E3 showing seemed to be a lot of Kinect casual stuff. If I didn't know better, I would say Microsoft is dialing down on hardcore exclusive titles in favor of multiplat titles and banking a lot of their money on Kinect's ability to take a significant portion of the Wii's marketshare.

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