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PlayStation (Games) Media Television

Sony To Use PS2 Chip In Flat-Screen TVs 26

Thanks to GameSpot for its news story reporting that Sony is intending to use the PlayStation 2's CPU chip in a flat-screen TV that will be released in Japan this fall. According to the story: "Sony plans to take advantage of the PS2 chip's CG capabilities to create a high-quality graphical user interface (GUI) for the flat-screen TV [apparently similar to the PSX's DVR menu in style], which will allow smooth and easy control in navigating the TV's menu." There's no indication of any game-like functions for the TV, but: "The release of the new flat-screen TV can also be considered as the prelude to Sony's next-generation electronic products, some of which are expected to operate using the PS3's Cell chip when they are released in 2006."
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Sony To Use PS2 Chip In Flat-Screen TVs

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  • Linux? (Score:3, Funny)

    by mungeh ( 663492 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2004 @03:25AM (#9937684) Homepage
    I wonder if they'll release a hard drive and linux pack to go with it?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Disc Read Error is coming to a TV set near you!
  • Sounds like (Score:2, Funny)

    by oasis3582 ( 698323 )
    a fantastic excuse to make Sony TVs even MORE expensive! SWEEEEEEET!
    • Or cheaper!
      Low cost processors that have been proven in the marketplace.... sounds good to me!
      • Ideally, yes, but most likely not. Marketing will make sure that the box will say "Powered by PS2 technology" all over it. Also, the chip is being put in there not to replace anything, but to add flashinees in menus, etc. Necessary? No. Something you will pay more for? YES.
  • So I'll have to wait until I can make a cluster of these for easy channel flipping! :-)

    I for one see this as a way of stremaing 3d animations on top of ANY programming on ANY channel!

    That is scary! That is REALLY scarey!
  • Not News (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2004 @10:27AM (#9939843) Homepage Journal
    This kind of thing has been talked about for a LONG time... hell, before the PS2 was even produced, that the "emotion engine" chip would be used for a wide variety of things outside of the PS2 because of its power.

    I know you die hard XBox fans love to beat down the PS2, but the only reason it hasnt become the undisputed king, was the bad decision to limit the Video RAM to 4MB.
  • by Jerf ( 17166 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2004 @10:30AM (#9939880) Journal
    Can we get one of these in my cable box? I can't believe it is two thousand fucking four and it takes upwards of three seconds for my cable box to register even the simplest of keypresses. I could program a damn Commodore 64 to be more responsive than that.

    Comcast wonders why nobody seems to want their video on demand. I'll tell you why: Because even to scan their free stuff, you have to dedicate five minutes of your time, laboriously cursoring here, waiting for the cursor to get there, waiting, waiting, cursoring to the next thing, waiting, waiting, waiting, and hesitantly pushing the "action" button, and waiting, waiting, only to find you had one more cursor action queued up and waiting, waiting for it to take effect, waiting, waiting, waiting for the action to take effect on the wrong screen, pressing "back" too many times in frustration, and finally finding yourself back at the normal TV view, only to start this all again... except, maybe not.

    My first-generation TiVo sometimes annoys me (I think the later ones are a lot more responsive), but I still love it. My cable box is utterly unusable. With one of these chips in there it would improve the user experience... well, almost infinitely since right now the user experience is effectively "zero".
    • by Detritus ( 11846 ) on Wednesday August 11, 2004 @02:12PM (#9942032) Homepage
      From what I've read, the problem isn't really the cable box, it's the way they designed the system. Your cable box is like a web browser, making requests for data to the cable company's servers. The delays that you see are a combination of slow communication links and slow servers. Your TIVO is much faster because it caches all its data locally.
    • Tivos are a mixed bag. Series 2 units are fast and responsive compared to the Series 1 units, but DirecTV tivos (which are basically Series 2 units) are so slow that it can take 30 seconds to re-order your season passes, 5 seconds for the "now playing" list to pop up, etc...

      Why you can't display or re-order a list of 30 text entries in less than a second with a 200MHz CPU baffles me. Sure, it won't play Doom III, but it really ought to respond more quickly to UI interactions. I'm not sure why the DirecT
      • It gets worse than that, too... I have a series 2 DTivo and it will take 30 seconds for the Now Playing list to pop up and 5 minutes to reorder the season passes. For about a week or so it was taking 5 minutes to bring up the list and 2 hours to reorder the passes. At that point I finally called Hughes and bitched. They said I had too many shows recorded and could either reformat and lose my shows or go through the painful act of deleting shows manually (each show took about 5 minutes to delete). I fina
        • You should try getting one of the memory buffer update thingy-do's from the Ninth Tee [9thtee.com]. While I don't have one my ownself, I understand that it speeds up all of the menu functions significantly. This leads me to believe that the issue isn't CPU power, but rather lack of memory or a swap space issue or somesuch thing. (Remember that the TiVo is ALWAYS writing to the HD, as it is always recording something, so if it needs to use swap space for anything it is inevitabley going to be slow).

          Rob

          • I looked at those a month ago, but they aren't for series 2 boxes. They are also more than the cost of a brand new box WITHOUT the cost of the 512MB pc100 it needs.

            I read a report that said when the box fills up it doesn't leave any swap space, and that jacks up its file table. I don't believe any manufacturer would be this stupid, but that's what the internet is saying. The only way to fix it is to wipe and start fresh... only to have the same problem in a few months.
  • i found a picture [nikkeibp.co.jp] of what the PSXs menus look like (not sure if thats from the final product). However i wonder if the added cost of a 3d chip will really help push more units for Sony. I mean does anyone care how cool the menu looks? I know personally when purchasing something like a new tv, i read alot of reviews and tend to look at something like picture quality and price as the main selling points. but then i know some people who bought new cell phones so they could get a camera, so maybe im wrong.

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