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Games Entertainment

XBox Linux HOWTOs 309

killmenow writes "Following up this slashdot story from a few days ago, today The Register is reporting that the XBox Linux folks have released a HOWTO for getting SuSE 8.0 running. Cool...I may have to go buy an X-Box now." There's also a HOWTO for Debian if that's your style. All of these require an XBox with modified hardware... There's also a story about the XBox online gaming service that implies Microsoft will be scanning your machine to make sure you haven't modified it, but we can't link to it since silicon.com has some sort of stupid registration requirement. Anyone find the story elsewhere? Ah, News.com has a story about XBox Live.
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XBox Linux HOWTOs

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  • Cool...I may have to go buy an X-Box now

    You boviously have more money than brains if you want to go buy an X Box just because you can install Linux on it. If you want to install Linux on something, buy a PC. Xbox is for games.
    • Actually, by buying an X-Box and running Linux on it, you're actively contributing to the downfall of Microsoft. Here's how:

      Microsoft relies on selling game licenses to make a profit off of their whole X-Box venture. And in order to remain competitive with Sony's PSX-2 pricing, they've had to heavily slash their unit costs. The net effect? They take a loss on each unit sold ($150, maybe more?), with the expecatation that if they sell enough games per unit, they'll be able to make that money back (and then some). By buying an X-Box, you're hitting MS where it hurts...... and no, companies don't have nuts.
  • by sulli ( 195030 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:00PM (#4207752) Journal
    but to do anything with this I would really need a WHYTO.
    • by ChaosDiscordSimple ( 41155 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:47PM (#4208166) Homepage

      Why?

      The first, and perhaps most important reason is "Because I can." We're geeks. Geeks modify things just to show that they can, to excersize their geek skills, to reveal in the technology.

      Second, for $200 I can get a machine with a stereo eqiupment form factor that will me a great mp3 and ogg vorbis player with visualization on my TV (great for parties), plays dvds, plays many classic games (courtesy of MAME, ScummVM, and others), browses the web (say, tvguide.com for listings), and if you're desperate can be used to ssh into work to fix something. For that, it's pretty good deal.


    • but to do anything with this I would really need a WHYTO.

      I think a John F. Kennedy quote is an appropriate response here.
      "But why, some say, the moon? Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask, why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does Rice play Texas?

      We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too"

  • You'll eventually cave and will buy an X-box game. Its like a little kid dipping into the cookie jar even though its naughty.
    • Yeah, I can't believe I'm going to buy an X-Box for a few games. I've always been a huge Sega fan, ever since I got the Master System (do a search for my /. nic sometime). Some how Microsoft got Sega to make Shenmue II/III X-Box exclusives in the US. I already got the import of part II, so I'll probally pass on that, but I need III. There is also the new Sega GT, and Panzer Orta. Hopefully Microsoft had to pay Sega for those exclusives, so they can take the loss on me buying the system, and then what they had to fork over to Sega for those games.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:01PM (#4207758)
    Now I have linux on my XBox.

    It was cool bringing a BASH prompt.

    But now I really wanna play some Halo, but I can't?
    It really sucks. I bought it for a gaming console, and now its just like a computer...
  • Reward (Score:3, Informative)

    by 1WingedAngel ( 575467 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:01PM (#4207763) Homepage
    If I recall correctly wasn't some Anonymous Coward running a $250k award to the first group to get this done?

  • The site referenced asks for a password. Err...
  • Password (Score:1, Redundant)

    by grip ( 60499 )
    If the link requires registration,the kind thing is to indicate that in the description.
  • by secondsun ( 195377 ) <secondsun@gmail.com> on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:06PM (#4207804) Journal
    MS has the right to block any one form its networks. However, if they pursue the X-box owner (most likely by lawsuit) this is a different story. While X-box live is their network, the X-box is the consumer's personal possession. With that said, the person who owns it has the right to do anything he wants to it, modding included.

    • And that's fine. There's nothing to say you can't saw your X-Box in half after you're done buying it. However they sure as hell have the right to make sure the machine connecting to their online SERVICE meets a minimum standard. That being a functioning X-Box with no tampering.

      Don't get me wrong, I'm not against modding or putting Linux on it or anything. More power to you if you want to do that. Just don't expect them to bend over backwards to accomodate you if you try to use their services. :)

    • The DMCA means that even if you crack the protection on the XBOX you own, you are in violation, no?
      • That's true; the DMCA is the weapon here. It's also why finding mod chips for PS2s is night impossible, since Sony goes after anybody selling them like a shark that smells blood.

        Plus modding PS2's seems to be an imprecise science, but good luck finding ANY chip compared to the ubiqituous modchips available for the PS1.

        Even if they were only used to defeat the 'region encoding' on games and not be able to play CD-Rs, that's a circumvention device and they can nail you for it.

        It's really a shame; there are so many great Japanese games that I'm never going to get to play. I can't even import a Japanese PS2 easily, since Sony's clamping down on that, too.

  • Suppose you get Linux running on your X-Box? Then what? You say "Wow, I have Linux running on my X-Box, I'm super cool." But... then what?
  • Mod Checking (Score:5, Interesting)

    by falser ( 11170 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:12PM (#4207869) Homepage
    Microsoft will be scanning your machine to make sure you haven't modified it.

    Bah! All you need to do is add another mod to hide the mod they look for. Remenicient of the ever popular radar-detector-detector.
  • by LordYUK ( 552359 ) <jeffwright821@NOSPAm.gmail.com> on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:12PM (#4207870)
    Linux on the X-Box? Suuuuure, next some high up at Microsoft will admit that windows isnt secure, or that someone landed on the "moon"...

    humor folks, enjoy it :P
  • Cool...I may have to go buy an X-Box now


    is this guy serious? if you just want to toy around with suse, BUY A PC. last i heard they were getting 1 frame a second on tux racer... for $300 you could buy a pretty decent PC that would run suse much better.
    • for $300 you could buy a pretty decent PC that would run suse much better.

      Ah, but an XBox is only $199.

      And linux on an XBox will get better.

      • A cheap Lindows box at Walmart [walmart.com] is only $299. It has 128MB, 850 MHz Duron, 10GB, 52xCD-ROM, etc.

        Plus you don't have to do ANYTHING geeky to put Linux on it. It already comes that way.

        But it's shopping at Walmart... that's the part that's like having an AOL address.

        Disclaimer: I NEVER shop at Walmart unless I need a gun in a hurry...

        • Plus you don't have to do ANYTHING geeky to put Linux on it

          If you don't have to do anything geeky, then what's the point?

          Linux is too easy these days. You install it and it just works. Many of us pine for the days when it took WEEKS to get all your hardware working correctly under linux. We actually enjoy that stuff. There was a sense of accomplishment when the joystick finally worked or you could actually burn a CD from an IDE CD burner.

          I think that is part of the appeal of XBox Linux.

  • by dschuetz ( 10924 ) <david&dasnet,org> on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:15PM (#4207901)
    Could someone please post the EULA for the Xbox. I'm 99% certain that it said, essentially, "you can't use the software that comes with the xbox for anything but your xbox." That is, you can't use their software on another computer (making Xbox-emulators pretty difficult). I don't think it said anything else.

    Furthermore, this restriction was only printed in a small box on one side of the product's shipping box -- nowhere did I see any EULAs on the unit itself, when I booted it up, or on any kind of sticker when I opened it up.

    I'm just curious if they've since made it more restrictive. I know I was VERY surprised not to find a typical Microsoft EULA attached to a big red sticker pasted over the power supply, or somesuch.

    That said, the "live network" could certainly deny access two whomever it wants -- be they people from another timezone, another country, or people using modded xboxes. But Microsoft shouldn't have any leg to stand on to prevent people from modding their boxes, except for the obvious one of avoiding copy protection on duplicated games (which wouldn't apply to 3rd party software, and *shouldn't* apply to backups). And Microsoft shouldn't go telling game companies that you've got a modded xbox and save folders on the hard driver for games X, Y, and Z (infering that they're illegally copied games).

    Of course, what's right and legal is irrelevant when they've got more laywer money than most geeks with modded xboxes....
    • by mapmaker ( 140036 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:43PM (#4208134)
      Modding isn't prohibited, because it can't be prohibited.

      You don't *license* Xbox hardware from Microsoft, you *buy* it. When you buy something, you *own* it, and can do whatever the hell you want with/to it.
      So there is not and can not be a "license agreement".

      Now, Xbox Live is a different story. Xbox live is a service, not a piece of hardware. Microsoft can legally define the terms of that service, and one of the terms can be that only non-modded Xboxes are allowed to use it.

      To summarize: modding Xboxes is/can not be prohibited. Using modded Xboxes on Xbox Live can and probably will be prohibited.

      • Modding isn't prohibited, because it can't be prohibited.

        I agree, but that hasn't stopped Microsoft from putting other theoretically or morally unenforcable terms into their software EULAs.

        And it hasn't stopped them from really pushing hard to close down modding-related sites.

        I was just curious if MS had even tried to prohibit modding, at the consumer-purchase-agreement level...
      • When you buy something, you *own* it, and can do whatever the hell you want with/to it.

        hey you didn't rip the tag off your mattress did you?
    • Someone may have already said this but I haven't bothered reading through all the responses...

      Wouldn't it be sensible that if you purchase a used Xbox (i.e. from a funcoland/gameco/used game store) you don't even see the EULA, and therefore are not obligated to abide by it? I'd love to hear the legalese on that.
  • by snubber1 ( 56537 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:21PM (#4207951)
    Anyone who owns a xbox and puts in a mod-chip might as well forget about XBL for quite some time. There are about a million ways one could conceve of detecting mods.
    • MS downloads and tries to run unsigned code on your box (which reports back if run)
    • Look for the trademark files of all the alternate dashboards littered all over your drive. MS knows what the drive should look like.
    • Just scan your drive for unsigned code every night.

    I'm betting there will be a new generation of stealth mods and hd swap kits for those who want to make the box 'clean' to get on XBL. I don't really feel like playing cat-and-mouse every day to stay ahead of the game. Online play has historically been one of the most effective (not 100% mind you) means of copy protection.
  • ..a microsoft conspiracy theory per day keep you going, here we go:

    when Microsoft originally started shipping the xbox, they WISHED that that Linux would run on it as soon as possible. Why? They wanted a good excuse for entering the desktop/home PC market without being accused for using their monopoly power.

    Now, because Linux has already soon changed the xbox from a game console to a nearly fullblown home PC - Microsoft can do it with windows as well. Want more proof, here [com.com]. They are practising for this take over in many fronts. And it's not only PCs, they also bought a mobile phone plant in china. Oh yes, they will be selling the whole package SW+HW very soon.

  • by t0qer ( 230538 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:33PM (#4208059) Homepage Journal
    And don't give me the line about how every xbox sale is a loss to microsoft. A sale is a sale on a quarterly earnings report, which is all the stockholders care about anyways.

    For less than the price of an xbox you can get a really nice little motherboard Via technologies is putting out now for $130 or less.

    http://www.via.com.tw/en/Products/eden.jsp

    Now sure it doesn't have a 10 gig hard drive ($20 bucks?) or a dvd drive (+$40) or ram (128 +$20) or a case (+20) but so far for an Eden based system we're at $200, far less than the $270 you would expect to pay for a modded xbox.

    Since UltraHLE i've never bought a console system. Why? If I put that $200 into my system, in a couple of years someone will write an emulator that can play it.

    If you really want M$ to lose money, figure out a way around their copy protection, write an emulator, and watch how fast ISO images of the games start floating around IRC and p2p networks. Don't feed the beast by buying another xbox please!

    --toq
    • And don't give me the line about how every xbox sale is a loss to microsoft. A sale is a sale on a quarterly earnings report, which is all the stockholders care about anyways.

      Wow, clearly Microsoft should start selling XBoxes for a dollar a piece (with the DVD support), their sales would go through the roof and their stockholders would be in heaven.

      Meanwhile, here on earth, shareholders tend to be interested in profits, which is the difference between revenue and expenses. An XBox costs more to make and ship than they profit from it. Revenue for XBoxes is less than expenses. Negative profit, or a loss.

      Not that all losses are a problem. Eating a loss to develop a powerful web browse and giving it away may be a great way to protect your very profitable operating system monopoly. Eating a loss because the vast majority of XBoxes will be profitable through game purchases isn't so bad either.

      Sure, you can build an similar system for a similar price. However, it's going to take my time to assemble and debug the hardware. For $200 I can build something that will match the technical specs, but will generally use lower quality components (bigger, noisier, flakier). What sort of case am I getting for $20? I don't see terribly good 3d acceleration on that motherboard you suggest.

      (I've seen the argument that an XBox that doesn't sell is a bigger loss to Microsoft. True, assuming that the XBox wasn't going to sell. The question is, would that XBox have sold? If Microsoft is still producing new XBoxes, the previous ones must be selling. Microsoft has enough of a marketing research to minimize the risk of ending up with a large backstock that they can't move.)

      Since UltraHLE i've never bought a console system. Why? If I put that $200 into my system, in a couple of years someone will write an emulator that can play it.

      If it works for you, great. Meanwhile, I want to play the games sooner than later, I want a system that is a breeze to set up, I want a system that has rock solid stability, I'm not interested in hanging around warez sites downloading various copies until I find one that works, and I want to support authors of high quality games by actually paying for them. To each his own.

    • by x mani x ( 21412 ) <mghase@noSpAm.cs.mcgill.ca> on Friday September 06, 2002 @02:08PM (#4208377) Homepage
      If you really want M$ to lose money, figure out a way around their copy protection, write an emulator, and watch how fast ISO images of the games start floating around IRC and p2p networks. Don't feed the beast by buying another xbox please!

      Yeah! And who cares about all the game development houses who will be losing potential sales as a result of your elite 0-day warezing ...

      Or all of us who have to pay more for slower bandwidth because of selfish hogs flooding the pipes with illegal ISO's ...

      I'd rather "feed the beast" than stoop lower than them, stealing games under the guise of some techno-freedom fighter sabotaging the Goliath.

      All that said, it's not the actual criminals/pirates/etc that bother me. It's the hypocrites ... all the people who steal, vandalize, or generally fuck shit up for fun/profit, then justify it with half-assed anti-establishment ramblings. I've seen it in the punk rock scene, and I've seen it with geeks. It's all the same old bullshit and frankly I'm tired of it.

      -Mani
    • Absolutely. Glad to see there are a few people here that get it.

      A bit more on the pricing: that XBox doesn't include a keyboard or the modchip you'll need to let it run Linux. And there's also the risk you'll take in frying the thing when you mod it.

      Meanwhile you can get a pretty good preassembled PC for $199. Walmart.com is showing an 800 MHz, 128MB RAM, 10GB disk, 10/100 ethernet with machine with Linux preinstalled (okay, Lindows, but hey), keyboard and wheel mouse for $199.86.

      Shop the mom'n'pop whitebox stores you can probably find something equivalent (quick check of local ads shows pretty decent kits in that price range, with the low-end on preassembled going for about twice that price with twice the CPU speed, twice the memory and four times the disk space.)
  • by SimplyCosmic ( 15296 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:41PM (#4208114) Homepage
    "There's also a story about the XBox online gaming service that implies Microsoft will be scanning your machine to make sure you haven't modified it"


    Although some people will take the conspiritorial mindset that this was done solely to Microsoft's advantage and being anti-consumer, it was most likely done not to prevent silly things like Linux running on the box, but to prevent cheaters from modifying their boxes in such a way as to ruin the online experience for others.

    It wouldn't take all that many cheaters with modded boxes to tank any online network's value to the average casual gamer.

    Of course, there's the side benefit of punishing those who mod their boxes for copyright infringement purposes.
    • A sale is a sale if it is for a game. It's common knowledge that MS is not making money on the boxes but on the earnings from the game sales.

      If you buy an xbox and then hack it up to be a linux box, you're obviously not going to buy any video games.

      So yes, if you have a slew of linux hackers buying up xboxes because they want to make a beowulf cluster of these, it will hurt profits [if they had any to begin with]
      • Uhm, yes and no. Yes, it hurts their bottom line in the short term. OTOH, they sell a lot more Xboxes. To the masses, it doesn't matter what happens to all those boxes. If it turns out that the xbox is selling much better than another console, Joe user will think that it has to be better. Microsoft on the other hand , will claim the losses on a slow market.

        So while you are right that it will hurt them a little, in the long run it will give them increased market share.
      • That would be true if the only profit from the XBox came in the form of the games and any hardware accessories.

        However, the "XBox Live" which is doing the automagic checking for hardwarew/software modifications is Microsoft's online service for the system, one for which end-users pay $50 annually to play online against others.

        If modded boxes allow gameshark like cheats online, and there was no method of checking for such cheat mods, this would ruin enough of the online experience for end-users that the annual $50 Microsoft is counting on to run those now cheat-enabled servers isn't going to be so easy to raise.

  • by RailGunner ( 554645 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:44PM (#4208147) Journal
    While I absolutely love the irony of running Linux on a MS box, I have to wonder if the hardware cost of the XBOX even worth getting one to run Linux?

    In a recent Fry's ad, I saw an ad for a AMD Duron 1Ghz processor and motherboard for $79, and the motherboard had on board sound / video. Add some RAM, a hard drive, etc, and you can build a more powerful machine for probably around $300, and you don't have to solder in anything or void your warranty.

    Anyone have a really compelling reason to run Linux on an XBOX? I'm sure there's at least one... maybe small machine footprint? XBOX is huge for a console compared to PS2 / Gamecube, but it's still small compared to even a midtower PC.

    And yes, I'll accept "Because it's fun" as an answer :)

  • XBOX $199
    MOD $99-149
    Risk of ruining your XBox when soldering the mod chip: minimal but possible.

    Add the price of your favorite keyboard and mouse and it's more cost effective to just buy a cheap PC or a "Net PC" with Linux (ThinkNic's go for only $249 WITH a keyboard and mouse).

    For me, I'll keep my XBox of the games, and my cheap x86 box for Linux.
    • On my site [warmcat.com] there is a $4 modchip that most 12 year olds could fit.

      The xbox is also attractive at its price for DVD drive and a modern video chipset, plus excellent TV-out.
      • by tshak ( 173364 )
        Looking at the instructions you mention the possibility of breaking the XBox multiple times. Doesn't seem worth it except for those who use a soldering iron with delicate hardware on a regular basis.
  • by Tom ( 822 )
    why, oh why is everyone so hyped about the xbox? aside from the fact that the M$ marketing department know perfectly well how to generate hype and sell crap, I mean?
  • by Mulletproof ( 513805 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @01:51PM (#4208203) Homepage Journal
    Two points, really. First, you could see this one coming miles away. Microsoft controls all the cards. They control the hardware you're getting, the software you're using and the network you're surfing. Given the fact that they created a closed box for a reason, it's no huge leap to imagine they'd use one or all of these paths to dissuade people from modding their box. And you won't see me minding too much either. One good thing that will make the X Box live a decent experience is conformity (yes, that evil, evil word). Knowing that the person who just fragged you has exactly the same hardware and connection. Sure, I might miss a multi region DVD mod or something, but not that much. Besides, I don't think anybody who mods for Linux is really worried about the games or X-Box Live. On that note, I can see MS being paranoid of Linux users trying to hack or otherwise use/abuse the Live network. I'd ban modded boxes too. A real, uncrippled OS is a dangerous tool in that environment. Too much temptation for you rabid, salivating Linux fan-boys. Finally, it's my opinion that Ps2 networking is probably going to blow because your going to have just as many surfing/playing problems as you did on your PC back in the Doom/Quake days... Y'know-- When that 56kb connection actually equalled out to 31.5kb if the planets were aligned and the wind was blowing south at 6kph? Maybe you'll get 42kb tommorow...
  • Price of a New XBox: $300.oo
    Materials to mod the Xbox: $23.88
    The look on his face when he realizes he just screwed up the soldering job and ruined the entire board: Priceless.

  • I think Microsoft's management were so used to winning in the software market they belived they can just do a similar thing in the electronics market and get the same results. I don't think they realised what they were taking on when they took on Sony.

    I believe Sony - as business strategists - are much more sophisticated than Microsoft, at least when it comes to electronics products. I predict a suprise from Sony with the PS3 - there isn't going to be one. What Sony will do is make it so that all their medium and high-end DVD players will have the capability to play games. Games is where the money is, after all, not the boxes. Watch Microsoft struggle trying to compete with that. It would be really difficult for them to persuade other DVD manufacturers to alter their boxes to play MS games. But Sony is the biggest manufacturer of DVD players. I'm afraid soon it will be game over for MS in the console wars.
  • A quick check at Walmart.com reveals that Xboxen can be had for $199. An 800Mhz Microtel PC can also be had for $199.

    What do you want to do? Do you want a $200 PC? Buy the Microtel. Do you have an afternoon free to show off your 133t h4x0r 5k1115? Buy an Xbox and mod it.

    I bought the dreamcast ($50) for it's hackability. I think it's worth the $50, hands down. No hardware mods are essential. The possibilites are not endless, but quite attactive. I think these people who are hacking the Xbox are simply paving the way. When the Xbox can be found at the Pawn shop for $20, I'll buy at least one if I know it can run linux. Heck, I'll be watching the prices over the next 6 months. With the console war, the PS2 is the clear winner. How long until Sony drops the price? How long until Xbox drops price to follow suit? How long until Xbox gets cheap enough to be used as multifunction appliances?

    To the people who like to tear things apart and install linux, I wish you the best of luck. You are the geeks who make linux work the way it does.
  • For all things that can be done with Linux installed in the console, I would like to be able to replace the Xbox drive with a higher capacity HDD and be able to partition it (one partition for a Linux filesystem, the other one for a regular 10GB Xbox filesystem).

    If not possible, then how about mounting a NFS filesystem from another computer in the network, leaving the internal HDD untouched? I would still need to mount a remote filesystem in order to access my nearly 50GB worth of A/V files, as they won't fit into the regular Xbox HDD.

    Lastly, a very important point here is that even though it is very useful to be able to convert the Xbox into a cheap and powerful $200 computer and use it as an A/V player in my huge TV, etc., I still want to use the machine in the way it was designed for, and that means running my legally owned games flawlessly.

    What I really need is a non-intrusive Linux installation, such as the one in the Dreamcast. I know it might never be possible to run unsigned code without modifying the hardware, but THAT would be too much to ask.
  • by Nanite ( 220404 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @02:15PM (#4208431)
    Cool...I may have to go buy an X-Box now.

    Do us all a favor and please don't. Microsoft may lose money if you buy one, but it loses more if you don't. A console's fate is decided on how many are sold, it has nothing to do with sales of games. So when geeks start making Xboxes fly off the shelf, just to install Linux, it still makes the Xbox look like a high selling success. If the Xbox is seen as a viable console with high hardware sales, Microsoft will have have the last laugh. Then we'll see Xbox 2, 3, and 4, a prospect no one around here wants to see. Let the Xbox sit on the shelf , and then MS may get the hint and get out of the console business when it sees that they aren't selling.

    Nanite
    Yeah, Small.
    • i) IMHO in the current state of the LinuXBox project there may be 10.000 geeks on our planet who care and probably a 1.000 who will buy it for that reason. That won't change the course of the world.

      ii) MS loses money with every XBox. A good reason to buy one.

      iii) The game companies care much more about their sales than about MS sales. Even if gazillions of XBoxes are sold and noone buys games, no company will release new games in the future.

      IMHO: If you think it's fun, buy an XBox. You're not doing anything particulary good or bad to MS.

      But remember: As soon as you start buying games for the XBox you'll really start supporting the XBox and MS. But on the other side these games may be a hell lot of fun ... (and Sony with their DRM ideas isn't a company that deserves geek support either (even though their Linux on a PS2 is cool)).

      BYMMV.

      Bye egghat.
  • I normally hate every attempt to snoop my systems. But I can see one good thing about the X-Box chip scanning online.
    Now, I don't have a X-box or even played with it, so I don't know all that the chip mods can do. But let's assume that the gaming network catches on and there will be some very popular online games on the x-box. Couldn't one imagine that some would produce mod-chips that enabled the user to cheat the games in some way? Either by a function in the chip or by modified games.
    Cheating ruined my enjoyment with playing Counterstrike( that and the games was getting old), so I would like to play a game where I was sure that nobody cheated. With every major game coming out these days, there's a constant battle with cheats, so the checking of the system could be a way to ensure a fair game.

    Still I agree that it sucks and the fact that some servers insisted on scanning my files on my PC for cheats, before I could join a Counterstrike server, really made me say enough is enough. The X-box is not a pc, so maybe most people will not find it quite as bad. I don't know, I'm not going to buy a X-box anyway.
  • I know why! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Quixadhal ( 45024 ) on Friday September 06, 2002 @02:40PM (#4208652) Homepage Journal
    This is to try and convince the SETI@Home people to produce binaries for the Dreamcast and PS2 linux enviornments, isn't it?

    If we hack the X-Box to run linux, won't that be an i386 platform console that can run seti@home? And then we can say, "See! People *DO* want to run seti@home on their game consoles. When can we get dreamcast and PS2 binaries to download?"
  • by Atryn ( 528846 )
    Question: Are the HOWTO's mentioned hosted on an XBOX running Linux and Apache? That'd be cool...

    Point: The DMCA only kicks in if you are circumventing encryption (i.e. to play illegally copied games). If I'm correct, this setup uses the mod chip to entirely bypass the existing OS. So you aren't even running the OS that has the decryption. It should only be illegal if you employ some Linux based software to then circumvent encryption on commerical software or games.

    I can't see how the DMCA could be used against someone just running Linux and freeware on the Xbox.
  • If you want to buy a system to hack on then buy a Dreamcast. They're cheap (about $40) - and you can run Linux [sourceforge.net] to your heart's content on the thing.

    Not only Linux, either - lots of homebrew games [boob.co.uk], NetBSD [netbsd.org] and even QNX [astranetwork.com]

    There are even lots of good, and now very cheap, commercial games available for it.

    Sure, it's not as advanced as an Xbox or a PS/2, before someone makes that very obvious point. But that is not what we are about, is it? The fun for many of us is in subverting the manufacturer's intentions and doing something unorthodox with the hardware - well the DC's the best for that.
  • Anybody consider the possibility that Microsoft may have butchered the signature crap on the xbox in the same manner as they did with CryptAPI?

    Any way to get a certificate and create another certificate with an issuer of Microsoft or something?

    just a stray thought from the void...

Reality must take precedence over public relations, for Mother Nature cannot be fooled. -- R.P. Feynman

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