Sony Delays PSX To 2005 In U.S. 19
Thanks to Bloomberg.com for its story revealing Sony is delaying the American release of its PSX PlayStation 2/digital video recorder combo device until 2005, allegedly "because the device may not appeal to U.S. consumers", according to the article. Dick Komiyama, although not explicitly stating these worries, said: "We're working very hard to make the technology feasible for U.S. consumers", and analyst Masayuki Ito argued: "'Delays give a bad impression... Investors probably didn't have high expectations for the product' because it has had little appeal in Japan." We recently discussed the debut of an enhanced PSX in Japan, as well as earlier issues with last year's Japanese launch.
Why delay? Why not just scrap it altogether? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Why delay? Why not just scrap it altogether? (Score:1)
I don't have some special insight into the US psyche but a device that lets you play games and do cool TIVO style things should have near universal appeal! Clearly Sony realise this, but they also know the current products costs too much and does not have the right feature set.
Now the Japanese culture is something I have even less insight into but from what little I know they don't like to "lose face" and standing up and saying we've got a good idea but our implementation is buggered is not likely to happ
Re:Why delay? Why not just scrap it altogether? (Score:3, Insightful)
On the price issue, I'm right there with you. Considering I could score a dual-tuner HDTV (both OTA and satell
Re:Why delay? Why not just scrap it altogether? (Score:2)
When has sony ever been on the cheap end? Not for the last 20 or so years. $999 may be a lot for generic recorder/burner/dvd
Twice as many products, Half the support (Score:3, Interesting)
Obselete as soon as it's out (Score:2)
Don't be so sure (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, if Microsoft do ship in 2005, and Sony aren't ready, Microsoft may enjoy huge success with no competition. But say Sony were to release their PSX at the same time as the new Xbox... it might not outsell it, but it
Re:Don't be so sure (Score:4, Interesting)
This device is not intended to compete with any console - it can't. It's more like Sony trying to get their foot back in the PVR door after their relationship with TiVo ended.
Confused by Name (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Confused by Name (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Confused by Name (Score:2)
I don't see what's wrong with PS2X actually. If it's based on the PS2, then they should keep that thing going.
Because simply everyone is going to have problems if there is another PSX on the market. Consumers will be confused, game magazines and all websites will have to change all their abbreviations, and it will be a complete fucking nightmare.
That aside, I wouldn't be too worried. By the time the PSX is out, the PS3 should be near enough that nobody cares, and the Xbox 2 will be even better than Jus
What about support? (Score:1)
This is a potentially stressful problem on the consumer's end when it comes to convergence devices. It's cool if you have multiple stuff in one set-top box -- saves you cable clutter, missing remotes, etc. But if one thing breaks, it means taking EVERYTHING to the nearest Sony center and basic
Not a bad product for Japan, but America? (Score:4, Interesting)
First, the Playstation was never called the PSX in Japan. The internal prototype name was apparently picked up and carried by foreign game magazines / sites, but in Japan, the Playstation was always called the Playstation (or Puresute for short, as PlayStation is Pureisuteshon in Japanese).
Second, while the PSX is damn expensive, it's actually not poorly priced for Japan. Sure, you can get a Tivo for a lot cheaper in America, but there is no Tivo in Japan. The average hard disk TV recorder thingy starts at $500 and goes up here, so the PSX is about the price of buying a PS2 and a hard disk recorder anyway, if not a bit cheaper.
That said, it's tacitly clear why the PSX is not appealing to the US market: it costs more than a Tivo and a PS2 combined, by a good margin.
Re:Not a bad product for Japan, but America? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the point is even a $500 hard disk recorder is a niche product in Japan - these things just aren't as popular as they are here - so the added expense of the P
Re:Not a bad product for Japan, but America? (Score:2)
I suspect I know why... (Score:2)
They don't need time to make it "more accessable" to US consumers. They need the time to make it less accessable. In the past month, a grey-market pirate product called HD Loader [hdloader.com] was released, which allows users to run copied games from the PS2 hard drive. Sony needs the time to break compatibility with HD Loader.
Sony making a mistake? (Score:2)
Re:Sony making a mistake? (Score:1)
Mistake? (Score:2)
Game player: PS2 R&D paid off long ago
HD: cheap commodity product
DVD bruner: Cheap commodity product (when it's realeased)
Television signal recorder: Fairly cheap product little R&D
Over all the product isn't a lot of work to put together, has alright margins and has a niche market apeal. I don't think they can lose much in this proposition. And if it's successful the next PS might have more of the same features. I'm sure Sony would like