Xbox 360 Motherboard In-Depth 36
jshaped writes "As a follow-up to their previously popular article,
Anandtech has posted an in-depth look at the Xbox 360 motherboard. The IBM cpu core looks massive, and check out the ATI gpu with 2 dice on the package." From the article: "The original Xbox featured a 4-layer Intel motherboard, but given the incredible power requirements of the CPU and GPU on the Xbox 360's motherboard we would be astonished if the same were true today. Luckily with any console, especially early on in their life, you are getting a true bargain when it comes to the cost of hardware - so the number of layers on this PCB doesn't matter much to the end user, as Microsoft will absorb all costs above and beyond the core system's $299 price tag."
True costs? (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft has to be eating a ton of the cost for every console sold.
Re:True costs? (Score:2, Insightful)
I know this has been gone over dozens of times on Slashdot, but that's not exactly true, since full functionality is not included in the base price. Never mind the hard drive, 2nd controller, etc...
Specifically, I'm talking about online play. Yes, this was not a capability of early gen consoles, but it's a core function of the coming generation of consoles. Factor in the cost of subscriptions, and the t
Re:True costs? (Score:1)
Xbox Live subcription fees aren't as damning as you seem to think. The point remains that even if the Xbox 360 isn't cheaper than all of those listed consoles, it's not as ungodly expe
Re:True costs? (Score:2)
You're right, of course, it's neither as bad as the FUD says, nor as good as the marketers and fanboys say.
Re:True costs? (Score:2)
Re:True costs? (Score:2)
Not that the 360 is OMGWTF expensive, but it's not accurate to say that it's cheaper than it's predecessors or competitors.
Re:True costs? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:True costs? (Score:2)
Re:True costs? (Score:1, Informative)
The interesting thing about console videogame systems is that (like most electronics) the cost of manufacturing is really low, the 'Cost' of the system that (usually) is considered as a loss is the cost of the technology and development. The fact is that, when you discount the cost of licencing (which Microsoft got raped on), the most expensive part of the original XBox was the Hard-Drive; Hard-Drives are (reasonably) unique in Manufacturin
Re:True costs? (Score:2)
Better also discount marketing costs and administrative costs. As MS produces more units, the marginal cost of a 360 will go down, but they've a lot of overhead that you've got to factor in.
Re:True costs? (Score:2)
Why bother? If they come anywhere close to selling as many of these as they predict, even the narrowest of profit margins will recoup the R&D costs very quickly. They probably spent $50 mil max on R&D. Sell 10 million of these things and your per-unit R&D costs get pretty slim.
The biggest cost was probably paid in "bribes" to third party developers, but hopefully they make those back in licensing. Microsoft learns quick, and they probably learned how to turn
Re:True costs? (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't forget that Adjusted for inflation:
What's the point?
Because of mass-production, robotics and computer design things become both better and cheaper; this doesn't stop people from complaining that someth
Re:True costs? (Score:3, Interesting)
Doubtful.
Looking at the parts shown in this article, it doesn't seem that the price is far outisde the $350 range*. Really, the only super-expensive parts are the CPU and GPU, and recent articles have shown that custom high performance silicon in recent years costs considerably less to produce than analysts had been predicting. Plus they're using cost saving techniques like splitting components out onto multiple dies to improve yields. Add
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:4, Insightful)
"Stick an ATI card in there and you've got a system that is performing around the level of a dual 2.5ghz 970 PowerMac. Which is why you keep hearing first hand impression talk about how 360 games look no better than the games people are playing at home."
So, the quote above, in essence, means that Microsoft is charging $300 (the core system is supposedly going to play at least 99% of 360 games, though I expect HD-requiring games like MMOGs as the 360 goes on) for a gaming experience comparable to that of a $2,000 Power Mac with the actual consistent release of games? The tone says complaint, the content says "OMG the Xbox 360 is a fantastic deal!"
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:1)
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:2)
This was at a time when nearly every installed video card was only a 2D accelerator, and most rendering (say, Quake) was done in software.
Are you just not old enough to remember this? Or were you a beta tester for 3dfx?
--Jeremy
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:1)
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:2)
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:2)
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:1)
VooDoo2 1998
Really people need to compare tech from the same time.
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:2)
Re:Amazing Piece Of Hardware (Score:2)
Yeah but... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:2)
Huh? Xbox 360 uses a custom triple core PowerPC chip - not an off the shelf Celeron like the Xbox.
The hardware in the 360 takes almost a completely opposite approach from the original Xbox. Very few commodity market components.
Can we please stop calling dies "dice"? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can we please stop calling dies "dice"? (Score:1)
Wow, 2 Dice?? (Score:2)