What the Sony Reshuffling Actually Means 30
Newsweek's N'Gai Croal steps up this morning with some interesting analysis of the Sony re-organization that occurred late last month. Mr. Croal points out the difficulty of understanding the machinations of a notoriously tight-lipped foreign company, and attempts to look at the executive movements from the games business view. From the article: "Here's what's on SCE's plate at this very moment: three product lines that must be managed over the next five to six years (PS2, PSP and PS3); two more product lines that are almost certainly already in the planning stages (PS4 and PSP2); an online service, an online store, operating systems and system updates for each of the post-PS2 machines; and one of the world's largest game studio operations. Given that workload, Sony desperately needed to free Ken up to do the vision thing, and groom the next generation to run SCE on a day-to-day basis, much like Microsoft did when Bill Gates ceded operational control of Microsoft to Steve Ballmer. So while we have absolutely no visibility into whether this evolution was initiated by Kutaragi or by Stringer, it strikes us as precisely the right move to help ensure the future health of the PlayStation business."
I hate forced subjects (Score:5, Insightful)
translation: Stay out of the way and shut the hell up, crazy man.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
1 - Everyone in the music dept will now be shuffled into janitorial services. a new sony online stores opens to great success.
2- PS4 will look fabulous, perform slightly slower then the next Xbox but will excel at 1 or 2 game genres so much we'll forgive him. It will also be $1900 and somehow we will buy it anyways.
3- The PSP2 will suddenly be the most popular consumer product ever. It will actually be a repackaged DS but with a better shell. Analysts will be stunned.
4- Oddly most fo slashd
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Frankly, after my run of faulty Sony products (tally of broken sony
Re: (Score:1, Informative)
"As it sits now, SCE is the company's only real profit (other divisions are taking losses)"
for a crazy man with no vision and no business sense, you have to credit him with steering the boat that upset the mighty nintendo. created the first console to ever sell 100 million units and followed it up with a second console that sold even more. it took vision to convince sony to enter the games business. it took business sense to secure key titles an
Re: (Score:2)
So you're the one who bought the PSX! Neat!
Just out of curiosity, how are you ever going to find out if you've decided not to buy Sony stuff?
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Shuffling and shuffling (Score:1, Troll)
I thought you meant the recent PS3 firmware update. I'm still wondering what the heck it means.
From TFA (Score:4, Funny)
Summary of TFA: We don't really know what's going on, but we've got a few clues so we'll wildly extrapolate forward from those.
In other news, no tea in the vending machine this morning - this probably means that Asia is now underwater and establishing a subsea uber-race.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It's... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re: (Score:1)
I don't know if any of that happened here, but from what I've read it just sounds like swapped some people aroundin existing positions... thus that would be 'reshuffling
Nothing concrete really... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
What hole? Do you mean...
They've managed to alienate all but the most rabid fans with their stupid and uncoordinated moves.
Um, right. I think what you mean is "they've alienated all the video game and computer nerds who aren't rabid fans". The general electronics-buying person doesn't even know about the rootkit fiasco, much less understand its gravity. In fact, they generally like Sony [slashdot.org].
Re: (Score:2)
There is every indication that Sony is hurting financially from all of this, not to mention increased competition from China and Korea in their electronics department.
Re: (Score:1)
Care to cite some respected analysis that agrees with this?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Big ships turn slowly (Score:3, Insightful)
Sony seems obsessed with trying to get the market to adopt one of their proprietary media formats. They tried just using their name to push it, and then they've started trying to piggyback on the success of some of their other products to get it adopted. Neither has had much success. It'd be a great revenue generator, but consumers don't want to pay the extra cost and competitors are right there to offer an alternative. Give it up already! They aren't helping blu-ray be adopted, they're hurting their PS3.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
The fact that it is created and controlled by a consortium is no different than HD-DVD or DVD or CD.
Betamax was proprietary. It was created by sony, hardware was exclusively produced by sony. Sony had complete control ove
Re:Big ships turn slowly (Score:4, Informative)
"It was created by a consortium of many different companies"
Incorrect, sorry - Blu-ray technology was 'created' in Sony labs, by Sony engineers, using Sony R&D budget monies and the Japanese 'Bullet Train Development Concept', that says why make the next leap a measly 10% over the existing level, just to keep you in the game, when a 200% jump means a whole new game... with the field, ball, rules, cheerleaders, refs, players AND winning trophy firmly in your grasp, since there are no competitors even in the same league.
After which, Sony called a campfire meeting of friends, and then the BD consortium was formed. Roughly 170 companies have lined up to date, or so they say.
Re:Big ships turn slowly (Score:4, Insightful)
Even just 3 years ago, I would have agreed vigorously. Now I'm not so sure.
As you mentioned above, these big corps steer like a Buick. Changes take a long time to trickle down. But somewhere between the death of MiniDisc and the PSP, Sony has changed tack.
They no longer sell ATRAC3, their proprietary audio codec. New devices only support this for legacy reasons The PSP, while locked down as far as executable code goes, does support standard things like JPG / PNG / MPEG-2 / MPEG-4. Even the Sony Ericsson phones only play MP3/AAC. Nothing DRM'd.
And now we see that the PS3 has multiple card readers (not just MemoryStick) a Linux bootloader provided and supported by Sony, a standard HDD that is removable without voiding the warranty, and a regular power plug (they used to rape you for those 'special' plugs, remember that?) Say what you will, but these things were basically unthinkable for Sony a few years ago.
I don't know exactly where they are going with this but these are certainly encouraging signs.
Rush reminiscing (Score:1)
I bet a lot of Sony sympathizers are feeling the same thing now that Kenny is no longer making retarded remarks about the PlayStation brand.
Hoo boy... (Score:1)
All Stringer's fault (Score:2)
Kutaragi, being less politica