Sony posts $852m profit: PS3, PC sales up

Sony got itself back in black with a $293m profit last quarter courtesy of improved PS3 and Bravia sales, and the good times continue: the company just posted a second-quarter profit of ¥68.7b ($852m). The Networked Products and Services division that encompasses PlayStation and VAIO was Sony’s strongest performer, with revenue going up five percent to ¥369b ($4.6b) on top of 3.5m PS3 sales (a slight increase), a 40 percent increase in PS3 software sales to 35m units, and “significant hardware cost reductions.” PC sales were up to 2.3m units from 1.4m units last year, and Bravia and digital camera sales also increased, to 4.9m and 6.2m units, respectively. Now for the bad news: PSP sales continued their precipitous decline, down 50 percent to 1.5m from 3.0m last year. By way of comparison, that’s the same number of PS2s Sony shipped this past quarter — maybe it’s time to break out a totally new PlayStation Phone, eh, Sony?

Sony posts $852m profit: PS3, PC sales up originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Oct 2010 10:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony’s Peter Dille thinks the PSP could use a cellular data connection, iPhone gamers ‘aren’t satisfied’

Peter Dille — Sony’s Senior Vice President of marketing at SCEA — sat down for a “fireside chat” with CNN, and made some interesting comments regarding the PlayStation Phone. Despite kinda / sorta sticking to the company’s policy of refusing to discuss rumors, Dille allegedly said that the lack of a cellular data component in current PSP devices could be holding the line back. “The PSP is a Wi-Fi device,” he said. “People are used to having always-connected devices.” Dille also noted that current smartphone platforms don’t give users a hardcore experience, instead providing “Time-killers,” which “gamers aren’t satisfied with.”

While the CNN article certainly includes some healthy speculation, Dille (and a company spokeswoman who told the publication that Sony “has relationships with Google”) was pretty talkative when it came to the PSP and more specifically the PlayStation Network. Apparently, Dille alluded to the fact that the current PSP doesn’t fulfill Sony’s goal for creating a content delivery hub that’s always accessible, saying “I don’t think we fully realize that vision with a Wi-Fi device… If it’s not connected [to a cell network] then it does sort of limit people.” Of course, we’re not taking this as any kind of confirmation from the company, but Sony seems awfully talkative about a device that they won’t comment on.

Sony’s Peter Dille thinks the PSP could use a cellular data connection, iPhone gamers ‘aren’t satisfied’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Oct 2010 09:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson Z-System: the PlayStation Phone’s gaming platform?

A bumper crop of circumstantial evidence surrounding the Android-based PlayStation Phone is starting to come together today — when it rains, it pours, as they say — and one particularly interesting thread suggests that the ecosystem surrounding the device might be called “Z-System.” An astute tipster notes that the term appears in the upper left of one of our shots, which maps to a domain — z-system.com, naturally — that’s owned by Sony Ericsson. Turns out the company also holds trademarks for Z-System in the US and Benelux trademark offices (among others, presumably) that were filed (and approved) this year, and the filing category includes “software for interacting or playing with electronic or video games,” not hardware, so that strongly suggests we’re looking at a platform here. We suppose it’s possible that this specific device will be called Z-System, but we’re going to float the theory that its actually underlying gaming platform that’ll bear that name — possibly a premium game store and set of software libraries that together will earn a device the Z-System badge. As we already saw with the BlackPad / SurfBook / PlayBook fiasco, trademarks don’t mean much until a device is actually announced — but it’s something to keep an eye on.

[Thanks, Andrew]

Sony Ericsson Z-System: the PlayStation Phone’s gaming platform? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Oct 2010 18:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The PlayStation Phone is still real

By now you’ve seen our photos of the PlayStation Phone, and likely you’ve also heard the scattered reports of debunkings and cries of “fake!” — it wouldn’t be a scoop without it. Only here’s the thing: the PlayStation Phone in the photos we ran last night, and the device reported on back in August is most definitely real. We’re not saying that because we want to believe or because we’re gingerly trying to nab pageviews: we’re saying it because we know it to be true. This is a device which has been confirmed through multiple, trusted sources. And we’re not just talking good tipsters — some of our information comes from people much more closely connected to the project. Even since last night we’ve received more info about the phone — learning that its codename is “Zeus,” and it was last seen running Android 2.X (not 3.0, which we suspect will be the shipping version). It should be obvious by comparison of our original mockup to the real photos we’ve just uncovered that the handset we described in August is the same handset now fully revealed. Prior to last night, we had never seen an actual image of the phone. It should also be obvious that the device pictured in those photos is a prototype running early software (which would explain the A / B button mention in the photo above) with hardware that was likely hand-built, or at the very least created in a very small batch.

Based on what we’ve heard about the secrecy of this plan, it makes sense that even Sony’s own employees wouldn’t be privy to information on the phone, the marketplace, and the collaboration with Google. The alleged Sony response to the device makes that somewhat clear — reports state that an employee originally told a publication that the images were fake, only to backtrack and deliver the standard corporate line that the company “doesn’t respond to rumor and speculation.” It’s possible that whomever was originally questioned either didn’t know of the device’s existence, was lying about its existence, or simply had their response taken out of context. And that brings us to our point — while there will be plenty of speculation on whether or not what we’ve shown you is real, we would never run the images or the information without a healthy sense that we were bringing you fact, and not fiction. We don’t like to boast, but as the guys and girls who brought you the first pictures and review of the Nexus One, the first details and images of the Dell Venue Pro (aka Lightning), the first pictures of the new MacBook Air, the first photos of the iPad, and the first photos of the iPhone 4, we feel pretty confident in our abilities to deliver the goods. Of course, this story is just beginning — so hold on tight.


The PlayStation Phone is still real originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Oct 2010 11:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Leaked Photo: Is This the Sony Ericsson PlayStation Phone?

Engadget has photos of what it says is a prototype Sony Ericsson slide-out phone with PlayStation-PSP–style gaming controls. The phone has a multitouch trackpad (it’s hard to slide analog sticks beneath a screen) and purportedly will appear sometime next year running Android 3.0, aka Gingerbread.

Rumors of an Android 3 PlayStation Phone first emerged in August. But we’ve been down this road many times before, with devices reported to be imminent, then killed off.

According to Engadget, the phone’s screen is “in the range of 3.7 to 4.1 inches” — they have photos, but not a copy of the phone itself, so there’s some guesswork involved. The phone is also reported to have a 1-GHz Qualcomm processor, 512 MB of RAM and 1 GB of ROM.

That’s not much storage if the phone’s going to store games, pictures, video, books, apps or other media. Apparently the phone takes microSD cards but not memory sticks or UMD. That’s one way to solve the storage problem, albeit a cumbersome one.

Engadget also claims there will be a special Sony Marketplace offering Android apps for the device. Custom Android app stores for custom Android devices seem to be the thing to do: Barnes & Noble is getting ready to do just that for its new Nook Color.

Kotaku reported earlier this week that Sony executives were showing off a slide-out widescreen gaming device that the company was calling the PSP2. The Wall Street Journal reported this summer that Sony was working on adding 3G networking to its gaming devices, and on handheld devices offering wireless communication, gaming and e-reading.

NowGamer reports that Sony’s European division stated that the leaked photos are fakes, but then changed its official response to “no comment.” NowGamer points to details suggesting that the photos are fake, including “a large amount of dirt collecting around the screen, as well as mention of ‘A’ and ‘B’ buttons on the interface.”

Assuming all of these projects are active, they could be complementary devices, offering slightly different features and price points, or it could be a single convergent device offering everything. I guess we’ll find out sometime in 2011.

See Also:


The PlayStation Phone

It’s hard to believe that what we’re looking at is real — but we assure you, the picture above is in fact the PlayStation Phone you’ve long been waiting for. As we reported back in August, the device you see is headed into the market soon, likely boasting Android 3.0 (aka Gingerbread), along with a custom Sony Marketplace which will allow you to purchase and download games designed for the new platform. The device snapped up top (and in our gallery below) is sporting a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM8655 (a chip similar to the one found in the G2, but 200MHz faster), 512MB of RAM, 1GB of ROM, and the screen is in the range of 3.7 to 4.1 inches. Looking almost identical to the mockup we hit you with this summer, the handset does indeed have a long touchpad in the center which is apparently multitouch, and you can see in the photos that it’s still bearing those familiar PlayStation shoulder buttons. For Sony buffs, you’ll be interested to know that there’s no Memory Stick slot here, but there is support for microSD cards.

The particular model in these shots is still in prototyping mode. As such, the unit doesn’t have a custom skin (not even SE’s Timescape design seen on the Xperia devices), and is said to be rather buggy. We’re digging into more facts as we speak, but it’s likely that much of what we reported earlier is still accurate, and though the device could still be headed for a 2010 release, 2011 is looking much more realistic. Still, there’s a lot of time between now and the holidays… so keep your fingers crossed!


The PlayStation Phone originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Oct 2010 21:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PSP2 Detailed, Maybe

psp2_rumor.jpg

It’s a big day in PSP land. First we get word that the lukewarm PSP Go got a major price cut. Now it seems that we’re getting some leaked information about a the PSP’s successor. All said, the timing of these two bits of news certainly makes sense.

Word was that Sony was set to announce the device at this year’s Tokyo Game Show, back in September–ultimately, however the thing never surfaced, though a few people in the know were said to have gotten sneak peaks of the thing in back rooms.

Kotaku claims to have squeezed some details about the device from “several sources.” The PSP2 is said to have a touch panel on the rear of the device that “look[s] like a big mouse trackpad.” The display on the device is sharper and an inch larger than its predecessor. Sony is apparently referring to the screen as HD.

It’s also said to be even more of a multimedia device than the PSP, serving as an eBook reader and a “netbook,” on top of its usual gaming duties.

Release for the device is said to be the fall of next year.

PSP Go Prices Slashed

psp_go4.jpg

Sony’s PSP Go suffered no shortage of hype before it launched. The device is slick, slim, and generally cool looking–and the company seemed sure that it would help breathe life into a portable gaming platform that was struggle to keep its head above water in the fight against Nintendo’s perennially popular DS.

Since its launch back in early October of last year, however, the device has failed to catch fire. Reviews and sales have been uniformly disappointing. Sony is celebrating a late birthday for the device by slashing prices in the US and Japan.

The price in the device’s native Japan has been dropped from 26,800 ($332) to 16,800 yen. In the US, the price has dropped to $199 from $249.

PSP Go price cut to $200 in the US and Japan

Sony just slashed ¥10k off the price of the PSP Go in Japan (effective starting Tuesday). That brings the price down to ¥16,800 or right around $200 — a more reasonable price point Sony has been toying with in the US for awhile. A quick search online shows a $199 listing on Amazon and Gamestop while Sony’s US PlayStation site still has it listed at $249.99. That’ll likely change any minute now.

Update: US price cut confirmed.

PSP Go price cut to $200 in the US and Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Oct 2010 02:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pictures of Sony’s new technicolor PSPs, and Monster Hunter 3 Special Edition preview

Pictures of Sony's new technicolor PSPs, and Monster Hunter 3 PSP preview

Nothing spices up waning interest in an aging console like a special edition, and while one could say that announcing three special editions is something of a stretch for the word “special,” these certainly are some… vibrant color schemes. At its press event yesterday, Sony announced a couple of new, pupil-assaulting two-tone color schemes for the PSP, along with a Monster Hunter edition that left many an otaku fainting in the aisles thanks to its gold highlights and redesigned analog nub. Read on for our impressions of all three noble beasts.

Continue reading Pictures of Sony’s new technicolor PSPs, and Monster Hunter 3 Special Edition preview

Pictures of Sony’s new technicolor PSPs, and Monster Hunter 3 Special Edition preview originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Sep 2010 14:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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