How Much will the Simpsons Themed Xbox Pro Go for on eBay?

This article was written on May 10, 2007 by CyberNet.

SimpsonsxboxWhen The Simpsons Movie launches on July 27th, a few of you may be more interested in an Xbox 360 than the movie. It’s not just any Xbox, it’s a Simpsons themed Xbox 360 Pro, and there’ll only be 100 of them available.

Where can you find one? Well, really you can’t.  They’re going to be given away as competition prizes when the film launches in July. But, you can bet at least a few of them will be hitting eBay. Any guesses on what it’ll go for?There’s definitely some hardcore Simpsons fans that are equally obsessed with the Xbox, so it could get interesting.

In other Xbox related news, with a Summer jam-packed with movie releases, there’s a whole list of Xbox 360 games inspired from those movies.

Microsoft has announced games from movies like:

  • Shrek the Third
  • Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
  • Ratatouille
  • Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
  • The Simpsons

Important Links:

  1. Video clips from the New Simpsons Gameplay.
  2. Details on how you can win a Simpson Xbox Pro (will be available soon).

Source: Tech Digest

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Deep Inside Xbox 360 Kinect and Why It’s the Future of Microsoft [Kinect]

Kinect is more than an Xbox 360 peripheral, it’s the future of Microsoft, or at least a very possible one. It’s the beginning of Microsoft’s plans for natural user interfaces, the step beyond the thing you’re staring at right now. More »

Telus turns Canadian Xbox 360s into IPTV boxes starting today

After years (and years) of waiting it’s no surprise to see the Xbox 360 finally sliding into the role of IPTV set-top box, but we couldn’t have seen Canada’s Telus being the first in North America to offer the option. It only switched customers over to the Microsoft Mediaroom platform (also used by AT&T’s U-Verse, where the feature should appear soon) powering its Optik TV package — currently only available in Alberta and B.C. — earlier this year, enabling this new multiroom setup. Of course, that means the Xbox 360 can’t be the only set-top box in the house — it just acts as a client to the main DVR for live TV watching, or to schedule and watch previously recorded programming. Subscribers owners can check the main website for access on their current Xbox 360 or grab a free new system by signing up for two years of internet access. Mediaroom 2.0 is expected to bring PCs and mobile devices into the fold at some point as well, but for now check out the Xbox 360 experience in our video demo after the break, as well as a press release with all the details.

Continue reading Telus turns Canadian Xbox 360s into IPTV boxes starting today

Telus turns Canadian Xbox 360s into IPTV boxes starting today originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Aug 2010 15:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Xbox Might Be Microsoft’s Future — and Computing’s, Too

It’s easy to dismiss Xbox’s new Kinect controller-free sensor as a “Wii Too” product.

But I wonder whether Microsoft is onto something much bigger, something that will take the innovations introduced for the Xbox into the broader sphere of personal computing.

Sure, from the perspective of gaming in 2010, it doesn’t offer much that Nintendo’s Wii doesn’t already have — as we pointed out in our review of Kinect in June.

But for one thing, Kinect doesn’t just record your movements. Its system of cameras, microphones, sensors and software algorithms also records (and recognizes) your voice, and can recognize faces and objects. For another, it didn’t come directly from the gaming and entertainment division at Microsoft, trying to copy the Wii. It grew out of Microsoft’s research labs, from a combination of teams already working on alternative input systems for computing devices. Gaming is a high-profile test case for their implementation.

Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft, told Computerworld on Thursday that Kinect “portends a revolution in the way people will interact with computers.” Bill Gates suggested something very similar at the D5 conference in 2007: The real transformation of the desktop metaphor for the PC would come through innovations in three-dimensional imaging. PCs and games were both held back by their reliance on the mouse/keyboard and the controller, Gates said:

[The Wiimote is] a 3D positional device. This is video recognition. This is a camera seeing what’s going on. And, you know, in the meetings, like you’re on a video conference, you don’t know who’s speaking, you know, they’re audio only, things like that. The camera will be ubiquitous. Now, of course, we have to design it in a way that people’s expectations about privacy are handled appropriately, but software can do vision and it can do it very, very inexpensively. And that means this stuff becomes pervasive. You don’t just talk about it being in a laptop device. You talk about it being part of the meeting room or the living room.

For a useful analogy and some historical perspective, let’s go back to October 2001. On October 25, Microsoft released Windows XP, still the most popular desktop operating system in the world. Two days earlier, Apple introduced the iPod, the most successful digital music and media player ever. Over the next nine years, what happened?

One of Apple’s shrewdest moves in the past decade was to embrace the iPod as the technological and commercial driver of its core businesses. The iPod was universally hailed as the top device in its class, technologically sophisticated and culturally cool. iTunes gave Apple footholds in retail (first for music, then other media) and on the PC platform. It was the first post-PC device that along with digital cameras and video, let Apple remake the personal computer from a workstation into a digital media hub by way of iLife. Then, in rapid succession, the iPod begat the iPhone, Apple TV, and the iPad. Apple brought multitouch interfaces to its laptops, and now its desktops via the Magic Mouse and Magic Trackpad. It’s a huge, diversified company, but it all springs from the success of the iPod.

Over the same period, Microsoft lost a lot of its reputation as an innovator, especially in the retail market. It settled its antitrust case with the DOJ. Its web browser and new Windows OS were widely reviled. It tried (and largely failed) to get strong positions in search, smartphones, and music players.

But the Xbox is different. Critics and fans love it; it has sold (and continually grown) like gangbusters; it’s been widely perceived as both serious and cool; it’s had landmark games like Halo, BioShock, and Final Fantasy XIII; and with XBox Live it arguably did more than any other product to actually bring proper networked computing into people’s living rooms.

Apple’s iPod, and then the iPhone, have given the company a direction for the future: innovative cloud and boutique retail, selling handheld computing devices driven by multi-touch interfaces. It’s a very different path than if Apple had continued to follow the roadmap offered by the Mac.

If Microsoft follows the Xbox rather than Windows and Office, or rather than chasing after Apple in tablets or Google in search, we’ll see it become a company less defined by enterprise solutions and spreadsheets than by ubiquitous, large-scale, multi-surface household computing.

Photo credit: Allthingsd.com


Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow? (Update: yes)

Let’s face it: despite the new Xbox 360 being joyously quieter and more efficient, the previous model still manages to seduce some of us with its sexy curves. Speaking of which — according to Joystiq’s source, Best Buy’s going to kick off August by lowering the prices for the Splinter Cell: Conviction and Final Fantasy XIII previous-gen Xbox 360 bundles. For just $299 — $50 off the current price point (and $100 off the launch price) — you still get a copy of the corresponding game title, a 250GB HDD, and two wireless controllers. So that’s gaming sorted for the summer; now put that $50 towards some cooling aid and you’re good to go.

Update: and the new prices are live. Grab them while they’re hot.

Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow? (Update: yes) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 23:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow?

Let’s face it: despite the new Xbox 360 being joyously quieter and more efficient, the previous model still manages to seduce some of us with its sexy curves. Speaking of which — according to Joystiq’s source, Best Buy’s going to kick off August by lowering the prices for the Splinter Cell: Conviction and Final Fantasy XIII previous-gen Xbox 360 bundles. For just $299 — $50 off the current price point (and $100 off the launch price) — you still get a copy of the corresponding game title, a 250GB HDD, and two wireless controllers. So that’s gaming sorted for the summer; now put that $50 towards some cooling aid and you’re good to go.

Best Buy to slash prices for old Xbox 360 special edition bundles tomorrow? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 23:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Xbox 360 4GB’s packaging shows off 250GB HDD upgrade option

It seems like a no-brainer, but at this point Microsoft has yet to confirm a separate 250GB HDD for its new Xbox 360 consoles — and really, if you’re picking up the 4GB model next month, that might come in handy. Newer press shots show a different side of the packaging, however, and if you get a high-res snapshot, you can see that it’s touting the various accessories you can buy to enhance your new Xbox 360 4GB experience: wireless controllers, Kinect, and… a 250GB HDD. Now, it could very well be misleading advertising — such a disc drive already exists, but you have to buy the current slimmed-down model or Halo Reach special edition bundle to get it. Somehow, though, we get the feeling this HDD is destined to be wrapped in separate packaging all by its lonesome — Microsoft’s Aaron Greenberg even insinuated as much not two weeks ago. Only question is, when and for how much?

New Xbox 360 4GB’s packaging shows off 250GB HDD upgrade option originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 19:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Announces Limited Edition Halo: Reach-Themed Xbox360

Halo: Reach - XBoxIf you’re one of the thousands of Halo players who are looking forward to the release of Halo: Reach this September, you may want to consider the Limited Edition Halo: Reach-themed XBox 360 that Microsoft announced today. The limited edition XBox 360 bundle will come in glossy silver with designs from the game printed on the side, a 250GB hard drive, and two wireless controllers that feature artwork from the game. The bundle will also include a Halo: Reach-themed headset, a copy of the standard edition of Halo: Reach, and a token for an in-game armor set that you can redeem when you get into the game.

The limited edition Halo: Reach bundle is available for pre-order now while supplies last, and will be available on September 14th, the same day Halo: Reach hits store shelves. Since the standard edition of the game comes with the bundle, you won’t need to order the game separately – unless you’re a hardcore Halo fan and already pre-ordered the collector’s edition. 

New Xbox 360 250GB Limited Edition Halo: Reach bundle revealed

The Halo series is no stranger to special edition Xbox 360 hardware, so it should come as no surprise that the latest entry, Halo: Reach, is also privy to such treatment. What makes it special, however, is that it’s the first special edition based on the new model — 250GB HDD, built-in 802.11n WiFi, a silver (presumably matte, based on the picture) finish, and custom, Halo-inspired sounds. The $399 price tag also nets you two special edition wireless controllers and, naturally, a copy of the game itself. Look for this September 14th, and really, if you’re not into glossy black (and we feel ya, brother), this might be in your best interest to pick up.

New Xbox 360 250GB Limited Edition Halo: Reach bundle revealed originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Jul 2010 23:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft reports $4.5b in profit, a record $16.04b in revenue

This time last year, almost to the day, Microsoft saw its first annual sales decline in history. Things are looking much better now, with the company reporting a record $16.04 billion in revenue, a 22 percent year-over-year increase for its Q4 revenue ending June 30th. In fact, revenue is up across all divisions, with Windows and Windows Live seeing the biggest uptick (43.5 percent to $4.55 billion) followed by Entertainment and Devices (27.3 percent to $1.6 billion). Operating income, on the other hand, paints a different picture of E&D, showing a $172 million loss for this quarter (compared to $141 loss in Q4 last year), but looking over the entire fiscal year, the home of Xbox and Zune this year did $679 million in operating income — a sizable jump to the $108 million from 2009. The overall operating income for the company is $5.93 billion this quarter (net income $4.52 billion), a 49 percent increase over last Q4, and $20.36 billion for the year (18 percent compared with fiscal 2009).

We know you’re interested in comparisons, so we’ll just go ahead and break it down for ya: the gang in Redmond is still beating Apple in both revenue ($16.04 billion vs. $15.7 billion) and profit ($4.52 billion vs. $3.25), but that margin feels smaller than it used to. Enough to keep the rumored pressure off Ballmer? Frankly, we don’t even think biplanes could knock the man off the top of a tower, but Windows Phone 7 has a lot to prove, and fast. Microsoft is hosting a webcast of its report later today — usually much ado about nothing, as far as we’re concerned, but we’ll listen in and let ya know if anything interesting pops up.

Update: Some interesting Xbox 360 statistics. 1.5 million consoles were sold this last quarter. Xbox Live has 25 million members, and for the first time since its inception, the revenue from the Marketplace exceeded subscription revenue.

Microsoft reports $4.5b in profit, a record $16.04b in revenue originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Jul 2010 17:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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