XBox Chip With Legal BIOS 359
Lours writes "OzXChip, an Australian company, has a new Xbox chip which comes preinstalled with the new (Cromwell Linux BIOS. Previous chips came without (or simplistic) BIOS for obvious legal and hardware-related (HD-key) reasons you had to go through a lot of manipulations in order to install a patched version of the original Microsoft BIOS or ask the vendor to do it which obviously he was not willing to do for free (when he was willing to). Since the new Cromwell BIOS is fully open source it can be shipped with the chip without any legal risks, gaining you a lot of time, sweat and money. Plus the chip has a very useful feature: by using software based on Andy Green's -- one of the maintainers of the XBox Linux project -- Raincoat, it lets you flash a new BIOS very easily: burn the BIOS file onto a blank CD, put it in the Xbox, boot and you are done. With such beasts there is not much left in the way of want-to-be Linux Xbox hackers who might have been affraid until now to have to deal with delicate hardware intricacies or reluctant to run the whole town for a vendor willing to mod their Xbox at the smallest fee. With important linux distributions also incoming (Debian and Mandrake are underway if not completed) it won't be long before everyone can write code for (and on!) the machine only a few minutes after receiving the chip in his mailbox. Hopefully we are going to see a zillion things running on the machine that Microsoft would only have dreamt of making (and selling)." Update: 01/23 16:07 GMT by T : The company's name is actually OzXChip, rather than OzChip (as originally rendered); thanks to reader Michael Muir for pointing this out.
yes but (Score:5, Interesting)
Check the links (Score:4, Interesting)
It has switch for "X-Box Live" compatibility
Re:Check the links (Score:3, Informative)
Re:yes but (Score:3, Interesting)
But really, I can't imagine buying an X-Box to play games.
It's a fraction of the machine my laptop is. As a
PVR or a webserver it makes perfect sense, however.
Re:yes but (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm assuming your laptop has a kickass 3d card, a dvd drive, component out, kickass controllers (laptop keyboards BLOW for gaming), and almost no OS overhead. Don't fall into the (pretty closedminded) belief that the XBox is just another shitty msft project. The Xbox is as much a regular computer as the new BMW 7 series, which is built with similar off-the-shelf parts and a MSFT OS.
Just a P6 + NForce + custom BIOS/ROM (Score:3, Informative)
Re:yes but (Score:3, Insightful)
The XBox does have some advantages.
First, it's closed hardware, so developers know what they are working on. They do not need to support 100 different video adapters and sound cards. They can optimize their code a lot more than for a PC game.
Secondly, the audio/video components are nice. The component out is a nice feature for those that are mad about image quality (although component only reduces the bandwith used to transmit video). The optical audio also is nice. Having a game run with optical Dolby Digital 5.1 is really cool.
Lastly, consoles output to a TV, not a computer screen. XBox games run at 640x480x32 because anything higher is useless on a TV monitor. When was the last time you played a game at such a low resolution on your computer? This fact gives the developers another chance to optimze their code and add more features since they have more memory to work with.
So, it is not closeminded to see the XBox as a PC, because it IS a PC. It simply provides a platform on which game developers can maximize their talent and not worry about compatibility issues and the like.
I'm the first to admit that the games are nice, but I think it is closeminded to think that the XBox is an incredible innovation. It is not. It's a PC with just enough modifications to make it proprietary. It's like a Mac with crapy parts so that anyone can buy one. It's the Microsoft Way(tm).
Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:5, Insightful)
I hope so too, but I thought the same thing when I picked up my Sony PS2 Linux kit. Not too many useful projects have come out of THAT yet. (All I really wanted was the ability to play mpeg video on my TV at a decent speed...but SDL hasn't been optimized yet, so that's not yet possible.)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? Because as a computing platform, the X-Box isn't that impressive, especially for $200. The graphics are nice, indeed, but you can buy a P4 tower from Dell for $400 [dell.com] these days, or a Tivo/PVR for a few hundred, a DVD player for $99 [vstore.com], you'd have to be really dedicated to mod a perfectly good X-Box (which voids the warranty).
Yea, it's a nice hack for those who really want to see linux running on everything. For everyone else, another dedicated box is a better option.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:5, Informative)
Proprietary WMA.
And no way to get your existing MP3s into the box, or the ripped WMAs out of it. MS don't want you to do that, so you can't. No way to play video media other than DVD either.
Only if you get either a hacked native BIOS, so you can run unsigned native apps, or you run Linux through cromwell or a hacked native BIOS, can you actually do what you want with the box you paid for.
There are some amazing unsigned native apps out there, like XBMP, but they are made with warez-ed MS tools. All respect to them for the quality of the results, but it sits badly with me that they are made with MS libraries, spreading MS proprietary APIs, and prepping the programmers really only for continuing the dominance of MS OSes. I hope as Linux on the Xbox gets more mature they'll consider moving over.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2)
No good reason? (Score:4, Insightful)
--
Re:No good reason? (Score:2, Informative)
Why bother? (Score:3, Insightful)
Great. For $400.00 you have a computer that can never be upgraded, has to be attached to a TV and requires home-made adapters to get the mouse and keyboard to work. You can get a better deal at Wal Mart.
If you want to mod your XBox becuase it makes your inner nerd all giddy go ahead and do it. Have fun! If you are trying to turn an XBox into a cheap and crappy PC please save your money and time.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe people who buy that as a media player want to actually hear the media instead of the CPU/PSU/HDD fan.
Maybe people don't want a monster beige tower in their living room, but just a moderately big black and green box.
Maybe people don't want to pay for 300+ Watt current when 100 Watt will do.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2, Informative)
A Shuttle SB51G XPC is quieter than an Xbox. It's also not much bigger and is infinitely more capable. Agreed, on power consumption and cost, it loses.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:3, Interesting)
that I have 4 dedicated X-Boxes in my closet and one behind
my TV.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2, Informative)
Frankly there is little point getting an XBox except as a toy, or unless you have a vested interested in breaking the encryption to sell games without a Microsoft tax.
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:4, Informative)
The first projects that are implementing a jukebox/settopbox especially for the xbox have already started...
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:3, Interesting)
And I think this is exactly one of the points Sony intended when the kit was released. It really takes some 6 months to fully handle all the details of the graphics system. I don't think this is the case with the XBox however. All the graphics are in a single chip with easy-to-use APIs.
And furthermore, if the modded XBoxes will be running something MS would have only dreamt of, then they will be mad because they just lost profits.
right tool for the right job (Score:2)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2)
Re:Build it, the (apps) will come? (Score:2)
I've been thinking of getting this program, but one thing holds me back -- they don't have it to the point where it will play full frame (720x480) video in realtime yet. Of course, most of the stuff on the net isn't full frame (most is maybe half res)...
I wanted to use this to view my DVD rips I've made myself, but it doesn't look like it's fast enough. Check out the Faq's section for other little issues (scanning through divx files is one)...
Just in time!!! (Score:5, Funny)
In other news, I buy all of my Apple hardware the day before a Macworld Expo.
Most chips COME with programmers now (Score:5, Informative)
If you really want to get caught up in this addictive and fun hacking, check these sites for answers to all questions:
www.xboxhacker.net
www.xbox-scene.com
#xbins on IRC
By the way...the number of hacked xboxes surely runs into the thousands, if not more, and there are already enough robust applications to make it a full-fledged media device.
Re:Most chips COME with programmers now (Score:2)
what? What server network hosts the channel to which you refer?
Re:Most chips COME with programmers now (Score:2)
What's with the parentheses? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What's with the parentheses? (Score:2)
He also doesn't nest his parenthesized comments nearly enough.
X-Box Killer apps (Score:5, Interesting)
It's too bad MS doesn't jump on the bandwagon. If they produced PVR software and sold it for the price of a normal game, I'd happily buy an X-Box and that software. I'd also pay at least $20 for DivX player software for it.
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:X-Box Killer apps (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah! And that killer app Mediaplayer is a MPLAYER + some other open source projects rip off! Read more about on MPlayer's HQ site [mplayerhq.hu]. There's talk about it somewhere on the frontpage. Xbox mediaplayer people shamelessly denied using open source code and DID NOT GIVE ANY CREDIT to whom it belongs. They were also violating GPL by not providing the source code.
No longer true. (Score:3, Informative)
- A.P.
XBox Live (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:XBox Live (Score:4, Interesting)
Easy solution: buy a second XBox. No, really. There are a number of used/refurb XBoxes around if you look. The infamous "Disk is Dirty or Damaged" error (DDoDE) made for a lot of replaced XBoxes. If you look around at your local used game shops, I'm sure they have a couple used for a good price (or refurbished for a bit more money). Play XBox Live on your current working XBox, waste your time hacking around with Linux on the refurb.
Re:XBox Live (Score:2, Informative)
Re:XBox Live (Score:2)
You can use Gamespy Arcade [gamespyarcade.com] and a tunnel program [gamespyarcade.com] to play quite a few online games for free, even with a modchip. I wouldn't pay for a service like that to play games when I can play them for free...
Let me get this straight.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd rather get a good machine, install linux... and NOT pay microsoft 300 bucks for sub-standard equipment.
I'm gussing most people who do this sort of thing are the types who would love to see Microsoft fall... if that is the case, don't give them your money.... no matter how cool your modded X-BOX will be.
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:4, Insightful)
But that's really stupid to be talking about it anyway - because there are 8.2 million Xboxes out there. I don't care how big you think the potential X-box mod-to-run-linux-only crowd is, you have to admit that percentage wise it is statistically neglegable and would have absolutely no impact on microsoft financially whatsoever.
Microsoft can just hire one less Booth-babe in the next trade-show to make back all the money that they ever lost to the "buy box but not games" crowd. Don't dwell on this too much.
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:2, Insightful)
What people can't seem to grok is that's an average based on aggregate costs and sales predictions.
A large portion of the "loss" is $million in sunk costs like advertising, R&D, game development and so on. That money is already spent. Everytime an XBox is sold, MS makes a little of it back.
You're Still Helping Microsoft (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Someone who buys an XBox and mods it to a computer gets a great deal. The equipment may not be state of the art, but it has been significantly subsidied by MS and is thus cheaper than regular hardware with similar performance. It also follows that they are not 'giving' their money to MS, quite the contrary. MS will have to give more money to the hardware vendors. Tor
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:2)
When the machine first came out it was pretty good hardware for the price, and MS may well have been losing money on every unit sold.
By now though I'd bet that component prices have dropped enough that MS is making a profit on them.
If you think that you can buy one and make MS lose money
Re:Let me get this straight.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Wow! (Score:2, Funny)
Wow!!! And without spending a bazillion gajillion years [theneoproject.com] of CPU time!
Hmmm... I wonder which one took/will take more effort...
ooh (Score:4, Funny)
Legal risks (Score:2)
Open Source or non-Open Source, this seems to run afoul of the DMCA anyway, at least here in the USA. So there still *are* legal risks...
the DMCA is unworthy of consideration (Score:2)
Humming the tune I heard at the Stones concert last night is probably a violation of the DMCA, if anyone has a digital microphone turned on anywhere in earshot. For that matter, the people letting their friends listen in over their cell phones during the concert were probably in violation of the DMCA.
It is a law that virtually everyone is in violatino of all of the time, and deserves to be ignored in everyday life, fought in the courts, and ultimately repealed if we can ever get a less-than-utterly corrupt congress elected to office.
Why this is interesting (Score:5, Informative)
1) Because modchips can now ship with a fully legal clean BIOS, it is very hard for MS to suppress or chill their development any more. Cromwell, the Linux booting BIOS, is only capable to boot Linux, there can be no copyright-based complaints. Ozxchips have made a micro-distro (~2MB ISO) which boots and reflashes the BIOS. In the future, I expect mods with multiple BIOSes in one flash, with Cromwell used to manage and reflash the other parts, but being itself read-only/protected.
2) Because Cromwell can boot off the Linux install CDs, perform the install and then subsequently boot direct into Linux, the increased availability of the BIOS suggests that more people will be encouraged to try Linux. And considering these are mainly kids who otherwise face a sterile, uncreative and useless relationship with games on the Xbox, that's a good thing. Again, in the future we can expect Cromwell to be a static feature of mods, the option to boot into Linux always being available.
You've been able to run Linux on the Xbox for some time now, this doesn't really change that. What's different is that you can now run Linux without using any MS code in the BIOS, whereas before Linux required the use of a hacked native BIOS to get it started. So the big difference is that you can run Linux without any copyright infringement.
That has ramifications for the MS trend to try to suppress modchips.
Re:Why this is interesting (Score:2)
right to copy when I'm just using the device I paid for in the
manner I see fit? I mean, it's my own property. I'm not
distributing copies of anything. Where is the copyright
infringement?
Don't let the pigs rape the language.
Re:Why this is interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
It has nothing to do with how you use the device you bought, and everything to do with hacking someone else's copyrighted code.
This is a good developement for those who want to legally use alternate BIOSes on their XBox.
Re:Why this is interesting (Score:2)
You could hack your own Xbox's BIOS all you want and its not infringement. When others supply mod chips that do this and then distribute them, they can be silenced.
xbox live? (Score:2, Interesting)
#Disable switch compatibility (XBox Live compatibility)
does this mean we can play on xbox live with modded xboxen?
Re:xbox live? (Score:3, Informative)
Gains (Score:5, Funny)
Well, one of those things I have plenty of, but I could always use more of the other two.
Re:Gains (Score:2)
ugh (Score:5, Funny)
So how is everyone going to react... (Score:5, Insightful)
(1) to test different types of security and see which ones were easily hacked
(2) to test different types of licensing agreements for their real hardware push into the living rooms of America
(3) to find a way to willing have people buy ms boxes to replace the failed WebTV fiasco
(4) to use open source people to boost the sales of Xbox above Sony's PS2s.
I dont understand the point. (Score:2, Insightful)
Outside Australia? (Score:2, Insightful)
x-anything (Score:5, Informative)
You'll never play xbox live online with a modded box. Theyre attitude makes sense: a service population with 5% cheaters will make 60% of normal gamers shy away from playing. Many people stopped playing CS because cheating is so prevalent.
As for killer apps, the XBMP - Xbox Media Player now in v2.2 is the ultimate app that is continually updated. DVD/mp3/ogg/m3u playlist/divx support, and the features keep getting better. Plus streaming support. right now, Xbox is the most cost effective media center available. Plus it has some great tech support in the dev scene. And Dreamix is a WIP PVR to complete the media center ideal
Did you read the story? (Score:2)
So there would be nothing to identify this to XBox Live as anything other than a dead-stock XBox.
That's part of what makes this hack so appealing.
Re:x-anything (Score:2)
The price of the Xbox will rise (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, a marginal group hacking Linux on the Xbox doesn't really matter, but what if someone wanted to buy 10000 Xboxes to build a super-cheap rendering cluster?
If doing this becomes easy enough MS isn't going to sell the Xbox for a loss forever...
Re:The price of the Xbox will rise (Score:5, Interesting)
No no no! Why do people always believe what they want to belive.
This is an urban myth. MS does *not* lose money on the sale of an XBox. It has lost money *so far* when incorporating all the development costs, but it doesn't lose more money each time someone buys one - it makes a small amount of the already lost/spent money back. The cost of the box easily covers the production cost of the unit and also incorporates a small profit for both MS and the retailer/distributor. Admittedly it probably makes more money out of the games, but buying loads of XBoxen will not send MS off into Chapter 11.
Re:The price of the Xbox will rise (Score:3, Funny)
NO! The real solution is buying used Apples. That way, MS neither makes money from the used sale nor made money from the original one. That will surely make MS go under.
What wrong with you? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What wrong with you? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, that's exactly the point: It's made by Microsoft. They can shut us out of their software with their "screw-yew" EULAs, but they've tried to shut us out of the hardware as well, and the xbox modders have proved that they can't do that, neither technologically or legally. Bet they've got their best monkeys scratching their heads to work out how to close their platform legally, but when it comes down to it, it's hardware, I've bought it, not licensed it and I can do what I damn well like with it. If I want to hack my fridge to run Linux, then I will. Same goes for the Xbox, and there's not a damn thing they can do about it.
Re:What wrong with you? (Score:2)
> the DMCA, saying that there is copyprotection
> in the BIOS, so modding the Xbox violates the
> DMCA
Since you can't run Xbox games - pirated or otherwise - under Linux, I doubt that's an issue in this case..
Re:What wrong with you? (Score:2)
Oh, grow up!
Running Linux on XBox is like playing MP3's on a toaster oven, or using the Internet to see if there is sufficient Mountain Dew in the Soda Machine down the hall. It's what geeks DO, fercrissake!
Your anti-MS kneejerk concerns about "what's cool" make you sound like some high school kid looking to his peer group to decide what music to listen to or what sneakers to wear. MS does make some "cool" things, and not everything Linux is automatically and necessarily "cool."
Please understand that the world is not all Jedi versus Sith.
Going Overboard (Score:4, Insightful)
Then, you'll be supporting the PC industry, instead of a Monopoly that makes propritary, overpriced, devices.
Re:Going Overboard (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Going Overboard (Score:2)
Cost IS an issue here. It's literally impossible to match the Xbox feature for feature for $200 or less. It's cheap because Microsoft mass produced them and got massive discounts on the hardware. Once again, for those of you with ADD, you CANNOT build a pc with all the features the Xbox has for anywhere near the same price.
Re:Going Overboard (Score:2)
Flashing BIOS Easy? MSFT must love this. (Score:4, Interesting)
I can just see it now:
1) Linux hacker goes home with new hotly anticipated Starcraft: Ghost (published by Microsoft), which he stood in line for 10 hours to buy.
2) Linux hacker pops new game into XBox.
3) New UberSafeDisc protection on Starcraft: Ghost flashes replacement BIOS, replaces it with code for original XBox BIOS, then disables future flashing...
Re:Flashing BIOS Easy? MSFT must love this. (Score:5, Interesting)
However, some information: on the Xbox, the motherboard flash containing the BIOS is not writeable by default. You have to take out the motherboard and short out a couple of links with solder before it can be written. So MS cannot trash or update the original BIOS.
Most commercial modchips feature a write protect line which you physically have to switch to allow writes to the mod flash. Even those that don't are externally reprogrammable from a PC printer port. So this is no kind of crisis.
What is more possible to imagine in the future though are new games linked with a new version of the MS libraries which seek out and shit on assets on the HDD that MS don't approve of.
Are they still at a loss? (Score:4, Interesting)
But with the depreciation of hardware over time, does it still cost them? Thoughts appreciated. -MMT
Re:Are they still at a loss? (Score:2, Interesting)
Now he wasn't specific as to whether Microsoft is amortizing the cost of development into the price of production of the units in order to have a year end loss, and thereby claim a tax refund (wow that was a long sentence
Now I have to get back to playing Splinter Cell
What is the goal? (Score:4, Insightful)
I would be very happy if I could get an X-box to be a 'good file player' that could play DVD, VCD, and everything else I play on my PC (QT, AVI, DIVX, VOB, blah blah... I admit, a big bag), and some basic network functionality without compromising the ability to play legal X-box games.
Within the community, we seem to have several counter-productive lines of progression.
There are the folks that want to play around with their X-box and add functionality (the most interesting and productive pursuit) and the people who want to buy a M$-subsidized device and use it for Linux-only purposes.
Realistically, the latter are better served to craft their own boxes w/o M$ at all (we all know what has happenned w/ HW prices).
Does it make any sense to buy an X-box and use it as a Linux box? It did months ago, but, with the way the market is progressing, you will gain far less in HW $ than you get is SW time...
I am all for EXTENDING the abilities of the X-Box, but you get much beyond that and it ends up being a gesture motivated not my innovation, but by spite for M$.
-Z
M$ XP user (3 PCs) w/ a SUN Solaris, MacOS, and a lil TiVo on the SDA LAN.
Oh sweet charlie horse on a rocket.... (Score:2, Interesting)
And as for people saying M$ is losing money on every unit sold, what if everyone went out and bought an XBox, just to mod it? You know what would happen? "XBox is now the most popular gaming console in the world, according to an indepenent poll. Game developers everywhere are dropping or delaying support for other systems in order to take advantage of this hot market." Now, how was M$ losing money?
Seems like your doing the old "Yeah, you should have seen the look on his face when I stopped his fist with my head..."
New marketing campaign (Score:2)
Why to hack XBox? (Score:3, Interesting)
So why should people bother? Is it a waste of their time to spend so much effort tinkering on XBox when MS clearly does not want them to?
Of course it isn't. Firstly, no one should ever discourage a geek from playing (attempting to hack or modify hardware or software). It's the single most important aspect of it all: the thrill of seeing what you can do with what you've got. Can I tweak it so it goes a little faster? Can I tweak so it sounds a little clearer? Can I take this fridge and make it act as a firewall?
GEEK-SPOK: Why have you been staring at the internals of that mountain of database code for the past two days? That's not our deptartment.
GEEK-KIRK: [dopey voice] Because it's there.
Of course, that's not the *only* reason to hack. Another is: We Hate Microsoft. And why wouldn't we? They try to lock us out of the software, and their not satisfied with that, now they want to lock us out of the hardware as well. *Naturally* hackers will try to hack it.
And what's so bad about that? I think some of the naysayers hear lack imagination. Think of XBox hacking as a big, community-based R&D project--because it is. Just like all R&D projects, we're not exactly sure what will come out of it. But I, for one, am curious to find out.
Although getting Linux up and running on XBox is still a bit tricksy today, that doesn't necessarily mean it will be difficult tomorrow. This latest innovation means that more hackers will be able to play.
It's conceivable that, at some future point, Linux-on-XBox may be as easy as inserting a CD (after having purchased the appropriate *type* of XBox from the store). Once the hardware is openned up, anything is possible. Myself, I'm looking forward to the prosepct of a "MAME distribution" for "Linux On XBox". Of course, you'd have to download all the romsets from somewhere else.
I know people have managed to get MAME up and running on XBox already, but that's what I'm getting at--as I understand it, it's still a bit involved right now. But as all this XBox hacking moves forward, it may one day be simple enough for everybody--or at least simple enough for the average geek.
Most important reason to hack the XBox: if the xboxhackers don't hack it to figure out how it works and let the masses know, who will?
P.S. I obviously wrote this strange, long post all at once w/o any proofing or anything. If the ideas or grammar offend anyone, all I can say is: oops, my bad.
Note to the submitter (Score:3, Insightful)
Writing is like coding: keep it simple. Spend some time on it, and have pity on your poor readers. There's more to writing than just spelling and grammar.
(My appologies if you are not a native English speaker---your spelling and grammar are good enough that it's hard to tell.)
XBox's death bed is here. (Score:2)
If this chip is indeed legal, and allows anyone to run software other than officially licensed Microsoft XBox software, the XBox will be discontinued and left behind. There will be no reason for XBox owners to buy official software because they can be happy with running various Linux distros or homebrewed games instead. The console industry is NOTHING LIKE the PC industry, and this was Microsofts biggest flaw. They need to make systems so devoid of PC-like architecture that someting like this wouldn't be possible.
With any luck, XBox2 will look and run nothing like a PC, everything will be 100% proprietary, non-Intel, etc.
Slightly OT question: PS2? (Score:2)
I mean if all you're using it for is as a media player or an emulator I suppose it's easier to code for a unit that's essentially a PC. But wouldn't the PS2 be more of a challenge? And in that, I think the end result would be a LOT more impressive (that's not to say the the X-Box efforts are not impressive!).
Re:Good for MS (Score:5, Funny)
Haven't most xbox owners already got both of those?
Re:Good for MS (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Halo and... (Score:2)
Re:Good for MS (Score:3, Insightful)
X-box games are very expensief to cover the losses on the machine sels
Re:Good for MS (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure - but lets be realistic - if you buy an XBOX and mod it - woudln't you still want to play some of the games> MS will break even at worst overall among mod chippers I'd think.
You are a fool (Score:3, Insightful)
If Microsoft was able to toss XBoxes into a trash compacter at $150 loss each (one of the numbers I've heard proposed for how much they lose per console) but get away with telling everyone that they'd sold them, they would gladly spend $150 million to "sell" a million consoles and be able to use that marketing info to convince developers to make more games for the XBox. Even with no hope of _ever_ being able to recoup the losses from those particular XBoxes.
Microsoft said they planed to lose a billion dollars for the first few years. Clearly their goal is not short term economic gains, but long range plans for getting a firm place in the market. Every XBox that gets sold helps that goal, even if the buyer turns it into a Linux box and never buys a single game.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2, Informative)
Nope. This will not qualify. With this solution you still have to replace the original BIOS chip with a new one. Besides the prize was split half. The X-box hackers already got $100,000 by making Linux run on X-box with custom BIOS chip.
To get that additional $100,000 prize no hardware modifications can be done to make Linux work on X-box.
---
Re:xbox live (Score:2, Informative)
Re:About time... (Score:3, Funny)
Here's another reason to own one: DoA Xtreme Beach Volleyball [gamespot.com]
All us imbalanced geeks will love it.
huh? (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, but only after it puts the lotion in the basket.