Lenovo To Launch Chinese Gaming Platform Called Ebox 71
siliconbits writes "Chinese manufacturer Lenovo will build a video gaming console for the Chinese market and has already spun off a company called Eedoo Technology, including a team of 40 engineers, with the task of developing the platform. It will be called the Ebox, and will be specifically designed to recognize shapes and movement without the need for a dedicated game controller, not unlike Microsoft's Kinect."
Re:I for one Welcome (Score:5, Funny)
No, you spelled Chinese wrong.
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Hmmm... (Score:4, Funny)
So its designed to work similar to a Microsoft product...
It's name has a strange resemblance to a Microsoft product...
How does that expression about Ducks go again?
Anyways, Kinect is patented, so if the technology is similar enough, I smell a potential lawsuit.
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It probably runs Xbox software backups too.
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It probably runs Xbox software backups too.
if it does I will buy one in a heartbeat since it is cheaper than an xbox and you wouldn't have to mod it... at least before they stop letting them sell it
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Anyways, Kinect is patented, so if the technology is similar enough, I smell a potential lawsuit.
The device is for Sale in China. Microsoft is just praying that China continues to allow them to sell their hardware there.
Funniest of all, their products rely on Windows (Score:2)
It is Microsoft Windows OS which makes their laptops sell well. It is not like old good IBM which had excellent reputation for quality, company culture and support.
MS can mysteriously rise Windows 7 licensing price for them, citing anti something laws. If your business runs on x86 chips, never, ever fsck with MSFT.
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So its designed to work similar to a Microsoft product...
It's name has a strange resemblance to a Microsoft product...
How does that expression about Ducks go again?
Anyways, Kinect is patented, so if the technology is similar enough, I smell a potential lawsuit.
Under normal circumstances, probably. But since Xbox isn't available on Chinese market (probably because M$ doesn't like piracy) and Lenovo's console is aimed at Chinese market only, I say that Microsoft has no right to complain here.
not unlike Microsoft's Kinect (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder just how much "not unlike Microsoft's Kinect?"
I smell a turd... (Score:3, Informative)
It's going to cost more than a Nintento Wii, but less than an XBOX360
It costs a Chinese person that makes an average wage 3 months of pay.
I predict colossal failure.
Re:I smell a turd... (Score:5, Insightful)
It probably is too pricey for the Chinese market.
But they could *absolutely* develop it in 3 months. You could build a better-than-360 console that quickly using off-the-shelf stuff. If you have it run Linux on x86, then developers can CRANK out the games. And if you don't go nuts with the copy protection and licensing restrictions (and historically China doesn't care about those things), you'll have what amounts to a modern version of the Amiga- i.e., a computer built for games.
If that's what it's going to be, that would be pretty awesome.
Re:I smell a turd... (Score:4, Insightful)
As for running a linux gaming console with minimal copy protection, who will make games for it?
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If they are targeting casual gamers rather than hardcore gamers (and that's what they do according to TFA) they need only a few good casual sports games. As for other games -- if the market is moderate, indies will crank out games like there's no tomorrow. If the market gets big, big players will join with ported versions of existing games just to get their cut.
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Lenovo did not invent PC, IBM did.
IBM just sold their desktop pc and laptop manufacturing parts to Chinese HW manufacturer.
Re:I smell a turd... (Score:4, Funny)
As for running a linux gaming console with minimal copy protection, who will make games for it?
Why the massive Linux game development community for one! I'm surprised no one has thought of this yet! What kid wouldn't want to play Tuxracer and... well just Tuxracer, on Christmas morning?
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Even if they pass on Linux and code a new kernel from scratch they won't have any bigger a pool of developers, though.
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Hey now, that's not fair.. we have a number of Quake mods also.. and...
Actually, there's excellent games of many types. At least as long as excellent gameplay is the goal, not necessarily AAA level graphics from current gen games.
Battle for Wesnoth, Flightgear, Tremulous, and Chromium B.S.U. are games I may never tire of.
For more suggestions, http://www.happypenguin.org/list?&sort=avg_rating [happypenguin.org]
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So it's certainly possible that a new approach by a company without the Microsoft corporate baggage could be ultimately simpler, cheaper and more successful.
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If it was actually intended for the chinese market and not to "accidentally" be sold to other countries through international web sites and under-the-table dealers I might agree with you.
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I heard a rumor that they will include a game where two tanks, or helicopters in some cases, maneuver through various predefined courses trying to destroy the other. It should include enough levels to keep people occupied until the tennis game comes out two months after release.
I'm hoping for a game where you steer a cowboy through a bunch of cattle, trying to rope one, all while avoiding cow skulls.
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You are wrong. You know why the real estate prices soar in Hong Kong, Macau and Canada? Mainland Chinese keep buying them with cash. Like everything else, this thing is not marketed to those who cannot afford it.
Waste of time.. The story mentioned China, so full xenophobia mode is engaged. Any depiction of a Chinese national as anything other than a poverty stricken sweatshop worker will be aggressively and hysterically denied. I imagine Japan had the same treatment at one pint.
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When you have one hundred million people that make twenty times the median wage or more, suddenly what you can sell to a factory worker becomes a whole lot less interesting. There is absolutely a large enough number of people who _could_ spend this money to make it profitable. The trick however is convincing the consumer to buy a game console when they already are accustomed to playing on their laptop or at an internet cafe. The Chinese bu
The "X" in Xbox stood for something. (Score:2)
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Staples is being sued by Paul Allen for his invention, "Not Being Office Max."
In fact, we all need to tread carefully around that one, unless we actually are Office Max.
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It's the sound the low-end notebook market made the first time they heard it was coming.
Re:The "X" in Xbox stood for something. (Score:4, Insightful)
That's not going to get them sued... (Score:2)
EBox, XBox, who's counting right? I expect Microsoft will be :)
ebox 720? (Score:1)
Shouldn't they call it the ebox 720 so that it's not just like the xbox 360?
I mean, the xbox 360 was a 360 degree change in direction, so shouldn't the ebox be able to spin in place longer than that?
ebox-platform (Score:2)
http://www.ebox-platform.com/ (Score:2)
The name is already taken by a Linux Distro. Hell.. I know the people that make it (are from my city).
For the Chinese market? (Score:2)
Are you serious. Why in the world would anyone market a software platform to the Chinese: the most pirating, copyright infringing, knock-off producing nation on the entire planet?
It doesn't matter how cheap you make this thing. People won't develop for it because the Chinese will hack and mod the thing in less than a week. Guaranteed.
This venture is futile.
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For one thing, you could rip off the sounds, textures and models from any western games you want. Art production is a considerable chunk of development cost.
For another, one or two guys could crank out a game in a month or two, and possibly make a fair profit off the number of legally sold copies, considering the minimal manpower investment.
A third factor is online play. From what I can guess, it must be a lot harder to write a
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Because China has the most people-friendly IP laws in the world. There is no such bullshit such as the DMCA in China.
hii (Score:1)
hiii (Score:1)
Microsoft won't like the name (Score:2)
They probably think they own the word 'box' just like they seem to claim ownership of the word 'windows'.
Asus made the Eeebox too. Close enough for confusion.
Who runs Lenovo really? (Score:2)
So, their plan is to make a box which will naturally (by law) have strictest censoring/trojaning capabilities. I can imagine the headlines now: "Console stops functioning after 2 hours". Would look nice on Global IT news sites. Eventually some guy (perhaps hired by their competitor) using that box will do a stupid thing like blogging on "enemy sites" and end up in prison, very publicly.
Think about it Lenovo. Are you such a genius future company to come up with this idea first or companies/competitors seen t
Fail (Score:1)
Only thing missing... (Score:2)
They will partner with Motorola and call the final product "Ebola"