View Full Version : Xbox 180
Viraneth
05-05-2008, 05:48 PM
Has anyone heard anything about it?
I've heard rumors that it is confirmed. Is it?
Leo_A
05-05-2008, 05:57 PM
There is no such thing, its a term a few idiots have applied to the the first Xbox now that its' successor is on the market. Another stupid term that seems more common is calling it a OG Xbox.
Why people just don't keep calling it by its name, and using 360 or the full name for the current system, I don't know. Gamers like coming up with stupid acronym's and terms, like shumps or whatever that one is...
Viraneth
05-05-2008, 06:05 PM
Thanks, this helped a bit.
So no xbox handeld?
Dissapointment! XD
ProgrammingAce
05-05-2008, 06:07 PM
Of course there's an xbox handheld. It's called the Zune. Check the footage from GDC 2008 for more details...
JunkTheMagicDragon
05-05-2008, 06:09 PM
ms' entertainment & devices division has enough to worry about keeping the 360 and zune profitable.
for right now, i think they're content to let their ips make money on the ds.
MrSparkle
05-05-2008, 08:22 PM
xbox handheld no problem all you need is a ton of money and ben heck.
Rob2600
05-06-2008, 12:09 AM
Gamers like coming up with stupid acronym's
Don't forget "PSX."
joedick
05-06-2008, 12:49 AM
Gamers like coming up with stupid acronym's and terms, like shumps or whatever that one is...
Don't forget "PSX."
Didn't Sony come up with that one themselves?
Rob2600
05-06-2008, 01:05 AM
Didn't Sony come up with that one themselves?
The official Sony PlayStation logo was a red, yellow, green, and blue "PS," yet tons of people called it the PSX.
ProgrammingAce
05-06-2008, 01:21 AM
Yes, but internal Sony documents from the Nintendo/Sony era abbreviate it to the PSX, even back when the system was called the "Play Station". So that one belongs to sony.
The 1 2 P
05-06-2008, 01:43 AM
The official Sony PlayStation logo was a red, yellow, green, and blue "PS," yet tons of people called it the PSX.
But later Sony actually made a system called the PSX: a PS2, tivo-like recording all in one device with different hard drive sizes. The people still calling the Playstation the PSX apparently missed this Japan-only release.
Half Japanese
05-06-2008, 01:53 AM
If we're talking 'official' abbreviations, GCN has to be one of the worst. NGC makes perfect sense, as it implies Nintendo Gamecube, wheras GCN implies Gamecube Nintendo, the verbalization of which would get you laughed out of your local game store.
MachineGex
05-06-2008, 10:07 AM
Sony had a poster with PSX on it just after launch. I use to have it. It was abbreviated and the "X" was red with the "PS" printed in black. It had the controller buttons on it as well. This poster was all over the place during the launch. Toys-r-us had them hanging along with most stores. Most people who bought the PSX at launch call it a PSX. :)
Jorpho
05-06-2008, 12:54 PM
The other notion frequently cited is that, as the Playstation ultimately owes its existence to Nintendo's desire for a SNES CD-ROM extension, it internally followed the same naming convention of the other SNES add-on, the Bandai Satellaview-X.
But then, DMG was the internal code for the original Game Boy, and you'll probably never see that anywhere.
Getting back to the topic at hand, I've never been clear on the status of the original XBox Live. Can you still go online and purchase new stuff made for the original XBox? Is there a particular naming convention used to differentiate XBox Live content for the original XBox from content for the XBox 360?
scooterb23
05-06-2008, 06:36 PM
Wake me when the XBox 540 into a fakie 50-50 rail grind comes out.
Cornelius
05-06-2008, 07:33 PM
I hate when people use that stupid, made up, PS1 abbreviation. There was a PSOne, but Playstation never used PS1, certainly not for the ugly grey box.
/end sarcasm
PSX seems just as valid as PS1. I use them interchangeable, but lean towards PSX ever since some thread where people were bitching about it.
Leo_A
05-06-2008, 08:40 PM
Getting back to the topic at hand, I've never been clear on the status of the original XBox Live. Can you still go online and purchase new stuff made for the original XBox? Is there a particular naming convention used to differentiate XBox Live content for the original XBox from content for the XBox 360?
I don't understand your question. Most of the content is still there and accessed like it always was, by entering the DLC section of the ingame menu of whatever Xbox game you own that had any, or by placing in a Xbox Live Arcade disc if you want access to the original XBLA.
There's no need for it to be on Xbox 360's marketplace, and none of it is there. It's done the same way when playing a Xbox game in backwards compatibility mode on the 360, I've downloaded stuff for several games in recent months like Crimson Sky, PGR2, Pirates, and a few other titles. Only exception might've been Halo 2's final map pack, I seem to remember that could be purchased using MS Points so they might've temporarily made it available on marketplace for 360 owners who didn't want to use a CC.
ProgrammingAce
05-07-2008, 11:35 AM
Only exception might've been Halo 2's final map pack, I seem to remember that could be purchased using MS Points so they might've temporariliy made it available on marketplace for 360 owners who didn't want to use a CC.
They tried, but couldn't get that to work. You had to pay cash to get the maps. I think they're free now anyway though, aren't they?
Leo_A
05-07-2008, 02:20 PM
Yeah, Halo content becomes free after 4 months or so.
NE146
05-07-2008, 02:22 PM
There is no such thing. The proper terminology is this:
Xbox = Xbox 1.0
360 = Xbox 1.5
:)
ProgrammingAce
05-09-2008, 05:04 AM
Yes, but internal Sony documents from the Nintendo/Sony era abbreviate it to the PSX, even back when the system was called the "Play Station". So that one belongs to sony.
I just checked, Sony owns the trademark on "PSX" in regards to the PlayStation 1. So if you don't like the abbreviation, blame them.
ubersaurus
05-09-2008, 04:07 PM
I don't understand your question. Most of the content is still there and accessed like it always was, by entering the DLC section of the ingame menu of whatever Xbox game you own that had any, or by placing in a Xbox Live Arcade disc if you want access to the original XBLA.
There's no need for it to be on Xbox 360's marketplace, and none of it is there. It's done the same way when playing a Xbox game in backwards compatibility mode on the 360, I've downloaded stuff for several games in recent months like Crimson Sky, PGR2, Pirates, and a few other titles. Only exception might've been Halo 2's final map pack, I seem to remember that could be purchased using MS Points so they might've temporarily made it available on marketplace for 360 owners who didn't want to use a CC.
Nope, I remember it well. The final map pack had to be bought through the Halo 2 DLC menu, and you had to pay with a Credit Card like all other OG Xbox DLC. Created a lot of problems for Microsoft, too.
And now it's free, so it's all a moot point.
ProgrammingAce
05-09-2008, 06:42 PM
Nope, I remember it well. The final map pack had to be bought through the Halo 2 DLC menu, and you had to pay with a Credit Card like all other OG Xbox DLC. Created a lot of problems for Microsoft, too.
And now it's free, so it's all a moot point.
You know, it's strange... It's hard to setup PartnerNet (microsoft's development version of Live) to actually accept money. While it worked fine in testing, in production the two systems didn't play well with each other. Apparently the 360 Live servers can't authenticate DLC for the Xbox1 correctly...
Cloud121
05-09-2008, 07:12 PM
But later Sony actually made a system called the PSX: a PS2, tivo-like recording all in one device with different hard drive sizes. The people still calling the Playstation the PSX apparently missed this Japan-only release.
PSX = Sony PlayStation
PSX-DVR = Sony PlayStation 2 DVR/Tivo/Recording Thingy With A Big HDD
That's my terminology.
I'm thinking it was kind of created by everybody, it was kind of universal at the time. I wouldn't be surprised if someone just made a typo, typed PSX by accident and it just caught on since it just seemed to fit. Not that it really matters anyway, I've called it PSX 10 years ago and I still do to this day.