Xbox
Information about Xbox
For the Xbox's successor, see .
For the X Window System box, see .
| Xbox | |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Microsoft |
| Type | Video game console |
| Generation | Sixth generation era |
| First available | NA November 15, 2001 JP February 22, 2002 AU March 14, 2002 EU March 14, 2002 |
| System storage | 8-10GB Internal HDD, 8MB memory card |
| Controller input | 4 maximum (wired or wireless or combination of either) |
| Connectivity | 100Mbit Ethernet |
| Online service | Xbox Live |
| Units sold | 24 million (as of May 10, 2006)[1] |
| Top-selling game | Halo 2 |
| Successor | Xbox 360 |
The Xbox is a sixth generation video game console produced by Microsoft Corporation. It was Microsoft's first foray into the gaming console market, and competed directly with Sony's PlayStation 2, and the Nintendo GameCube. It was first released on November 15, 2001 in North America; February 22, 2002 in Japan; and on March 14, 2002 in Europe. The Australian launch came on April 26 of the same year. It is the predecessor to Microsoft's Xbox 360 console. The Xbox was Microsoft's first product that ventured into the console arena, after having collaborated with Sega in porting Windows CE to the Dreamcast console. Notable launch titles for the console included , , Dead or Alive 3, Project Gotham Racing, and .
History
Development
Selected home game consoles
|
|---|
| First generation |
| Magnavox Odyssey • Pong • Coleco Telstar |
| Second generation |
| Fairchild Channel F • Atari 2600 • Interton VC 4000 • Odyssey • Intellivision • Arcadia 2001 • Atari 5200 • ColecoVision • Vectrex • SG-1000 |
| Third generation |
| NES • Master System • Atari 7800 |
| Fourth Generation |
| TurboGrafx-16 • Mega Drive/Genesis • Neo Geo • SNES |
| Fifth generation |
| 3DO • Amiga CD32 • Jaguar • Saturn • PlayStation • Nintendo 64 • Virtual Boy |
| Sixth generation |
| Dreamcast • PlayStation 2 • GameCube • Xbox |
| Seventh generation |
| Xbox 360 • PlayStation 3 • Wii |
According to the book Smartbomb, by Heather Chaplin and Aaron Ruby, the remarkable success of the upstart Sony PlayStation worried Microsoft in late 1990s. The growing video game market seemed to threaten the PC market which Microsoft had dominated and relied upon for most of its revenues. Additionally, a venture into the gaming console market would also diversify Microsoft's product line, which up to that time had been heavily concentrated into software.
According to Dean Takahashi's book, Opening the Xbox, the Xbox was originally going to be called "DirectX-box", to show the extensive use of DirectX within the console's technology.[2] "Xbox" was the final name decided by marketing, but the console still retains some hints towards DirectX, most notably the "X"-shaped logo, which DirectX is famous for, along with the "X" shape on the top of the system.
As time progressed, Microsoft's J Allard was responsible for the hardware and system software development. Ed Fries was responsible for all game development on the platform. Mitch Koch was responsible for sales and marketing and all three reported to Robbie Bach. This team was also primarily responsible for Microsoft's follow-up product, the Xbox 360.
The system has been discontinued as of November 13, 2006.
Price history
Europe (prices include tax)
|
North America
|
With a price-dropped PlayStation 2 and a comparatively inexpensive GameCube as competition, many users were naturally reluctant to invest in the console. Microsoft countered with a £100 price drop (and its equivalent in the rest of Europe) on April 26 2002, just a month and 12 days after its initial launch in the UK. To avoid frustrating early adopters, they offered any two current games and an extra controller for free to any purchaser who could provide a sales receipt showing the original higher price.
By September 15 2005, Microsoft reported a four billion dollar loss in selling the Xbox gaming system.[3]
Xbox 360
When equipped with a removable hard drive add-on, the Xbox 360 supports a limited number of the Xbox's game library through emulation. Emulation adds support for anti-aliasing as well as upscaling of the still standard definition image. These emulators are periodically updated to add compatibility for older games and are available for free through Xbox Live or as a file download to be burned to a CD/DVD from the Xbox web site. As the architectures are entirely different between Xbox and Xbox 360, software emulation is the only viable option for compatibility without including processors from the original Xbox.
Hardware and accessories
Hardware
- See also:
Although the Xbox is based on commodity PC hardware and runs a stripped-down version of the Windows 2000 kernel using APIs based largely on DirectX 8.1, it incorporates changes optimized for gaming and multimedia uses as well as restrictions designed to prevent uses not approved by Microsoft. The Xbox does not use Windows CE due to Microsoft internal politics at the time, as well as limited support in Windows CE for DirectX.
The Xbox itself is much, much larger and heavier than its contemporaries. This is largely due to a bulky tray-loading DVD-ROM drive and the standard-size 3.5 inch hard drive. Because of this, the Xbox has found itself a target of mild derision, as gamers poke fun at it for things like a warning in the Xbox manual that a falling Xbox "could cause serious injury" to a small child or pet. However, the Xbox has also pioneered safety features, such as breakaway cables for the controllers to prevent the console from being yanked from the shelf.
The original game controller design, which was particularly large, was similarly often criticized since it was ill-suited to those with small hands and caused cramping in the hands of some users. In response to these criticisms, a smaller controller was introduced for the Japanese Xbox launch. This Japanese controller (which was briefly imported by even mainstream video game store chains, such as GameStop) was subsequently released in other markets as the "Xbox Controller S", and currently all Xbox consoles come with a "Controller S", while the original controller (known as Controller "0", "The Duke", or "The Hamburger") was quietly discontinued.
Several internal hardware revisions have been made in an ongoing battle to discourage modding (hackers continually updated modchip designs in attempt to defeat them), to cut manufacturing costs, and to provide a more reliable DVD-ROM drive (some of the early units' drives gave Disc Reading Errors due to the unreliable Thomson DVD-ROM drives used). Later generation of Xbox units that used the Thomson TGM-600 DVD-ROM drives and the Philips VAD6011 DVD-ROM drives were still vulnerable to failure that rendered the consoles either unable to read newer discs or caused them to halt the console with an error code usually indicating a PIO/DMA identification failure, respectively. These units would not be covered under the extended warranty.
In 2002, Microsoft and nVidia entered arbitration over a dispute on the pricing of nVidia's chips for the Xbox.[4] nVidia's filing with the SEC indicated that Microsoft was seeking a US$13 million discount on shipments for nVidia's fiscal year 2002. Additionally, Microsoft alleged violations of the agreement the two companies entered, sought reduced chipset pricing, and sought to ensure that nVidia fulfil Microsoft's chipset orders without limits on quantity. The matter was settled on February 6, 2003, and no terms of the settlement were released.[5]
Technical specifications
- CPU: 32-bit 733 MHz Coppermine-based Mobile Celeron in Micro-PGA2 package. 180 nm process.
- SSE floating point SIMD. 4 single-precision floating point numbers per clock cycle.
- MMX integer SIMD.
- 133 MHz 64-bit GTL+ front side bus to GPU.
- 32 KB L1 cache. 128 KB on-die L2 "Advanced Transfer Cache".
- Shared memory subsystem
- 64 MB DDR SDRAM at 200 MHz; 6.4 GB/s
- Supplied by Hynix or Samsung depending on manufacture date and location.
- Graphics processing unit (GPU) and system chipset: 233 MHz "NV2A" ASIC. Co-developed by Microsoft and nVidia.
- 4 pixel pipelines with 2 texture units each
- 932 megapixels/second (233 MHz x 4 pipelines), 1,864 megatexels/second (932 MP x 2 texture units) (peak)
- 115 million vertices/second, 125 million particles/second (peak)
- Peak triangle performance: 29,125,000 32-pixel triangles/sec raw or w. 2 textures and lit.
- 485,416 triangles per frame at 60fps
- 970,833 triangles per frame at 30fps
- 4 textures per pass, texture compression, full scene anti-aliasing (NV Quincunx, supersampling, multisampling)
- Bilinear, trilinear, and anisotropic texture filtering
- Similar to the GeForce 3 and GeForce 4 PC GPUs.
- Storage media
- 2x – 5x (2.6 MB/s – 6.6 MB/s) CAV DVD-ROM
- 8 or 10 GB, 3.5 in, 5,400 RPM hard disk. Formatted to 8 GB. FATX file system.
- Optional 8 MB memory card for saved game file transfer.
- Audio processor: nVidia "MCPX" (a.k.a. SoundStorm "NVAPU")
- 64 3D sound channels (up to 256 stereo voices)
- HRTF Sensaura 3D enhancement
- MIDI DLS2 Support
- Monaural, Stereo, Dolby Surround, Dolby Digital Live 5.1, and dts Surround (DVD movies only) audio output options
- Integrated 10/100BASE-TX wired ethernet
- DVD movie playback
- A/V outputs: composite video, S-Video, component video, SCART, Optical Digital TOSLINK, and stereo RCA analog audio
- Resolutions: 480i, 576i, 480p, 720p and 1080i
- Controller ports: 4 proprietary USB ports
- Weight: 3.86 kg (8.5 lb)
- Dimensions: 320 × 100 × 260 mm (12.5 × 4 × 10.5 in)
Official accessories
Audio/video connectors
- Standard AV cable: Provides composite video and monaural or stereo audio to TVs equipped with RCA inputs. Comes with the system. European systems come with a RCA jack to SCART converter block in addition to the cable.
- RF Adapter: Provides a combined audio and video signal on an RF connector.
- Advanced AV Pack: Provides S-Video and TOSLINK audio in addition to the RCA composite video and stereo audio of the Standard AV Cable.
- High Definition AV Pack: Intended for HDTVs, it provides a YPrPb component video signal over three RCA connectors. Also provides analog RCA and digital TOSLINK audio outputs.
- Advanced SCART cable: The European equivalent to the Advanced AV Pack, providing a full RGB video SCART connection in place of S-Video, RCA composite and stereo audio connections (composite video and stereo are still provided by the cable, through the SCART connector, in addition to the RGB signal), while retaining the TOSLINK audio connector. As Europe had no HDTV standard when the Xbox was release, no High Definition cable was provided in those markets.
Networking
- Ethernet (Xbox Live) cable: A Cat 5 cable for connecting the Xbox to a broadband modem or router.
- Xbox Wireless Adapter: a wireless bridge which converts data running through an Ethernet cable to a wireless (802.11b or 802.11g) signal to connect to a wireless LAN. While the official Wireless Adapter guarantees compatibility with the Xbox, almost any wireless bridge can be used.
- Xbox Live Starter Kit: A subscription and installation pack for the Xbox Live service, as well as a headset (with monaural earpiece and microphone) that connects to a control box that plugs into the top expansion slot of a controller. The headset can in fact be replaced with most standard earpiece-and-microphone headsets; headset specialist Plantronics produces various officially-licensed headsets, including a special-edition headset for Halo 2.
- System Link cable: A Cat 5 Ethernet crossover cable for connecting together two consoles or a Cat 5 straight through cable used in conjunction with an Ethernet hub for connecting up to four consoles, for up to 16 total players. This functionality is similar to Sega's DirectLink for Sega Saturn.
Multimedia
- Xbox Windows Media Center Extender: A software kit released by Microsoft which allows Xbox to act as a Windows Media Center Extender to stream content from a Windows XP Media Center Edition computer. It can also be used for DVD playback.
- DVD Playback Kit: Required in order to play DVD movies, the kit includes an infrared remote control and receiver. DVD playback was not included as a standard feature of the Xbox due to licensing issues with the DVD format that would have added extra cost to the console's base price. By selling a DVD remote separately, Microsoft was able to bundle the cost of the DVD licensing fee with it. Although there is nothing to prevent the Xbox from acting as a progressive scan DVD player, Microsoft chose not to enable this feature in the Xbox DVD kit in order to avoid royalty payments to the patent-holder of progressive scan DVD playback. The DVD Playback kit only plays DVDs from the local region. The DVD Playback kit will also allow the Xbox to play VCD movies. By default, the Xbox can only play Xbox games and audio CDs.
- Xbox Music Mixer: A utility software bundled with a microphone that connects to an adapter that plugs into the top expansion slot of a controller. It provides a music player with 2D/3D visualizations as well as basic karaoke functions. It also allows users to transfer pictures in JPEG format (to create slide shows) as well as audio in MP3 or WMA format (for karaoke or a custom game soundtrack) from a Windows XP or Windows Vista machine running the Xbox Music Mixer PC Tool.
Controllers and removable storage
The Xbox controller features two analog sticks, a directional pad, two analog triggers, a Back button, a Start button, two accessory slots and six 4-bit analog action buttons (A/Green, B/Red, X/Blue, Y/Yellow, Black, and White).- Standard Xbox controller: Originally the normal Xbox controller for all territories except Japan, this has since been quietly discontinued and replaced in Xbox packs by the Controller S. The Duke controller has been criticized for being relatively large and bulky compared to other video game controllers (it was awarded "Blunder of the Year" by Game Informer in 2001).[6] The black and white buttons are located above the A, B, X, and Y buttons, and the Back/Start buttons are located between and below the d-pad and right analog stick. Also, the standard face buttons (A, B, X, and Y) were oriented in an oblong parallelogram rather than a uniform diamond, which was very unusual compared to other standard controllers.
- Controller S: A smaller, lighter Xbox controller. Once the standard Xbox controller in Japan (codenamed "Akebono"),[7] it was released in other territories by popular demand, and eventually replaced the standard controller in the retail pack for the Xbox console. The white and black buttons are located below the A, B, X, and Y buttons, and the Back/Start buttons are similarly placed below the left analog stick. This controller has received its share of criticism as well, especially with regards to placement of the black/white and back/start buttons.[8]
Games
proved to be a great success for the game industry and Microsoft Game Studios.
In 2002 and 2003, several releases helped the Xbox to gain momentum and distinguish itself from the PS2. The Xbox Live online service was launched in late 2002 alongside pilot titles MotoGP, MechAssault and Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon. Several best-selling and critically acclaimed titles for the Xbox were published, such as Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell, Ninja Gaiden and LucasArts' . Take-Two Interactive's exclusivity deal with Sony was amended to allow Grand Theft Auto III, and its sequels to be published on the Xbox. In addition, many other publishers got into the trend of releasing the Xbox version alongside the PS2 version, instead of delaying it for months.
In 2004, Halo 2 set records as the highest-grossing release in entertainment history making over $125 million in its first day,[15] as well as being a successful killer app for the online service. That year, Microsoft and Electronic Arts reached a deal that would see the latter's popular titles enabled on Xbox Live.
Xbox Live
On November 15, 2002, Microsoft launched its Xbox Live online gaming service, allowing subscribers to play online Xbox games with (or against) other subscribers all around the world and download new content for their games to the system's hard drive. This online service works exclusively with a broadband Internet connection. Approximately 250,000 subscribers had signed up within two months of Xbox Live's launch.[16] In July 2004, Microsoft announced that Xbox Live had reached one million subscribers, and a year later, in July 2005, that membership had reached two million. An Xbox Live Gold subscription (which affords the user the most features of any membership) currently costs US$50 a year (roughly US$4 a month). Recently, competitive leagues have been created, namely playing Halo 2. Leagues include prizes and sponsorships.
Xbox modding
Xbox motherboard with installed modchip
Four main methods exist of modding the Xbox:
- Modchip: Installing a modchip inside the Xbox that bypasses the original BIOS, with a hacked BIOS to circumvent the security mechanisms.[19]
- TSOP Flashing: Re-flashing the onboard BIOS chip with a hacked BIOS to circumvent the security mechanisms. The Xbox BIOS is contained on a commodity EEPROM (the 'TSOP'), which can be made writable by the Xbox by bridging points on the motherboard.[20] Flashing is usually carried out by using a specially crafted gamesave (see 'Game save exploit', below) to flash the onboard TSOP, but the TSOP can also be desoldered and rewritten in a standard EEPROM programmer. This method only works on 1.0 to 1.5 Xboxes, as later versions replace the commodity TSOP with an LPC ROM contained within a proprietary chip.[21]
- Softmods: Installing additional software files to the Xbox hard drive, which exploit programming errors in the Dashboard to gain control of the system, and overwrite the in-memory copy of the BIOS.[22] Soft modification is known to be safe for Xbox Live if the user enables multibooting with the Microsoft dashboard and an original game disc is used.[23]
- Game save exploit: Using select official game releases to load game saves that exploit buffer overflows in the save game handling.[24] When these special game saves are loaded, they access an interface with scripts for installing the necessary softmod files. Disassembly of the Xbox is not required when installing most game save exploits.
- Hot swap: Using a computer to change the data on the hard drive. This requires having the Xbox unlock the hard drive when it is turned on, then swapping the hard drive into a running computer. From there it can be accessed by a special LiveCD. The user installs the softmod files directly to the Xbox hard drive. This technique has been used extensively to harbor cheating on many online games. Disassembly is required to install this softmod.
There are also distributions of Linux developed specifically for the Xbox, including those based on Gentoo, (see also Xebian), , and Dyne:bolic.
Alternative operating systems: Xbox Linux is a project that ported Linux to the Xbox. FreeBSD has also been ported to Xbox.
UK advertising controversy
In 2002 the Independent Television Commission (ITC) banned a television advertisement for the Xbox in the United Kingdom after responses from certain members of the public deemed it distasteful. It depicted a mother giving birth to a child who was fired like a projectile through the hospital window and who flew through the air. As he flew he aged rapidly before landing in a ready-dug grave. The advert ended with the slogan "Life is short. Play more." Complaints came from recent mothers including one whose child was stillborn.[26]References
1. ^ Gamers Catch Their Breath as Xbox 360 and Xbox Live Reinvent Next-Generation Gaming. Xbox.com (2006-05-10). Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
2. ^ St. John, Alex (August 2007, vol. 5, issue 8, pg. 14). DirectX 10th Anniversary. Computer Power User. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
3. ^ Cole, Vladimir (2005-09-26). Forbes: Xbox lost Microsoft $4 billion (and counting). Joystiq. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
4. ^ Microsoft takes Nvidia to arbitration over pricing of Xbox processors. EE Times (2002-04-29). Retrieved on 2006-06-29.
5. ^ Microsoft and Nvidia settle Xbox chip pricing dispute. EE Times (2003-02-06). Retrieved on 2006-06-29.
6. ^ Games of 2001. Game Informer (January 2002, pg. 48).
7. ^ Ninja Beach Party. Official Xbox Magazine (October 2002, issue 11, pg. 44).
8. ^ Final Sniper (2003-08-11). Xbox Controller S Review. TalkXbox. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
9. ^ Halo: Combat Evolved at Game Rankings
10. ^ NFL Fever 2002: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
11. ^ Project Gotham Racing: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
12. ^ Dead or Alive 3: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
13. ^ Fuzion Frenzy: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
14. ^ Azurik: Rise of Perathia: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
15. ^ Becker, David (2004-11-10). 'Halo 2' clears record $125 million in first day. News.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
16. ^ Coleman, Stephen (2003-01-07). Xbox Live Subscriptions Double Expectations. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
17. ^ Steil, Michael (2007-04-02). . Xbox Linux. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
18. ^ Xbox Live Terms of Use. Xbox.com (October 2006). Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
19. ^ Rybka, Jason. Modchips - What Are They and Should You Use One?. About.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
20. ^ SLuSHIE (2004-03-30). Flashing TSOP With ANY Version XBOX V1.0-V1.5 For Noobs. I-Hacked.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
21. ^ Steil, Michael (2007-02-07). . Xbox Linux. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
22. ^ Phoenix. Phoenix Bios Loader. Xbox-HQ.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
23. ^ Kalviainen, Erik (2006-02-15). . ProductWiki. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
24. ^ Becker, David (2003-03-31). Hacker cracks Xbox challenge. News.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
25. ^ Patrick Schmid and Achim Roos (2007-07-18). Modding The Xbox Into The Ultimate Multimedia Center. Tom's Hardware. Retrieved on 2004-05-11.
26. ^ 'Shocking' Xbox advert banned. BBC News Online (2002-06-06). Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
2. ^ St. John, Alex (August 2007, vol. 5, issue 8, pg. 14). DirectX 10th Anniversary. Computer Power User. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
3. ^ Cole, Vladimir (2005-09-26). Forbes: Xbox lost Microsoft $4 billion (and counting). Joystiq. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
4. ^ Microsoft takes Nvidia to arbitration over pricing of Xbox processors. EE Times (2002-04-29). Retrieved on 2006-06-29.
5. ^ Microsoft and Nvidia settle Xbox chip pricing dispute. EE Times (2003-02-06). Retrieved on 2006-06-29.
6. ^ Games of 2001. Game Informer (January 2002, pg. 48).
7. ^ Ninja Beach Party. Official Xbox Magazine (October 2002, issue 11, pg. 44).
8. ^ Final Sniper (2003-08-11). Xbox Controller S Review. TalkXbox. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
9. ^ Halo: Combat Evolved at Game Rankings
10. ^ NFL Fever 2002: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
11. ^ Project Gotham Racing: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
12. ^ Dead or Alive 3: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
13. ^ Fuzion Frenzy: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
14. ^ Azurik: Rise of Perathia: Summary. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
15. ^ Becker, David (2004-11-10). 'Halo 2' clears record $125 million in first day. News.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
16. ^ Coleman, Stephen (2003-01-07). Xbox Live Subscriptions Double Expectations. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-09-30.
17. ^ Steil, Michael (2007-04-02). . Xbox Linux. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
18. ^ Xbox Live Terms of Use. Xbox.com (October 2006). Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
19. ^ Rybka, Jason. Modchips - What Are They and Should You Use One?. About.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
20. ^ SLuSHIE (2004-03-30). Flashing TSOP With ANY Version XBOX V1.0-V1.5 For Noobs. I-Hacked.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
21. ^ Steil, Michael (2007-02-07). . Xbox Linux. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
22. ^ Phoenix. Phoenix Bios Loader. Xbox-HQ.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
23. ^ Kalviainen, Erik (2006-02-15). . ProductWiki. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
24. ^ Becker, David (2003-03-31). Hacker cracks Xbox challenge. News.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
25. ^ Patrick Schmid and Achim Roos (2007-07-18). Modding The Xbox Into The Ultimate Multimedia Center. Tom's Hardware. Retrieved on 2004-05-11.
26. ^ 'Shocking' Xbox advert banned. BBC News Online (2002-06-06). Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
External links
- Official sites
- Official Xbox/Xbox 360 Website
- Xbox at GameSpot
- Xbox at IGN
- Xbox at the Open Directory Project
- Other sites
- PCvsConsole Shows some specs and the cpu gflops
|
Consoles: Xbox • Xbox 360 Games: Xbox Games • Xbox 360 Games (Demos) • Backward Compatible Games • Platinum Hits • Xbox Live Arcade Titles (Upcoming) Online Services: Xbox LIVE (Arcade • Marketplace) • Microsoft Points • Games for Windows - Live • Live Anywhere Peripherals: Xbox 360 Accessories • Xbox Live Vision • Wireless Headset • Wireless Racing Wheel Promotional: OurColony • Official Xbox Magazine • Xbox Exhibition • "X" Show • Xbox Rewards Tools: Xbox Development Kit • Microsoft XNA Misc.: Microsoft Game Studios • Xbox 360 Launch • Xbox 360 Technical Problems |
A console manufacturer is a company that manufactures and distributes video game consoles. It is also known as a first-party video game publisher. Historically, some of the most recognized console manufacturers include:
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Microsoft Corporation
Public (NASDAQ: MSFT )
Founded Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA (April 4 1975)[1]
Headquarters Redmond, Washington, United States
Key people Bill Gates, Co-founder and Executive Chairman ;
Paul Allen, Co-founder ;
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Public (NASDAQ: MSFT )
Founded Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA (April 4 1975)[1]
Headquarters Redmond, Washington, United States
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Paul Allen, Co-founder ;
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video game console is an interactive entertainment computer or electronic device that manipulates the video display signal of a display device (a television, monitor, etc.) to display a game.
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Video games were introduced as a commercial entertainment medium in 1971, becoming the basis for an important entertainment industry in the late 1970s/early 1980s in the United States, Japan, and Europe.
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The sixth-generation era (sometimes referred to as the 128-bit era; see "Number of bits" below) refers to the computer and video games, video game consoles, and video game handhelds available at the turn of the 21st century.
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North America is a continent [1] in the Earth's northern hemisphere and (chiefly) western hemisphere. It is bordered on the north by the Arctic Ocean, on the east by the North Atlantic Ocean, on the southeast by the Caribbean Sea, and on the south and west
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Anthem
Advance Australia Fair [1]
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Advance Australia Fair [1]
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Europe is one of the seven traditional continents of the Earth. Physically and geologically, Europe is the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, west of Asia. Europe is bounded to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the west by the Atlantic Ocean, to the south by the Mediterranean Sea,
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Hard disk drive
An IBM hard disk drive with the metal cover removed. The platters are highly reflective.
Date Invented: September 13 1956
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An IBM hard disk drive with the metal cover removed. The platters are highly reflective.
Date Invented: September 13 1956
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memory card or flash memory card is a solid-state electronic flash memory data storage device used with digital cameras, handheld and laptop computers, telephones, music players, video game consoles, and other electronics.
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In computer networking, Fast Ethernet is a collective term for a number of Ethernet standards that carry traffic at the nominal rate of 100 Mbit/s, against the original Ethernet speed of 10 Mbit/s.
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Xbox Live is an online multiplayer gaming and content delivery service created and operated by Microsoft Corporation. It was first made available to the Xbox video game console in November 2002.
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This is a list of video game console and handheld game console sales. See List of best-selling video games for figures on video game sales.
Company Platform Released Sales
Sony PlayStation 2 2000
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Total sales ranking
Company Platform Released Sales
Sony PlayStation 2 2000
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May 10 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Events
- 1291 - Scottish nobles recognize the authority of Edward I of England.
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20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2003 2004 2005 - 2006 - 2007 2008 2009
2006 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2003 2004 2005 - 2006 - 2007 2008 2009
2006 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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The sixth-generation era (sometimes referred to as the 128-bit era; see "Number of bits" below) refers to the computer and video games, video game consoles, and video game handhelds available at the turn of the 21st century.
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video game console is an interactive entertainment computer or electronic device that manipulates the video display signal of a display device (a television, monitor, etc.) to display a game.
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Microsoft Corporation
Public (NASDAQ: MSFT )
Founded Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA (April 4 1975)[1]
Headquarters Redmond, Washington, United States
Key people Bill Gates, Co-founder and Executive Chairman ;
Paul Allen, Co-founder ;
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Public (NASDAQ: MSFT )
Founded Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA (April 4 1975)[1]
Headquarters Redmond, Washington, United States
Key people Bill Gates, Co-founder and Executive Chairman ;
Paul Allen, Co-founder ;
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Sony Corporation
ソニー株式会?
Public (TYO: 6758 ; NYSE: SNE )
Founded May 7 1946 (adopted current name in 1958) by Masaru Ibuka and Akio Morita[1]
Headquarters Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan[1]
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ソニー株式会?
Public (TYO: 6758 ; NYSE: SNE )
Founded May 7 1946 (adopted current name in 1958) by Masaru Ibuka and Akio Morita[1]
Headquarters Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan[1]
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