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Xbox 360 Vs PS3
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billywows
Elite |
10-Nov-2006 19:39
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singaporegal
Supreme |
09-Nov-2006 16:47
Yells: "Female TA nut" |
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Hi tabbykat, Its really hard to say for chartered. Could be either way... 50-50 |
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tabbykat
Member |
09-Nov-2006 16:38
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Thanks Singaporegal, I thought it may make a breakout from the very tight Bollinger soon. Do you think so? If there is a breakout, Up or Down? Cheers |
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singaporegal
Supreme |
08-Nov-2006 21:58
Yells: "Female TA nut" |
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Hi tabbykat, Hard to tell for chartered.... I think it'll probably remain stagnant for a while. Its been hovering around 1.20 for a long time already. |
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tabbykat
Member |
08-Nov-2006 21:57
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Hi TA Gurus, What's you take on this stock. It seems to me it is uptrending soon. Cheers. |
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billywows
Elite |
07-Nov-2006 18:03
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AP Microsoft to Offer Shows on Xbox Live Tuesday November 7, 2:33 am ET By Elizabeth M. Gillespie, AP Business Writer REDMOND, Wash. (AP) -- Microsoft Corp. has teamed up with a handful of Hollywood studios to sell TV shows and rent movies that can be downloaded through the software maker's Xbox Live online video-game service and beamed straight onto television sets.
The company announced Monday that beginning Nov. 22, Xbox Live users with the latest console will be able to choose from shows including "South Park," which airs on MTV's Comedy Central, and CBS Corp.'s "CSI," and movies including Warner Bros.' "V for Vendetta" and Paramount Pictures' "Mission Impossible III."
In addition to CBS, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment and Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures and MTV Networks, Microsoft has signed agreements with Turner Broadcasting System Inc. and Ultimate Fighting Championship, a privately held Las Vegas company that primarily broadcasts pay-per-view fights. Financial terms of the partnerships were not disclosed. Ross Honey, senior director of Microsoft's media, content and partner strategy group, estimated that 750 hours of programming would be available as soon as the service launches and roughly 1,000 hours by the end of the year. The programming -- most of it in standard-definition format and some in high-definition -- will be available through the Xbox 360 console to any user of Xbox Live's free or paid online service, which allows gamers with broadband connections to send text or voice messages to each other, and watch movie trailers and other product demonstrations. Microsoft hasn't said how much the downloads will cost, only that prices for programs broadcast in standard definition will be "competitive" with those offered by competitors, including Apple Computer Inc.'s iTunes store, Movielink, CinemaNow and Amazon.com's Unbox. TV shows through those services generally go for $1.99 per episode, while movie rentals generally cost about $3.99. Microsoft will sell TV shows for purchase only, and the only option for movies will be a rental that expires 24 hours after you start watching it. High-definition content will cost more than standard-definition programming, Honey said, because it requires a lot more bandwidth to broadcast in the higher-quality format. A key advantage Microsoft is hoping will play in its favor is that consumers will be able to watch the content on their TV sets rather than on computers or portable digital devices, the standards for most of the competing services. "Being able to watch on your TV, yeah, that's a pretty big deal," said David Cole, president of DFC Intelligence, a market research firm based in San Diego. IPods and other devices can be plugged into TV sets with optional cables, though the picture quality usually suffers a bit. A handful of gadgets that act as a bridge between computers and TVs also are available but haven't gained much consumer traction. Apple's chief executive, Steve Jobs, recently showed off a compact set-top box, dubbed iTV, that will allow consumers to wirelessly send movies purchased online -- as well as other digital content stored on a computer -- to a television set. He said it will be available early next year. Much like the Media Center edition of Windows XP, which Microsoft touts as an all-in-one PC and home entertainment center, the new Xbox service aims to bolster Microsoft's presence in the living room. Nevertheless, industry analysts aren't predicting it will drive hordes of people to buy the Xbox console. "This is already a game system -- so it's really going to sell to a presold audience," Cole said. "People aren't going to be buying it for these features, I don't think." Some analysts said the initial variety of Xbox TV and movie programming struck them as a bit thin. "The size of the launch library did feel a bit too small to be able to make a huge immediate impact," said Jason Anderson, director of research at San Francisco-based International Development Group. "But what it does is send out a signal flare to the rest of the industry that there's a commitment from Microsoft to be able to sell multiple types of content through the Xbox." Analysts are not predicting that the new service will steal much business away from Sony Corp.'s market-leading PlayStation franchise, but the consensus seems to be that it will help Microsoft remain competitive. The Xbox service will launch less than a week after Sony's PlayStation 3 video-game console hits store shelves in the United States. Sony has not said whether it will sell TV shows and movies through PS3, though company officials last month said the forthcoming online PlayStation Store is being set up so users could potentially download movies through the PS3. It would be easy for Sony to sell TV and movie downloads, given its ready access to shows and films produced by its Sony Pictures division. "Sony has a wealth of entertainment content available to us at our fingertips, whether it's movies, television or music. It's just a matter of us tapping into that content, and we will be making an announcement about that at some point," said Dave Karraker, spokesman for Sony Computer Entertainment America. The PS3, due out in U.S. stores on Nov. 17, will be able to play games and DVDs at "1080p," which is the highest-definition resolution currently available. Microsoft has developed a high-definition DVD drive that can be added to the Xbox 360. It will hit store shelves in the U.S., Europe and Japan in the coming weeks. --------------------- |
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scotty
Senior |
05-Nov-2006 14:37
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XBox has great marketing. It aligns itself with solid games. Recently, on the papers there are advertisements on Gears of Wars. I also saw a Gears of Wars event in Funan. I don't remember PS doing anything like this. |
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billywows
Elite |
05-Nov-2006 13:02
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Sunday November 5, 12:34 PM Make or break for Sony as PlayStation 3 finally launchesIt has taken six years, hundreds of Japan's best brains and untold millions to develop, but the much hyped and delayed PlayStation 3 finally launches this week with Sony's future riding on it. Sony and its rivals are stepping up the battle in the multi-billion-dollar global gaming market with fast-action, high-definition new machines. The PlayStation 3 (PS3) faces fierce competition from Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Nintendo's Wii and costs almost twice the price of the two rival consoles. Even so, for now production is Sony's biggest worry, not demand. Sony Computer Entertainment is only shipping 100,000 PS3 consoles for the launch in Japan this Saturday and few doubt they will be quickly snapped up. "As many as they'll be able to produce they'll be able to sell," said David Gibson, an electronics analyst at Macquarie Securities in Tokyo. "While there's now more competition I still think that the PlayStation 3 will sell in substantial quantities," he said. A bigger challenge could be in North America, where Sony will ship 400,000 PS3s for the debut there on November 17. Sony was forced to delay the global launch of the PS3 by about six months until this November due to problems with the high-definition DVD player, giving the Xbox 360 a one-year head start. The company pushed back the rollout again until March 2007 in Europe as it grapples with production problems that mean many Japanese fans are also likely to go home empty handed. "I think most people were expecting something like one million (PS3s to be shipped) for the initial week launch period," said Sony Computer Entertainment spokeswoman Yoshiko Furusawa. "One hundred thousand is just not enough. But what we are trying to do, hopefully, is make continuous shipments weekly or bi-weekly," she told AFP. Despite the delays, Sony has maintained its forecast to ship six million PS3s worldwide by March 2007. Sony has long dominated the home video-game market and shipments of the original version and the PlayStation 2 have both topped 100 million each. The success of the console is considered vital to a revival at Sony, which is in the midst of major restructuring including 10,000 job cuts under its first foreign chief executive, the Welsh-American Howard Stringer. Sony last month slashed its operating profit forecast for this fiscal year by 62 percent to 50 billion yen (423 million dollars) because of recalls of millions of its defective batteries and swelling costs related to the PS3. It now expects its game division to make a loss of about 200 billion yen this fiscal year after it cut the price of the PS3 in Japan by one-fifth amid complaints it was too expensive. Even so, at 49,980 yen (423 dollars) for the standard 20-gigabyte hard disc, the PS3 is still almost twice the price of the cheapest Xbox 360 at 29,800 yen, and Nintendo's Wii which launches in December at 25,000 yen. "I think the price (of the PS3) will have to decline further so that on the hardware they won't really make much money for the next couple of years," said Gibson at Macquarie Securities. "However, the software is where you make the money," he added. Sony refuses to say exactly how much it has spent on the PS3 but admits that it will initially lose money on each console after spending hundreds of millions of dollars on new technologies such as the "Cell" microprocessor. "The amount of money Sony spent on the development of Cell is enormous," said Osamu Hirose, analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Center. "People may say the PS3 will sell like the PS2 -- 20 million units per year. But I don't think 20 million units will cover the cost of the Cell project. "Sony has to make more use of Cell and make PS3 not just a game but a multi-functional appliance that people use every day," he said. Sony wants the PS3 to be a home entertainment centre that people also use to play high definition DVDs, browse the Internet, chat to friends, listen to music and store photos. Sony Computer Entertainment head Ken Kutaragi, known as "The Father of the PlayStation" began working on the PS3 right after the launch of the PlayStation 2 in 2000 -- so is he already preparing to start work on a successor? "We haven't even launched the PlayStation 3 so I think it is a little bit too premature to talk of a PlayStation 4," said Sony's Furusawa. |
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billywows
Elite |
27-Oct-2006 07:39
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Microsoft profit, revenue climb 11% LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- Microsoft Corp. said late Thursday that its quarterly profit and revenue both rose 11%, topping expectations, on continued strong demand for its server software and a sharp jump in sales at the Xbox video-gaming unit.
Microsoft's entertainment unit, which houses Xbox, enjoyed a 70% sales surge during the quarter compared with a year ago. The company has now sold six million of the consoles globally and its Xbox Live gaming service signed up its four millionth subscriber during the September-ending quarter.
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singaporegal
Supreme |
24-Sep-2006 11:56
Yells: "Female TA nut" |
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Chartered still downtrending. Sharp price change imminent from TA charts. | |||||
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billywows
Elite |
22-Sep-2006 21:41
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Gaming war breaking out in November ..... Nintendo may be the ultimate winner in terms of pricing! --------------------- Responds to consumer complaints the console is too expensive Ken Kutaragi, president of Sony Computer Entertainment, reportedly said at the Tokyo Game Show Friday that the price cut came in response to customer complaints that the console was too expensive.
The PS3 will still be more expensive than its chief rivals, Microsoft's XBox 360 and Nintendo's Wii. The Xbox 360 sells for 39,795 yen in Japan, while the Wii has been priced at 25,000 yen.
Nintendo shares ended up 2.6%.
The PS3 is scheduled to be released on Nov. 11. See more global markets coverage.
Ilya Garger is a reporter for MarketWatch based in Hong Kong. |
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billywows
Elite |
09-Sep-2006 22:56
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A new gaming competitor in the near future? -------------------- September 08, 2006 01:23 PM ET Dell founder sees gaming in PC industry futureAUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Dell Inc. founder and Chairman Michael Dell sees computer gaming becoming a $4 billion-per-year industry by 2010 as consumers hook up to high-speed Internet services to battle monsters on-line. Dell told the Austin Game Conference on Thursday night that his company is positioning itself to be a leader in computer gaming. "Things like multi-core processors, acceleration engines for physics and graphics, wide-screen displays, web cams: there are a lot of great things happening on the hardware side that can really make the gaming experience quite exciting," Dell said. Dell Inc., the world's leading personal computer maker with $55.9 billion in revenue last year, acquired Alienware, a Miami-based maker of gaming systems, earlier this year. Alienware had $200 million in revenue in 2005. Dell, a Texas native who has long admitted being a big fan of computer games, says he attended the conference to determine what game architects and designers want to see in computer hardware. "I want to know what kinds of things they're looking for in hardware, and they like to discover what's happening with hardware, new features and new capabilities, so they can make sure they're enabled in next generation games," he said. |
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FORREST
Member |
09-Sep-2006 13:06
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billywows
Elite |
08-Sep-2006 21:50
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MSFT working fast to capture Japanese market share ... -------------------- September 08, 2006 04:32 AM ET Microsoft to Release Cheaper XboxTOKYO (AP) - Microsoft Co. is set to release a cheaper, bare-bones version of the Xbox 360 video game console in Japan to boost flagging sales ahead of the arrival of new machines from rivals later in the year. The Japanese unit of U.S.-based Microsoft Corp. will launch a Xbox 360 console on Nov. 2 that comes without the 20-gigabyte hard drive and other accessories included with the standard version, according to Microsoft spokesman Jun Yoshihara. The low-end version, already sold as the Xbox 360 Core System in the United States and Europe, will sell for 29,800 yen ($255) -- about 10,000 yen ($86) less than its standard version, Yoshihara said. Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, will also offer two free games to buyers of the new model in Japan for a limited time, he said. Players don't need a hard drive to run most Xbox 360 games, unless they want to save games midway, and can buy a 20-gigabyte hard drive for about 9,500 yen ($80) or a smaller memory stick for 3,200 yen ($27). Sales of Xbox 360 in Japan have been sluggish in Japan, at 158,000 units as of Sunday from its release late last year, according to Enterbrain Inc. The software giant, which does not release sales figures in Japan, has sold about 5 million units of the video game console worldwide. Microsoft's announcement came after rival firm Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. said Wednesday its PlayStation 3 will go on sale in November in the United States and Japan, but fewer units will be available for the launch dates. Worldwide, Sony expects to ship only 2 million units of its much-awaited update to the popular game console instead of 4 million as originally planned, Sony Computer chief Ken Kutaragi said Wednesday. Another competitor, Nintendo Co., is set to introduce its Wii game console within the year. |
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billywows
Elite |
08-Sep-2006 21:25
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Seems like IBM producing chips for Nintendo, while CSM for MSFT. Very ironic when IBM and CSM are working together on the 45nm low power process technology with 2 others chips makers .... Anyway, let's see which is the winning gamer this Christmas sales. |
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FORREST
Member |
08-Sep-2006 18:02
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not sure if this news has any relevance to Chartered....anyone? SAN FRANCISCO ? The microprocessors that will power Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s upcoming Wii video game console are now being shipped from IBM Corp.'s East Fishkill, N.Y., fab, IBM said Friday (Sept. 8). IBM and Nintendo signed a multi-year chip production agreement to support the upcoming launch of the game console earlier this year. IBM claims that the chip, code-named "Broadway," will deliver experiences not previously possible on video game consoles. "The first chips are in our possession," said Genyo Takeda, Nintendo's senior managing director and general manager of its integrated research and development division, in a statement. "Today's milestone marks the final stage of our drive to reach both core and nontraditional gamers with an inviting, inclusive and remarkable gaming experience." Under the terms of the agreement, IBM will produce millions of 90-nanometer Power Architecture-based chips featuring silicon-on-insulator(SOI) technology for Wii. IBM said the SOI technology helps deliver improved processing power and a 20 percent reduction in energy consumption. "When millions of gamers take the controls of Wii this holiday season, the IBM logo will once again be front and center on this innovative new product," said Ron Martino IBM's director of technology collaboration solutions. IBM has been producing chips for Nintendo gaming consoles since the Nintendo GameCube in 1999. IBM also delivered a multicore processor for Microsoft Corp.'s rival Xbox 360 gaming console last year. In a move that may shift the focus in the videogame console battle from fast, powerful processing engines to more intuitive user interfaces, Japan's Nintendo in May unveiled a videogame controller that uses three-axis motion signal-processing technology. Analog Devices Inc. and STMicroelectronics are key suppliers for the microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) sensors used in the controller. Nintendo developed the controller platform for Wii (pronounced "whee"). |
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Nostradamus
Supreme |
08-Sep-2006 17:40
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Chartered would be an indirect beneficiary of the postponement of the launch in Europe of Sony's PlayStation 3 video game console, which could drive up sales of rival Microsoft's Xbox 360 video game console. Chartered will benefit from market share gain by the Xbox 360 as it produces about half of the requirements for Power PC microprocessors used in the Xbox 360. |
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billywows
Elite |
06-Sep-2006 18:05
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Another good headstart for Xbox 360 ... ------------------------ The console's launch is being pushed back to March 2007. It was previously scheduled to go on sale on Nov. 17.
The delay is the latest setback for the PS3 release, which has been beset by delays and concerns about pricing.
The delay is due to difficulties in manufacturing the PS3's advanced Blu-ray DVD system, according to reports.
Sony shares fell 0.98% in Tokyo trading on Wednesday before the announcement. Also see Asia Markets.
In addition to delaying the console's European release, the Blu-ray production problem would reduce the number of units available for the machine's U.S. and Japanese launches in November, Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. President Ken Kutaragi reportedly said.
The launch dates for both Japan and North America remain unchanged, however, at Nov. 11 and Nov. 17 respectively, the company said.
And Kutaragi reportedly affirmed earlier projections that Sony would ship six million consoles worldwide by the end of the fiscal year ending March 2007.
In August, Japanese brokerage Mitsubishi UFJ Securities halved its forecast for PS3 shipments through March to three million, citing looming supply-chain problems for high-tech components. It also downgraded Sony's stock rating.
"This seems to be the continuation of a series of bad news. People were prepared to wait for the PS3, but delaying its European launch so they miss the Christmas season is just so not good," said James Hong, head of equity derivatives trading at Dresdner Kleinwort in Tokyo, according to Dow Jones Newswires.
"This is a crucial product given its Blu-ray features, and they need to get it out fast. I doubt this is going to help their stock price."
Tokai-Tokyo Securities analyst Osamu Hirose said it was bad news for Sony, but added in a Dow Jones Newswire report that the damage from a delay in the European launch might not be too significant.
"The market won't take it well," Hirose said. "But in contrast to consumers in Japan, consumers in Europe don't seem to be as intent on getting the latest equipment, so if they are interested in buying a PlayStation, they might go for a PlayStation 2 without much of a fuss."
Hirose said he was maintaining a neutral rating on Sony's stock. See more technology coverage.
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ralphguy
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14-Aug-2006 18:34
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billywows, it is indeed from your post in CSMq3 views:
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ralphguy
Member |
14-Aug-2006 18:22
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i cant remember where i read from... maybe is from 1 of your post... i read that DELL going to announce Q2 report and then it doesnt seems that positive. tik they had lower their estimates. let me go find.... Yes... i definitely believe that the bankers had already bought in and accumulated those "cheap" CSM/STATchip over last few weeks. then now they will slowly off load when these counters cheonging.. but see how la... maybe it is true that CSM is really a good buy... jus my opinions lo... |
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