Archive for: mobile device

Gaming Consoles on the way out. Mobile devices to replace big, bulky units in as little as 5 years?

  • December 15, 2009 3:35 pm

rrod2Are gaming consoles, the very thing that has kept many a geek enthralled for years, on the way out? Is their relevance slowly disappearing as mobile devices become more and more powerful with scalable options and outputs that are ever increasing?

To highlight this simple though looming question, look at the iPhone. While on the device itself the hardware isn’t too spectacular compared to current gaming champs such as the Xbox 360 and PS3, the iPhone is quickly pushing the idea of mobile gaming ahead quicker than it has ever moved before. If someone asked you years back when the original Playstation was released if they ever dreamed that within 15 years someone would be able to play the same games on a phone, chances are you’d laugh and discount them as crazy. Yet here were in 2009 with very playable Playstation One games running on emulators aboard jailbroken iPhones.

But simple on device hardware isn’t going to kill traditional consoles alone. What about those late night parties and weekend frag fests with your friends? If everyone stayed in their room and kept their nose in their own little device, who would have fun gaming anymore? The expanding options to connect phones to TV’s is coming. Looking ahead to 2010, several phones are rumored to be coming with HDMI-out. Watching movies via your phone will be easier and more fluid than ever. If the same phone has the graphical muscle and supporting games to make the most of that muscle, such connections will ultimately make the traditional gaming console obsolete.

iphone-gameJust think, in as little as 5 years, a LAN party could involve nothing more than 20 people showing up at a gaming event with nothing more than themselves and their phone. Again, it’s crazy to think about because even now, LAN parties require some pretty meaty laptops. Ok, so maybe 5 years to the day won’t see gaming laptops reborn inside of phones, but I bet you if we stretch that limit to 10 years the outcome will more substantial. Besides the expanding power of mobile devices, one can also look towards the increase in game downloads, streaming, and other types of cloud services that are beginning to render physical media obsolete as we speak.

The addition of high definition outputs on mobile devices coupled with the push online is only making a market ripe for the taking of any young and forward thinking entrepreneur. Even traditional consoles are relying more and more on cloud based services and features. Though such consoles will always suffer from one big flaw — the cords that tether them to the walls. With battery technology of the near future coupled with the increasing advancements in mobile graphics and computing technologies, the day of the gaming console may be nearing the end.

I’m not trying to drum up mass hysteria and panic by putting a date on console gaming’s death. Though the brains behind such projects as the Xbox and PS platform should be looking at mobile gaming with at least one eye intently trained on it. Whether they like it or not, mobile devices will one day become the go to hardware. Will the golden oldies reinvent themselves or will they suffer the same fate as several other aging industries (namely US auto and newspaper industries) have faced?

What do you think, will the Xbox 720 and PS4 be the last of a dying breed?

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The xPhone will decimate all mobile devices! [Video]

  • December 9, 2009 9:14 am

xphoneHaving as many things as you can think of crammed into one device seems like a gift from above. But often times, such gadgets often suffer from “jack of all trades, master of none” syndrome in that no single feature stands out for being amazing. A phone stuffed with a bajillion mediocre features is far from exciting and in fact quite frustrating and disappointing. Thankfully we can always dream about the “xPhone” — a do it all, no compromises mobile device that fits everything inside. Hell, the kitchen sink might even be in there somewhere. We joke now, but someday such spoofs will be more reality than we can even fathom. In essence, the video and the creator do a good job highlighting how at times, we nerd scan be a bit impractical and silly when feature support is concerned.

As for the xPhone, I say bring it on. Though I don’t think I’d lose too much sleep if the VHS option was left out. I haven’t touched one of those in years. Anyway, the day I can whip out my 30″ iMac from a case the size of a stick of gum is the day I can claim to truly have seen it all. What’s your digital drug?

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Technabob > Electrobeans

ARM’s announces their Cortex A5 multi-core mobile processor

  • October 21, 2009 12:23 pm

Current smartphones may suffer from laggy interfaces and stuttering multimedia performance because of weak internal hardware. Fret no more, put away those tissues and slap a smile on that pretty little mouth of yours as such experiences will soon be a thing of the past. The savior? ARM’s new Cortex A5 multi-core processor should certainly take care of all current slowness and then some. Labeled by ARM as “the smallest, lowest power ARM multicore processor capable of delivering the Internet to the widest possible range of devices” means this new processor will have some big shoes to fill and reputations to keep up. Of interest to mobile device junkies, the new A5 processor will be twice as energy efficient as older A9 and A11 chips giving future phones longer run times between outlet tetherings as well as leading to overall smaller devices thanks to a smaller physical footprint. The real kicker is the delivery date which ARM simply states as “this quarter”. Hell yeah! We can’t forget the 1GHz beast also known as Snapdragon. The current hotness for sure. Though I can assure you that once the ARM Cortex A5 multi-core struts it’s stuff, we’re all going to ask: “Snapdragon what?”

In case you were wondering, the chip pictured is not the A5.
Unwired

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