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The software giant announced Tuesday that it has extended its contract with Fonix Speech, an operating division of Fonix in Salt Lake City. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
The voice recognition feature debuted in the original Xbox design and became a key factor in Microsoft's launch of Xbox Live service back in November 2002. With it, gamers can chat back and forth during networked games or interact while watching movies or listening to music.
The feature was so successful, Microsoft pushed to include voice chat in every Xbox game title. Fonix said its voice command technology is included in Xbox-compatible Tom Clancy titles from Ubisoft; Delta Force-Black Hawk Down, published by Novalogic; and SWAT: Global Strike Team, published by Vivendi Universal Games.
Keeping the continuity with Fonix is one of several steps Microsoft is taking to make sure Xbox 360 is backward-compatible with its predecessor.
Microsoft has yet to publish prices or release dates for its Xbox 360. Various reports suggest the console will be globally released in November and competitively priced to match its current $299 price tag.
When it debuts, Microsoft said its Xbox 360 will have a 20GB hard drive, a custom-built IBM PowerPC-based CPU, high-definition game support and a 500MHz ATI graphics processor.
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Fonix, Microsoft Xbox, voice recognition, Xbox 360, console






- Current $299 price tag?
- by bobby_brady May 31, 2005 4:35 PM PDT
- Come on CNET!
- Like this Reply to this comment
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- Not to mention...
- by tubedogg May 31, 2005 6:23 PM PDT
- The games listed by Fonix are games that actually use voice recognition...the writer of this story somehow connected voice chat with voice recognition, which are two totally separate things: voice command or voice recognition is used in a handful of games, all of which are squad-based tactical shooters, and allows the player to issue voice commands to CPU-controlled teammates; voice chat is used in nearly every Xbox game that has multiplayer through Xbox Live and is simply two or more players having a conversation with each other. I'm presuming this story was written based on the press release on Fonix's site here [1] which you'll note doesn't mention voice chat or Xbox Live at all.
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(5 Comments)Finally, voice chat is not surviving "despite" additions, it is a key component of Xbox Live and continuing it's place as such on the 360.
[1] http://www.fonix.com/page.cfm?name=news&id=1546