Sony upped the ante Wednesday in the looming handheld-game war, giving its PlayStation Portable device a price and an on-sale date likely to inspire fierce competition with Nintendo's DS.
The PSP will go on sale in Japan on Dec. 12 for about $185 (19,800 yen), Sony Computer Entertainment said in a statement. The release comes sooner and cheaper than many analysts had expected. The company has not yet set a U.S. date or price for the PSP. Sony has said the PSP will arrive in the United States at the end of March. U.S. pricing for game hardware is usually similar to or slightly below the cost in Japan.
Sony announced the PSP last year in a high-profile bid to expand on its PlayStation 2 console, which dominates sales of home game systems. The PSP will sport an advanced display, a new optical media format Sony expects to also use for movies and music, and a processor only slightly less powerful than the one that powers the PlayStation 2.
While the PSP is expected to have a large ready-made audience of PlayStation enthusiasts, the device has been bedeviled by reports of delays and lackluster support by game developers. Several analysts have speculated that Sony would not be able to meet its target to ship the device this year. They've also forecast a steep price tag, with estimates ranging as high as $300 due to the advanced technology behind the PSP.
The $185 price sets up the PSP for a head-to-head tussle with the DS, the advanced handheld game player Nintendo will introduce in the United States in mid-November. Nintendo has long ruled the handheld game player market with its Game Boy franchise. The DS will sell for $150, also far lower than initial expectations.
The company says that manufacturing facilities in Shenzhen and Chengdu, China, will be inspected by a group "dedicated to ending sweatshop conditions in factories worldwide."
The Samsung Galaxy Mini 2 S6500 could make its debut at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona later this month, according to a leaked promotional image.
The space agency powers down its last System Z machine, years after IBM stopped selling them for the mathematical calculation jobs for which NASA originally bought them.
A group calling itself Evil Shadow Team reportedly hacked into Microsoft's online store in India, stealing usernames and passwords of the site's customers.