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June 1, 2009 1:32 PM PDT

The 404 353: Where the Sony PSP Go! at E3 looks like Eric Cartman

by Justin Yu
  • 9 comments

This show is getting too many mascots. First Boxxie McFinderberg, then our soon-to-be beta fish, and now a baby panda?! On today's show, we discuss "Terminator Salvation," Asian actors in Pixar's "UP," E3 2009, the Sony PSP Go, and the leaked Palm Pre review on Boy Genius Report.

Someone saw 'Drag Me To Hell' over the weekend...

(Credit: Edward McInTyre/CNET)

Sony and Palm are clearly using the same marketing team, because they're both mucking things up with the release of their latest products, the Palm Pre and the recent Sony PSP Go leakage. Jeff and Wilson suspect that they released it early on purpose, but the real story here is how boring it is. None of the internal specs have changed, it's the same screen as the PSP 3000 except for minor upgrades to the onboard memory. The most obvious difference is the sliding keypad. Wilson thinks it's simply useless and just another piece of hardware prone to break over time. Not surprisingly, the dudes think it's a wise move not to include a UMD slot in the new PSP Go. After all, everything is going the way of cloud computing, and you can still put a game on a Sony Memory Stick anyway. Wait a second, what the hell? Why am I even writing about all this gaming garbage? Up until five minutes before the show, I didn't even know what a PSP Go was!

Moving on: if you're running out of toilet paper for the day, print out Boy Genius Report's Palm Pre review and wipe away. BGR unveiled the "world's first review" of the new handheld on Friday, and it also happens to be the "world's most poorly written review" as well. First of all, there's a code of ethics that comes into play here, and BGR still hasn't revealed how or why they decided to leak the review before anyone else. Journalistic integrity, anyone? And come on, dude: if you're going to leak a high-profile review that you know will get a massive amount of hits, maybe spend a tiny bit more time shaping the text. We get that it's a blog, but this review reads like someone wrote it on the pot. Or maybe we're just jealous that we didn't get one first. :)

Finally, thanks again to EVERYONE that submitted logos over the weekend for our contest. It ended today, so don't send any more unless you have one that can seriously compete with the finalists (which we will debut tomorrow). Check out the final submissions below and let us know what you think in the comments. Do you have a favorite out of all of them?


EPISODE 353



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Originally posted at The 404
June 3, 2008 10:55 AM PDT

Sony to introduce 'Qore,' a PlayStation video program

by Daniel Terdiman
  • 25 comments

Sony on Tuesday said it will unveil on June 5 what it's calling Qore, a "highly interactive, monthly original program that covers the world inside PlayStation."

The idea is that Qore will offer anyone interested in the PlayStation universe a sort of peek behind the curtain at what's going on with the platform, with developers of PlayStation titles, and with the games themselves.

Unfortunately, Qore will not be broadcast to everyone. It will be available only through the official PlayStation Store, a shopping portal accessible via PlayStation 3s. Viewers who want to watch Qore will pay a $2.99 per-episode fee or they can subscribe for a year for $24.99.

According to Sony, Qore's content was designed to be interactive, offering viewers the ability to control the camera angles on much of what they watch or to look at the content with a picture-in-picture feature. They will also be presented with interactive ads.

The first episode features unseen content from upcoming PS3 games like SOCOM: US Navy SEALS Confrontation and Star Wars: The Force Unleashed.

Qore seems like a good idea in principle. Sony has had image problems during this generation of consoles, and its PS3 hasn't done nearly as well as it had hoped. So giving users the ability to get more inside information on what's going on with their console seems wise.

Except that I quibble with Sony's decision to limit Qore's viewership to those who can access it via the PlayStation Store, and to charge for the program. Wouldn't they get much more interest if anybody could watch it for free? To be sure, the program might have features that can only work on the PS3, but a scaled-down version available on some cable TV channel or on the Web would seem to be a great way to attract more people to the platform.

And I don't imagine too many people are going to migrate to the PlayStation platform just because of Qore.

I will admit the program is likely to bring in some revenue, but I can't imagine that it will be that much, and certainly not enough to stave off critics who say Sony is struggling and that the PS3 hasn't held up its end of the fiscal bargain. But make the show available to everyone, put some ads on it, and maybe they've got something.

Still, what do I know? Perhaps PS3 users will rush to fork over $2.99 an episode or $24.99 a year and Sony's fortunes will skyrocket.

But I doubt it. I really like the idea of this program because I think people always want a view of things they don't normally get to see. But asking them to pay for it is not a winning strategy to me.

On June 10, Geek Gestalt hits the highways for Road Trip 2008. I'll start in Orlando, Fla., and visit many of the South's most interesting destinations. Stay tuned, and be sure to keep up, both now and during the trip, with what I'm doing on Twitter.

Originally posted at Geek Gestalt
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