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PlayStation 3

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The PlayStation 3 (colloquially known as the PS3) is the next video game console in Sony's PlayStation series. Currently, PlayStation 3 is estimated to be available sometime in 2006, but recent developments suggest that it may in fact arrive as late as 2007, or as early as fall (October to December) 2005. Pictures at the cell project at IBM Research Labs IBM Research Labs CELL

Technology

File:Cellchip.jpg
Cell

The PlayStation 3's CPU will be a chip codenamed Cell, and the system will use chip-to-chip interface technology and memory technology from Rambus. Cell's technical details [1] were released at the February 2005 ISSCC. Cell is a processor that contains a core based on the IBM POWER architecture and several independent processing units called SPEs. Early versions of the chip will be 90-nm, with a change to a 65-nm process, if cost and performance allow. Abstracts from presentations to be presented at ISSCC show the Cell processor running at 4.6 GHz.

In December 2004, Nvidia announced that they have been in a multiyear agreement with SCEI to develop the PlayStation 3's GPU [2], a custom variant of their next-generation graphics processor. In fact, they had worked for two years on the chip before making the announcement. They were previously responsible for the GPU in the Xbox system. The GPU will be manufactured at the joint Sony/Toshiba fabrication facility in Nagasaki, Japan.

Reuters news service reports that Elpida will be supplying the RAM used in the PlayStation 3, and the company confirms speculation that the PlayStation 3 will utilize the 512 megabit version (64 Megabyte per RAM chip) of XDR DRAM, with Rambus' interface technology. Up to four can be used per Cell chip, for a maximum RAM figure of 256 Megabytes per Cell Chip.

In addition to the DVD standard of the PlayStation 2, Sony has announced that it will use Blu-ray Discs. The Blu-ray drive will probably be compatible with current DVDs, enabling the console to play DVD movies and likely PlayStation 2 games. As with Xbox 360, there have been persistent rumors that the PS3 will not have a built in hard drive.

PlayStation 3 standards

Unlike the PlayStation and PlayStation 2 systems, Sony appears to have chosen publicly-available application programming interfaces and technologies for the PlayStation 3. The current list of open standards Sony has chosen includes:

  • Cg, Nvidia's C-like shading language.
  • COLLADA, an open, xml-based file format for 3D models.
  • OpenGL ES 2.0, the embedded version of the popular OpenGL graphics API.

The list of ones they are considering includes:

  • IPv6, for connection to the next-generation Internet [3].
  • OpenMAX, a collection of fast, cross-platform tools for general "media acceleration," such as matrix calculations.
  • OpenVG, for hardware-accelerated 2D vector graphics.

Anticipation

As the latest in a series of extremely popular game consoles, anticipation surrounding the PS3 is high. Fans have already started designing images of what they think the console will look like. However, there have not been any official designs publically released by Sony as of yet. Dedicated Sony loyalists have also formed various forums, which they use to discuss all aspects of the next generation gaming system. Sony has announced that the PS3 will appear (possibly in playable form) at in 2005; it was due to be unveiled by SCEA ahead of that date[4], however public and investor showings of the console before that date have been cancelled.

Competition

The PS3 will compete for marketshare with the Xbox 360 and Nintendo's Project Revolution.

References

See also