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PlayStation 3

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PlayStation 3
PlayStation 3 Logo
PlayStation 3 Logo
PlayStation 3 in vertical position with the controller
PlayStation 3 in vertical position with the controller
ManufacturerSony Computer Entertainment
TypeVideo game console
GenerationSeventh generation era
LifespanEarly November 2006 (worldwide)
MediaBD-ROM
DVD-ROM
CD-ROM

The PlayStation 3 (PS3) is Sony's seventh generation era video game console in the PlayStation series. It is the successor to the PlayStation 2 and will mainly compete against the Nintendo Revolution and the Xbox 360. Sony has announced that the PS3 will be backward compatible with earlier PS1 and PS2 games. At the moment, little is known in public about the PS3 apart from its hardware specifications and the reports that it will be based on open APIs for the game development.

The PS3 was officially unveiled on May 16, 2005 by Sony during an E3 conference, where the console was first shown to the public. A functional version of the console was not at E3 or the Tokyo Game Show in September 2005, although at both events, demonstrations were held on devkits (for example Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots) and comparable PC hardware, and video footage based on the predicted PS3 specifications was produced (for example for Mobile Suit Gundam).

Pricing and release date

Sony was originally aiming for a spring 2006 launch as announced at the 2005 Electronic Entertainment Expo, but Sony revealed during a press conference in Japan on March 15, 2006 that there will be a delay due to issues over the finalization of Blu-ray disc copy protection technology, and as a first for any PlayStation console, Sony is now aiming for a worldwide release in early November 2006.[1]

Sony has not yet announced the pricing for PlayStation 3. Sony Computer Entertainment president and "father of the PlayStation" Ken Kutaragi has been quoted as saying "It'll be expensive" and "I'm aware that with all these technologies, the PS3 can't be offered at a price that's targeted towards households. I think everyone can still buy it if they wanted to" and "but we're aiming for consumers throughout the world. So we're going to have to do our best [in containing the price]". Ken Kutaragi believes that customers would be willing to pay extra for a superior product, as they had in the past for the original PlayStation (¥39,800 vs. ¥12,500 for the Super Famicom). (Yen to US Dollars is 117:1, so ¥39,800 is $338.79)

On the French radio program Europe 1 the president of Sony Computer Entertainment France, Georges Fornay, suggested the PlayStation 3 will sell between the price of an expensive console, $500, and well below that of a inexpensive blu-ray player, currently $1,000[2]. There were some early translations and interpretations that were denied by Sony. Because prices quoted for the Europe market contain VAT tax and prices in the U.S. do not include taxes, the Euro to dollars conversion is usually one to one as in Xbox 360 pricing.

Games in development

As of March 2006, there are already over 230 PS3 games announced by multiple developers and publishers, like SCEA, Electronic Arts, Konami, Namco, Capcom, Square Enix and many others. As well as announced titles there are likely to be many 'secret projects' already under development. Since then the PS3 will be delayed until November.

Most developers have already announced games for the PS3. Some anticipated ones include Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots, Killzone PS3, Resident Evil 5, Devil May Cry 4, Shin Megami Tensei, Armored Core 4 , Unreal Tournament 2007, Resistance: Fall of Man, Grand Theft Auto 4 (provisional title) and Tekken 6.

At the E3 2005 Press Conference, Sony showed some pre-rendered and some real-time videos of games in development with the codenames Eyedentify, Vision Gran Turismo and MotorStorm. Also shown at E3 was a Final Fantasy VII technical demo of the opening sequence remade for the PlayStation 3 system. Square Enix stated afterwards that there isn't any plans for a remake at the moment, but it is in consideration.
At this time, three games have been mentioned as PS3 launch titles: Lair from Factor 5, Warhawk from Incognito Entertainment, and Unreal Tournament 2007 from Epic Games.

Backward compatibility

Games

The PlayStation 3 will be compatible with PlayStation 2 and PlayStation. In a recent interview Ken Kutaragi stated that backward compatibility will be achieved through a combination of hardware and software.

At the PlayStation briefing on March 14, 2006 in Japan, Sony revealed that the PlayStation 3 will display legacy recoded PlayStation titles in high-definition resolutions. However, backwards capability will be limited to only games that have passed Sony's TRC (Technical Requirements Criteria). Estimates by game developers put the number of PS and PS2 titles that have passed the TRC to be around 50-85%.[3]

Peripherals

The PS3 will not be backward-compatible with some of the hardware peripherals of the PS2. For example, memory cards for the PlayStation and PlayStation 2 will not work on the PlayStation 3 hardware.[4] Instead it was announced that the PS3 will only use the Sony Memory Stick to save games. The Memory Stick will be able to store saved games for both PS1 and PS2 games, unlike the PS2's memory card. However, with the announcement of a standard 60 GB HDD with the PS3, a hard drive game saving system is very likely.

Peripherals such as MaxAction for PS2, are able to transfer PS1 and PS2 saves to a PSP Memory Stick, making the saves compatible to be read from the PS3.

Online services (PSNP)

Main article: PlayStation Network Platform

To answer to Microsoft's Xbox Live, Sony has confirmed a unified online service at the 2006 PlayStation Business Briefing meeting in Tokyo..[5] The name of the service has been given the working title "PlayStation Network Platform". Sony has confirmed that the basic online service will be free and will have sufficient functionality for online gaming. The online service is being developed jointly by Sony Computer Entertainment and Sony Online Entertainment.

Online features

Communication/Community:

  • Voice/Video chat
  • Messaging
  • Lobby/Matchmaking
  • Score/Ranking
  • Friend list/Avatar
  • Game data upload/download

Commerce:

  • Shop (accessible from inside games)
  • Content Download
  • Micro Payment
  • Subscription
  • Entitlement (user access rights) management

Account:

  • User Registration
  • Login ID/Handling of name issues

Interface and operating system

According to DevStation Conference, the PS3 will use the Cross Media Bar already used in the PlayStation Portable and PSX devices. The hard disk will come pre-installed with a Linux distribution, possibly with Cell extensions developed by IBM and Sony.[6][7]

Hardware specifications

According to a press release by Sony at the May 16 2005 E3 Conference, the specifications of the PlayStation 3 are as follows: [8]

Central processing unit

3.2 GHz Cell BE multi-core processor: PowerPC-based 'Power Processing Element' and 8 Synergistic Processing Elements (SPEs). The PPE has a 512 KiB L2 cache and one VMX (AltiVec) vector unit. Each of the eight SPEs is a RISC processor with 128-bit SIMD and superscalar functions. Each SPE has 256 KiB of software-addressable SRAM.

Only seven SPEs are active; the eighth is redundant, to improve yield. If one of the eight has a manufacturing defect, it is disabled without rendering the entire unit defective.

Graphics processing unit

Custom RSX or "Reality Synthesizer" design co-developed by NVIDIA and Sony:

  • Clocked at 550 MHz
  • 1.8 TFLOPS
  • Full high definition output (up to 1080p) x 2 channels
  • Multi-way programmable parallel floating point shader pipelines
  • 128-bit pixel precision offers rendering of scenes with high dynamic range imaging
  • 512 MB Graphics Render Memory
  • Sony has hinted it may also handle audio (possibly Nvidia's Soundstorm 2) PS3 Block Diagram

Memory

Theoretical system bandwidth

  • 25.6 GB/s to Main Ram XDR DRAM: 64 bits × 3.2 GHz
  • 22.4 GB/s to GDDR3 VRAM: 128 bits × 700 MHz × 2 accesses per clock cycle (one per edge)
  • RSX 20 GB/s (write), 15 GB/s (read)
  • SB 2.5 GB/s write and 2.5 GB/s read
  • 204.8 GB/s Cell Element Interconnect Bus (Theoretical peak performance)[9]
  • Cell FlexIO Bus: 35 GB/s outbound, 25 GB/s inbound (7 outbound and 5 inbound 1Byte wide channels operating at 5 GHz) (effective bandwidth typically 50-80% of total)[10]

Audio/video output

Sound

Storage

  • Blu-ray Disc: PlayStation 3 BD-ROM, BD-Video, BD-R, BD-RE.
  • DVD: PlayStation 2 DVD-ROM, DVD-Video, DVD-ROM, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW
  • CD: PlayStation CD-ROM, PlayStation 2 CD-ROM, CD-DA, CD-DA (ROM), CD-R, CD-RW, SACD, SACD Hybrid (CD layer) SACD HD
  • Hard Drive: Standard 60 GB, 2.5", detachable/upgradeable, with Linux pre-installed.[11][1][12]
  • Memory Stick standard/Duo and standard/mini slots
  • CompactFlash Type I and II slot
  • SD/MMC slot

It was announced on the 14th of March 2006 that all Playstation 3 games will ship on Blu-Ray Rom discs.

Communications

Networking

SCEI's press release indicates that controller connectivity to the PlayStation 3 can be provided via:

Controller

The design of the concept controller has been likened to a boomerang or a banana by many observers. According to the Japanese video game publication Famitsu, Sony Computer Entertainment chief technical officer Masayuki Chatani said that the controller design is a "prototype, so there could be some small adjustments."[13]

On March 23, 2006 at the Game Developers Conference, Phil Harrison announced that the "boomerang" design has indeed been scrapped and that a new controller design will be revealed in May at E3. [14]

Physical dimensions

  • 32 cm (L) x 24 cm (W) x 8 cm (H)[15]

Overall floating-point capability

In a slide show at their E3 conference, Sony presented the "CPU floating point capability" of the PlayStation 3's Cell CPU, and compared it to other CPUs. In their official press release, the same statistic regarding the PS3 as a whole was reported to be 2 TFLOPS[8].
The figures are rounded estimates based on addition of the theoretical maximum floating point performances of the processing units in the Cell CPU and those of the RSX GPU. Inevitably, real-world performance for both systems will be lower. Additionally, programmers may find it difficult, initially, to optimize their game engines to make the best use of the highly parallel architectures of both systems, further reducing real-world performance.

Miscellaneous

Software development

The PlayStation 3, unlike the PlayStation and PlayStation 2 systems, is based on open and publicly-available application programming interfaces.

The list of open standards includes:

  • COLLADA, an open, XML-based file format for 3D models.
  • PSGL, a modified version ofOpenGL ES 1.0 with extensions specifically aimed at the PS3
  • OpenMAX, a collection of fast, cross-platform tools for general "media acceleration," such as matrix calculations.
  • OpenVG, for hardware-accelerated 2D vector graphics.

Sublicensed technologies includes:

The list of standards they are reported to be considering includes:

Sony has selected several technologies and arranged several sublicensing agreements to create an advanced software development kit for developers. In addition, Sony recently purchased SN Systems, a former provider of Microsoft Windows based development tools for a variety of console platforms including the PlayStation 2, GameCube, PSP and Nintendo DS to create additional GNU development tools. Sony is providing all developers with GNU toolchains where SN Systems will provide more customer-oriented GNU tools at an additional cost.

Region coding

During a Q&A session at the 2006 Game Developers Conference, Sony Computer Entertainment Worldwide Studios President Phil Harrison confirmed that the PlayStation 3 will indeed feature region-free gaming. [20]

Blu-ray movies will use a region code. However, the Blu-ray region code will be different from the DVD region code.[21]

Region code Area
1 United States, Canada, Mexico, South America, Japan and East Asia (excluding China)
2 Europe and Africa
3 China, Russia, India, Pakistan and all other countries.

Gallery


Screenshot gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Sony delays PlayStation 3 launch". BBC News. March 15, 2006.
  2. ^ "PlayStation 3 European pricing suggested". maxps3.com. April 6, 2006.
  3. ^ "PS3 not really 100% backward compatible". PS3 Portal. March 15. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
  4. ^ "No More Memory Cards". www.maxconsole.net. Retrieved Jul 31. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ "PlayStation Network Platform detailed". www.gamespot.com. Retrieved Mar 15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ "Cell Broadband Engine resource center". IBM. Retrieved 2006-03-15.
  7. ^ "Linux™ extensions, key software development tools released for Cell Broadband Engine microprocessor". IBM. Retrieved 2006-03-15.
  8. ^ a b "Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. to launch its next generation computer entertainment system" (PDF). Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. Retrieved June 10. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "Cell Broadband Engine Architecture and its first implementation: a performance view (subsection The Element Interconnect Bus)". IBM. Retrieved Nov 29. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ "Cell Broadband Engine Architecture and its first implementation: a performance view (subsection Flexible I/O Interface)". IBM. Retrieved Nov 29. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ "PS Biz Brief 06: PS3 HDD Required - It's 60GB and Linux too". ign.com. Retrieved 2006-03-15.
  12. ^ "CONFIRMED: PS3 to Ship with HDD". next-gen.biz. March 20, 2006. Retrieved 2006-03-20.
  13. ^ "Sony Undecided on Hard Disk". IGN. June 1. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
  14. ^ "Sony confirms PS3 controller redesign". Engadget. 2006. Retrieved March 23. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ "From Xbox to Xbox 360, from PS2 to PS3". Nikkei Business Publications, Inc. June 20. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
  16. ^ "pixeluxentertainment.com". Retrieved Sep 15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |org= ignored (help)
  17. ^ "alias.com now autodesk". Retrieved Feb 25. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |org= ignored (help)
  18. ^ "Kynogon joins SCEI's "PLAYSTATION3" Tools & Middleware program" (PDF). Retrieved Jan 25. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |org= ignored (help)
  19. ^ "Juniper Networks on IPv6 and MPLS networking in Asia – Part I". DigiTimes Publication. Retrieved June 10. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  20. ^ "Region-Free PS3 Gaming Announced". IGN.com. Retrieved March 22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ "BluRay Region Coding Announced - Japan & US Same Region Code". cdrinfo.com. Retrieved Dec 28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)

External links