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XBOX#REDIRECT Xbox XBox#REDIRECT Xbox XboxThe Xbox is Microsoft's game console, released on November 15 2001. It is Microsoft's first independent venture into the console arena, after having collaborated with Sega in porting Windows CE to the Sega Dreamcast console. The price is currently 149 USD, 149 EUR, 99 GBP, 200 Canadian_Dollar, 249 AUD, 290 NZD and 1200 NOK. Notable launch titles for the console include ''Amped'', ''Dead or Alive 3'', ''Halo: Combat Evolved'', ''Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee'', and ''Project Gotham Racing''. ==History== The Xbox was initially developed within Microsoft by a small crew including Seamus Blackley, a game developer and high energy physicist. While some critics were initially concerned that the Xbox would allow Microsoft to extend its dominance of the PC software market to consoles, As of 2005 estimates show the Xbox's share of the worldwide console market is not much ahead of the Nintendo GameCube and far behind the PlayStation 2. Indeed, Xbox for the most part has a similar (but smaller) selection of the teen-adult games that the Playstation 2 has, with Xbox's advantages mainly being in performance, graphics and sound. Initially, Xbox did have trouble getting console-exclusive games, a strategy with the Grand Theft Auto (GTA) series that made the PlayStation 2 very successful but later the exclusivity deal was amended after GTA's publisher realized the sales potential of having GTA on the Xbox. Some consider the Xbox's freshman forey into the console market particularly successful in spite of the established dominance of PlayStation 2 whose market lead had been due to the original PlayStation base, and compared to the GameCube which has failed to match the sales of the Nintendo64 predecessor. The Xbox has not sold well in Japan, due to the Japanese people's poor acceptance of non-Japanese consoles, limited Japanese developer support, few game choices and the large size of the hardware itself. In much of Europe, the Xbox is currently slightly ahead of the GameCube, but is still far behind the PlayStation 2. Microsoft predicted that it would not make a profit on the Xbox for at least three years and that turned out to be correct; the division had its first profitable quarter in 2005. In November 2002, Microsoft released the successful Xbox Live online gaming service, allowing subscribers to play online Xbox games with (or against) other subscribers all around the world and download new content for their games to the hard drive. This online service only works with broadband. The milestone of 1 million subscribers was announced in July 2004. Several internal hardware revisions have been made to discourage modding, cut manufacturing costs, and to provide a more reliable DVD-ROM drive (the early units' drives were prone to failure). ==Hardware== Microsoft built the Xbox around industry-standard Personal computer hardware, unlike the traditionally proprietary design of nearly all other gaming consoles. However, it still uses standard console architecture. The inclusion of the hard disk not only serves as a disk cache for faster game loading times compared to the PS2 and repository for saved game information (eliminating the need for sold-separately memory cards), it also allows users to download and save new content for their games from Xbox Live and copy music from Red Book (audio CD standard) so players can partially or completely replace the soundtrack of Xbox games that support Custom Soundtracks, all firsts in console history. Custom Soundtracks are often supported in non-cinematic games (e.g. racing/driving games) where the music is inconsequential to what is happening in the game. Although the Xbox is based on commodity PC hardware and runs a stripped-down version of the Windows 2000 kernel (computers) using APIs based largely on DirectX, it incorporates restrictions designed to prevent uses not approved by Microsoft. The Xbox does not use Windows CE due to Microsoft internal politics at the time, as well as limited support in Windows CE for DirectX. The Xbox is much larger and heavier than its contemporaries, and shipped with an unusually large controller. This is largely due to the large, tray-loading DVD-ROM drive and the standard-size 3.5" hard drive. Despite managing to be smaller and lighter than similar commodity PCs, the Xbox has found itself a target of mild derision, as gamers poke fun at it for things like a (overly cautious) warning in the Xbox manual that a falling Xbox "could cause serious injury" to a small child or pet. While some elements of the Xbox's design, like break-away cables for the controllers to prevent the console from being yanked from the shelf, take the size into account, it has undoubtedly hurt the system's sales to the space-conscious Japanese. Another common complaint about the system was that the original game controller design was seen as too large for some people. For the Japanese Xbox launch, a new and smaller controller was introduced, a design which was subsequently released in other markets as the "Controller S", which eventually replaced the original design. Currently, all Xbox consoles come with a "Controller S", and the original version of the controller (also known as 'The Duke') is no longer sold. ===Detailed specifications=== *CPU: 733 MHz Intel Pentium III processor, with a 133 MHz FSB *Graphics Processor: 250 MHz custom chip named the NV2x, developed by Microsoft and nVIDIA (comparable to a low-end GeForce 4 card) *Total computer storage: 64 MB DDR SDRAM running at 200 MHz, supplied by Micron *Memory Bandwidth: 6.4 GB/s *Polygon Performance: 125 million flat-shaded polys/second **(Microsoft figure. Some critics assert that the Xbox's polygon-per-second number is exaggerated by unrealistic testing conditions.) *Sustained Polygon Performance: 100+ M/s (transformed and lit polygons per second) *Micropolygons/particles per second: 125 M/s *Particle Performance: 125 M/s *Simultaneous Textures: 4 *Pixel Fill Rate - No Texture: 4.0 G/s (Anti-aliasing) *Pixel Fill Rate - 1 Texture: 4.0 G/s anti-aliased *Compressed Textures: Yes (6:1) *Full Scene Anti-Alias: Yes *Micro Polygon Support: Yes *Storage Medium: 2-5x DVD, 8 gigabyte hard disk, optional 8 MB memory card *I/O: 2-5x DVD, 8 GB/10 GB hard disk, 8 MB memory card *Audio Channels: 64 3D channels (up to 256 stereo voices) *3D Audio Support: Yes *Musical Instrument Digital Interface DLS2 Support: Yes *Dolby Digital Encoded Game Audio: Yes (via TOSLINK) *Broadband Enabled: Yes (10/100base-T Ethernet) *DVD Movie Playback: Yes (separate DVD Playback Kit/Remote required) *Maximum Resolution (2x32bpp frame buffers +Z): 1920(vert.)x1080(horiz) **Note: NTSC (Non-HD) TV's have less than 500 horizontal lines. PAL TV's have less than 600 horizontal lines. *High definition television Support: Yes, 480p/720p/1080i (see game boxes for supported resolutions). *Controller Ports: 4 proprietary Universal Serial Bus-based ports *Weight: 3.86 kg *Dimensions: 324 × 265 × 90 mm (12.8 × 10.4 × 3.5 inches) ==Official Xbox accessories== ===Audio/video connectors=== *Standard AV Cable: Provides composite video and monaural or Stereo to TVs equipped with RCA jack inputs. Comes with the system. European systems come with a RCA jack to SCART converter block in addition to the cable. *RF Adapter: Provides a combined audio and video signal on an RF connector. *Advanced AV Pack: A breakout box that provides S-Video and TOSLINK audio in addition to the RCA composite video and stereo audio of the Standard AV Cable. *High Definition AV Pack: A breakout box, intended for HDTVs, that provides a YUV component video signal over three RCA connectors. Also provides analog RCA and digital TOSLINK audio outputs. *Advanced SCART Cable: The European equivalent to the Advanced AV Pack, providing a full RGB video SCART connection in place of S-Video, RCA composite and stereo audio connections (composite video and stereo are still provided by the cable, through the SCART connector, in addition to the RGB signal), while retaining the TOSLINK audio connector. As Europe has no HDTV standard, no High Definition cable is currently provided in those markets. Numerous unofficial third-party cables and breakout boxes exist that provide combinations of outputs not found in these official video packages; however, with the exception of a few component-to-VGA transcoders and custom-built VGA boxes, the four official video packages represent all of the Xbox's possible outputs. This output selectivity is made possible by the Xbox's SCART-like AVIP port. ===Networking=== *Ethernet (Xbox Live) Cable: A Category 5 cable cable for connecting the Xbox to a broadband modem or router (note that there is no "official" Xbox Live cable; any PC ethernet cable can be used) *Xbox Wireless Adapter: a wireless bridge which converts data running through an ethernet cable to a wireless (IEEE 802.11) signal to connect to a wireless LAN. While the official Wireless Adapter guarantees compatbility with the Xbox, almost any wireless bridge can be used. *Xbox Live Starter Kit: A subscription and installation pack for the Xbox Live service, as well as a headset (with monaural earpiece and microphone) that connects to a control box that plugs into the top expansion slot of a controller. The headset can in fact be replaced with most standard earpiece-and-microphone headsets; headset specialist Plantronics produce various officially-licenced headsets, including a special-edition headset for Halo 2. *System Link Cable: A Category 5 cable crossover cable for connecting together two to four consoles, for up to 16 total players. This functionality is similar to Sega's DirectLink for Sega Saturn. ===Multimedia=== *Xbox Media Center Extender: A kit that allows Xbox to act as a Media Center Extender to stream content from a Windows XP Media Center Edition PC. It can also be used for DVD playback. *DVD Playback Kit: Required in order to play DVD movies, the kit includes an infrared remote control and receiver. DVD playback was not included as a standard feature of the Xbox due to licensing issues with the DVD format that would have added extra cost to the console's base price. By selling a DVD remote separately, Microsoft was able to bundle the cost of the DVD licensing fee with it. Although there is nothing to prevent the Xbox from acting as a Progressive scan DVD player, Microsoft chose not to enable this feature in the Xbox DVD kit in order to avoid royalty payments to the patent-holder of progressive scan DVD playback. *Xbox Music Mixer: A utility software bundled with a microphone that connects to an adapter that plugs into the top expansion slot of a controller. Provides a music player with 2D/3D visualizations as well as basic karaoke functions. It also allows users to upload pictures in JPG format (to create slide shows) as well as audio in WMA and MP3 format (for karaoke or a game's Custom Soundtracks feature) from a Windows XP machine running the [http://www.xbox.com/en-US/musicmixer/pctool-overview/ Xbox Music Mixer PC Tool]. ===Controllers and removable storage=== *Standard Xbox Controller (AKA "Controller O"): The normal Xbox controller for all territories except Japan, this has since been replaced in Xbox packs by the Controller S, and due to its increasing rarity, is believed to have been discontinued. It is considered to be bulky. The black and white buttons are located above the ABXY buttons, and the Back/Start buttons are located between and below the d-pad and right thumbstick. *Controller S: A smaller, lighter Xbox controller. Once the standard Xbox controller in Japan, it was released in other territories by popular demand, and eventually replaced the standard controller in the retail pack for the Xbox console. The white and black buttons are located below the ABXY buttons, and the Back/Select buttons are similarly placed below the left thumbstick. *Memory Unit: An 8 MB removable solid state memory card onto which game saves can either be copied from the hard drive when in the Xbox Dashboard's memory manager or saved during a game. Note that some recent games (e.g. Ninja Gaiden and Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball) do not support this accessory as a cheat prevention measure. *Logitech 2.4 Ghz wireless controller. Approved by Microsoft for wireless gameplay with Xbox. ==Screenshots== Tecmo (2001) Image:ferrrari.jpg|''Project Gotham Racing 2'' Bizarre Creations (2003) Image:Ngmt.jpg|''Ninja Gaiden'' Tecmo (2004) Image:halo.jpg|''Halo: Combat Evolved'' Bungie (2001) Image:amped2.jpg|''Amped 2'' Microsoft Game Studios (2003) Image:Nflfever.JPG|''NFL Fever 2004'' Microsoft Game Studios (2003) Image:blinx_the_time.jpg|''Blinx the Time Sweeper'' Microsoft (2002) Image:fable.jpg|''Fable (video game)'' Lionhead Studios (2004) Image:XboxJadeEmpire.jpg|''Jade Empire'' Bioware (2005) Image:Crimsonskies55.jpg|''Crimson Skies'' Microsoft Game Studios (2002) Image:ME0000525344 2.jpg|''Forza Motorsport'' Microsoft Game Studios (2005) Image:B 2.jpg|''Rallisport Challenge 2'' Microsoft Game Studios (2003) XboxI find it a bit strange that the Modding the Xbox section of this article does not include information about www.xbox-scene.com or any of the modchip production teams, such as SmartX or Team Xecuter. Xbox scene has been on of the key players in the Xbox mod scene, and I believe that it is large enough to deserve a section in this part of the article. In fact, I believe Modding the Xbox is a large enough topic to be another article entirely, with sections dedicated to the major xbox mod sites/mod developers (Including, but not limited to, Xbox-scene.com, Halo-mods.com, xbins.com, Team Xecuter, Team SmartX, Team Xenium, Team Evox, Team UIX, and Team Unleash). User:Hunter Killer 03:48, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC) ---- ''Microsoft built the Xbox around industry-standard PC hardware in contrast to the traditionally proprietary design of nearly all other gaming consoles. In spite of (or because of) this, it is the most powerful console when compared to its main competitors, the PlayStation 2 and Gamecube, while remaining price competitive.'' : This sounds like a fanboy wrote it. It is not NPOV. Same goes for much else in the article. :Actually thats fact, they built their system around PC hardware, quite a bit of it standard enough that you can swap stuff out on a limited basis, and it's more powerful than it's competitors. Finally it has also remaining competitive price wise against Sony. User:PPGMD ---- The graphics on this page cover the text when viewed with Netscape 4.76 -- bbotbuilder "forgot password at school terminal" ---- Just an explanation on where the Xbox stands compared to the GameCube as of Nov. 2003: It appears obvious that the Cube's price-slash did propel it forward, but independent sources indicate that it may have only closed a gap that the Xbox held over it this year. I also added a bit of fuzziness to the wording because there are few accurate, independent numbers. For example, Sony claims the PS2 controls at least 3/4 of the market, Nintendo claims 1/3, and doubtless Microsoft also claims somewhere about a 1/3. Before we know it, the Phantom will come out and claim the 60% left over :-). This is typical of the free info, so we have to take it with a grain of salt: [http://www.gamespot.com/all/news/news_6081738.html] [http://www.instat.com/press.asp?Sku=IN030703ME&ID=813] [http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worldbiz/archives/2003/11/24/2003077120] (I also removed the fact that the Xbox console is selling at a loss because it's not significant when the Cube and the PS2 are as well.) --User:Mrwojo 19:13, 24 Nov 2003 (UTC) Oh yes, sources sources, If you go to site 1 thay say that the X-box is doingbetter, if you go to site 2 they say that the 'cube is doing better. But there is no denying that the gamecube is outselling the X-box now, in canada the gamecube is selling 52% out of the consoles, in japan ps2 and gamecube are selling equal. I'll get some sources... --Peter (maybe I should start an account...) http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?section_name=ret&aid=2824 Xbox is falling behind -- Peter :In the US, that appears to be correct. Globally, it's still not very clear: [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3397649.stm BBC: "GameCube fights to stay in the game"], http://www.pcpro.co.uk/?http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/news_story.php?id=52428 --User:Mrwojo 02:40, 18 Jan 2004 (UTC) == De Facto Standard? == In 2002, Microsoft released the successful online gaming service "Xbox Live" which quickly became the de facto standard for online gaming. Third party services for online play also exist. In January 2004, Microsoft reported that Xbox Live reached 750,000 subscribers. Can we really say that Xbox Live is the de facto standard for online gaming? First of all, that should probably read online console gaming, since PC gaming has it's own set of applications. Even that doesn't seem right since neither Sony nor EA, each who have the largest marketshare in their given fields, participate (although that may change after this year's E3). I like Xbox live and I think some mention should be made of it, but I don't think that you can call it a standard due to the fractured nature of the online console gaming community. ''Some updates: EA is now going to participate in XBL. Sony has their own online plans, but I don't think it is a viable competitor against XBL. Also, many people are interested in XBL for PC, and MS is making it available via their NextGen initiative.'' ==Exclusive games== Similar issue: on the list of "exclusive games" "released" on XBox, does that wording imply that the games are still only on XBox, or can a reader infer that some (like Halo), were released later on other platforms? --User:Krupo 02:13, 3 May 2004 (UTC) :I think the wording "exclusive" refers to exclusive to other ''consoles'' (e.g. Sony Playstation 2, Nintendo Gamecube). It does not necessarily refer to the IBM PC compatible, one of Microsoft's core systems. User:Frecklefoot — User:Frecklefoot | User talk:Frecklefoot 14:37, Jul 1, 2004 (UTC) ::Halo is released for the Apple MacOS X platform, which is NOT one of Microsoft's core systems. It should be removed from the list. :::Reccomend we just remove the term "exclusive", which I think I'll do just now. User:SockatumeUser talk: Sockatume 23:25, 23 Apr 2005 (UTC) ==Xbox a seperate company?== Is there a separate division of Microsoft that makes the Xbox—a separate corporate structure? I'm trying to figure out if it should be listed under :Category:Microsoft subsidiaries, or if it's more properly thought of as just a Microsoft product. User:Postdlf 03:46, 1 Jul 2004 (UTC) :There is a whole structure devoted to the Xbox, but it is not a seperate company. There are entire studios (satellite offices) that do nothing but develop Xbox games (such as in Salt Lake City, Utah). But it is not a seperate company or subsidiary. They consider the Xbox a product, albeit one with a huge supporting infrastructure. User:Frecklefoot — User:Frecklefoot | User talk:Frecklefoot 14:37, Jul 1, 2004 (UTC) == Placing XBox on top of the TV == Just reading the Wiki about the rumour of not placing XBox on top of the TV. Not denying the fact that the cable snap-in will instantly seperate, so it's impossible that the XBox will be yanked off the TV set. But realistically, you can't play ANY games with any console box on top of the TV, the dangling wires will hang over your TV screen - it just can't be good with any console, (PS2, GC, or XBox) As an aside, when someone tripped over my controller cable and it 'lizard-tailed', the game paused automatically and waited for me to plug the controller back in. Which I thought was really excellent. - johnliu I would have thought the main problem with putting an XBox on top of a TV would be that its vast weight would instantly crush the hapless television :-P Hah hah, sorry, couldn't help myself! You can place a gamecube on top of a TV due to its low weight and size and wireless controller functionality. -brett See other meanings of words starting from letter: XWords begining with Xbox: XBOX XBox Xbox Xbox XBOX2 XBox2 XBOX360 XBox360 Xbox360 XBox_2 Xbox_2 Xbox_2 XBOX_360 XBox_360 Xbox_360 Xbox_360 Xbox_360_games Xbox_Corporation Xbox_games Xbox_II Xbox_ii XBox_Live XBox_live Xbox_Live Xbox_live Xbox_Live! Xbox_Media_Center XBox_Next Xbox_Next Xbox_Next Xbox_or_PS2 XBOX_partions Xbox_Solution Xbox_Solution Xbox_three-sixty |
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