PlayStation 3: The next generation

Sony moves ahead with development of the next version of its video game console. Right now, distributed computing is the name of the game.

If distributed computing can unravel the building blocks of life, it can probably help make a better version of "Crash Bandicoot."

That appears to be Sony's thinking as the electronics giant moves ahead with development of the next version of its PlayStation video game console.

Speaking at the Game Developers Conference (GDC), an annual trade show for the creative and technological sides of the game industry, Shin'ichi Okamoto, chief technical officer for Sony Computer Entertainment, said research efforts for the PlayStation 3 are focusing on distributed computing, a method for spreading computational tasks across myriad networked computers.

Distributed computing is making headway as a way for researchers to conduct demanding computing experiments, such as an ongoing project by Stanford University to unlock protein structures.

Okamoto said the method also appears to hold the most promise for dramatically boosting the performance of the next PlayStation. Game developers have said they would like the next console to have a thousand times the processing power of the PlayStation 2. There's no way to do that with hardware advances alone, he said.

"Moore's Law is too slow for us," Okamoto said, referring to the long-held truism that semiconductor power doubles roughly every 18 months. "We can't wait 20 years" to achieve a 1,000-fold increase in PlayStation performance, he said.

Okamoto said Sony is working with IBM to apply Big Blue's research in "grid computing," a variation of distributed computing, to the next PlayStation. While he didn't share details, the plan presumably would involve networked game machines sharing software, processing power and data.

Okamoto added that the recently released kit that allows PlayStation 2 users to run Linux software on the console is the foundation for much of the research.

Looking further ahead, Okamoto saw even bigger changes for Sony's game business. "Maybe the PlayStation 6 or 7 will be based on biotechnology," he said.

While Sony focused on the future, Microsoft looked at the recent past. Pete Isensee, lead developer for Microsoft's Xbox Advanced Technology Group, used his GDC talk to deliver a mostly positive critique of the Xbox's journey to the market, lauding a product launch that happened on time and without major bugs, a departure from Microsoft history.

"Microsoft has this stigma about not getting it right until version three," he said. "We didn't have a choice with Xbox. If we didn't get it right with version one, Sony and Nintendo would eat us alive."

Xbox glitches centred mainly on international issues. The game console's bulky controller repelled Japanese consumers, for instance, forcing Xbox to design a slimmed-down version that comes standard with the Japanese Xbox and as an add-on purchase for US and European users with small mitts.

"There is a perception we didn't know what we were doing when it came to the controller," Isensee said. "What we failed to do is a usability test for a global market. You need to do that, because things that work in the US don't always work in Japan or Europe."

That includes the Xbox start-up screen, which had to be redesigned for the Xbox's European launch because nobody realized that the German "einstellungen" wouldn't fit in the same text space as "settings."

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Talkback 6 comments

    What they are saying is there ...Glenn Sweeney -- 22/03/02

    What they are saying is there is no hope in hell they can beat ms nvidia and amd/intel at the same time. So they are propograting stupid lies .. i wonder where this 1,000 times playstation 2 will be banned in ? perhaps youllhave to have a military license to own one.. hahaha man some ppl are so stupid. I wonder if the world news will be as gullable this time? probably.
    Dont believe the hype!

    The playstation 2 was a rushed product with bad design and it shows. Xbox is great buy one :)

    To Mr Sweeney; Thats your opin ...the saint -- 22/03/02

    To Mr Sweeney;
    Thats your opinion. I love my PS2. And I can watch DVD's on my console. :) The Emotion engine in the PS2 makes for realistic human/nature movements/texturing. Thanks but I already own a high end PC, I really don't need another one in VCR sized box.

    Further to what I was saying r ...Anonymous -- 25/03/02

    Further to what I was saying re: the emotion engine. Sony are looking ahead, using the emotion engine to better render physical 'real-world' textures and motions they got outside the circle. Distributive computing is another ground-breaker from Sony. My point was Sony are trying to revolutionise the game market, whilst Microsoft are trying to re-package it...

    Hmmmm following Moore's law th ...Anonymous -- 25/03/02

    Hmmmm following Moore's law there would be a doubling of speed every 18 months - that is exponential increase. By my calculations the 1,000 fold increase on PS2 Technology will occur within 5 or 6 years, not 20. In fact, after only 7.5 years the power would be over 65,000 times greater. That's 7.5 years after the release of the PS2, not 7.5 years from now.

    Why don't they just spend their time programming rather than complaining about speed?

    well just to make sure you sma ...Gregg Veauthier -- 25/06/02

    well just to make sure you smart people don't over look any detail, i have to say it sould be able to play any playstation game and if able to get approval to be able to play pc games like duke nukem and others that arn't for the gaming systems
    ps. the navy ain't for me even though i am in it, so i got nothing else better to do then write to you guys expressing my feeling on you situation, further more i would suggest putting out on the market march 3, 2003 (3,3 03')if you get my drift

    I soon as i heard on worldnet ...Salim Talal Hamad -- 15/05/03

    I soon as i heard on worldnet news that sony was going on with its next console i was so euphoric. I am so happy they decided to scrap the idea of making sony2 their last. To me sony2 didnt meet the power expected. I'm glad they decided to design somthing thats revolutional. Dont let us the sony gamers down- Give it everything you got and show nintendo and x box whose boss. More grease to your elbows. This recent development made my day.

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