Yeah, but because it also read CD's, that was it's drawback, that you could put the GD dump onto a CD and boot it.
This console will need to play nothing but this disc format. and pcs wont be able to burn or read these disks or interface the disk drive to make dumps. They really just need to enforce the patent heavily enough to stop this happening.
Sony effectively owns the BluRay format. If you look inside your fancy BluRay player, maybe it's branded as Phillips, Pioneer, whatever. Look at the labeling on the lens or the casing around it. Sony. Look on the BluRay site's FAQ page. The only thing in all caps is PLAYSTATION 3. Sony initiated the development of the medium, paid for the majority of its development, provided the personnel, and are reaping the benefits. It's revenge for the failure of Betamax.
http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/news/5697
http://www.gamespy.com/articles/492/492075p1.html
All I'll say about that.
360 discs (HDDVD) can only be read in the 360 and in a very specific version of PC disk drive with a custom firmware.
Same with Wii and GC discs, when they came out. And neither of those consoles read other disc formats normally.
Last edited by Colamisu; 7th-August-2011 at 20:47.
I looked at your links, but what do you mean "All I'll say about that".. are you agreeing with me?
I'm only asking since you quoted me and posted it.
The 360 reads and plays DVD movies also which in some cases are dual layer.. The Wii was gonna be made as a dvd player so the drive supports it, but they held back on it, but hackers brought it out of it and made it do it, so the softmod makes it read burnt DVD's and play the games. But yeah the GC is a good example, that worked against pirates AFAIK, couldnt be bothered googling to ind out if it was hacked.
Last edited by Constipated Rat; 7th-August-2011 at 21:12.
Fuck, I know that mate*rolls eyes*.. but as you know, it IS hacked and plays burnt dual layer DVD games. I know I do it myself.
OK, well in that case, who are you telling that too, me or Colamisu?... it was probably the disk size and all that other shit that put hackers off bothering to mess with it, they prob could have hacked it if wanted. But the PS2 and Xbox hack scene stole its thunder..... so whatever.
This is confusing, is there a system out there that its drive reads only its unique game format and that has been hacked to play burnt games?
Last edited by Constipated Rat; 7th-August-2011 at 21:22.
I know the Atari Jaguar CD discs hold like 890MB or something silly.
Not sure if it's relevant, but hey!
That was too fucking shit to hack lol. No one would buy the games, that is if you could find someone with a Jag, or even better someone with the Jag and it's CD attachment to sell the games too.
They should make a square game disk, one that sets into the drive and instead of spinning it will have 4 lasers or maybe even 2 that track each side or maybe even pivot like spotlights and talk to each other(think of the loading times it will save) And you can't fit a square peg into a round hole/divet, so no other drive can take the disk. It would be like an uber fututristic cartridge interfaced by lasers instead of pins. But the drive itself also has to be interface-proof so game dumps can't be made, that is the tricky part. Once a dump is made the drive will be bypassed and games played on a hard drive or SD card or through network port
Last edited by Constipated Rat; 7th-August-2011 at 22:34.
For the record, I didn't mean to sound like a dick earlier. My whole thing is if I have a choice between paying and not paying for the exact same thing I'm going to chose not paying. Unless of course punishment for it becomes feasible. Also by bonus physical content I meant stuff that comes with LEs and whatnot. I like soundtracks, figures, art books etc...and buy them anyway but it's quite nice when I can get them pre-packaged with the game which is something that would go away if the industry became download only and I'd have to buy all of it individually. :/
Just how old are you?
LOL @ Atari Jaguar
N Gage QD had no way of pirating the games, I don't think. You could pirate the games for the original N Gage because it has an SD card slot whereas the QD doesn't.
Even I remember Beta, and I'm only 27.
... Shut up...
I remember Betamax and I'm 20?
I'm 23 and I've actually seen Beta tapes because my grandma owns some. But yeah I only know it even exists because of much older people.
Look at the dates on the articles. 2001. The "death of PC gaming" has been heralded by reporters, analysts, and etc. since there has been PC gaming. PC gaming will never die until PCs themselves die. And I don't see that happening in our lifetime.
Neither of those are relevant. There is no way to play unintended content on an unmodded 360 through use of its ability to read and play DVD movies, therefore the ability to read DVD movies does not affect whether or not the console is secure. The Wii has the capability to read DVD movies, but it is disabled by the firmware by default. Therefore, the ability to read DVD movies does not affect whether or not the console is secure.The 360 reads and plays DVD movies also which in some cases are dual layer.. The Wii was gonna be made as a dvd player so the drive supports it, but they held back on it, but hackers brought it out of it and made it do it, so the softmod makes it read burnt DVD's and play the games. But yeah the GC is a good example, that worked against pirates AFAIK, couldnt be bothered googling to ind out if it was hacked.
There are mod chips for the Gamecube, same as there are for the Wii, 360, PS2, PS1, etc. There's no free-ish way to mod it like there is with the PS2/360/Wii because there's not really any software running on it, but it is moddable. Basically the thing that makes this hardware cycle so easy to mod is not the insecurity of the media, but the reliance on a console operating system which, by definition, will be vulnerable to some sort of software attack.
22. I've never actually seen a Betamax tape myself, but I'm aware of it. I've picked up a bit of the history of modern consumer electronics through my many journeys through the internet.