Well...it's kinda hard for you to start dictating the terms of the thread, especially when Chris started it and in the first email it was clear he was talking about something not yet on the shelf.
I personally would not compare the Wii and the Xbox, I've said before that I don't believe the two to be competitors. I don't own either one..nor a PS3. If we are only going to talk about things you can go buy now...that stops any talk of anything new going on with iPhone or iPods...palm pre, any number of things. Part of the fun is talking about things that are soon coming, new technology being developed, if you don't like talking about it, perhaps you should have stayed away from a thread that was clearly about new tech. On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 1:09 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall < [email protected]> wrote: > Understood but this started off by making claims for the Xbox that have > since been shown to be in development. > > Each game platform seems to have it's endorsers and its detractors. > > The Wii started off as the first (or let's say the most recent) interactive > game console. it continues to develop this and with new games that make it > a bit more interactive. (The EA Sports description of Tiger Woods Golf 10 > seems nice, but disappointing as it will show me what a crappy gofer I > really am.) > > The Xbox is now developing those type of games. However there is nothing > on the shelves yet. Wii's still are flying off the shelves. > > Now I would not go out to buy an Xbox for those type of games. (not my > desire) but I would buy it for Movies and an interface with some > technology. > > Now my son-in-law has gone whole hog. He has a game chair etc. for his > Xbox. > > The new technology as you say is a development tool for game companies to > develop games from. But it is still a development tool. > > When you want to make comparisons let us make comparisons to what is > available off the shelf not what is development. Otherwise you have made an > unequal comparison. > > No it is not vaporware but until it becomes a real live game on the shelf > it is not realware either. I have known stuff to get stuck in development > for some time due to glitches and yes sometimes economy. > > So lets make sure we discuss real games with real games not real games with > games in development. > > Stewart > > > At 02:56 PM 6/3/2009, you wrote: > >> You are starting to sound like Tom, I usually don't expect insults from >> you. >> Calm down Rev.. >> >> You said you had seen much that was vaporware, my point was that it was >> already in production, already in the pipeline. It's not been released >> yet, >> but it will be. It's not a development tool, the product has been >> released >> to game developers so they can code for it. That's not vaporware by >> definition. >> > > Rev. Stewart A. Marshall > mailto:[email protected] > Prince of Peace www.princeofpeaceozark.org > Ozark, AL SL 82 > > > ************************************************************************* > ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** > ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** > ************************************************************************* > ************************************************************************* ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** *************************************************************************
