[citation][nom]jwl3[/nom]Thehighlander:No, that's not what he said. Read the line:"We don't provide the 'easy to program for' console that [developers] want, because 'easy to program for' means that anybody will be able to take advantage of pretty much what the hardware can do, so then the question is what do you do for the rest of the nine-and-a-half years?" explained Hirai.This does not mean they chose the difficult, yet highly advanced technological path vs. the simple, less advanced path. This means that they ONLY chose to make it difficult for NO OTHER REASON than to spread out games so that the console would last longer. It makes sense from a business perspective. The first games that come out will stink, but the graphics leap from PS2 to PS3 helps sell the console to early adopters. Later on, as the platform matures, developers begin to get familiar with the software (as opposed to earlier) and develop better games.A totally sleazy way to artificially extend the product's life cycle. This can backfire on them too as the number of games that come out that s*ck will cause people to get turned off by the console. But in truth, what do they care? You already bought the dang machine.[/citation]
jwl3,
Obviously you do not have much experience in programming. As several other posters have noted, software programming relies on hardware architecture. If you design a new console centered around a new multiprocessing/parallel processing core (ie. the cell processor), software development tools and programming techniques must change as well. Same reason why although most computers nowadays have multi-cores (ie. Core2, CoreQuad, etc), relatively few programs other than very high end, expensive, and specialized ones actually take full advantage of the multiple cores. This will change as the software developers "catch up" to writing multi-threaded programs in the Windows OS. According to your logic, Intel, AMD, and MS all "ONLY chose to make it difficult for NO OTHER REASON than to spread out 'software' so that the 'PC' would last longer." I rest my case.