tsnorquist
Distinguished
[citation][nom]Skippy27[/nom]The RROD issue has not been an "issue" for years. I personally know no less then 25 people that have bought machines in the last 3 years that have never had a single issue. I personally have 3 at my house (one for me, one for the son and one for others) all of which log many hours of use every day and not a single issue on any of them and even the youngest xBox is over 1 year old.Your Atari has no where near the advancements nor sensitivity in it's electronics to even attempt to compare it in this way so get a clue.[/citation]
I was just sharing my personal experience with this console. I would hope that my Atari didn't have anywhere near the "advancements nor sensitivity in it's electronics to even attempt to compare it in this way so get a clue.".... it's damn near 30 years old.
What I was trying to convey, you obviously missed the point, is that the Atari was better built. With today's advancements in cooling (active/passive), PCB production, and fabrication there shouldn't be any issues of RRoD's. However, there are with many people who can attest to it happening this day. Your isolated group of 25 people doesn't speak for the entire populace of Xbox 360 users.
I was just sharing my personal experience with this console. I would hope that my Atari didn't have anywhere near the "advancements nor sensitivity in it's electronics to even attempt to compare it in this way so get a clue.".... it's damn near 30 years old.
What I was trying to convey, you obviously missed the point, is that the Atari was better built. With today's advancements in cooling (active/passive), PCB production, and fabrication there shouldn't be any issues of RRoD's. However, there are with many people who can attest to it happening this day. Your isolated group of 25 people doesn't speak for the entire populace of Xbox 360 users.