Serpiente_Plyskeen
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macho cabríoes, me encanta participar en este hilo pero os habéis reído de los pcs que vendo y he sufrido un parón en las ventas por ello... de hecho, tenía gente interesada en mis pcs que al leer en este hilo sobre ellos han decidido comprar en otro sitio y me han confirmado que ha sido por este motivo.
Si no fueseis como sois participaría más por aquí... mientras a reírme con mi amigo Pep (el principal destructor de mi chiringuito), con el amigo Serpiente y el amigo Victor leyéndolos.
Un cordial saludo del tito pensaibérico.
WTF? :: En serio?
Precisamente estaba por preguntarte: ahora que sabemos el precio de la XBOX One (599 napios) - nos puedes decir más o menos como sería un PC equivalente vendido por ti? Porque tiene toda la pinta de que por ese precio va a ser una máquina más que decente.. Por cierto, ojo al comentario de Jeremy Laird al respecto de que de los 8 núcleos de la XBOX, sólo 4 van a ser para juegos (los otros 4 para el resto de cosas, Kinect, etc), así que las CPUs actuales van a ser equivalentes o incluso mejores (mayor frecuencia y tal).
Edito y añado: el contrato de AMD con M$ por la XBOX, de 3 millardos de dólares para arriba:
AMD's Xbox One Deal Valued at $3+ Billion USD
AMD's Xbox One Deal Valued at $3+ Billion USD
By Kevin Parrish29 May 2013 15:02 - Source: Gamechup
AMD is making big bucks off the Xbox One alone.
Bob Feldstein, the current VP of Technology Licensing at Nvidia, served as ATI's VP of Engineering and its VP of Strategic Development from 1994 until 2006 when AMD acquired the company. For the next seven years, he served as AMD's VP of Business Development, and then he joined Nvidia in July 2012. That said, he has some knowledge about what's going on inside AMD.
According to his LinkedIn profile, AMD's involvement with the Xbox One console is valued to be worth more than $3 billion USD. He also acknowledges that AMD has provided a custom silicon solution for Microsoft for the Xbox One, a game console and entertainment device cramming into "one" form factor.
"My involvement was focused on business management and supply agreement negotiations," he states. "This required the coordination of multiple functional teams within AMD, as well as regular customer meetings with leadership teams responsible for handling the challenges of complex, multi-year deals. This project is valued at $3+B."
He also talks about the PlayStation 4 that was revealed to the public on February 20. Unfortunately, he doesn't provide any financial worth on the project, but he's less vague with the Sony console, and talks about the Jaguar cores and Radeon graphics.
"The Sony PlayStation game console is powered by a semi-custom AMD APU," he states. "This processor is a single-chip custom processor, with eight x86-64 AMD Jaguar CPU cores and a 1.84 TFLOPS next-gen AMD Radeon based graphics engine supported by 8 GB DDR5 memory. AMD silicon will be a key enabler for the next generation of gaming experiences through this partnership with Sony, who has built the largest installed base of game consoles in existence today."
If anything, the two posts clearly show that AMD is playing a big part in the next-generation console wave. The Nintendo Wii U isn't quite as AMD-focused, antiestéticaturing an IBM PowerPC 750-based three-core Espresso" chip clocked at 1.2 GHz, and an AMD Radeon "Latte" 550 MHz GPU with a built-in eDRAM cache.
PC Outlook Falls As Market Increasingly Looks to Tablets, According to IDC - prUS24129913
PC Outlook Falls As Market Increasingly Looks to Tablets, According to IDC
28 May 2013
FRAMINGHAM, Mass., May 28, 2013 – Worldwide PC shipments are now expected to fall by -7.8% in 2013 according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker. The new forecast reflects a shift in PC buying trends as users increasingly consider alternatives such as delaying a PC purchase or using tablets and smartphones for more of their computing needs. In place of a limited decline of -1.3% in 2013 ***owed by a gradual increase in volume, the new outlook calls for a more substantial decline of -7.8% in 2013 and -1.2% in 2014 with shipment volume reaching only 333 million in 2017 – still below the 349 million shipped in 2012 and a peak of more than 363 million shipped in 2011.
The updated forecast reflects the significant drop in volume during the first quarter of 2013 as well as the tras*itions happening in PC design as vendors bring products to market that are optimized for Windows 8, including more thin, convertible, touch, and slate models.
"As the market develops, usage patterns and devices are evolving," said Loren Loverde, Program Vice President, Worldwide Quarterly PC Trackers at IDC. "Many users are realizing that everyday computing, such as accessing the Web, connecting to social media, sending emails, as well as using a variety of apps, doesn't require a lot of computing power or local storage. Instead, they are putting a premium on access from a variety of smaller devices with longer battery life, an instant-on function, and intuitive touch-centric interfaces. These users have not necessarily given up on PCs as a platform for computing when a more robust environment is needed, but this takes a smaller share of computing time, and users are making do with older systems."
IDC expects to see some replacements happen in 2014, particularly in the commercial segment as support for Windows XP expires. However, the commercial market has been conservative with replacements, focusing on individual systems more than large upgrade projects. In addition, workers at many companies already have portable PCs with adequate configurations. The motivation to buy a new system due to falling prices or to switch from a desktop to a portable PC is contributing less to market growth than it did in the past.
"In addition, the BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) phenomenon has moved from smartphones to tablets and PCs with nearly 25% of employees in organizations larger than 10 people claiming to have purchased the primary PC they use for work," said Bob O'Donnell, Program Vice President, Clients and Displays. "This means that some of the corporate PC purchases we expected this year will no longer happen."
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