The official Ps3 thread

Mr Latte said:
Dont you PS3 owners use wireless for streaming like the X360?

What about a USB caddy connected to the PS3?

I havent tried the wireless streaming...Not sure if the 20gig can do that.

It does recognise all sort of Usb point you can plug into it...but i dont think it recognises a computer (i.e using a usb to usb lead from the ps3 to my laptop)
 
Mr Latte said:
Dont you PS3 owners use wireless for streaming like the X360?

What about a USB caddy connected to the PS3?
I dont have wireless as it's the 20gb model. Not sure how I would stream to it though.!!!

I have tried almost everything which has a USB connection, walkman, PSP, Mobile Phone, Pen Drive etc, and they all work fine except my USB HDD caddy - maybe it's something to do with it having two usb attachments, one for data & one for power?
 
Might be a certain way the drive needs formated, FAT32 or NTFS?

Would be ideal if you get it going as arnt 2.5 HD caddys USB powered?
Meaning no power supply to lug around and of course you can connect it to your own PCs or take it with you somewhere with gamesaves etc on it?
 
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I think it's just because the drive hasn't been initialised in windows. It's recognised in the disk manager but doesn't show up as a physical drive in My Computer etc. Will it use a different format than NFTS/FAT etc as it's linux?
 
Ok, I upgraded the HDD and it was incredibly easy. Didn't take any pics though as my camera needed charging!

Also, theres a decent vid of how to do it here http://www.t3.co.uk/news/247/games/playstation_2/ps3_gets_diy_upgrade

I have tried 3 seperate external HDD's and the PS3 doesn't recognise any of them (hopefully this will be fixed in a future firmware update!!!), So in the end I had to use the PS3 backup utility to copy my games saves etc to a 2GB pen drive.

The backup utility said there wasn't enough room initially, so I went through and deleted everything which I could download again or transfer back onto the system. I popped the new drive in and booted it up - it then prompted me to format it and I have to say it was the quickest damn format I have seen of any drive on any system, i mean it took about 5 seconds for a 120Gb drive :eek:

I was pleased to see that all the acount info etc is stored within the system itself and not on the HDD so there is no fear of losing your login details, credit card info, buddies etc.

All in all it was incredibly easy and painless to do. My only complaint being that it didn't recognise my external HDD's to I couldn't back everything up - looks like it's gonna take me a while to download everything again!
 
^^^ Well done...Now give us updates on any teething problems and what not please. It will be interesting to see how it goes. One quick question: Does changing the HDD invalidates the warranty at all?
 
Uh Ohhhh

No Force feedback on the PS3 :(
Very bad move tbh Especially considering MS have released quite a good wheel themselves

1up.com said:
A NeoGAF post pointing to a GT Planet post raised our eyebrows at the possibility that Force Feedback (an Immersion-patented tech [the rumble guys, remember]) would not function on Sony's PS3. Force feedback response control is a big deal to racing fans and fans of Sony's Gran Turismo series are likely jonesing for the fifth installment of the game with a slick FF wheel.
Sony Computer Entertainment America confirmed that there would be no supported force feedback technology with its PlayStation 3. They told 1UP the following:

All PS3 games are programmed for the SIXAXIS which doesn't have force feedback, therefore the force feedback in the wheels won't be recognized.
No word this time on whether there will be a racing wheel that supports "leaning technology" where the SIXAXIS motion-control functionality can be integrated into a wheel. We're joking, but it's through tears.
Link to 1up
 
Force Feedback > Motion Control.
I can imagine waggling a steering wheel around. Great fun, and superb exercise no doubt, really build on the guns with that bad-boy.

Sony seem very stubborn in their ways, they do one thing, the public say they are wrong and Sony still maintain that they are right. It's slightly annoying and whats done is done. However, it's certainly a strike against Gran Turismo 5 and a positive for Forza Motorsport 2.
 
Yeap it certainly is.
a lot had hoped FF would be included in the Eu release of F1 CE.
Just seems like a step backwards. Although i always thought force feedback wasn't held by immersion? I thought it was totally different to the rumble?
Although i would maybe wait for a few more news sources coming out and saying it, but with GTHD and F1 not having force feeback it doesn't look good.
 
I thought it was Immersion who held force feedback and the rumble was thought to be a form of force feedback.

Just a thought but sureley if you were using a third party device then that third party would be the ones who had to pay royalties for the FF. Then if the software developers built it in to the software it would work - Sony wouldnt be able to stop this or even need to as they woudln't be doing anything wrong???

I have a Logitech gamepad (the one which looks remarkably like the PS controller) and I plugged it into my PS3 last night and it worked a treat.
 
Interesting....If true.

Usually news from International Solid State Circuits Conference would leave us a little cold, however, a snippet of news has caught our attention. This relates to a 1:30pm meeting on Tuesday February 13th entitled: “18.1 Implementation of the CELL Broadband Engine in a 65nm SOI Technology” – specifically that:

” The chip operates at 6GHz at 1.3V and is fabricated in a 65nm CMOS SOI technology.

The CELL Broadband Engine is, of course, better known simply at ‘The Cell processor’ and is used in the PlayStation 3 (as well as IBM’s Blade servers and some HD TVs). The Cell currently powering the PS3 runs at 3.2GHz and is fabricated on 90-nano-metre (nm) Silicon On Insulator (SOI) tech.

We read on:

”The 65nm CELL Broadband Engine design features a dual power supply, which enhances SRAM stability and performance using an elevated array-specific power supply, while reducing the logic power consumption. Hardware measurements demonstrate low-voltage operation and reduced scatter of the minimum operating voltage.”

We were then drawn to the people attending the conference. Tucked in alongside IBM and Toshiba delegates, was an S. Tokito. We looked more closely to discover that S. Tokito was visiting from Austin, Texas – specifically from Sony Computer Entertainment in Austin, Texas.

Could this be Shizuo Tokito? A man whose name is writ large on several papers regarding blue light emitting diodes (Blue Rays)? Quite possibly. Now, there’s only really one connection between the Cell processor and Blue Ray – although they don’t communicate directly with each other, they do co-exist within the confines of Sony’s enormous, hot and heavy PlayStation 3.

Therefore, a knee-jerk reaction to this could be that Sony is readying the next-gen-Next-Gen PS3 with a buff new processor running at twice the speed of the current unit. The form-factor of such a new unit would also be smaller; the heat emissions would be less… all in all, you’d have a PS3 v.2 which would not require most of your sitting room to place it in. But, as we say, that’s knee-jerk.

This strikes us as more than unlikely – with problems with current PS3 production, the idea of two PS3s on the market would be disastrous.

More possible (notice that we are not saying, ‘likely’) would be for the new processor to be slotted into the existing PS3 and running at the current clock-speed. This would give a performance increase while cooling the system.

Another reaction could be that the company will be placing the new 6Ghz cell in the AV-centric PS3 mooted by Ken Kutaragi last December – and poo-pooed by the rest of the world as the ramblings of the ‘father of PlayStation’.

Final reactions could, of course, be that the conference organisers got Tokito-san’s company wrong – that this is not Shizuo at all, but some other Japanese uber-scientist who works with Sony’s HD-TV group instead; or even works with NHK.

http://news.spong.com/article/11413?cb=89
 
Joebob said:
I thought it was Immersion who held force feedback and the rumble was thought to be a form of force feedback.

Just a thought but sureley if you were using a third party device then that third party would be the ones who had to pay royalties for the FF. Then if the software developers built it in to the software it would work - Sony wouldnt be able to stop this or even need to as they woudln't be doing anything wrong???

I have a Logitech gamepad (the one which looks remarkably like the PS controller) and I plugged it into my PS3 last night and it worked a treat.

Not really as Sony would need to give out code libraries etc to games dev's to send the fedback signals out of the system, through the controller port/USB port. The 3rd parties just pick up on this signal. I am assume to be on the safe side, Sony have done away with giving those libraries out this time. As i think the signal is also part of the Patent that Sony infringed on.
 
ElRazur said:
^^^ Well done...Now give us updates on any teething problems and what not please. It will be interesting to see how it goes. One quick question: Does changing the HDD invalidates the warranty at all?
I wouldn't imagine it would effect the warranty as they make it soo easy to change - I have kept the drive I took out just in case I need to stick it back in at any time. Plus I can't really think of anything else to use a 20Gb HDD for - seems too small nowadays!

You may well be a bit shafted on the warranty front anyway having imported it!!!

No teething problems at all, my only complaint was not having a big enough drive to backup to... I might buy myslef an 8Gb pen drive as I can see it coming in very handy.
 
Yeah i done a backup of my PS3 last night before i installed Yellow Dog on it.

What to remember to do is delete the RFOM cache which iis iirc 100 meg and if you have 'Installed' RR7 remove the 4GB install file, then it flies through the backup lol
If i had deleted my RR7 file earlier i probably could have kept GTHD and Motorstorm demo :(
 
You installed Yellow Dog... what advantages does that give you?

Can you still play your PS3 games etc on it?
 
You can basically use your PS3 as a computer.
It comes with firefox and thurnderbird and open office all bundled into it. TBH if i get a euro PS3 i will possibly use 1 of them as a PC.

Yeah you can boot to the Game OS or Yellow Dog OS. It is quite a nice OS.
You should do it with your 20GB drive just to have a look. It is a really simple job. Download it then its about 12 steps for installing it.
 
Ah, so it comes up with a dual boot menu?

Is it free or do I have to pay for it?

Does PS3 support a wireless keyboard and mouse or just USB ones?
 
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Well the easiest way to do it is set the PS3 to boot to linux all the time, then from linux there is a 'start gaming os' shortcut.
Or when powering on if u hold down the power button for 5 seconds, that boots to the gaming OS, but then u need to change the setting to boot to linux all the time again. As the 5 second thing is technically a soft reset.
 
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