Sign up for the FREETell Membership and receive benefits that include the digital edition of Tell Magazine sent straight to your inbox, product giveaways, coupons and much more!
The E3 madness has begun and today there were plenty of news worthy notes to go around. One of the most significant announcements came out of the Microsoft camp revealing production spec Kinect (formerly project Natal). And to our surprise with this new revolutionary piece of motion sensing technology we were treated with a new, sleeker, darker and cooler running XBOX 360. No special designation has been given to the new console of than “the new XBOX 360.”
It comes with a new look glossy black exterior, built-in 802.11n (finally!), expandable 250GB internal storage, five USB ports, as noted 45 nanometer and integrated CPU and GPU that will allow for considerably cooler operating temperatures and last but not least touch sensitive ON/OFF with finger swipe disc eject.
Early adopters of the original XBOX may have their doubts but one can only hope that five years, three versions and a slew of RRoD warranty repairs later they got this right. One thing is for sure, at a price of $299 who wouldn’t consider an upgrade?
The E3 madness has begun and today there were plenty of news worthy notes to go around. One of the most significant announcements came out of the Microsoft camp revealing production spec Kinect (formerly project Natal). And to our surprise with this new revolutionary piece of motion sensing technology we were treated with a new, sleeker, darker and cooler running XBOX 360. No special designation has been given to the new console of than “the new XBOX 360.”
It comes with a new look glossy black exterior, built-in 802.11n (finally!), expandable 250GB internal storage, five USB ports, as noted 45 nanometer and integrated CPU and GPU that will allow for considerably cooler operating temperatures and last but not least touch sensitive ON/OFF with finger swipe disc eject.
Early adopters of the original XBOX may have their doubts but one can only hope that five years, three versions and a slew of RRoD warranty repairs later they got this right. One thing is for sure, at a price of $299 who wouldn’t consider an upgrade?
Read [engadget]
Of course, to stay up to date on all of the latest in gaming news (including E3 coverage), you can follow our sister site Gamertell.
Related Posts