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The AI dooooooom thread

Started by Hamilcar, April 06, 2023, 12:44:43 PM

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Syt

https://www.pcgamer.com/software/platforms/microsoft-doesnt-know-what-to-do-about-the-memory-pricing-crisis-microsoft-is-causing/

QuoteDue to the memory pricing crisis that its own AI ambitions are helping cause, Microsoft does not know how to sell a new Xbox that feels cutting-edge at a price that regular people can afford.

The next Xbox, codenamed Helix, will have "leading-end performance," new Xbox boss Asha Sharma said in a recent interview with Fortune, but I'm left wondering how Microsoft defines that, because everything else she said downplays its likely technical capabilities.

What the console business needs, Sharma said, is "new business models" rather than "just the most premium, high-performance console in the world."

"I think we've reached a point where it will be hard to imagine that mass audiences can afford thousands of dollars to spend on a console generation," she said. "So I think we will see radically different business models that we never expected come into orbit later this year."

It's an astonishing place we're in. Consumer devices always involve compromises for the sake of affordability, but this is the first time I can remember a tech company lowering expectations for its next big gadget so dramatically.

Sharma went on to say that Microsoft will "have to think very differently about storage and memory going forward."

"We will have to apply new techniques so that we can compress [games]," the Xbox CEO said. "We will have to empower customers to have very flexible storage offerings. We will have to empower new types of games so that they can fit on-device."

There are outlines of ideas there, but Xbox has already done "flexible storage options," and what it means to "empower new types of games so that they can fit on-device" is anyone's guess. (Are they going to put "Now with smaller games!" on the box?)

As for "new business models," perhaps Microsoft will offer financing? A rent-to-own plan?

Another guess is that we're talking about cloud streaming. It's not strictly new—RIP Stadia—but it fits in well with big tech's AI obsession. At a GDC session I attended in March, Nvidia DLSS pioneer Bryan Catanzaro said that "AI is fundamentally much more efficient in the cloud." That's a useful premise if you want to move toward a world where games are served like Netflix shows and at-home devices can get by with less RAM and SSD space.

We are born dying, but we are compelled to fancy our chances.
- hbomberguy

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