PSP News

@ 2005/03/28
Sony Launches Mobile PlayStation Portable
March 28, 2005 06:47 AM ET



By MATT SLAGLE


With hype and fanfare usually reserved for a movie premiere, die hard video game fans formed large lines Thursday to buy Sony Corp.'s tiny new PlayStation Portable.

At the Sony Style store in New York, "Last Call" host Carson Daly joined Sony executives for a midnight madness event. Hundreds lined up at Sony's Metreon store in San Francisco to pick up the hot gadget, while midnight launches or early openings were held at most of Grapevine, Texas-based retailer GameStop's 1,800 outlets.

The PSP, Sony's first foray into portable video game machines, features stereo sound and a sharp, 4.3-inch color screen. Sony hopes the PSP can appeal to more than gamers with its ability to play movies, music and show pictures.

The $250 "Value Pack" which went on sale across North America on Thursday includes extras like a memory card, carrying case and a copy of the full-length movie "Spider-Man 2" on the system's proprietary, 1.8-gigabyte media discs.

Mike Yacullo, 36, pre-ordered a PSP in January to make sure he'd get one on time. It arrived Thursday morning, along with several games.

"I actually never owned a Sony video game before, but this one pushed me over the edge," the programmer from Jersey City, N.J. said. "I'm really, really impressed. The graphics are excellent, the screen is really bright. It's better than I thought it would be."

Sony made 1 million PSPs available for Thursday's North American launch; the company has sold more than 1.2 million in Japan since December. Sony plans to increase production to 2 million units per month by the middle of next year.

The PSP and the DS from Nintendo Co. are expected to buoy the global portable games market from $3.9 billion in 2003 to $11.1 billion in 2007, according to market research firm DFC Intelligence.

The PSP already has enjoyed some celebrity cachet, making the rounds at a Hollywood fashion show last week that included PSP accessories from top fashion designers like Marc Jacobs, Heatherette, Jenni Kayne and Jennifer Lopez.

And at least one person broke the law to get a PSP early.

A man in Charlotte, N.C., reportedly made off Tuesday with 12 PSPs he stole from a GameStop store. Police said when a clerk confronted him, he tried to knock her eyeglasses off.

http://news.moneycentral.msn.com/tic...ymbo l=US:SNE

Sony Ordered to Pay in PlayStation Case


TOKYO (AP) - Japanese electronics giant Sony Corp.'s video game unit has been ordered to pay $90.7 million in damages to Immersion Corp. over a patent infringement lawsuit related to a controller for Sony's PlayStation consoles, the company said Monday.

The Tokyo-based company plans to appeal the decision by the federal district court in Oakland, Calif., a Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. spokesman said on condition of anonymity.

In the decision issued Thursday, Sony Computer Entertainment was ordered to pay damages to Immersion Corp., a San Jose, Calif., company which develops and licenses digital technology.

In a 2002 lawsuit, Immersion accused Sony of patent infringement with the Dual Shock controller for the PlayStation and PlayStation2. Dual Shock technology makes the controller shake in time with what's going on in the game.

Sony denies that Dual Shock violates Immersion's patents, the spokesman said. He said he could not give more details because the lawsuit is pending.

The district court decision included an order to suspend PlayStation sales, but that order does not hold while an appeal is being heard. Sony will continue to sell its game machines in the United States, the spokesman said.

Sony's PlayStation platform is the No. 1 home game console in the world.

Comment from alias420 @ 2005/04/03
It looks like at least someone already has a copy of the new Grand Theft Auto for the PSP. You can check out the video in our downloads section.

http://www.psp-hacks.com/?p=11
Comment from Sidney @ 2005/03/29
Sony responds to PSP dead-pixel reports

SCEA downplays widespread reports of LCD screen problems, says warranty is still in effect and defective units can be exchanged.
Soon after the PSP launched in Japan last December, reports began to surface that some units' LCD screens suffered from pixels that were either permanently light or dark. Within 24 hours of the portable's North American launch, similar complaints began to reverberate around the Internet. The locus of the complaints was, ironically, the official PlayStation forums, which was temporarily down yesterday following heavy traffic.

http://www.gamespot.com/news/2005/03...s_6121092.html