Endless Paradigm

Full Version: New Xbox 360 Dashboard Brings Many New Features
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[Image: Xbox-dashboard-2011.jpg]

Fire up your Xbox 360 at some point today and you'll be prompted to download something that, like it or not, will have an indelible impact on the way you interact with the console. For all the attention given the new visual interface—named after that thing you take to work and resembling the sliding orthogonal tiles that comprise Windows 8's new tablet-angled overlay—the biggest change, if you're also using Kinect, involves the spoken word.

By wiring Microsoft's Bing search engine into the "how I get stuff" process, you'll now be able to find and access content with just a few verbal commands. Say "Xbox, Bing, Iron Man Two," for instance, and the system will search across multiple catalogues, dishing up a list of content related to the film Iron Man 2, including the option to buy it through various stores (Microsoft's Zune, Walmart's Vudu) or directly launch it through a player like Netflix (assuming you're a subscriber).

In fact getting what you want, from concept to execution, should be significantly faster than it was before, having to punch buttons on a gamepad to navigate and enter phrases using the 360's virtual keyboard. Forget Kinect's "you are the controller" hand interface, which generally takes longer than a gamepad as you fumble to wake Kinect up and wrestle the pointer around the screen, you can now go from the movie or TV show you're after to a bunch of related stuff, all the way to watching it, without lifting a controller.

I haven't played with the update yet (what I thought was an early access code to download the beta turned out to be a beta application form, still pending) but I did have a chance to chat with Microsoft representatives about it last week. Their presentation involved a lot of buzzword-laced talk about "ramping up content choices" and consolidating content (someone even slipped the word "magical" in, referring to Kinect), all of it underlining a "strategy to reinvent TV." And the company trotted out more performance metrics: Microsoft says it's sold more than 57 million Xbox 360s globally, has over 35 million Xbox Live users globally, says the average player spends two hours a day on Xbox Live, and notes that 40 percent of Xbox Live gamers spend 30 hours a month watching TV on the Xbox 360 today. It sounds impressive, and on some level probably is. The Xbox 360 is still a set-top box, mind you, but it's infinitely more versatile than anything sold by cable or satellite TV providers.

Microsoft also offered its take on the transitioning TV biz, stating that it's "gone from a closed system managed by a relatively small set of companies to a much more open system, delivering substantial additional capabilities and experiences and options." Microsoft wants to channel everything through the Xbox 360, no surprise, claiming that it's "completely open to what sources that content comes from."

But what about content unbundling, the shift away from all-inclusive cable TV-style packages toward an app-like pay-per-channel approach? Microsoft was understandably coy about this, when I asked, alluding to the byzantine legal arrangements between content providers, publishers, and portals currently preventing individual channels from appearing as services you'd subscribe to discretely. But the company also understands that the latter is what consumers want, that wee're looking for more unbundling, and that the "App-i-fication" of the Internet is well underway.

Will the Xbox 360 be the frontrunner for any of that? Voice-driven interfaces are popping up everywhere. Imagine a future Android tablet or the iPad 3 or 4, as powerful as any game console, wirelessly streaming video to your 50- or 60-inch screen and using Siri to do business (or, alternatively, imagine a more Siri-like natural language voice interface on your Xbox 360). At risk of oversimplifying, you have creators and consumers getting wrestled around by distribution middleware. That middleware's in flux, and Microsoft's Xbox 360 dashboard update today, another move on the chessboard.

The update hasn't been pushed to my console yet but I've been waiting for this for a while.

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The only thing I care about for this update is the voice commands thing.

Simply so I can lean into someone's room while they're playing the xbox, and shout "XBOX BING [Insert disgusting item here]" and watch them try to cancel the search frantically.
Another new dashboard??

Can't they just pick a UI and keep it...
Sony ;_;
Senseito7 Wrote: [ -> ]Sony ;_;

what about them x)
ProperBritish Wrote: [ -> ]
Senseito7 Wrote: [ -> ]Sony ;_;

what about them x)

poo poo updates and stale old XMB. That's what.
Senseito7 Wrote: [ -> ]
ProperBritish Wrote: [ -> ]
Senseito7 Wrote: [ -> ]Sony ;_;

what about them x)

poo poo updates and stale old XMB. That's what.

I do have to agree with the crappy updates.
I liked the first xbox dashboard. The one with the gray bars on either side that you flipped around.

Personally, I'm not a huge fan of these new widget based interfaces with big blocks all over the screen. I like consistency with my interfaces, and to me, the PS3 sticking with the very usable XMB is a pro, not a con. Every time Microsoft updates their dashboard, its just something new that I now have to get used to, and I haven't liked any of the interface changes so far. Sure add new features, but you don't need to overhaul the interface to do so.

sorry for saying the word "interface" too many times
when i try to upgrade via usb i get the status code 3524-396B-1600-0703-C000-0099 :I
They're trying to match all of their OSs together with the Metro UI. I actually like it for the live panels but it's gonna take some time getting used to navigating through everything. Also, cloud save storage is very handy.
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