
The Wall Street Journal was a lengthy writeup on The Race for a New Game Machine: Creating the Chips Inside the Xbox 360 & PlayStation 3. The book, written by two former IBM employees involved with the creation of the Cell processor, chronicles the chip designs for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. It turns out that IBM, Sony, and Toshiba spent 400-million dollars and five years in designing Cell. Meanwhile, Microsoft benefited from all the research and development. The Wall Street Journal's Jonathan V. Last writes:
That's pretty crazy. It appears that Sony's ambitious plans for the PlayStation 3 combined with a surprising amount of trust in a Western partner caused it to take its eyes off the ball. Meanwhile, Microsoft cleverly -- and apparently legally -- seized an opportunity to get a fancy new chip with other people's R&D money. I'm absolutely fascinated by how this book humanizes three very large companies. Based off of theWSJ report, I feel sad for Sony for being hustled and admire Microsoft's gumption. Then there's IBM, which comes off as the dirty, two-timing slut. At least, that's the characterization that comes up in my head.
How do you guys feel about these revelations?
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