Microsoft Announces XBOX Media Center
Microsoft at Work on Next Xbox - Gates
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research) is hard at work on the next generation of its Xbox video game console, even as the current version starts to show its full potential as an entertainment hub, founder and Chairman Bill Gates said on Wednesday.
In an interview ahead of his keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Gates told Reuters the company would look to extend the functionality of the Xbox, the only game console to ship with a built-in hard drive and Ethernet connection.
“We are pushing the boundaries in terms of expanding what people think of as what the device can do,” Gates said.
Last year, Microsoft released a title called “Xbox Music Mixer” that allows users to download music and photo albums from their PC to the console.
Later this year, Gates said, Microsoft will release a kit for the Xbox that will extend the functions of its Windows XP Media Center Edition to the console, turning it into a set-top box that allows the playback of live and recorded video, music and photos.
“You’ll see us keep pushing the boundaries there,” Gates said.
Microsoft has lately been active in recruiting staff to work on gaming hardware, although Gates declined to talk in much detail about the company’s plans for the next generation of the Xbox, which is widely expected to come in 2005 or 2006.
Market leader Sony Corp. (6758.T: Quote, Profile, Research) , which has dominated the current generation of consoles with its PlayStation 2, has been similarly circumspect about its plans for a PS3.
“In terms of the next round, hey it’s a new game. We’re not showing our hand and I don’t think Sony’s showing their hand,” Gates said. “We’re doing some very cool work but that’s really all we say at this point.”
Despite heavy competition, though, Gates said he was pleased with the market position of the money-losing Xbox, which was released in Nov. 2001 and has battled Nintendo Co. Ltd. (7974.OS: Quote, Profile, Research) for second place in the U.S. market.
“Our goal in this generation was to be one of the leaders, and we feel like we’ve accomplished that very well,” Gates said.


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