Thursday, June 28, 2007 - Posts

3.50 Downgrade Video Tutorial

A YouTube user by the name of barroni1977 has posted a video tutorial for downgrading a PSP from firmware 3.50. Some of you probably find a visual guide more helpful than a text-filled readme so this should provide a little extra aid. Again, firmware hacks can potenially render your PSP permanently useless so proceed in downgrading at your own risk. With that said check out the video using the link below.

3.50 Downgrade Video Tutorial

Via DCEmu
posted by Auri with 0 Comments

SCEA offers to settle lawsuit for $8.5 million

Sony Computer Entertainment America has agreed to pay a USD 8.5 million settlement to employees who claim they are owed unpaid overtime.

As reported by law firm Shapiro Harper & Urmy, SCEA's Andrew Wilson filed the suit in February 2005.

He seeks to represent a group of "Image Production Employees" - including animators, artists, modellers, visual effects and lighting specialists - who worked at the company between February 2001 and September 2007.

The lawsuit alleges that Sony "has failed to comply with California labour laws requiring it to pay overtime", and calls for "statutory penalties, damages, punitive damages, restitution and injunctive relief".

A conditional settlement has now been reached, under the terms of which current and former employees will receive payments from a USD 8.5 million fund. Sony has also agreed to reclassify class members with the job titles of associate artist and artist 1 as non-exempt employees under California's Fair Labour Standards Act.

The settlement must be approved by a court, with a hearing scheduled for September. According to SH&U, the settlement "may be rescinded if a sufficient number of class members opt out".

Ellie Gibson
June 28, 2007

Source: GamesIndustry.biz
posted by Auri with 0 Comments

Few console owners using multimedia capabilities, says study

According to the Diffusion Group, while 80 per cent of US households own game consoles capable of DVD playback, only 30 per cent were aware of that fact and only 13 per cent of gamers are using them for that purpose.

The Dallas-based research firm also found that, of the households who view movies on their game consoles, 74 per cent are watching physical DVDs and only 26 per cent are going online to purchase or rent a digital movie download.

"Today's next-generation games consoles such as the Xbox 360 or Sony PS3 are true digital multimedia powerhouses," said Dale Gilliam III, author of the Diffusion Group report.

"Yet very few of these devices are connected to the Internet and, even though these same platforms may feature a high-definition DVD playback system, very few consumers are using them for non-gaming media applications."

The report also found that approximately half of US households with broadband own at least one game console, with 15 per cent owning two or more game consoles. Those consoles are most likely to be located in the living room or family room (52 per cent) than in a second bedroom (24 per cent) or in a dedicated games room (21 percent).

The Diffusion Group's report, On The Use of Game Consoles for Movie Viewing, is based upon a survey of 2,000 US broadband heads-of-households.

Mark Androvich
June 28, 2007

Source: GamesIndustry.biz
posted by Auri with 0 Comments