Truck driver backs into unloading slot. Crew inside warehouse opens and unloads truck then closes door. Truck driver comes back later and picks truck up.IF that's true how would they get the Ps4s in the warehouse?
edit - damn you broken .gif!Truck driver backs into unloading slot. Crew inside warehouse opens and unloads truck then closes door. Truck driver comes back later and picks truck up.
That's how HP did it when I worked there
Is it an official pic? Because if not, I am fairly sure that is not an Amazon warehouse. Namely because walking into one while keeping any sort of electronic/metallic objects on your person is pretty much impossible.
Microsoft CEO Candidate Elop Said to Mull Windows Shift - BloombergJoining Microsoft
Elop is set to join Microsoft after agreeing to sell Nokia's handset business to the software maker for $7.2 billion in September. He resigned as Nokia's CEO when the sale was announced, and said he would become head of a new Microsoft devices unit responsible for hardware such as the Surface tablet and Xbox game console.
Elop's assumption is that Microsoft could create more value by maximizing sales of Office rather than by using it to prop up sales of Windows-based devices, said two of the people with knowledge of his thinking. Market-research firm Gartner Inc. projects PC shipments will fall 11 percent this year.
Microsoft (MSFT)'s Windows division reported that revenue rose 4.6 percent to $19.2 billion in the latest fiscal year, which ended June 30. The unit that includes Office and other corporate software products saw sales rise 2.5 percent to $24.7 billion. Microsoft scrapped that reporting structure for the current fiscal year and now reports earnings based on devices and software for consumers as well as enterprises.
More Focus
Besides emphasizing Office, Elop would be prepared to sell or shut down major businesses to sharpen the company's focus, the people said. He would consider ending Microsoft's costly effort to take on Google with its Bing search engine, and would also consider selling healthy businesses such as the Xbox game console if he determined they weren't critical to the company's strategy, the people said.
Earlier this week, investors drove Microsoft shares to their highest price since mid-2000, after Nomura Holdings Inc. analyst Rick Sherlund said the sale of Bing and Xbox, along with other moves, could lift fiscal 2015 earnings by 40 percent.
If they sell the Xbox division, I'm fairly sure that'll be the end of the Xbox.If they sell the Xbox division, does the xbone lose access to the all powerful cloud?
I don't think there are many (if any) potential buyers.The question is.... who buys the Xbox division?
Usually such large corporate purchases are done at the peak and when they want full marketshare.I don't think there are many (if any) potential buyers.
Well, SteamOS will apparently run OpenGL, which is a pretty common development platform, as I understand it. OpenGL is also compatible with ARM hardware, which is going to be a lot more important in the future.Nr 2 is much more likely (and doubt Sony has the money for it) as the end result of an eventual sale will be the same. Xbox would no longer be a direct competitor. I don't think there is any buyer out there that would continue the brand as a next gen console. Valve might be a buyer for rights to various patents, etc, if they truly want to start going into the console market. That way they could adapt their steam box to allow xbox one development kits to work for it, making it far more likely that developers would create games for it instead of trying to convince them to use an entirely different software development kit.
An upgradable pc component "Steam Box One" running on linux with the ability to run occulus rift, kinect and developers could develop for it similar to the xbox one without the need for a different software kit.... that would kick Sony right in the nuts.
Yes they could. They could release bi-annual Steam Machines with some extra Samsung software bundled in. Think of Valve's own Steam Machines as Google's Nexus line - stock software with good hardware - while other companies will release their own Steam Machines with extra software bundled in.I would think that Samsung might actually throw in a bid for Xbox. They could run the next model with their Taizen OS. Yes, it would be different than the current system, but Samsung has pretty much unlimited capital to throw at a problem and make it better.
The only down side is they don't like sitting on hardware too long, especially in the mobile world. They have 4-6 "big" phone releases every year. They couldn't do that with a console.
Hmm...
Plus the PS4 uses opengl. Hopefully that alignment makes it easy to make games run natively on SteamOS, but I doubt it'll be that easy.Well, SteamOS will apparently run OpenGL, which is a pretty common development platform, as I understand it. OpenGL is also compatible with ARM hardware, which is going to be a lot more important in the future.
This guy from Nokia is a backward thinker. If anyone thinks Microsoft will be riding the operating system sale/office sale for long, they are flat out, out of touch.
It could depend if there are any patents involved. Amazon, Google or Samsung might buy into it if there are juicy patents for future lawsuits.The question is.... who buys the Xbox division?
Agreed. Elop's strategy will deliver short term gains at the expense of long term growth. I'm not a fan at all.This guy from Nokia is a backward thinker. If anyone thinks Microsoft will be riding the operating system sale/office sale for long, they are flat out, out of touch.
With Apple now giving away their OS and all updates for free with hardware purchases (This isn't without a ploy to drive hardware sales though. Introduce new software, slow down a system, sell another piece of hardware) and free fully functional and implemented office suites of their own, along with competition from google, those days of Microsoft charging boatloads of cash for their O/S"s are soon going to die. Steam O/S will also make a huge impact. If anything because it is yet another disrupter, and another choice, while Microosoft stagnates. If you cannot see yet, MS is slowly becoming the next Blackberry. Albeit a slow death because they are followers not completely 100% stagnant.
With that said, the Xbox division is fried.
Amazing how fast something can turn from one of the best consoles this generation, to seeing consumer backlash due to inept policies and horrible money grabbing/pay walls.
It's really good to see. This is what happens when people start voting with their wallets. If only I, and everyone here, could do the same with shitty games so the software gaming industry would follow suit. Hopefully indies drive that.