Analysts are questioning the reasons behind further delays in the launch
of Sony's
eagerly-anticipated
PlayStation 3 video
games console.
Sony will push back the release of the PS3 to November, the company announced
at a press conference in Tokyo today.
However, some analysts have questioned the reported reason for the delay,
which Sony claims is due to problems with the digital rights management (DRM) on
the console's next-generation
Blu-ray optical
drive. Instead, they suggest more serious issues.
"We think that slower than planned progress in developing the graphics chip,
or a lack of software titles, is probably the main reason for the delayed
launch," said analyst Eiichi Katayama of
Nomura
Securities' Financial & Economic Research Center in Tokyo.
Blu-ray discs will give the new PlayStation console removable storage
capacity more than five times greater than that offered by the DVDs used in
older consoles.
The Blu-ray DRM technology is already close to finalisation, Nomura believes,
and is therefore an unlikely source of delays.
"Of the three copy protection technologies for the Blu-ray disc, AACS was set
in the early stages of development, licensing of the ROM mark has already
started, and licensing of BD+ is also likely to start soon," said Katayama.
"In view of this, we think that delays in copy protection technologies are
unlikely to be the biggest reason for the delay in the PS3 launch."
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