28 March 2020

Analyse This: The Next Gen Consoles (Part 9) [UPDATED]


So, the Xbox Series X is mostly unveiled at this point, with only some questions regarding audio implementation and underlying graphics architecture remaining. The PS5 is partly unveiled with questions surrounding physical makeup and operating system "costs". I want to place a caveat here that these are very complicated technical discussions - I'm not an expert and it's possible I've misunderstood something but, where possible, I take my information from multiple sources and viewpoints in order to understand a problem from both a top-down and bottom-up approach - something that I think you can see in my meanderings.

Let's take a look at what each system has confirmed and how those specs may effect the user experience...

22 March 2020

Analyse This: The Next Gen Consoles (Part 8)... How the predictions stacked up...


So, yesterday, SONY surprise revealed some of the PS5 specifications - a couple of days after Microsoft surprise revealed a tonne of information about the Xbox Series X. While I won't summarise the information (you can find that elsewhere), I am going to do some navel-gazing and take a look back at my predictions and see how they square against the released information and in the next article think about how this all comes together in comparing the two consoles. So feel free to skip this blogpost!

11 March 2020

Analyse This: Performance VS Processing power... (I was wrong!)

The Xbox Series X SoC in all its glory...
This post has been in the works since I last posted and in response to certain comentators on the merits and accuracy of that post. I'll get around to the full Xbox Series X and PS5 reveals this week but for now, let me indulge in a bit of naval gazing and shoulder shrugging...

Recently, I had a certain post about the potential CPU performance of the Xbox One Series X, based upon statements issued from the official Xbox news blog. This, of course, caused some waves. Many people were unhappy with the theoretical performance of the proposed CPU - despite the fact that it would be incredibly performant by any console standard - i.e. it would be the most powerful CPU ever to be placed into a console form-factor! This is not a "weak" CPU and the Ryzen 5 1600 AF is not a weak CPU (though not what we'd be getting!) and an underclocked 4800H would also not be a weak CPU...

The second most common refrain was from people saying that 4x the processing power correlates with 2x clock speed, combined with 2x the number of processing threads. This argument is flawed on several levels but, aside from that it's nonsense. Here's why: