The Sony NGP is looking like a bit of a powerhouse as far as portable gaming is concerned, and we can't wait to see what its true capabilities really are. But as with any announcement, there was a LOT to take in. Here are some key facts you might have missed that illustrate what the Sony NGP is all about:
British company ARM, which has built Sony NGP's CPU, usually gears its creations towards good battery life, according to TechRadar. Sony's pitching battery life between 4-6 hours. Sony NGP contains an ARM Cortex-A9 core (4 core) CPU. This is well ahead of other recent mobile devices, whose manufactures have only recently begun installing Dual Core in the latest handsets. The iPad also uses ARM Cortex designs in its system on a chip (SOC). Sony has dubbed the curvaceous chassis of Sony NGP 'Super Oval Design'. The platform holder claims it has been specially created to ensure more comfort in longer play sessions than PSP1. Sony claims that the combination of two touchpads and thumbsticks allows for "touch, grab, trace, push and pull" moves of the fingers. Sony NGP's GPU - SGX543MP4+ quad-core - is built by Imagination Technologies, another British company based in Hertfordshire. Sony NGP's quad-core GPU setup is four times as powerful as top-of-the-range current mobile platforms, according to Epic. Every game for Sony NGP will be provided with Sony's LiveArea, where users can share info and communicate other players. Additionally, Sony NGP users will be able to view an Activity log, constantly updated with accomplishments from those playing the same game. Sony NGP has a five inch, 960 x 544, 16:9 OLED screen. In terms of resolution, that's almost the same as the native rendering resolution of both Alan Wake on Xbox 360 and Call of Duty: Black Ops on PS3. The original PSP sported a 480 x 272 display, for those of you who love to compare. The Sony NGP resolution is in the same ballpark as the iPhone 4's Retina Display, which is 960x640. The Apple phone has a much higher pixel density though, since Sony NGP screen is only 3.5 inches. Sony NGP operates with more than 2.5 times as many pixels as the Nintendo 3DS. That's even when you consider the 800x240 stereoscopic resolution of the Ninty handheld. The console packs a Six-Axis motion sensing system behind its screen. Sony NGP includes a three-axis gyroscope and a three-axis accelerometer - that's one motion sensor more than the iPad (which is missing a gyroscope) and one less than the PlayStation Move, which also houses a Terrestrial Magnetic Field sensor. Sony has dropped the UMD format in favour of Flash cards, which can store the full software titles plus add-on game content or the game save data directly. Flash cards with more capacity will be made available in the future to allow for bigger games, according to Sony. Despite all this killer tech, Sony said Sony NGP won't cost as much as $599 - the price at which the PS3 launched. 82 third-party developers have already signed up to work on the Sony NGP. That's 48 in Japan, 16 from North America and 18 from Europe. You might not get it by Christmas: Sony has only confirmed that "at least one" territory will see a pre-Xmas launch. There are 14 titles confirmed so far, including iterations of Killzone, Call of Duty, Uncharted, LittleBigPlanet, Resistance and WipEout. Sony NGP's here for the long term. Yoshida-san told Kotaku: "The portable is a totally different beast. Sony NGP's still emerging and in a transitional stage. We are developing a platform to last a long time." Sony NGP size is 182mm x 18.6mm x 83.5mm. Let's compare and contrast to other console lengths: the original PSP is 169mm, the DSi is 137mm, the 3DS takes up 134mm and Apple's diddy little iPhone 4 is just 115.2mm.
Sony NGP Fan Page
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