Most Popular
| Top Stories | Commented | Featured |
ATI Radeon HD 5570 Review featured
AMD's six-core Thuban to have feature like Turbo Boost?
Google to launch Twitter-like service for Gmail
Intel unveils Itanium 9300 series enterprise processors
Netflix to roll out 1080p streaming later this year
China closes major hacker ring, arrests three members
Intel Core i5-based MacBook Pros coming soon?
Sharp and Samsung end LCD patent suits with cross-licensing agreement
TS Community
| User Gallery | Recent Discussion |
Modded Razer Lachesis by Tehoste | Are you gay? by CMH |
I'm still logged in from FF2! by Obi-Wan Jerkobi | Crysis Warhead by Tha General |
Industry News
Overheating 360 to cost Microsoft $1.15 Billion
Microsoft is facing a large setback with the Xbox 360, concluding after numerous complaints that the overheating issues the console is plagued with is their fault. With an estimated 30% of consoles vulnerable to overheating, many customers have paid out of pocket for repairs and have gotten the runaround from Microsoft on multiple occasions. That's changed now, and they are prepared to shell out bigtime to fix the problem units.
To the tune of over $1 Billion, Microsoft will not only fix affected consoles, but reimburse people who paid to have their unit repaired otherwise. Despite having an astronomically high number of affected units, Robbie Bach of Microsoft says it is one of those things that “just happens”:
After a year and a half of mounting complaints, Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft's entertainment and devices division, downplayed the timing of today's news saying: "This is just one of those things that happens when it happens. We reached our conclusion early this week and because it's a financially meaningful issue we had to announce it immediately."
I suppose exploding batteries are one of those things that “just happens”, too.
The news wasn't helped any by the sales forecast, which was once again cut. Initially expected to sell upwards of 15 million units by the end of last month, Microsoft eventually cut that number to 12 million. They failed to reach even that, with an estimated 11.6 million devices sold since initial launch.
Considering the console itself is sold at a partial loss, Microsoft is obviously very heavily interested in making sure that the name Xbox never disappears. With Nintendo creeping up on them very rapidly, the last thing they needed was a 30% failure rate in their hardware. Oops.
To the tune of over $1 Billion, Microsoft will not only fix affected consoles, but reimburse people who paid to have their unit repaired otherwise. Despite having an astronomically high number of affected units, Robbie Bach of Microsoft says it is one of those things that “just happens”:
After a year and a half of mounting complaints, Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft's entertainment and devices division, downplayed the timing of today's news saying: "This is just one of those things that happens when it happens. We reached our conclusion early this week and because it's a financially meaningful issue we had to announce it immediately."
I suppose exploding batteries are one of those things that “just happens”, too.
The news wasn't helped any by the sales forecast, which was once again cut. Initially expected to sell upwards of 15 million units by the end of last month, Microsoft eventually cut that number to 12 million. They failed to reach even that, with an estimated 11.6 million devices sold since initial launch.
Considering the console itself is sold at a partial loss, Microsoft is obviously very heavily interested in making sure that the name Xbox never disappears. With Nintendo creeping up on them very rapidly, the last thing they needed was a 30% failure rate in their hardware. Oops.
Related Stories
User Comments (1)
Post a comment| 9Nails on July 7, 2007 9:22 PM | Part PR, part good business. (And maybe a pinch of
class-action avoidance.) I think this is a smart move for
Microsoft. I applaud them for picking up the onus on this
one without outside action. Especially if it's true that the
tune is to 30% of Xbox 360 owners suffering from this
problem. It leaves me slightly more inclined to purchase a
'360 when I buy an HD ready TV.
|
TechSpot RSS



