A number of Australian employees of Hewlett-Packard are facing the loss of their jobs as the global computer giant looks to slash its worldwide workforce by up to 30,000.
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Mike Bantick
Sunday, 15 July 2007 08:31
There was the slimmer, TV-out enabled PSP shown, which should give the Sony hand-held device a boost, not enough to snag the phenomenal Nintendo DS though.
Software, though not as exclusive as originally expected, will be strong for Sony towards 2008. Exclusives shown at E3 included Heavenly Sword, Gran Turismo 5, LittleBigPlanet, Killzone 2 and the now confirmed exclusive Metal Gear Solid 4.
But it was the Nintendo Wii that got the excitement ticks for hardware. Three new peripherals announced.
The Wii Zapper combines the Wii-mote and Nunchuck into one "gun" peripheral for, well, zapping the heads off zombies.
The Wii Wheel (packed with the upcoming Mario Kart) is, once again a housing for the Wii-mote into a steering wheel shaped controller, whilst it looks a little small for my liking it should be effective giving greater immersion than simply tilting the current controller.
Finally, the Wii Fit balance board will ensnare an even larger demographic for Nintendo. Giving people a game orientated way to explore balance, Yoga, light exercise and keeping track of Body Mass Index progress in one wireless peripheral will - albeit a focused target group - work.
This years E3 may have increased the lead Nintendo has on the chasers in the wow-factor league. Nintendo still has a software issue, commentary from North American Nintendo president Reggie Fils-Aime giving us assurances about the amount of Wii and DS titles coming. We did get a release date for Super Mario Galaxy (Nov 12th)
Electronic Arts did also come good on its claim of shifting resources to the Wii with their list of up coming titles.
The battle for our electronic hearts, minds and cash is still raging strong.
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