I spent all of about 30 seconds on the dashboard, so I don't feel like ads on the dashboard really affect me at all.
mastermario said:I spent all of about 30 seconds on the dashboard, so I don't feel like ads on the dashboard really affect me at all.
This is what I'm thinking. Dashboard ads are an ideological issue, not a practical one. They really don't affect how much I enjoy playing my 360 so they don't affect my opinion of the console as a whole. Consoles should be looked at in terms of entertainment value. Micorsoft's business model is another issue entirely, but in terms of entertainment value, the 360 has been the most entertaining, worthwhile console of the generation for me. That being said, I never owned a PS3 so I'm really not the best judge here. From what I've played I really like the PS3, but I guess I'm biased towards the 360 if only because I've never owned a PS3.mastermario said:I spent all of about 30 seconds on the dashboard, so I don't feel like ads on the dashboard really affect me at all.
Sure games, can aspire to be more than just entertainment, but I play games to be entertained and have fun. That is my benchmark when I evaluate both consoles and games individually. I can be entertained by a game because it's beautiful or thought-provoking or artistic, but in the end entertainment value is the scale I evaluate consoles on. Evaluating Microsoft as a company is separate from evaluating the 360 as a console. Even in evaluating Microsoft as a company, I haven't looked at their finances, but creating a more efficient business model through advertising could actually be a good thing for the consumer. Microsoft could very easily provide a better or cheaper product because of the ad revenue, while adding a feature that most consumers don't really mind.stealth toilet said:Instead, I'll ask, do you really just think of consoles as entertainment? Or like, a medium for entertainment? What about art? What about education? Can it aspire to anything more than mere entertainment?
There will be a point where I mind but I don't think ads hanging in the background of the dashboardstealth toilet said:I could totally go off again, but I'll spare you all. :lol
And, I'll remark, that one's naivete towards advertising is exactly what a lot of advertisers prey on. They may not seem all that intrusive now, but it is much more intrusive than it used to be (no ads), and so long as people do not mind they will become ever more so.
Mai Valentine said:Games are already used for education. You've heard the term edutainment I'm sure? It doesn't even come up as a word to spell-check so I guess it's a real word now. :lol
That is my benchmark when I evaluate both consoles and games individually. I can be entertained by a game because it's beautiful or thought-provoking or artistic, but in the end entertainment value is the scale I evaluate consoles on.
Evaluating Microsoft as a company is separate from evaluating the 360 as a console.
To me it's just like a tv commercial; I can't really avoid them
There's not a whole lot of people that would choose the alternative just based on principles alone.
x2 said:I sure as heck wouldn't. If I am spending good money on a console you can be sure it's gonna be the one with the biggest and best game library.
x2 said:they bought it because that is what most of their friends have and why would they want to be left out? So they can sit and play their PS3 alone when 10 of their friends are having fun on Live?
Mai Valentine said:I am already a Microsoft slave so I think your point is moot. I freely admit that I haven't bothered to try OSs other than Windows. I also own a Zune and a Windows phone and really don't regret that when the alternative is being an Apple sheep.