Sony Does It Again: Goes With Expensive, Proprietary Memory Format For PS Vita

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  • admin
    Administrator
    • Nov 2001
    • 8921

    Sony Does It Again: Goes With Expensive, Proprietary Memory Format For PS Vita

    Sony is facing potential consumer anger against its yet unreleased PS Vita portable console for yet again choosing to use a proprietary storage format, as the company tries to prevent piracy on the console.

    Instead using using a common storage format like SD or MicroSD, Sony has decide to use its own proprietary memory card format to store user downloads, games and saves. The console already uses another proprietary card, known as the PlayStation Vita Game Card, to distribute games.

    Ironically, Sony has decided against using its own existing proprietary memory card format, MemoryStick, opting to invent a brand new memory card that can only be used with the portable console.

    Sources cite this decision was down to security reasons, as Sony tries to prevent what happened with its last portable console, the PSP, which was quickly hacked to allow the playing of pirated games. Sony also says that a proprietary format guarantees the performance of the cards, as opposed to gamers being able to buy cheaper SD cards that would not work properly with certain games.

    The PSP used MemoryStick, which could be accessed on PCs, and Sony have learned from that mistake by not allowing the Vita memory card from working on computers as mass storage devices, and users can't interact with the card without using Sony's proprietary software. Unfortunately for gamers, the software will only be available for Windows at the time of launch, this month in Japan and Asia, and in late February in the US.

    Sony has also come under attack for the price of these cards, with 16GB cards priced at $69.99, and 32GB cards costing as much as $119.99, GameStop recently revealed. In comparison, a class 10 16GB SD card can be had for as low as $25, while 32GB cards can be had for roughly double this amount.
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  • drfsupercenter
    NOT an online superstore
    • Oct 2005
    • 4424

    #2
    And here I thought the CEO of Sony basically admitted they were making money from piracy because people had to buy the PSP hardware in order to get games for free?

    I'm sure somebody will make an adapter, I have an adapter that converts two MicroSD cards to a Memory Stick Pro Duo, so I can buy two 16GBs and have a 32GB one for far less than the official cards.
    CYA Later:

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    • admin
      Administrator
      • Nov 2001
      • 8921

      #3
      Making something that's supposed to be "hack-proof" is really just an invitation to hackers, especially if the product comes from Sony.
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      • Budreaux
        Super Member
        Super Member
        • Jan 2006
        • 278

        #4
        Originally Posted by admin
        Making something that's supposed to be "hack-proof" is really just an invitation to hackers, especially if the product comes from Sony.

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        • drfsupercenter
          NOT an online superstore
          • Oct 2005
          • 4424

          #5
          Yeah basically.

          As of late, you can't emulate MagicGate or whatever, but you also don't really need it. You can just borrow a "magic Memory Stick" from a friend, install custom firmware on your PSP, then go about doing it the third-party way all you'd like
          CYA Later:

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