Monday, May 26, 2014

If You Like Your Xbox 360, You Should Keep Your Xbox 360

I’ve been an Xbox customer since day one of the first
version and I’m what you might consider a “Power User” on
the Xbox 360.  I pre-ordered the Xbox One, received it on day one, and
have been really pissed off ever since.  


Simply put, the Xbox One (XB1) doesn’t do anything the
Xbox 360  does. I call it the “Xbox None” in my house.  
 Hardly a day goes by when I don’t seriously consider returning it
to Microsoft and here’s why:


Xbox One can’t access
my music collection


My 360 naturally connected to my home network and my Windows
PC’s music collection.  Because the 360 was wired to our home theater
I would sit back in my recliner, browse through my music and play whatever I
wanted.  The “None” can’t do that.


Instead, I have to get up and walk over to the home office,
pick the music on my PC, “Play-to” my Xbox None, then go back and
sit down in the living room. And I have to do this every time I want to change
the playlist or the genre, completely ruining the music experience.


Xbox One doesn’t show
my photos


One of things we loved doing as a family was to show pictures
of a given event on our big screen TV.  The 360 would easily access my
20 year collection of photos on the PC in seconds.  Not any more.


I have to first upload my photos to Microsoft’s “SkyDrive”
(it’s a Dropbox clone) which is limited to 7gb (my photo collection is
over 100gb) before I can show them on the Xbox None.  With 1 Mb/s upload
speeds that means it takes 14 hours put up the pictures I want to see which
essentially makes this a useless feature for our living room.


Xbox One can’t play music
in the background


One of the favorite things my wife and I used to do was select
a treasured family event, watch the photos, and play music in the background.
When I play games, background music is a must.  The 360 did this easily
and efficiently and of course, the “None” can’t do it.


When you play music, it “snaps” about 25% of the
screen to display essentially nothing other than the artist and the title and
if the music is coming from your PC, it means that 25% of your screen is black
with white letters; both a complete waste and a perfect way to burn-in your
expensive plasma TV.


So whether you’re trying to look at a piddly 7gb of
photos, or play your game, or do anything else, if there’s music on, 25%
of your screen is black.  And unlike the 360, you can’t adjust the
music volume relative to game playing volume which essentially ruins the music+gaming
experience.


I can’t think of anything more appropriate to say here
than “WTF?”.


Xbox One won’t play Media
Center content


My Windows PC is connected to my cable TV and acts as our
DVR.  When we wanted to watch our shows, the 360 would dutifully connect
to the PC and play them on the big screen.  Can you guess what I’m
going to say?  Yes, sadly, Microsoft’s Xbox “None” does
not connect to Microsoft’s Media Center.  And there’s not even
a workaround on this one.


Xbox “None”: a huge
disappointment for a loyal customer


When you buy the next generation of a product, you naturally
expect that it will do all the things your original product did and do them
better.  For Microsoft to completely drop key features of the Xbox 360
that made it the center (i.e. 360 degrees) of the living room and then to tout
the Xbox One as it’s worthy replacement indicates to me that either I’m
the only guy in the country doing all this stuff with his 360, or that Microsoft
had to rush this thing out the door after they found out about Sony’s
PS4 launch.  


The Xbox One is a rush job that doesn’t do any of the
“livingroom friendly” activities its predecessor does and in my
view, is a huge step backwards in becoming the living room extension of the
home network.


Why would you buy the Xbox One?


Don’t buy it yet if you have a 360 or you’ll be
in for a big disappointment.  Only get one if you don’t have a game
console and the specific game title you want is available right now.  Wait
until Microsoft improves this thing. If I knew then what I know now, I would
not have bought it.


So why haven’t I returned
it yet?


In a word, Battlefield.  The new version of Battlefield
4 with up to 64 players has great graphics and is a lot of fun on the Xbox One,
despite the fact that I can’t play music and despite the fact that there
is something really wrong with the in-game voice chat and despite the fact that
the game crashes about once an hour. I would have to pay more to upgrade my
PC than I did to buy the Xbox One in order to play that game.  Jury is
still out on Forza (my other favorite). Graphics and physics are great but they
make it so that you have to buy a lot of in-game purchases on top of the $60
premium I paid for the game so I’m not a happy camper about that.


I’m also hoping that Microsoft will upgrade the Xbox
One so that at least it does what the 360 did (ya think?).  In the meanwhile,
I’m going to figure out a way to connect my “old” 360 to the
XB1’s HDMI port so that my wife and I can still watch photos from Christmas
past while we listen to Christmas music, in the background.


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