Sony is Funny...



D3ViLsAdvocate wrote:Try shaking the salt harder onto your tongue.
brentbizzle wrote:Lol... actually laughed at that one. Sorry for the logic. After that obama thread I was in the mood to type


D3ViLsAdvocate wrote:Try shaking the salt harder onto your tongue.

D3ViLsAdvocate wrote:Try shaking the salt harder onto your tongue.
Diehard335 wrote:lol, still after all these years, a few different kids sitting at their computer have managed to outsmart them.
DarkPacMan77 wrote:I have a feeling that Sony just outright doesn't like the idea of homebrew at all. I mean, consider the phat PSP. It has an IR sensor. Sony, to my knowledge, never had anything "big" that they used for the IR sensor, but when they made the PSP-2000, they took the IR sensor out.
They had to know that IRShell and IRCommander etc. were some of the most popular homebrew.
-DarkPacMan77-


D3ViLsAdvocate wrote:Try shaking the salt harder onto your tongue.
brentbizzle wrote:Computer code is a whole language in itself, really has nothing to do with understanding a foreign language. And the fact is companies don't have a problem with legitimate homebrew. Look at Apple with the app store. Sony making a built in function to partition the PS3 drive to install linux. Homebrew is not the issue. It's the pirating of software that is and THAT's what the companies have issues with. Unfortunately in many cases homebrew means direct access to pirating, and for the companies to stop pirating they have to try and stop homebrew.
When it comes to company's not filling in security holes and such... Companies work on time frames. Time = money. Hackers don't. They have all the time in the world to break down code and find any flaw they can. If you gave companies that same capability, you would have more secure devices coming out and be waiting forever for the d**n things to be released.
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