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There is no fix for Intel’s crashing 13th and 14th Gen CPUs — any damage is permanent
(www.theverge.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Tagging on here: Both the first model PS3 and Xbox 360 were hot boxes with insufficient cooling. Both suffered from getting too hot too fast for their cooling solutions to keep up. Resulting in hardware stress that caused the chips solder points to weaken until they eventually cracked.
Owner of original 60gb PS3 here.
It got very hot and eventually stopped working. It was under warranty and I got an 80gb replacement for $200 cheaper, but lost out on backwards compatibility which really sucked because I sold my PS2 to get a PS3.
Why would you want backwards compatibility? To play games you already own and like instead of buying new ones? Now now, don't be ridiculous.
Sarcasm aside, I do wonder how technically challenging it is to keep your system backwards-compatible. I understand console games are written for specific hardware specs, but I'd assume newer hardware still understands the old instructions. It could be an OS question, but again, I'd assume they would develop the newer version on top of their old, so I don't know why it wouldn't support the old features anymore.
I don't want to cynically claim that it's only done for profit reasons, and I'm certainly out of my depth on the topic of developing an entire console system, so I want to assume there's something I just don't know about, but I'm curious what that might be.
It's my understanding that backwards-compatible PS3s actually had PS2 hardware in them.
We can play PS2 and PS1 games if they are downloaded from the store, so emulation isn't an issue. I think Sony looked at the data and saw they would make more money removing backwards compatibility, so that's what they did.
Thankfully the PS3 was my last console before standards got even lower and they started charging an additional fee to use my internet.