I don’t think I am alone in the way I have my TV mounted to one wall and my game console not just sitting on the floor beneath it- in fact, my game consoles are in the other corner of the room (in my stereo rack). Having the TV mounted about 12’ away from the consoles can make the newer accessories for either a bit hard to connect.
Wii is easy- there are numerous wireless sensor bars that can be put anywhere; but the Microsoft Kinect and the Sony PS3 Eye (used with the Playstation Move controllers) can be a bit more challenging.
Monoprice has a 10M USB 2.0 active extension cable for $8.46- which is considerably longer and less expensive than the Microsoft official 10’ Kinect Extension cable that is going for about $50. The big difference is that the Kinect cable is designed to plug into the special port on the back of the xBox 360 slim and provide additional power. If you (like me) purchased the Kinect separate from an xBox bundle, you also received a USB to Kinect power injector- and this when used with the 10M USB extension cable works perfectly! :)
The PS3 Eye worked with the 10M extension cable- no problem.
I now have both USB cables ran in my walls and through my attic- so there are no cables to see save for the power plug for the Kinect power injector.
The TI-84 Calculator works for homebrew apps on the PS3, but this is just a temporary method as it is kind of annoying to need to run the app on the TI every time I want to boot the PS3 into developer mode.
I ordered a Maximus AVR USB from a small site called Sick Gaming Site this morning (the only US vendor listed on the Max AVR USB site). The site doesn’t instill the greatest feeling of security and confidence as they only have three products for sale. However, the transaction for the AVR USB was handled very professionally with very prompt email updates. Their inventory count also updates in real-time, so that is another re-assuring feeling.
They only accept PayPal, so I feel I have a little more security (i.e. no credit card info stored on their servers). Now I only worry about having my name & address on an unknown server… (For paranoia, I may change the info on their site to alias information once the product has shipped).
Update:
My Maximus AVR USB has shipped via first class US Postal with delivery confirmation. A tracking number has been provided- but (of course) US Postal isn’t the best at updating tracking information… :)
It is going from Brooklyn to Atlanta, so I am expecting it sometime early next week. I will update when I receive the package. So far I am personally very content with Sick Gaming Site’s business process.
Final Update:
My Maximus AVR USB was delivered today. Shipped on Sept 16th and received on September 20th. Good job on the part of Sick Gaming Site in ordering, processing and delivery!
The x64 drivers included with the FLIP 3.4.2 package are not signed and will not work properly with Windows 7 x64; you might want to try the x64 drivers over at Maximus AVRUSB or use an x86 system (which is what I did).
Setup and install took a few minutes and all is working as it should! :)
There are many posts going around on about the PS3 Jailbreak; there was an ‘official’ PS3Jailbreak package for $170 (banned for sale by Sony), followed by less expensive versions (PS3-Free, PS3 Liberator, etc)
More recently, PSGroove and PS Freedom options have popped up allowing install on USB Development kits, various phones (Android, Nokia N900, Palm Pre and older iPhones) and other devices (TI-84 Plus calculator) to be used. These versions do not include the software needed to backup PS3 blu-ray discs to a hard drive and are intended solely for homebrew development on the PS3.
The basic premise is that the device has to act as a USB controller and send specific data to the PS3 on bootup, putting the system into a developer mode that can run unsigned code.
Note: The PS3 exploit must be run every time you boot the PS3; once you power off, you need to re-connect your jailbreak device to re-enable the exploit on next boot!
The USB development kit was designed for this task and various version can cost $30-$50.
The Android versions (different versions for each phone- check the PS Freedom compatibility list!) requires a custom system flash that will disable USB functionality while it is active.
The Nokia N900 and Palm Pre versions appear to use software running in a terminal (I do not have either of these devices so I cannot test)
The iPhone version requires an iPhone 2G/3G or a 1st gen iPod touch running iPhone Linux.
The final option is using a TI-84 Plus calculator to a program that you load and execute when needed.
I opted for the later version and purchased a TI-84 Plus Silver Edition. The TI-84 Plus Silver runs between $90 (Wal-Mart and Target) to $120 (Fry’s). It is a pretty nice graphing calculator to have even without the PS3 exploit. The TI-84 Plus and the Silver edition are about the same, but the Silver edition has 3x more RAM, a removable faceplate and some extra bundled apps- it was about $2 more at Target ($88.99 vs. $90.99), so it was a no-brainer for me.
What you will need to run PS3 Jailbreak with a TI-84 Plus calculator:
A PS3 system running 3.41 firmware. If you have updated to 3.42 you will not be able to use this exploit (and you cannot downgrade once upgraded).
It is also important to note that 3.41 is currently unable to connect to PS3 network; this was done by Sony to force users to upgrade to 3.42. (Although I hear rumor of using a PS3 proxy to bypass this requirement?)
A TI-84 Plus (regular or silver edition) running the latest firmware (currently 2.53MP)
Connect to your TI-84 Plus with ‘TI Device Explorer’ (located in the TI Connect suite)
Drag the ‘PS3JB.8xk’ file to the TI Device Explorer window
There may be a few confirmations and the installation may take a minute or two
Once complete, disconnect the TI-84 from the PC
Run the software on the TI-84 Plus
Press the ‘Apps’ button on the TI-84 Plus
Scroll down until you find the ‘PS3JB’ entry and press ‘enter’ when it is highlighted
Press enter to close the title screen
Press ‘1’ to execute the program
A screen will appear with instructions on the calculator
Connect the TI-84 Plus to the PS3
Eject any discs in the PS3 and power the system down normally
Remove all power from the PS3; ie unplug the PS3 slim or use the power switch on the PS3 classic
Remove all USB connections from the PS3
Return power to the PS3 (but do not turn on yet).
Plug a USB cable between the PS3 and the TI-84 Plus (USB A to MiniUSB B cable)
Power up and wait a few minutes
Power on the PS3 and quickly press the Eject button after pressing power (you should get three quick beeps indicating that the drive is empty)
You should see ‘working…’ and eventually a ‘done’ on the TI-84 Plus screen
Once complete you will have ‘* /app_home/PS3_GAME/’ and ‘* Install Package Files’ options under your game menu
If the above does not work, verify firmware versions on the PS3 and the TI-84 Plus, and go back and start over at step 3.
You can now plug in a USB device and install a PKG file (as they become available) by using the ‘Install Package Files’ option under the menu.
Developers are working on homebrew and various emulators for the PS3- such as a PSP emulator for the PS3– but there isn’t a whole lot of custom software out for the PS3 at the time of this writing.
The PS3 Backup Manager (manager.pkg) is an obvious package one you will want to search for (use ‘The Google’) as it will allow you to backup your purchased PS3 game disks to a USB hard drive.
Note: The PS3 Backup Manger package may be considered the line that separates ‘homebrew’ from ‘piracy’ on the PS3 as it allows you to copy commercial game discs to your hard drive. While this is acceptable use for legitimate archival purposes of games you have purchased, it should not be used on games that you do not personally own!
Notes on the USB hard drive backup:
PS3 games can be pretty big (5GB – 40GB) and could take some time to backup to hard disk (1h 20m for God of War III)
You will need an original PS3 game disc in the drive to play a game as the PS3 checks for a disk (any disc will do) during game startup (similar to the UMD/ISO method on the PSP)
If you need to reboot the PS3, you will need to re-run the exploit to allow you to run unsigned code on the PS3 again (i.e. Backup Manager is unsigned code).
Here are some of the better videos I found that go through the jailbreak and backup process (one for TI-84 Plus, the other for Palm Pre):
Edit: I went back on Saturday and the stack looks exactly the same… I will look again tomorrow if I decide to get the Radeon X1900GT (to see if I can unlock it to 16 pipelines!).
Edit #2: Sunday afteroon and they were down to two units! I think the main issue with these are the $600 price tag…