It's a chip designed for use in Xbox One and they are reusing it to save money. It is a southbridge chip. Usually for IO I think. Nothing to worry about.
Maybe they are reusing excess chips from the XBOX One.
Bingo.It's a chip designed for use in Xbox One and they are reusing it to save money. It is a southbridge chip. Usually for IO I think. Nothing to worry about.
No, but the fact that you can replace your mechanical drive in current gen consoles with OS installs directly from MS would suggest this is possible.SSD looks like it could be pretty simple to replace, has there been any info on if someone has tried to do this yet?
Yep, just beautiful.
Yep, just beautiful.
They cut too much meat from Series S specs though... unfortunately
It's a chip designed for use in Xbox One and they are reusing it to save money. It is a southbridge chip. Usually for IO I think. Nothing to worry about.
No cables except for the fan is very impressive.
Ah. It'd be great to install Linux on that box haha.
There wasn't any Microsoft console where you could boot windows onto it.Now I think it, can you still boot W10 in a Series X|S? I would get a second Series S if I could convert this in a PC machine with Steam and everything lmao
I hope failoverflow will take a deep look at the consoles but i don't have high hopes for Xbox.No cables except for the fan is very impressive.
Ah. It'd be great to install Linux on that box haha.
It could be the reason for USB 3.1 which of course is totally fine for a console.It's a chip designed for use in Xbox One and they are reusing it to save money. It is a southbridge chip. Usually for IO I think. Nothing to worry about.
There wasn't any Microsoft console where you could boot windows onto it.
Realistically it'd be a lot of work.
I can see an audience beyond us core who'd just pick one up for Gamepass
AFAIK you can't actually void warranties for breaking those seals, at least in US.