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Microsoft ships first Xbox 2 development kits using Apple G5 hardware

Although the specification for Microsoft's next-generation Xbox platform has not yet been finalised, the company has shipped early prototype development kits to some developers - using Apple PowerMac G5 systems as a basis.

Although the specification for Microsoft's next-generation Xbox platform has not yet been finalised, the company has shipped early prototype development kits to some developers - using Apple PowerMac G5 systems as a basis.

Technology news site The Inquirer reported over the weekend that the software development kits (SDKs) featured dual-CPU Apple Power Mac G5 systems with ATI Radeon 9800 Pro graphics solutions - effectively making them into high end Mac systems, but running a modified version of the Windows operating system core.

The hardware configuration of the systems has been confirmed by development sources, who told us this morning that the kits are designed only for creating extremely early prototypes of game technology, with the specification of the final Xbox 2 console being radically different.

Although the final specification of the console is thought to be still under discussion at Microsoft - with issues such as the amount of RAM and the whether to include a hard drive still undecided - it's known that Xbox 2 will feature six PowerPC G5 CPU cores and a new model of the ATI Radeon graphics chipset.

As such, the current kits - which, interestingly, are actually branded with the Apple logo - are only similar to final Xbox 2 hardware in the broadest terms. Right now, neither the next-generation ATI part nor the 65nm IBM PowerPC chip - or, for that matter, the three-CPU board needed to hold them - actually exists, so Microsoft is shipping something based on current hardware in order to give developers a running start on the new platform.

The arrival of these prototype kits puts Microsoft well ahead of its rivals in the next-generation console race - since developers have yet to see specifications of Sony's PS3 and Nintendo's N5, never mind actually receiving development hardware.

The news lends weight to recent speculation within the industry that Microsoft will be the first to bring its next console to market, with a launch in autumn 2005 considered likely, while both Sony and Nintendo are thought to be aiming at 2006 launches, with a possibility of Japan-only rollouts in late 2005.

Further Reading: [Xbox 2 SDK released on cool Apple Power Mac G5s - The Inquirer]

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Rob Fahey avatar
Rob Fahey: Rob Fahey is a former editor of GamesIndustry.biz who spent several years living in Japan and probably still has a mint condition Dreamcast Samba de Amigo set.