Microsoft’s upcoming console is designed to be all things to all audiences. It will play the latest games, but it will also link to your streaming media accounts, your cable box, and your tablet—via the SmartGlassapp—in a bid to rule your living room.

Live-TV Integration

If you hook your cable box into your Xbox One via its HDMI-in port, you can switch to live TV simply by pressing a button—or by saying "Xbox, live TV" loud enough for the Kinect microphone to recog­nize the command. The console also features an "Xbox One Guide" that outlines currently available broadcast-TV programming along­side on-demand con­tent. You'll be able to organize media con­tent by your "favorites,” as well as by the degree to which it is currently trending in popularity.

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Terrifying Power


Driven by an eight-core processor and 8GB of RAM, the Xbox One will have USB 3.0 ports, a Blu-ray drive, a 500GB hard drive, and Wi-Fi. Every unit comes with a new Kinect, a 250,000- pixel infra red tracking camera that can process 2GB of data per second. It can distinguish your thumb from your hand and register wrist and shoulder rotations. According to Microsoft's Mark Whitten, it can "read your heartbeat” by measuring tiny changes in skin tone as the blood vessels in your face expand and contract.

Multitasking

Borrowing a trick from Windows 8, the Xbox One’s Snap Mode lets you multitask between apps and functions on the same screen. If, say, you're watching a sporting event, you can prompt the Xbox One via voice command or button press to access your updated fantasy league stats or to search the Web with Internet Explorer. The Xbox One also includes Skype integration and allows video chats over Xbox Live, through Kinect. In effect, the Xbox One can turn any TV into a smart TV.

No Old Games

Some great new games are in the pipeline for the Xbox One (see page 18), but the console is not backward compati­ble. You can't play Xbox 360 games on it, and you can’t use your old controllers. You can, however, bring your Xbox Live Gamertag and your Xbox Live Gamerscore over to the new console. The migration may include digital movies and music you've bought on Xbox Live, but it does not include download­able Xbox 360 Arcade games, which won't work on the Xbox One.

It’s Always Watching

The console works sort of like a video game DVR, constantly buffer­ing gameplay footage onto the hard drive so that you can say “Xbox, capture that” and save a clip of your latest exploits for posterity. You can share the clips via Xbox Live, YouTube, and other social net­works. Kinect is always watching, too: It must be connected to the Xbox One for the con­sole to function, and it has a low-power mode that enables it to listen for voice commands even when the Xbox One is switched off.

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