DVR on your Xbox (even while you're playing), more broadband gaming

Published: Thursday, Jan. 11 2007 12:14 a.m. MST

News from the virtual world:

— TV ON THE CONSOLE: Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates had a busy weekend, popping up via satellite at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit and delivering the keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Gates was promoting his vision of a world where every electronic device you own — from your computer and your TV to your cell phone and your car — is connected.

"The digital decade is happening," he crowed.

For gamers, the big news is that you'll be able to use your Xbox 360 as a digital video recorder. Robbie Bach, president of Microsoft's entertainment devices division, joined Gates in Vegas to unveil the console's new IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) service, which will let you download and record TV shows while you're playing "Halo" or other games on Xbox Live. The service will be available by the end of the year, but if you'll be able to receive it will depend on your Internet service provider.

— GAME SHOW: One of our favorite new toys of the last few years is Turner Broadcasting System's GameTap, the service that delivers classic video games (not to mention new episodes of the delightful "Sam & Max") to our PC. Now another cable TV company, Showtime Networks Inc., is looking to get into the act with a similar service called On Broadband.

The Showtime service, a joint venture with game publisher Broadband Libraries LLC, will offer games that can be downloaded or played online, as well as game reviews and tips. Some material will be free and some will be available for purchase, and subscriptions will be available. The service won't bear the Showtime name; instead, it will be branded with the name of your local broadband provider. Showtime didn't give any hints about specific games, though we're really hoping for one based on "The L Word."

— BOOM! POW! Kolton Mahoney, a 14-year-old in Layton, Utah, got a surprise Christmas morning when he tried to play the copy of "Madden NFL 07" he'd received from his uncle. Instead of good, clean gridiron action, Kolton got an eyeful of pornography.

"This is definitely not Madden," Kolton said he thought to himself — and thank goodness for that, because explicit images of John Madden could scar a boy for life.

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