My father's brother's nephew's cousin's former roommate who supposedly knows someone at Sony said the PS3 will dispense free cheese slices. :detective: :laugh:
Insert cross game chat and I'll forget all the offline activity and hacks that occured...Add in longer warranties oh say 1-2 years for PS3 repairs from Sony and I think I can forgive them completely.
I would prefer cheese sticks with a nice marinara sauce for dipping - any luck with asking your father's brother's nephew's cousin's former roomate for that info? :wink1: JPConway
I can believe that new features will be added. First, they are rebuilding their infrastructure, which is probably a good time to plug in new features; the network is down, so resources can be funneled into building and coding, not just upkeep and support; and lastly, they need to win back their fans and new users and 1-up the 360, which probably had a rise in gamers as of late. I hope that we'll see some good things once the network is back up.
I´ll only believe it when i see it. And 2 weeks + 4 days without the PSN is only not a long time to Sony. I sure hope "early next week" not to be friday, thursday, wednesday and tuesday, but MONDAY, tomorrow!
soon –adverb, -er, -est. 1. within a short period after this or that time, event, etc.: We shall know soon after he calls. 2. before long; in the near future; at an early date: Let's leave soon. 3. promptly or quickly: He came as soon as he could. 4. readily or willingly: I would as soon walk as ride. 5. early in a period of time; before the time specified is much advanced: soon at night; soon in the evening. 6. Obsolete . immediately; at once; forthwith. 7. sooner or later, eventually: Sooner or later his luck will run out. 8. would sooner, to prefer to: I would sooner not go to their party. Compare rather( def. 8 ) . Origin: before 900; Middle English; Old English sōna; cognate with Old High German sān, Gothic suns —Can be confused: currently, immediately, momentarily, now, presently — adv 1. in or after a short time; in a little while; before long: the doctor will soon be here 2. as soon as at the very moment that: she burst into tears as soon as she saw him 3. as soon…as used to indicate that the second alternative mentioned is not preferable to the first: I'd just as soon go by train as drive [Old English sōna; related to Old High German sāno, Gothic suns ] Word Origin & History soon O.E. sona "at once, immediately," from W.Gmc. *sæno (cf. O.Fris. son , O.S. sana , O.H.G. san , Goth. suns "soon"). Sense shifted early M.E. to "within a short time" through human nature (cf. anon ). Amer.Eng. Sooner for "Oklahoma native" is 1930, from the fact that in 1889 many settlers of the territory snuck onto public land and staked their claims "sooner" than the legal date and time