Ninmecu said:
At the time of writing, it wasn't mentioned, but I standby what I said. The console has to be put into a complete OFF mode, as in power unplugged, power switch turned off, everything unplugged, to ensure it isn't on...Yeah...I'll let Lightknight iterate it.
To be fair, you don't actually have to unplug anything. The standard "off" for the Xbone looks like it'll be sleep mode, same as with the ps4. This should allow for updates to run while you're off the system, faster boot times and even perhaps being able to turn on your system and pick up exactly where you left off. Those are good features, we want those.
However, the way to turn the kinect off will be a full turn off instead of the sleep mode. You probably have to hold down the power button or change the settings somewhere. This will ruin any of the features listed above plus any I haven't thought of. Also, with developers and Microsoft thinking that updates are run when you aren't around, they'll be throwing them out there all the time and when you turn it on the updates should be even worse than this past generation because of their perception that it won't be impacting you.
No matter how you look at it, while it's on, you've still got a potential big brother and they have patents moving forward to support that theory, so no, I will not ever allow an Xbone in my home, under any circumstances, even if they revive my favorite franchises/games of all time.
Microsoft has recently (Win8-recently) gotten into the habbit of forcing things on consumers that we don't want but that they want us to do. For me, it's not even an issue of big brother per se, but rather it's a huge issue of being forced to use their products in a way I do not wish to. There is no reason that there shouldn't be a setting to turn it off and there's no reason that in non-kinect games you couldn't have kinect off to play them.
I get that they want to see us and hear us and gather metric data on how people enjoy games. Yes, that'll make better games. But that's for a study full of willing participants and NOT consumers who are paying for what should be a gaming console. It also doesn't matter that they have a privacy setting somewhere in the nether regions of the OS. Facebook and several other companies also have that and we know exactly how good they are at hiding them and how updates will occasionally turn some of those settings back to default for some obvious and greedy reasons.
The crux of the matter is giving consumers a choice. I think Microsoft is still capable of listening to consumers. But only when money talks (or fails to) in a significant way. It's why they're admitting they made a mistake with Win8 by forcing the metro menu on users instead of giving them a choice. It's that choice thing that makes a huge difference. If the initial sales of the Xbone are shitty and this remains the reason then I do believe future iterations of the Xbone will resolve this component of the issue. I don't know about the other disliked changes though (they stand to make a lot of money from the used games thing and we don't know that the ps4 won't go that route too).