Some thoughts on the Sony PSP

I’m on spring break for the week, so I’m trying to get away from academic things for a few days. On that note, here are some musings about really important stuff – video games!

I picked up a Sony Playstation Portable (PSP) this past December when my wife and I were visiting Las Vegas. It’s quite a neat little machine, sporting a beautiful (and relatively large, for a handheld gaming system) solor screen, built-in stereo speakers, a USB port, wireless connectivity with a built-in web browser, etc. Oh yeah, and it also plays video games. This post will give my impressions of the PSP after having had it for a few months.

General impressions

The PSP seems to be a fairly well-built device. Admittedly, I have not dropped my PSP on the concrete yet or deliberately mistreated it, but it doesn’t break when carried in a jeans pocket, for instance. It can also do a lot of things, as I hinted to above. I think the main problem with the PSP, though, is that it may be a “Jack of all trades”, but like the saying, it is a master of none of them.

Gaming

Ironically, gaming is probably the PSP’s weakest point – unless you have a PSP with revision 2.00 or earlier firmware. If all you have are Sony-provided games, you will probably be looking for something to do with your PSP. There just aren’t many good PSP games out there. I mainly play RPGs / action RPGs / old school games on my main consoles. On the PSP, you have the choice of a few RPGs, but none of them could even remotely be considered must-buy games. PoPoLoCrois, for instance, is a passable – if a bit tedious – RPG experience, but doesn’t do a whole lot that RPGs from the Genesis/SNES era couldn’t do. There’s really nothing on the PSP that could compare to, say, Star Ocean: The Second Story or Grandia on the original Playstation.

The graphics and sound in the games that the PSP has are very nice. Untold Legends: Brotherhood of the Blade, for instance, has very impressive graphics. And truth be told, it’s a pretty good time-waster if you’re on a long trip and not doing the driving yourself. But it’s not really any better (or substantially different) than the host of other hack-and-slash games available on every modern console.

UMD discs are also a bit of a pain. The PSP, unlike every other handheld currently out there, runs its games from a little DVD-like disc called a “UMD”. This presumably makes games a lot cheaper to produce (though you won’t see that reflected in game prices), but adds the twin problems of disc read errors and loading times to handheld gaming. One thing you really don’t expect from a handheld is to have to wait for a game to load. The whole point, in fact, of the handheld is instant gaming. Gaming wherever and whenever you want it, and the PSP misses that boat a little. On the plus side, picking up a game where you left off is almost instantaneous, provided you don’t run out of battery between when you put your PSP to sleep and when you wake it up again. I’ll have to admit that I did experience some glitches here with Untold Legends locking up after trying to continue a game in progress.

The PSP is also equipped with a memory stick duo slot, which makes saving games a breeze and ideally would let you run games from the memory stick so that you don’t have to carry around a pocketful of UMDs. Unfortunately, no Sony-made games appear to support playing from the memory stick. If you want to play games from the memory stick, you’ll have to stick with “homebrew” games and/or emulators and hope your PSP’s firmware is old enough to run them.

The controls of the PSP also leave something to be desired. The D-pad of the PSP is difficult to perform diagonals on, making control in some games imprecise. (I’ve tried several PSPs, and it doesn’t seem to be just mine.) When available, the analog thumbstick works a lot better than the d-pad, but it seemed sluggish on games like Bosconian in the PSP’s Namco classics collection. The other buttons, though, work well enough.

Honestly, if gaming is your only reason to buy a handheld, buy a Nintendo DS or a Gameboy Advance. The game library for either of those systems simply blows away what you’ll find on the PSP. In addition, the systems and games are cheaper.

If you’re an older gamer, though, you might find the form factor of the PSP to be better – with its bigger screen and easier-to-hit controls.

Music

If you’re wondering what to do with sll that memory stick space since Sony doesn’t seem to want to let you stick games on there, you can load the PSP up with MP3 music. The PSP is a passable MP3 player, although if you are expecting a well-thought out interface with lots of features, you will be disappointed. There are almost no features for organizing music. Basically, you just dump tracks onto the PSP (it’s seen by your computer as an external USB drive where you can crag and drop files) and play them.

A plus with using the PSP as a music player is that it has internal speakers. True, they are fairly weak speakers, but you can use the PSP without headphones.

Movies

Another way to use your memory stick space is for movies. True, you can buy movies specifically for the PSP on UMD discs, but why would you want to buy movies for the PSP when they are more expensive than DVDs and not watchable on your television?

That’s right. The PSP has no TV output, so forget watching PSP movies on your television. (Yes, there are a couple of low-quality and expensive options for adding TV-out to the PSP, but why bother?)

More bad news: Sony didn’t make it extremely easy for you to move video to the PSP, since it only supports a very limited range of resolutions and video encoding methods.

The good news is that software makers have come to the rescue. There are packages available for Windows that can convert video to the required PSP format for you without much fuss. Under Linux, the package ffmpeg can convert video from most any other format you have (DVD, for instance) to PSP format. Depending on what quality you want, you can get anywhere from a single movie to 6+ hours of video onto a 1GB memory stick. (If anyone is interested, I could post a “HOWTO” for getting video onto the PSP using a Linux machine.)

This is probably what I use my PSP the most for – a portable movie player. You can carry several movies on the memory stick, so you’ll have something to watch on the go.

Web browsing

With the version 2.00 firmware, Sony has put a usable web browser in the PSP – making it a simple, easily carried web browsing appliance. The browser worke well and supports Javascript, but you won’t be able to access things like streaming video, since the PSP doesn’t support many video formats. Neither Flash nor Java is supported, rendering some sites unusable. On the plus side, the screen is very easy to read on the PSP, and most pages that don’t require Flash or Java are rendered well.

Very large pages won’t fit into the PSP’s memory, triggering the PSP to complain about the size of the page and then display only part of it. Ebay’s search pages do that, as do some other pages with lots og images.

Still, I was able to check e-mail anf surf the web from inside one o the malls in Vegas on the PSP. Neat.

Book reading

Since the PSP functions as a web browser, you mught also expect to be able to read e-books on it. Sony apparently didn’t think of this possibility, but it can be done. You have a few options:

  1. Use a homebrew book reader, which requires you to be running an older version of the PSP firmware.
  2. If the book is in text file format, open it with the web browser. This will only work reliably if the e-book is very short due to the PSP’s memory limitations.
  3. Write a script to convert the e-book to split HTML pages, which you can then read on the PSP without the memory errors. This is what I’ve done. If you want the script (a short python script for Linux – might run on Windows too if you have Python), let me know and I’ll post it.

With the HTML files, you can use the PSP as a passable book reader. Using the large font makes the text very easy to read. It’s too bad Sony didn’t provide some book-reading software with the PSP.

Images

If you have a Sony camera that takes pictures to a memory stick duo, you can use the PSP to view the pictures. Alternatively, you can copy pictures from your computer to the PSP and view them on the PSP. This feature isn’t all that useful to me, but then again I don’t have a Sony camera.

Conclusions

My overall impressions? The PSP is a very cool device. Unfortunately, Sony has gone out of their way to limit the device so that many people won’t really use it for much of anything. The game library is too small, and most other functions of the PSP are limited. If you’re a gadget freak like me, pick one up used. If you want to play games, get a Nintendo handheld instead.

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