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Sony sells 1.2 million PlayStation 3 machines in North America over holidays
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TOKYO - Sales of Sony's PlayStation 3 game machine sales totaled 1.2 million in North America during the key holiday season, the electronics and entertainment company said Monday. The performance gave a lift to its Blu-ray video format because the console also works as a Blu-ray player.

Competition is intense among the latest video game machines, pitting Sony Corp. against Nintendo Co.'s popular Wii and Microsoft Corp.'s XBox 360. Despite the strong holiday sales for the PS3, more Wiis have sold than PS3s since the consoles debuted in late 2006.

But the rivalry between the two of the latest video formats — Blu-ray and HD DVD — appears to be tipping toward the former after Warner Bros. Entertainment, formerly a supporter of the Toshiba-backed HD DVD format, defected to the Blu-ray side over the weekend.

Both formats deliver crisp, clear high-definition pictures and sound, but they are incompatible with each other, and neither plays on older DVD players. Only one format is expected to emerge as the winner, much like VHS trumped Sony's Betamax in the video format battle of the 1980s.

Blu-ray discs can hold about two-thirds more data than HD DVD discs but the technology requires new manufacturing techniques and factories, boosting initial costs.

HD DVDs, on the other hand, are essentially DVDs on steroids, meaning movie studios can turn to existing assembly lines to mass produce them.

Attracting movie studios is critical for making the format widespread. Now, just two major U.S. studios support HD DVD — Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures, which also owns DreamWorks SKG, and Universal Pictures, a unit of General Electric Co.

Sony can hope to gain more sales in its core electronics products, including Blu-ray recorders and high-definition flat-panel TVs, if consumers choose Blu-ray. That may also aid it in its struggle against the popularity of the Wii machine from Nintendo, which went on sale about the same time as the PS3, attracting newcomers to gaming with easy-to-play games that use a wandlike remote-controller.

"The PlayStation brand ended the year in a very strong position and clearly indicates more positive momentum going into 2008," said Jack Tretton, president and chief executive of Sony Computer Entertainment America.

"The strong PS3 sales also further establish Blu-ray's dominant position as the high-definition medium of choice for games and movies," he said in a statement.

Sony Computer Entertainment, the Japanese electronics and entertainment company's game unit, said Monday that sales of the PlayStation Portable handheld reached 1.4 million in North America during the Nov. 23 to Dec. 31 holiday shopping period.

Including sales of 1.3 million for PlayStation 2, PS3's predecessor, retail sales of the three PlayStation machines combined reached more than 3.9 million in North America, Tokyo-based Sony said.

Nintendo spokesman Yasuhiro Minagawa said sales numbers for the Wii — a hot Christmas gift this year — weren't available for the same period in the U.S.

Even though it has been in short supply since its launch, the Wii still far outnumbers the PS3 in American living rooms. According to market researcher NPD Group, the Wii sold 6 million units in the U.S. through the end of November, compared with just 2.5 million for the PS3.

Nintendo said previously it had shipped 13.2 million units worldwide of the Wii by October. The Kyoto-based maker of Pokemon and Super Mario games is expecting to sell a cumulative 23 million Wiis by March 31, the end of its fiscal year.

Sony has said previously that it sold 5.6 million PS3s worldwide as of the end of September. The latest will add to the tally but the company did not yet have the numbers from the other regions.

The PS3 has lagged behind the Xbox 360 console from Microsoft, which has sold 17.7 million Xbox 360 consoles globally over the last two years.

In a tie-up that could help sales, Sony said Monday that PlayStation Portable users worldwide will be able to make calls through the popular Internet-based phone service, eBay Inc.'s Skype, starting later this month.

The PSP must be the latest model released in September, and download of special software and a microphone would be needed. Users would also have to sign up for the Skype service, which provides free calls to other Skype users.

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