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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    Sony promises more games to boost PS3 demand

    TOKYO
    Thu Jun 21, 2007 4:24am EDT

    Stocks

       
    People play a game on the Sony Playstation 3 at a party held by Sony celebrating the game console, in Berlin March 22, 2007. Sony Corp. said it expects at least 380 new PlayStation 3 software titles to become available in the current business year, on top of more than 100 titles currently on the market, driving demand for its latest console that saw a slow start. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke

    TOKYO (Reuters) - Sony Corp. (6758.T) expects at least 380 new PlayStation 3 games to hit the market this business year and says that should rev up demand for the console that has so far lost out to Nintendo's (7974.OS) wildly popular Wii.

    Technology

    There are about 150 games currently available for the PS3, including online titles.

    Sony Chief Executive Howard Stringer said at the annual shareholders' meeting that the company will review its dividend policy once it has achieved its profitability target for the year to March 2008, raising the possibility of future dividend hikes.

    "Attractive game software is the key to accelerate PS3 growth over the next year," Stringer said on Thursday.

    Sony's game division posted an operating loss of 232 billion yen ($1.88 billion) in the past business year because of hefty start-up costs of the PS3, prompting investors to see the console business as Sony's biggest risk factor.

    Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s Wii game console has been outselling the PS3 by three to one in Japan and more than two to one in the United States so far this year, according to game magazine publisher Enterbrain and research firm NPD.

    A lack of attractive games has been widely cited as a reason for the PS3's relatively weak performance in addition to the fact that it is twice as expensive as the Wii.

    More than 200 packaged software titles will likely be released for the PS3 in the year to March 2008, and more than 180 titles are expected to be launched over the Internet, Stringer said.

    "PlayStation 3 going forward will be vital to our future and we'll succeed," said Stringer, the first non-Japanese to run the Tokyo-based electronics and entertainment conglomerate.

    Sony aims to double its PS3 shipments to 11 million units in the current business year and reduce the game unit's loss to 50 billion yen.

    Responding to a shareholder request for higher dividend payouts, Welsh-born Stringer said Sony management is willing to re-examine its dividend policy, but achieving its profitability target should come first.

    Sony aims to hit a group-wide operating profit margin of 5 percent in the current business year, and a 4 percent margin for its electronics division.

    In the past business year, when its earnings were hit by the massive loss at the game unit and costs to recall 9.6 million PC batteries, its overall operating margin came to 0.9 percent, and its mainstay electronics unit posted a 2.6 percent margin.

    "Upon achieving our profitability target, we would consider whether to change our dividend policy," Stringer said.

    Sony's annual dividend have remained at 25 yen per share for the past seven years.

    Following Stringer's comments, Sony shares closed down 1.5 percent at 6,520 yen, underperforming the Tokyo stock market's electrical machinery index .IELEC.T, which gained 0.49 percent.

    ($1=123.58 Yen)

    (Additional reporting by Nathan Layne, Kentaro Hamada)



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