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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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    Nintendo to launch camera, music-ready DS in Japan

    TOKYO
    Thu Oct 2, 2008 9:17am EDT

    TOKYO (Reuters) - Nintendo Co Ltd will launch a DS machine that can take pictures and play music, hoping to cement its lead over Sony's PlayStation and encroach into the territory of Apple Inc's iPod and iPhone.

    Technology  |  Media

    The new model will be launched in Japan on November 1. It is slimmer and has bigger displays than the current model, and will sell for 18,900 yen ($179), up from 16,800 yen for the current model but below the PSP's 19,800 yen.

    The Kyoto-based company, locked in a three-way battle with Sony and Microsoft Corp in the global video game industry, plans to launch the new machine, the DSi, outside Japan in 2009.

    Nintendo's strategy to broaden the gaming population by offering innovative but easy-to-play games has been a roaring success in recent years as the DS and Wii console have attracted women and the elderly on top of traditional gamers.

    White-hot demand for the DS and Wii console, which features a motion-sensing controller that lets players direct on-screen plays by swinging it like a racket, helped the company raise its annual operating profit forecast in August by 23 percent to 650 billion yen ($6.2 billion).

    "We are finding ourselves in an unprecedented stage where one of every six people (in Japan) has the DS," Nintendo President Satoru Iwata told a news conference on Thursday.

    "We will strive not only to appeal to those households without the DS, but to promote a shift to 'one DS per person' from 'one DS per household'."

    The new model will be 12 percent thinner than the current machine and come with 17 percent bigger LCD panels.

    Nintendo sold 6.94 million units worldwide of the DS in April-June, far out-pacing 3.72 million units of Sony's PSP.

    In Japan, however, the PSP outsold the DS by 20 percent in the six months to September, according to game magazine publisher Enterbrain, in a possible sign of slowing momentum for the Nintendo machine.

    Mizuho Securities analyst Takeshi Koyama said it is too early to tell how much demand the new DS is likely to stir up because it is unclear at the moment what kind of unique game software and services Nintendo will offer for the new machine.

    "There is nothing earth-shattering about it ... We can hold high hopes of it if software titles unique to the new model come out," Koyama said.

    "But they did not offer something like that this time around."

    Following the announcement, shares in Nintendo, Japan's fifth-most valuable company after Toyota Motor Corp, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp and NTT DoCoMo Inc, ended down 3.7 percent at 39,500 yen.

    That was their first close below the 40,000 yen mark in more than 16 months. The benchmark Nikkei average fell 1.9 percent.

    For the Wii, which have outsold Sony's PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's Xbox 360, Nintendo plans to launch highly anticipated music software, "Wii Music," on October 16 in Japan, entering the fast-growing software segment pioneered by Activision Blizzard's "Guitar Hero."

    "Wii Music" will let players simulate more than 60 different instruments and is expected to be a promising sales driver for the Wii in the year-end shopping season.

    ($1=105.74 Yen)

    (Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Michael Watson, Elaine Hardcastle)



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