- May 26, 2011
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I wasn't quite sure how to title the thread, so I'm sorry if it comes across as misleading.
I've been thinking of there being the possibility of using the HDMI-in port on the Xbox One to plug in the Xbox 360. In lieu of using a set-top box/DVR/cable-box/etc., this would allow you to easily switch back and forth from your Xbox 360 and Xbox One games using one interface, without switching inputs on your TV, and without using an extra HDMI port on your TV if you're limited. Obviously, not a possibility for everyone, and I'm sure there will be people saying, "What's the point? Why not use them both separately?" but possibly being able to overlay your existing Xbox 360 games on top of an Xbox One interface could have some pretty cool/convenient implications.
Marc Whitten was actually posed this question in an Engadget interview and had a fairly interesting reaction to this, to say the least. A Cheshire cat grin from ear to ear and a little hinting at interoperability between both the consoles tells me that Microsoft could be working hard behind the scenes to see if they can implement something like this... I guess unless that was the first he'd heard of it and he thought it sounded like an amazing idea :winktongue: Obviously, Microsoft is not done with the Xbox 360 and there's no way I am giving mine up... I have a ton of games on there to play, and without any cable box to connect to the Xbox One, I would stand to benefit from this a lot
I've transcribed the conversation below, alongside a link to the video:
I've been thinking of there being the possibility of using the HDMI-in port on the Xbox One to plug in the Xbox 360. In lieu of using a set-top box/DVR/cable-box/etc., this would allow you to easily switch back and forth from your Xbox 360 and Xbox One games using one interface, without switching inputs on your TV, and without using an extra HDMI port on your TV if you're limited. Obviously, not a possibility for everyone, and I'm sure there will be people saying, "What's the point? Why not use them both separately?" but possibly being able to overlay your existing Xbox 360 games on top of an Xbox One interface could have some pretty cool/convenient implications.
Marc Whitten was actually posed this question in an Engadget interview and had a fairly interesting reaction to this, to say the least. A Cheshire cat grin from ear to ear and a little hinting at interoperability between both the consoles tells me that Microsoft could be working hard behind the scenes to see if they can implement something like this... I guess unless that was the first he'd heard of it and he thought it sounded like an amazing idea :winktongue: Obviously, Microsoft is not done with the Xbox 360 and there's no way I am giving mine up... I have a ton of games on there to play, and without any cable box to connect to the Xbox One, I would stand to benefit from this a lot

I've transcribed the conversation below, alongside a link to the video:
"Xbox Chief Product Officer Marc Whitten interview (E3 2013)" - Videos - Viddler (starts at around the 14:50 mark)Interviewer: "... you're buying an Xbox One and you're worried about that stuff not transferring over ... I have friends that might be weary of purchasing an XBLA game right now because they know that it won't go to their next console and they're already planning to buy that ... so there's HDMI CEC on Xbox One for instance and I'm wondering, am I able to plug in a 360 via HDMI to my Xbox One and then play it through the Xbox One?"
Marc Whitten: *starts to grin and smile* I think those are great ideas and we should talk about them more in the future.. *huge smile and lots of head nodding... ending in a huge smile that lasted so long you could think the video froze for a second*
Interviewer: That's an interesting answer
Marc Whitten: You know what? The thing I'll tell you is, you're right the platform is not backwards compatible. We believe everybody's going to still have a lot of Xbox 360s, we think it's going to be a great place to buy games, to play games, to sort of interact with your community... and I want people to feel like that the Xbox 360 and the Xbox One work really well together. So I'll sort of leave it at that, but there's a lot of things I think you can do there, both in LIVE and making sure that's one community, and frankly even more directly how those products can work together