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by civild 5222 days ago
Your second (third?) point is moot, since Sony's own Content Manager Assistant[1] can copy anything from your Vita memory card onto a Mac or PC. The piracy chat from Sony's spokespersons is pure marketing dross.

As for their right to earn money, I don't think anyone is debating that - Digital Foundary's main criticism is the speed of the media, which is (through empirical testing of course) significantly worse than standard microSD cards that are much cheaper.

The best comparison though is to Nintendo's 3DS which comes bundled with a standard SD card, and it hasn't fallen to piracy yet.

[1] http://cma.dl.playstation.net/cma/

1 comments

Ah, that's weird. I was under impression that CMA would allow you only to copy over specific data - akin to iTunes, but seems I was wrong. (Or was I? From the link:

  You can display lists of music, image, and video files stored on your computer and transfer the files to your PS Vita system.
That sounds like iTunes-esque thing - is anyone here in possession of Vita and could chime in about this?)

Nevertheless, thanks for that link.

It allows you to copy pretty much anything, including "Apps" of which Games are a subtype. PSP hacker websites like Wololo are already poring over encrypted .psvimg files.

I know this because I own one, and I ran out of space on my 4GB Vita memory card within a day just by downloading games from PSN. The CMA is a life saver because I can use my PC as backup storage, essentially, without being forced to buy a larger, more expensive, memory card.

Of course, this just leaves the matter of convenience, which is why the performance of the media is such an annoying factor.

As for the CMA itself, it simply acts as a daemon once it is set up - there's no GUI and all file transfers are handled on the Vita itself.