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But Ken Kutaragi looks about as edgy as a game of Pong. The stocky 52-year-old CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment quietly enters a conference room in PlayStation's Tokyo headquarters, ...
Ken Kutaragi will be replaced by Kazuo Hirai, but will continue to work as a senior technology adviser for Sony. A shakeup in the command structure behind the PS3 may have a positive effect on ...
Ken Kutaragi's pristine Nintendo PlayStation prototype version has unique design features. The only known console prototype remains costly and offers a look at what could have been.
Ken Kutaragi is running a robotic startup, taking no pay, and trying to shape the future of human-robot relations. Tech. PlayStation's creator wants robots and humans to work side by side.
PlayStation inventor Ken Kutaragi shrugged off the metaverse as the tech industry’s next big undertaking and head-mounted displays as the portal to that destination, describing them as dividing ...
Ken Kutaragi, the former chairman and CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment, has claimed during the Tokyo Game Show over the weekend that everyone at Sony originally thought the PlayStation would ...
Ken Kutaragi’s big bet. In spring of 1993, there were rivals like 3DO, Sega and Nintendo. They were all very different platforms, and each of them had great games.
When Ken Kutaragi was leading the development of the PlayStation in 1994, the team was just 65 people. Kutaragi had to rely heavily on partnerships with external providers when building the iconic ...
Ken Kutaragi, the co-creator of the first three PlayStation consoles, has a Nintendo PlayStation prototype in his closet. It was believed only one of the prototypes existed after it sold for ...
In an interview with Bloomberg, Ken Kutaragi explains the reasoning behind his apathy toward VR and the metaverse. To him, this technology isn’t about unifying the real and virtual.
TOKYO — Ken Kutaragi, whose name is often paired with “geek” and “genius,” seemed to many a logical choice to take Sony’s helm as it struggles to turn around its stumbling electronics ...
PlayStation CEO Ken Kutaragi used his game console to take control of Sony's boardroom. His next target: every appliance in your home.