QUOTE(rokco2 @ Mar 15 2007, 02:06 PM)

2.) remove that damn resistor and risk to crash that 1 week old 360 mobo
If you are reasonably competent at soldering and have a soldering iron with a proper small point tip, it's not particularly difficult to remove the resistor. Just be slow and patient, don't force it, don't overheat the board surrounding it, and it will come off eventually. There are other components near it, but not on all sides, so it's possible to get the iron tip in there without a great risk. Trickier would be putting it back on, if a future update requires the eFuses to be functional - the resistor is too small to put it back as is without considerable skill, you'd probably end up attaching some small flyleads with a larger scale component on. The resistor is 10K ohms, btw, if it comes to that

I have no idea whether the risk/effort is worth the potential reward, tbh. I had mine removed because I had a skilled friend to do the soldering, because I'm an optimist and I like messing with odd platforms, and because I have a reasonable technical proficiency which might make even a hack with limited mass appeal useful/interesting to me.
QUOTE(Wolves @ Mar 15 2007, 03:59 PM)

Damn, why is everyone so excited about XBMC?
Because XBMC is really useful and cool, and the original Xbox's hardware limits its capabilities; most obvious example, the CPU is not powerful enough to decode most HD-resolution stuff. XBMC is far more useful to most normal people than, say, a Linux port, even though porting Linux to it is pretty cool.