QUOTE(syntaxerror329 @ Mar 13 2009, 09:49 AM)

Basically as I understand it hackers have already made a device that sits in-between the DVDROM drive and the motherboard and looks at all the SATA commands and feeds them into a computer. Wouldnt it be possible to put in a original disk and dump it to the hard drive and have a tool analyze what sectors of the DVD are the actual game. (as we know the games are often much smaller then the entire disk) We could then discard the unused sectors of the disk or replace them in the .ISO with FFFFFFFFFFFFF so that the .ISO size can be compressed into a much smaller size? (exactly like Wii scrubber is doing) ?
This increases the risk of being banned (new checks that look at the padding data), for little gain. You gain nothing unless you can squish the disk down to fit on a single layer DVD, but that changes a lot of details of the security stuff - the people developing the firmware modifications are not supporting single-layer 360 games for a reason.

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A lot of people have 20GB hard drives and the idea of emulating just the security data for diskless play isnt going to be very useful without getting a bigger way overpriced hard drive from Microsoft. Sure we can get WD Bev series hard drives and make our own but then we will have tons of people on live with duplicate hard drive serial numbers and I am sure that wont make MS happy. Even then we are limited to 120GB
This thread was originally about that possibility, because it has the advantage of minimising the amount of storage needed by the device. You are correct that this is still a limited approach, and that emulating the entire disc is probably more useful (and not significantly more difficult, as the hard part is SATA emulation + security handling, which has to be done either way).
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Further as it was already stated this emulating any part of the disk with hardware would not be a easy task. Also if there was hardware emulation of the security check then why not take it all the way and set it up so that a PC with much larger and cheaper hard drives is just loaded with ISOs and have a Daemon tools for 360 type application running on the host computer. What really frustrates me about that idea is that everyone keeps saying how hard this would be yet this tool already exists for the Nintendo Wii
. From www.flatmii.com Share any Wii supported format from your PC using High-speed 2.0 USB protocol . Play, and emulate any of your stored Wii/GameCube image discs . Soldering installation, clip or any software modification is not required for FLATMII. You can even use your Wii without a Wii DVD drive
I don't know what the Wii's DVD interface is, is it SATA, IDE, something weird? Whatever it is, then yes, presumably that chip emulates it, and provides fake data it gets from its USB host. Don't really know too much about the Wii. The fact that someone has already done it for a similar system doesn't make it any easier, though: lots of people have run 100m in under 10s but I'd still have to train for years to be able to attempt it myself

The differences between them would be the interface type, if the Wii isn't SATA, and the security challenges the 360 sends to the drive (no idea how the Wii authenticates discs but from the extreme simplicity of the drive chips that worked on earlier models it can't be that complicated). I can't tell you exactly how much work these differences would create. If it was trivial then the people behind the Wii device would have done it, and be selling a 360 device already, though, no? More money for them

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Has anyone even attempted such a thing?
If they have, they haven't discussed it publicly.