PS5 and PS4 lead engineers are retiring from Sony


Sony hardware architect Masayasu Ito, who led the engineering work on both the PS4 and PS5, is retiring at the end of September.

The 60-year-old engineer is currently the vice president of Sony Interactive Entertainment, but will step down on October 1, according to Bloomberg.

Ito first joined Sony in 1986, moving to its console division in 2000. During his time at the company, he led the engineering of the PS3, PS4, and PS5, as well as the PS4 Pro.

Although not as well-known as Sony hardware designer Mark Cerny, Ito has been instrumental in the success of PlayStation – a lead engineer when it comes to hardware and system software for the PS3, PS4, and PSP. Now, he will leave Sony behind, stepping out as representative director as well as SIE vice president.

ITO began engineering consoles in the early ’00s – working extensively on PlayStation 1 and 2 peripherals including LCD monitors for the PSone. He then led the development of Sony’s popular handheld, the PSP. He was also involved in the creation of Sony’s first double in VR, the original PSVR, as well as the PS5.


Ito’s exit marked the end of a 36-year long career with Sony – originally working on audio equipment. Current Director and Vice President Lin Tao will replace Ito when he steps down on October 1. Additionally, Kiichiro Urata will take over as Representative Director in his absence. However, it is also believed that Cerny will remain as the lead designer for Sony’s next generation of consoles.

he said no words So far Anything to do with PlayStation 6.

PS5 Things to Do First

The PS5 has been plagued by constant supply issues since its launch in November 2020, with many gamers still unable to get their hands on the console. However, Sony is committed to increasing the supply of the PS5 in time for the holidays, along with a promise to increase production earlier in the year. “We want to produce more units as soon as possible,” said Sony’s CFO, Hiroki Totoki.

Want to read more about PS5? This is why the PS5 is getting more expensive, and what you can expect from the upcoming PlayStation Tournament beta.

Ryan Leston is an entertainment journalist and film critic for IGN. you can follow him Twitter,

Source


Related News

PIN, password or fingerprint, which method is better to protect Windows

The first thing we must do when we open a new computer or when we format it, is to select which security method we want to use to protect access to our

NVIDIA Ada GPUs Smaller, More Performance: AD106 and AD107

Images and specifications for NVIDIA's upcoming AD106 and AD107 graphics processors have surfaced. New Ada-architecture GPUs will power the low-end laptops we

Open war for the search engine of the future: why Google and Microsoft have become obsessed with ChatGPT

Web browsers have not changed much in the last two decades. In 2023 that is going to change: the irruption of ChatGPT and conversational chatbots created with

The quintessential alternative to the Apple Watch is available for half its price

The Amazfit GTR 3 Pro has a very visual design and multiple health functions

JP Morgan report shifts institutional trader interest from blockchain to AI after crypto slump

More than half of institutional traders surveyed by JPMorgan Chase & Co said artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning will be the most