Ex360e -
While not a spacecraft, the EX360e has been qualified for stratospheric conditions (100,000 feet, -90°C, near-vacuum). Several units are slated for deployment at the Concordia Research Station in Antarctica, and a modified version is under consideration for lunar polar crater exploration, where temperatures hover near -200°C in permanently shadowed regions.
As an "experimental" project, Ex360E has distinct advantages and notable limitations for enthusiasts.
The is an experimental, open-source Xbox 360 emulator specifically designed for Windows PCs. Unlike general-purpose emulators like Xenia , EX360e is tailored for Xbox Live Arcade (XBLA) titles that were developed using the XNA Game Studio framework. Performance and Compatibility ex360e
No technology is without constraints. The EX360e has three acknowledged limitations:
For nuclear or space-adjacent applications, the EX360e integrates with on-the-fly scrubbing. Each logic operation is performed three times on physically separate die, and results are compared. If one core returns a corrupted value due to a gamma-ray strike, the other two overrule it. Memory is composed of magnetoresistive RAM (MRAM), which is inherently immune to single-event upsets. The result is a mean time between soft errors (MTBSE) of over 10 years in a 1 Mrad total ionizing dose environment—orders of magnitude better than industrial PLCs. While not a spacecraft, the EX360e has been
: .NET Framework 3.5 or higher and Microsoft Visual C++ 2010 runtime.
By decoupling electromechanical systems from the tyranny of ambient conditions, the EX360e enables what engineers call “presence without presence”: the ability to act in a place without being there, for as long as necessary, with fidelity approaching human touch. For the technician who no longer has to suit up for a radioactive hot cell, for the oceanographer who can now monitor a hydrothermal vent for months, for the polar scientist who can maintain instruments through the long night—the EX360e is not just a tool. It is a new way of being in the world’s most hostile places. The is an experimental, open-source Xbox 360 emulator
For industries like offshore wind, arctic shipping, and deep-sea mining, the EX360e changes the ROI equation. Consider a subsea inspection campaign: a traditional ROV requires a support vessel, a team of 12, daily maintenance, and spare parts for every seal and hydraulic hose. Downtime due to cold-start issues in the North Sea costs an average of $50,000 per hour.
The table reveals a clear trade-off: the EX360e is heavier (450 kg vs. 300 kg for a comparable hydraulic arm) and more expensive (estimated $350,000 vs. $120,000). However, total cost of ownership over a five-year mission in extreme conditions is 60% lower due to reduced maintenance, no fluid logistics, and longer deployment cycles.