No, he's right, cause that's not an Xone, it's a ******* 360, you know, the one that sold more than the PS3 and had ******** of exclusivities. You would know that if you weren't a stupîd Sony fanboy. Before you start running your mouth, I have both, and I prefer nintendo anyway, so no, I'm not a "Xbone" or whatever you call them.
This fukin kid probly doesn't even have the following.
2 or more Monitors
GTX 980 or above
i5 4690K or above.
more than petty 8 gigs of ram.
1TB HDD
250GB SSD
Yet carries around the banner "PC Master race"
People with real powerhouse computers don't go "Pc masterace forever11!!11!1"
the eject button on the XBOX works when the circuit is connected and a capacitor is filled up, then it has enough current to trigger a relay to start the motor to open/close the tray. When you touch the plasma ball, you essentially create a "load" for the electrostatic energy in the plasma ball, which will induce a current in electromagnetic components. So either the relay coil receives the energy or the PCB trace leading to the capacitor receives the energy and the effect is essentially the same as if the CD eject button was pushed.
I still think a more likely explanation is that someone else is using the eject option for the disc tray via a controller while the other guy messes around with the plasma ball next to an xbox.
Just saying that even though your explanation sounds logical, I'm still skeptical about this.
from what I can see there are no lights round the ring of the xbox which means no controllers are connected? I could be very wrong, I don't really use xbox, or there might even be a green light and I'm just retarded
Brother used to have one of those on one side of the room and one of them touch lamps on the other side, you know, the ones where you just touch somewhere on the body of the lamp and it switches on, and that used to switch on/off every time he touched the plasma globe. I think those touch buttons work by sensing a change in the levels of static electricity when something touches them, and plasma globes sling off a ton of that (its what makes fluorescent tubes light up when you hold it near the globe)
I got a plasma ball for last Christmas and started playing around with it like wrapping it in aluminum foil and connecting a wire to the ground via screw and making sparks and stuff. But then after about 2 hours of fun I called it a day, turned on my laptop and it basically was just a brick now.
Have an xbone at a friends place and they claimed on instant on mode the tv and xbone would come on by themselves in the middle of the night. Then I'm playing and it randomly sounded the no disc eject. Thinking there was someone with amplified radio keying up