MS did add (limited) USB storage capability in 2010, allowing the use of thumbdrives (I think technically it can use USB HDDs too, but with a max data size of 16GB it's a waste to do that).equalsign wrote: In my eyes, Microsoft were the abnormal ones this gen when it came to proprietary data. The PS3 and the Wii both used user upgradable storage solutions.
To their credit, MS has probably most consistently improved their console over the life of it (though, arguably, they also left themselves the most room to do so). The PS3 dropped a lot of features along the way - PS2 compatibility, SACD compatibility, Other OS support, most of the card slots (well, from the 60GB, the 20GB never had them, or Wi-Fi for that matter), and so on.
The Wii, notably, dropped backwards compatibility with the newer "Family Edition" console, which has been the standard model sold for about a year now.
Had the 360 not been rushed to market before the other two, it's possible that the initial feature set would have been better. For its part, the machine has only ever gotten better, as opposed to the competition. Though, the competition also didn't have anything on the level of the RRoD fiasco

VVV
