[citation][nom]neros1x[/nom]It could be true. The PS3 has 8 cores, and most PCs don't even have 8 cores yet. By the time this console hits its life expectancy, 16 cores will probably be passe.[/citation]
Probably not. The only PCs with 8 cores are those with crappy FXs and they are beaten by dual and quad core Intel processors such as the i3s and more significantly, the i5s. Considering that games are only jsut beginning to use 4 threads, I'd say that 16 cores is a long way off, especially with so many games and software applications still only being single/dual threaded. There is little reason to go past two cores and almost no reason to go past 4 unless you are doing professional/highly threaded work on them.
Besides that, the quad core Sandy Bridge i7s are faster than the octo core FX processors, so I really don't see core count going up any time soon. Even AMD recognizes that 8 is the most that even they will use in desktops for some time and considering that AMD are the ones who like to throw out highly threaded processors across their entire processor market, I doubt we will see even 10, 12, or 16 cores being common place for at least ten years. Quad core desktop CPUs came out like six years ago and they still aren't the industry standard yet. Even after they are, we still have 6, 8, and 12 core CPUs to make common place before the 16 core CPUs are common. By that time, we might not even be using X86, or at least not in it's current form.
[citation][nom]returnzork[/nom]That will cost too much money, for a console with 16 cores..[/citation]
How many cores a processor has does not define price WHATSOEVER. If it's something like 16 ARM A15 cores, then it would still be dirt cheap. If it's something like 4 Sandy Bridge cores, it would cost MORE than the 16 ARM A15 cores. Core count does not determine price any more than core count determines performance, both of which is next to neither.