The cable is included with all the HDD upgrade packs. That said, their 60GB and 120GB retail upgrades remain wholly inadequate for digital distribution of full retail titles. While at this time there are only a handful released on the Xbox marketplace, once more are released those hard drives will still be insufficient. I don't know about you, but I personally do not want to delete anything that I have purchased digitally. You never know if it might become unavailable, or if you will no longer be able to download it or something.
This might be a slight deviation from the topic at hand, but the Xbox360's original design and specs are showing its age. When people start worrying about disk space and start having to purchase addons and upgrades to their existing console, it's starting to show that the original design is inadequate for today's market. My 20GB Pro model is completely outdated now. I only have 9.7GB free, and that's basically not enough space for today's XBL implementation and regular use -- I assume that most XBLA games are getting bigger. I think if I deleted _everything_ I'd have like 13-15 GB free, which is still not a lot.
Digital distribution has really taken off over the last 2 years. DLC is now really commonplace, and they are getting bigger. What we thought were simple arcade games that would be small are slowly becoming as impressive as full fledged retail titles. Full retail titles are also being released for digital distribution too.
Add in proprietary design, and MS has totally fucked their consumer base. I have absolutely no intentions of upgrading my HDD on the Xbox360 unless I don't have to pay for it. Their 60GB and 120GB HDD upgrades are ridiculously overpriced. MS tried the bandaid solution though -- I remember hearing about their free upgrade for people with arcade machines (no HDD) for a free 20GB HDD or something like that.
Basically, it seems that MS didn't really plan things out too well and the consumer suffers greatly as they are forced to play catch up with the accessories (wireless adapter is now replaced with the wireless N adapter; HDD is inadequate and needs an upgrade). People then have to fight the hardware problems, but become attached as they are too 'invested' into the Xbox360 platform.
No, they didn't think years ahead, and I doubt if anyone in the business knows how long any one console cycle is going to last. My feeling is that this current cycle is going to be significantly longer than previous ones. Both Sony and MS lost massive amounts of money establishing their entries, and to bring it all to net profitability requires more time. Plus I'm sure the pain of the bloodletting doesn't exactly motivate them to hurt like that again anytime soon. Nintendo isn't pushing the leading edge in the slightest, so it's not like anyone is forcing a leap to the next cycle. The Wii remote will be copied and maybe retrofit to the other consoles, and that's that.
So, peripheral updates to the systems are not surprises. They're also not undesirable. What they are, at least in Microsoft's myopic case, is seriously overpriced. Their system's firmware can be updated to allow all manner of peripheral improvements, and apparently, it was designed to permit much-larger HDDs from the get-go. No short-sightedness there. Now if they can just get the cost in line with
what's advantageous for them and their users, they stand to gain a massive profit from the move to electronic distribution.
I don't like to delete anything I've purchased either, and so far I haven't. All I have free is 1.6 GB right now, since Fallout 3 is installed. As long as the "real" games keep coming on DVD, I don't have to play catch-up with anything. If they really want their Steam-like ambitions to succeed with me, or anyone who thinks like me, they need to give me a lot more space for a price I'm willing to pay. As for the transfer kits, last I heard is that you
don't get one with the 60GB drive, but you do with the 120.
Final note: There is zero need for 802.11N for years to come. G will be all you need until broadband gets routinely above 54 Mbps
across the board (including server speeds and all other links in the chain). Right now the best I know of for the home is 30, and most people are lucky to get 7.