For PlayStation 3 fans who want to do more than  mash buttons when playing games on the console, Sony is introducing a wireless  keypad that can be attached to the system's controller for typing and web  browsing.
 The Bluetooth-enabled keypad, available in  November, is intended to make it easier to chat during multiplayer games.  Currently players talk to each other over headsets with microphones. Gamers  tired of hearing inane banter from their peers may welcome the ability to put  down their earpieces and communicate through typing instead.
 Another feature is a button on the keypad that will  let users turn it into a touch pad and use the entire surface as a mouse by  sliding their finger over the surface. This, Sony says, will make it easier to  browse the web using the console.
 It includes two shortcut buttons, a Communication  Button and a Message Box Button, on the lower part of the Wireless Keypad,  enabling users to jump to pre-set features on XMB (XrossMediaBar) during game  play.
 There is already a wireless "ThumbPad" available  for the PS3 from Mad Catz, but this is a first from Sony itself. Sony has not  yet announced a price.
 Sony's gaming arm also said at a gaming convention  in Leipzig, Germany, that it has updated its PlayStation Portable system. The  enhanced PSP will feature a new LCD screen with a wider gamut of colours,  antireflection technology and a built-in microphone that was not available on  previous systems. Players can use the microphone to make Skype calls and talk to  other gamers during multiplayer sessions.
 Sony will begin selling the new PSP in America on  Oct. 14 for US$200 as part of a bundle with "Ratchet & Clank: Size Matters,"  a game whose two heroes embark on an intergalactic search for a kidnapped girl.  Another bundle with the new PSP and a 4-gigabyte memory stick will be available  for the same price in November. The standalone system will cost $170 and is due  out by the end of the year.
 - AP
 
  