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- Path: coranto.ucs.mun.ca!gnoel
- From: gnoel@morgan.ucs.mun.ca (George Noel)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.advocacy,comp.sys.amiga.misc,comp.sys.amiga.multimedia
- Subject: What is Multimedia? (was Re: History of Computing at the Smithsonian)
- Date: 13 Mar 1996 05:15:38 GMT
- Organization: Memorial University of Newfoundland
- Sender: gnoel@plato.ucs.mun.ca
- Message-ID: <4i5llq$ept@coranto.ucs.mun.ca>
- References: <4hm2s1$2kr@ousrvr3.oulu.fi>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: plato.ucs.mun.ca
- Summary: Multimedia
- Keywords: Consists of?
-
- In article <4hm2s1$2kr@ousrvr3.oulu.fi>,
- Esa Haapaniemi <eha@ernst.oulu.fi> wrote:
- >Nathanael J Henderson (nahender@prairie.NoDak.edu) wrote:
- >: Don Schmelling (dons@olympus.net) wrote:
- >: : : >
- >: : : > Multimedia was first used on Amigas.
- >: : :
- >: : : I do like Amiga, but I'm sure "Multimedia" was first seen on game
- >: : : machines. At least I know the C-64 had simple animations and sampled
- >: : : synchronized sounds. Both short, but the definition was met.
- >: : :
- >: : Well I do not consider a game machine to be a multimedia platform.
- >: : How many game machines could be used as a kiosk?
- >:
- >: Much like Bill Clinton's political positions, your definition of
- >: multimedia seems to be a constantly shifting target. Suitability as a
- >: general purpose kiosk machine hasn't a bloody thing to do with whether or
- >: not it was capable of some form of multimedia.
- >
- >If you really need to know, I have seen a kiosk run with C-64 and dual
- >floppies. It has joystick and keyboard visible. The place is on airport
- >where the machine is used in telephone booth to advertize, allow written
- >messages (FAX ??) and choosing from some other possibilities the
- >telephone co. is offering (pick the number with joystick from a list
- >of hotels, ...)
- >
- >That is (was?) in Denmark one year ago, so there !-)
- >
- >Esa Haapaniemi
- >University of Oulu
- >Finland
-
- Cool. :)
-
- But anyways..
-
- The thing all of you guys are forgetting is that all of the items fitting
- the term "multimedia" has to be OUT OF THE BOX when referred to as a
- Multimedia machine.
-
- Ie: The games machines of old combined sound, and video/animations in
- color to a TV screen and could be recorded on a VCR sure.
-
- The C64 could do this also.. after you added a cassette drive and/or disk
- drive and eventually hard drive etc.
-
- Early Apple computers also had the capability of sending color images
- from disk/computer to a VCR to be recorded, not sure if this was standard
- or not.
-
- We can leave IBM PCs and clones out of this entirely.
-
- Then came the Amiga which had a BUILT IN disk and RAM drive (where can
- those game machines save information to), even the C64 had to add stuff
- to it to make it useable. The Amiga had 4096 colors available, could
- multitask (unlike the Apple computers), had stereo sound (unlike Apple and
- C64 before then and game machines before then) which could be hooked upto an
- external stereo and not just a TV and/or monitor. Back to the
- multitasking bit, add a genlock and/or a frame/video grabber, add a sound
- digitizer and save all images/animations and sounds to a disk and/or hard
- drive then use a program which combines all these together to display
- them to a VCR from disk or in realtime simultaneously and you have a
- multimedia machine. These additions along with hard drives and CD-ROMS
- just enforces the Amiga's multimedia's capabilities which were already
- there from start.
-
- It wasn't until IBM PC clones came STANDARD with a color graphics card,
- sound card providing stereo which could be hooked upto a stereo to send
- signals to and get signals from, a disk drive and later a hard drive and
- CD-ROM and "multitasking" capabilities that THEY were labelled "Multimedia"
- machines - which still couldn't output to a VCR and/or a TV without an
- additional card (which sometimes might have come standard) still making
- them not true multimedia machines but the term has been warped by them
- ever since, that is all people consider multimedia to be these days, all
- these cards added on and not truely standard giving the computers what
- they think is "Multimedia" capability.
-
- -=*George*=-
-
-
-