home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.advocacy
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!gatech!destroyer!news.iastate.edu!barrett
- From: barrett@iastate.edu (Marc N. Barrett)
- Subject: Re: Tandy Unveils 16-Million-Color CD-ROM Multimedia system
- Message-ID: <Bzq75n.BA8@news.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames, IA
- References: <1h56fnINNbtc@bigboote.WPI.EDU> <BzMzJ3.86n@news.iastate.edu> <1ha5inINNgg@pith.uoregon.edu>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 18:53:46 GMT
- Lines: 61
-
- In article <1ha5inINNgg@pith.uoregon.edu> ggiles@cie.uoregon.edu (Gregg Giles) writes:
- >In article <BzMzJ3.86n@news.iastate.edu> barrett@iastate.edu (Marc N. Barrett) writes:
- >>
- >> When I compare CD-ROM desktop computer systems, I am usually talking about
- >>systems with a current OS, detached keyboard, hi-res non-interlaced display,
- >>fast 32-bit CPU, 262,144-color or 16-million-color palette, and CD-ROM drive.
- >
- > You obviously think that CD-ROM is some sort of miraculous device that
- >transforms your system into the next-wave of technology.
-
- No I don't.
-
- > IT IS NOT. CD-ROM is
- >merely a storage medium, just like anything that has come before it, like
- >tape, removable disk, and hard disks.
-
- Of course. But the miraculous thing about CD-ROM is that it makes 650M of
- read-only storage available for the manufacturing cost of a floppy disk.
-
- > CD-ROM doesn't add colors, it doesn't
- >add speed, and it doesn't add features. It just stores. Any system can be
- >made to work with a CD-ROM drive.
-
- Of course. But CD-ROM can do wonders with a system that already has good
- non-interlaced resolution and color capabilities.
-
- > As someone that has overseen two CD-ROM projects since September, I think
- >I can fairly say I have a good grip on CD-ROM and what it means (see my
- >tagline). A third will begin in the Spring (it's supposed to be demoed at
- >CES).
-
- Very good. What systems do these products run on?
-
- > While I would also like to see Commodore add more CD-ROM support to the
- >Amiga, such third-party solutions have been available for well over a year.
-
- True, and exactly how much CD-ROM ***SOFTWARE*** has come out of this
- third-party CD-ROM support? Excepting CDTV titles, which I do not regard as
- true Amiga CD-ROM software.
-
- >Right now, I personally don't care WHO makes a product as long as it does
- >what I want it to do. If Commodore has the CD-ROM drive I want, fine. If they
- >do not, fine - I'll go to a third-party.
-
- Commodore is needed to jump-start the development of Amiga CD-ROM products.
- Tell me again: exactly how many are available?
-
- > CD-ROM does not determine what composes the rest of the system.
-
- Of course it doesn't. But an extra 650M of storage for a presentation or
- a game can sure make a difference. Take a look at the 20-disk "Star Trek
- Twentieth Anniversary Game" for the IBM sometime, and then imagine what an
- extra 46 times as much storage could do to the game. Or imagine how good a tax
- preparation program could be with 650M of storage to work with. (The DataMax
- people mentioned that their CD-ROM tax preparation program would have just
- about every IRS form you could imagine already scanned in high-resolutions
- right on the disc)
-
- ---
- | Marc Barrett -MB- | email: barrett@iastate.edu
- --------------------------------------------------
-