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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rock!taco!garfield.catt.ncsu.edu!kdarling
- From: kdarling@garfield.catt.ncsu.edu (Kevin Darling)
- Subject: Re: Future Entertainment Show, London
- Message-ID: <kdarling.721329512@garfield.catt.ncsu.edu>
- Lines: 25
- Sender: news@ncsu.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: North Carolina State University
- References: <BxG7J9.BEC@brunel.ac.uk>
- Date: Mon, 9 Nov 1992 17:18:32 GMT
-
- > [Philips] was showing off CD-I. I don't know who their target market is,
- > but if the size and design of the trackball controllers on most of the
- > machines is anything to go by, it appears to be the pre-teens. (ie large
- > brightly coloured buttons, and a large trackball).
-
- That's the "Roller Controller," for kids. They probably use them at shows
- simply because they're large, sturdy and easy to mess with. (That's also why
- U2's guitarist, The Edge, uses one in their ZOO T.V. concerts to select song
- rhythms/sounds from a custom CD-I disc. On the other hand, lead singer Bono
- uses the stock thumbstick controller to select localized messages from his
- own CD-I disc. Both applications are shown on the audience "video walls".)
-
- You can also buy a normal-sized trackball, mouse and joystick. I haven't
- heard anything about when the keyboard will be publicly available.
-
- > On a more technical point, there was a demo disk running and showed off
- > FULL SCREEN FULL MOTION VIDEO. This was very impressive, and if CDTV wants
- > to compete then Commodore better have the same thing ready soon !
-
- MPEG encoding is still pretty expensive, at least for very-low-budget titles.
- The larger CD-I production houses pay about $80K for an encoding setup. Or
- you could send out to have it done, but I've been told that it costs $600+
- per minute of video because of the current 100+:1 encoding time ratios.
-
- kevin <kdarling@catt.ncsu.edu>
-