[rec.games.misc] CD-I revisted - Tale of the Uninvited

czei@accelerator.eng.ohio-state.edu (Michael S. Czeiszperger) (05/07/88)

[This contains somewhat interesting stuff about the latest development]
[in home entertainment.  Please forgive the somewhat boring intro     ]


I got a call this week from a CD-I developer, who claimed he got
my number from a friend who reads USENET.  He was all excited
about telling me the latest happenings with CD-I, except he 
thought us USENET chaps didn't know anything about CD-I and proceded to 
run down the entire last two years of CD-I history. 

After I got it through his head that the green book standards
and the formulation of American Interactive Media were by now
well-known events, he managed to explain who he was and why
he was calling.  I think his last name was Feldman, although I'm not
sure because he talked so fast.  He claimed to be an employee of the
company that makes the computer games "Deja Vu" and "The Univited", and
that he was *at this very minute* working on CD-I versions of these
games.  

He went on to claim that there were about a hundred companies working
on CD-I titles, and that most of the titles weren't games, but a new
kind of entertainment.  For instance, there is one disk that is a 
home audio mixing session.  The CD-I disk contains the raw tracks
from a well known rock group's recording session, and the home user
gets to mix down and arrange the tune any way they like.  It was
mentioned in Keyboard magazine that some of the high end players will
include MIDI outputs, so the home recording enthusiast could use his
home recording setup.  Theoretically one could record the MIDI output
from the CD-I disk directly into a MIDI sequencer and then re-arrange
the whole tune, or examine how all the licks were put together.
A written score of the album could even be generated from the MIDI output, so
the hobby musician could have an *exact* musical notation of the
original music, not the cheesy version featured in those books.

One thing we talked about was the present mis-conception about the
possibilities of interactive entertainment. Some people are unable
to comprehend anything interactive that doesn't function like the 
Dragon laserdisc game that was out a couple of years back.  In that
game, the user could only decide between left, right, and straight, and
the game just jumped between tracks on the laserdisk. This way of
operating is not in any way representative of CD-I, or of interactive
media in general.  

For instance, the CD-I version of Dark Castle will function *exactly
like the regular Dark Castle*, except for a bunch of added features.
For another thing, it will be in full color, and the audio will feature
longer, more complicated, better recorded sound effects.  Beyond that,
it will be try to be more than just a computer game.  If the user just
wishes to watch, for instance, Dark Castle will cease to be a game,
and will become more like a movie, presenting a story with dialog,
characters, and a plot that takes place on the backgrounds of the game.
As you can imagine, THIS IS NOT ANYTHING LIKE DRAGON'S LAIR.  Not one
bit.


About the players themselves.....

The manufacturers of CD-I players have pledged to make the first units
cost under $1000.  There are rumors that base units with no extra
features could initially cost as low as $750.  Philips is getting 
ready right now for CD-I by including a CD-I port on all of their
regular CD Audio players.  If you've purchased a Philips CD player
in the last two months it probably has this port.  When CD-I finally
hits in about a year, Philips will sell a cheap expansion box that
contains the heart of the CD-I system.  

The basic units will come with:

1. The ability to play regular CD audio disks.
2. A video output to hook up to your TV.
3. A joystick.

One of the problems with using CD's as a storage media is that it's
impossible to write on the darn things.  How are people going to
store data such as their highest Dark Castle scores?  The players
themselves will have 16k of battery backed memory, that should take
care of a small amount of data.  An alternative is to include an
extra video output so that the player could record the data directly
to videotape.  Assumming that the kind of people that would by
CD-I players are the same kind of appliance happy people that buy VCR's,
this should a workable solution.  :-)



Just bringing the USENET community the latest news.....

-czei

-- 
Michael S. Czeiszperger         | "The only good composer is a dead composer"
Systems Analyst                 | Snail: 2015 Neil Avenue         (614)
The Ohio State University       |        Columbus, OH 43210          292-
cbosgd!osu-cis!accelerator.eng.ohio-state.edu!czei                    0161