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Text File | 1989-08-12 | 6.2 KB | 143 lines | [TEXT/MNET] |
- APPLE SHOWCASES NEW INFORMATION PRODUCTS;
- ANNOUNCES PLANS FOR MEDIA CONTROL ARCHITECTURE
-
-
- Relationships with leading information companies to yield
- enhancements to the Macintosh platform.
-
- BOSTON, Massachusetts--August 9, 1989--Five major media
- companies and a leading university today announced that
- they are developing new information products for the
- Macintosh personal computer. Apple Computer, Inc.
- showcased these products at a Macworld news conference.
- In addition, Apple announced plans to enhance the
- Macintosh development platform by working with developers
- to define the Apple Media Control Architecture. This
- architecture will provide a framework for all applications
- to access information from videodisc players, CD-audio
- players, videotape recorders and other media devices.
- ABC News InterActive, the John F. Kennedy School of
- Government at Harvard University and WGBH Educational
- Foundation announced new interactive videodisc products.
- Datapro, a division of McGraw-Hill Information Services,
- and Warner New Media, a division of Warner Communications,
- announced new CD-ROM products. Newsweek demonstrated an
- experimental new interactive videodisc product for the
- Macintosh.
- "These announcements demonstrate how leaders in the
- information industry are providing the kind of products
- that give users unprecedented access and control of a rich
- supply of information from their personal computers," said
- Jean-Louis Gassée, president of Apple Products.
-
-
- Information products highlighted are:
-
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- -A series of interactive videodiscs from ABC News
- InterActive, including "In the Holy Land," about the
- conflict in the Middle East, and "Martin Luther King
- Jr.," — both hosted by Ted Koppel, anchor of ABC News
- "Nightline."
-
- -"The Macintosh Consultant" from Datapro, a CD-ROM-based
- resource covering Macintosh related products, concepts
- and news. This product features audio- visual critiques,
- electronic comparison tables, and ratings of software and
- hardware products.
-
- -An interactive videodisc from the John F. Kennedy School
- of Government at Harvard simulating the Three Mile Island
- crisis. The videodisc is the first in The Harvard
- Interactive Series of case studies that lets users be
- decision makers during crises.
-
- -"Upheaval in China," an interactive videodisc from Newsweek
- exploring the recent events in China from the perspective of
- photographers at the scene.
-
- -"Audio Notes" from Warner New Media, a series of music
- appreciation CDs with HyperCard annotation. The first title
- is Mozart's "The Magic Flute," with commentary from Roger
- Englander, the television producer of Leonard Bernstein’s
- Young People’s Concerts.
-
- -"Interactive NOVA: Animal Pathfinders," an interactive
- videodisc from WGBH-TV on animal migration, behavior and
- habitats.
-
-
- These products are possible on the Macintosh today because
- of powerful tools like Hypercard, the Hypercard CD-Audio
- Toolkit, and the Hypercard Videodisc Toolkit. The Apple
- Media Control Architecture is one of the ways in which
- Apple will continue to enhance the Macintosh as the platform
- of choice for information products.
-
-
- Impact of Apple’s New Relationships
- "These industry leaders represent an emerging class of
- developers. We see them as 'information providers' who can
- use Macintosh to make the information that they own available
- to individuals in new ways.
- "Their work gives us valuable insight into the importance
- of integrating media devices that make information easily
- accessible. Their cooperation in helping us define the Apple
- Media Control Architecture lets us continue to provide the
- best platform for their products," said Gassée.
- The Apple Media Control Architecture's system level
- framework will provide a consistent standard interface to
- current and future media devices for all Macintosh
- applications and will simplify the integration of media
- devices. Currently, software developers must write a custom
- interface for each media device. Apple’s Media Control
- Architecture will provide the core interface code to all
- media devices and developers can then customize that code
- to add selected functionality to their products.
- Because this architecture simplifies writing media device
- drivers, Apple expects developers to incorporate such devices
- in their future applications.
- "Standardizing the way applications talk to media
- devices extends the power and functionality of Macintosh
- applications because it allows individuals access and control
- of rich libraries of information regardless of the media
- form," said Gassee.
- For example, a presentation package can be designed to
- take advantage of the Apple Media Control Architecture.
- The user can easily integrate video clips from an ABC News
- InterActive videodisc and high-quality sound from a Warner
- CD-audio disc into a presentation, and then "print" the
- combined presentation on to videotape. In addition to
- videodisc, Audio-CD and CD-ROM interfaces, Apple will offer
- videotape player interface software. Videotape is expected
- to reach more users because of its low-cost read/write
- capabilities and wide availability.
- Developers can also use the Apple Media Control
- Architecture to expand an application's "help" function.
- The user simply asks for help on how to create a complex
- graph. Instead of a limited quantity of text, he or she is
- presented with full-motion video and CD-quality audio to
- explain the process.
- Specifications for Apple's Media Control Architecture
- will be available to developers by the end of this year.
- Other new information products announced at Macworld
- include two products from the British Broadcasting
- Corporation -- MediaMaker, which allows users to create
- multimedia presentations combining video, sound, and
- Macintosh graphics and MediaBank, libraries of source
- material on 8mm video tapes; an interactive version of the
- best-selling book "Conceptual Blockbusting" by Stanford
- University's Jim Adams; a CD-ROM version of the 1990 Guinness
- Book of Records from Pergamon Compact Solution, a division of
- Maxwell Communications Corporation; and Voyager Company's
- Beethoven's Ninth Symphony -- a HyperCard-based music
- appreciation notes and companion audio CD.
-
- -30-
-
-
- Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, HyperCard and Macworld
- are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
-
- END
-