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- From: slug@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu (Wowbagger The Infinitely Prolonged)
- Newsgroups: austin.general
- Subject: Re: Nintendo Game vs. 386sx Computer
- Keywords: Nintendo, Games, Computer
- Message-ID: <83844@ut-emx.uucp>
- Date: 17 Nov 92 23:27:32 GMT
- References: <1992Nov16.195727.19130@awdprime.austin.ibm.com>
- Sender: news@ut-emx.uucp
- Organization: The University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX
- Lines: 57
-
- In article <1992Nov16.195727.19130@awdprime.austin.ibm.com> chuckt@austin.ibm.com (Charles N. Tomlinson) writes:
- >
- >Now here is the problem. I already have a 386sx computer in my home, and I have
- >a hard time justifying going out buying a Super Netendo 16-bit($140.00) to play
- >games on when I can do most of the same thing on my computer. So I guess what
- >I am looking for is some of your opinions on the pros and cons of the two.
- >Here are a few that I thought of:
- >
- Computers can be made to be almost as easy to use. Throw a simple menu on
- it so that your kids merely have to choose what game to play and it is loaded!
- (I did that for my parent's word processor, lotus etc when they first bought
- their computer since they had no concept of DOS :-) Now they use OS/2 with
- all those "pretty little icons" that they mere click on)
-
- I would like to throw my vote in for the computer:
-
- 1) A computer is more than just a game machine. When I was 11, my parents
- bought my brother and I an Atari 800 computer and yes, I played lots of games.
- However, I also started to program on it. I am now a CS major :-)
- There are lots of "Educational Software" packages out there that can make
- learning fun for smaller kids. This would give your 3 year old a head start
- with computers, and since he is growing up with it, computers will be nothing
- new and in the future he may have an advantage due to life-long exposure.
-
- 2) Don't forget to add "shareware" and "freeware" games to the list of things
- available to the home PC. There are may awesome games that can be FTP'd from
- Internet sites (Duke Nukem, Commander Keen, Wolfenstein- basically most of the
- Apogee games) and tried. If liked, they can be legally registered for $15 each
- (sometimes $30 for 3 games).
-
- 3) You have the computer already. Joysticks are not necessary for many games
- (but they can make may easier to control), but computers have keyboards for
- input which allows for more games (like Jeopardy).
-
- 4) A Nintendo will fairly permanently root your kids in front of the television
- if they weren't already :-)
-
- > 2. My computer would not be tied up all the time with the kids on it.
-
- Sometime in the future, you may get another computer, and then the kids would
- really appreciate the "old" one.
-
- > 3. Get to hear all the nice music that plays when you play the game. ;)
- You can get Soundblaster cards (or others like them) relatively cheap ($90 new)
- My room-mate has one and it makes the games sound really awesome :-)
- >
-
- Well, I hope this input from a former kid (who grew up just as the computer era
- started) helps :-)
-
-
- --
- slug@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu ***** Glen A. Graham *****
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