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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.graphics
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.iastate.edu!barrett
- From: barrett@iastate.edu (Marc N. Barrett)
- Subject: Re: Tandy Unveils 16-Million-Color CD-ROM Multimedia system
- Message-ID: <BzuMFo.JnI@news.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames, IA
- References: <BzKqr1.JCy@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> <Bzqrqn.Cvo@csugrad.cs.vt.edu> <72408@cup.portal.com>
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 04:14:12 GMT
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <72408@cup.portal.com> Tom_-_Obszanski@cup.portal.com writes:
- >>Commodore hasn't released a computer with a CD-ROM drive because they're
- >>computers don't NEED a CD-ROM drive, but that doesn't mean that they
- >>don't OFFER one.
- >>
- >>jf
- >>--
- >>John Franklin
- >>franklin@csugrad.cs.vt.edu
- >>franklin@elfie.async.vt.edu
- >>
- >
- >I strongly disagree with the statement that the Amiga doesn't need a CD-ROM
- >drive. More collections of images and text are becoming available on CD-ROM
- >(as mentioned in some text I deleted) and we need access to them, just as
- >any MAC or MS-DOS/Windows machine has - there's an awfully large amount of
- >good raw data out there for us to use. Secondly, PhotoCD from Kodak appears
- >to require a CD-ROM drive if you want to get the images into a computer,
- >including the Amiga (without having to hook a PhotoCD player up to a
- >frame-grabber, a dumb solution IMHO).
-
- I agree that that would be a very dumb solution. But it sounds like
- something Commodore would try to do to provide "Photo CD" support for the
- Amiga. A few weeks ago Commodore tried solving the problem of no Amiga
- CD-ROM drives from Commodore by pushing this hack that involved connecting
- a CDTV to an A3000 with a parallel cable. Dumb, dumb, dumb.
-
- >Fortunately, we don't have to wait for Commodore to come out with a CD-ROM
- >drive for the Amiga. There's a large number of drives that can be connected
- >directly to your SCSI bus, and all you need to get them to work are the
- >device drivers in the form of CD-ROM-FS, or other available package. So
- >basically, quit whining, buy a NEC, Sony, Toshiba, Chinon, or whatever kind
- >of drive you want, as long as it's supported by your CD-ROM drivers. That's
- >what I'll be doing in a little while. BTW, the newest Pioneer CD-ROM
- >changer (with it's quadruple speed mode) works great on an Amiga 3000, I've
- >seen it done.
-
- Unfortunately, there is very little you can actually do with an Amiga and
- a CD-ROM drive right now. Sure, you can buy the NASA discs and view lots of
- pictures, but this amounts to little more than a slideshow. There is very
- little interaction with something like this. And discs with static pictures
- or static data are the only ones that are usable on an Amiga. None of the
- interactive CD-ROM products written for CD-I, Mac, or IBM are usable on an
- Amiga. These discs have the data in a custom format, which would require
- ports to the Amiga of large amounts of software or even parts of operating
- systems to use this data. And discs like these make up the bulk of CD-ROM
- discs that are available.
-
- ---
- | Marc Barrett -MB- | email: barrett@iastate.edu
- --------------------------------------------------
-