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- From: king@snoc01.enet.dec.com (Randall King, Sydney, Aussieland)
- Subject: CDTV & No Manuals Gripe
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.050827.14531@nntpd.lkg.dec.com>
- Sender: usenet@nntpd.lkg.dec.com (USENET News System)
- Organization: Digital Equipment Corp.
- References: <Steven_Hurdle.00ql@amusers.UUCP> <JKH.92Dec19024801@whisker.lotus.ie>
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 20:35:58 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <JKH.92Dec19024801@whisker.lotus.ie>, jkh@whisker.lotus.ie (Jordan K. Hubbard) writes...
- >
- > interface department. Beyond that I've added Sim Cit,( which
- > should be in every CD-owners collection IMO) The Fred Fish
- > Collection on CD-ROM, and the "Heroic Age of
- > Spaceflight-Nasa... The 25th Year". The Fred Fish CD simply
- >
- >Well, Ok, I'll freely admit that the Sim City CD is nice (though lack
- >of a mouse-type pointer DOES mean that you end up often paging through
- >lots of stats screens you don't want - c'mon, admit it!). I'll admit I'm
- >somewhat spoiled by the straight Amiga Sim City interface, but the
- >soundtrack definately breathes new life into the game, I'll readily
- >agree.
- >
-
- OK. I'll be an honest maverick. Although I love the CDTV for its PD Fish
- via PARNET, the lack of documentation is a turnoff for normal people.
-
- Simcity for example. We didnt have the original on floppy, so the ROM is
- all we had. My daughter sat down excited to get into it, turned it on,
- and wanted to know some reasonable things like. Whats the objective?
- What kind of strategies are there? All she got on the help screens was
- hieroglyphic pictures and points on various photographs. She wandered
- around cities pointlessly for a while, and has abandoned it since.
- Strike 1.
-
- Then my good lady wanted to random play an audio CD. Wheres the instructions?
- On the welcome disk. 10 minutes later she has waded through all the American
- voices to find something that on our real CD is the push of a button.
- She's not going back and doing anything else fancy again.
- Strike 2.
-
- Grolliers. Well, the docs are there online but it takes quite a while to figure
- it out. Anyway, my family got the hang of it, but navigating around is still a
- pain. The biggest problem is the content: great for US of A subjects, but it
- does nothing for my kids on local subjects - and I'd guess at least 50% of
- their queries relate locally. Dont know how you'd get by without the keyboards
- - pointing to letters on the screen is pretty unwieldy. My kids still go the
- local hardcopy encyclopedia first. Strike 3.
-
- So makers, please dont abandon the old printed word on CDTV instructions. The
- response time on ye olde CDROM's is hardly instantaneous, so in this era of
- instant gratification, please don't expect people to hang around long enough
- online to figure out how to work something properly. At least with real docs
- someone else can help out. How many of you still read computer magazines in
- preference to electronic docs?
-
- So now the CDTV is used exclusively for SCALA EX connection and those wonderful
- Public Domain CD-ROMS. But it's worth every cent for that.
-
- So there. Got it off my chest. Am I the only person in the world with this
- experience?
-
-