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- Xref: sparky comp.multimedia:4185 comp.ivideodisc:210
- Newsgroups: comp.multimedia,comp.ivideodisc
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!ames!eos!data.nas.nasa.gov!willard.nas.nasa.gov!browning
- From: browning@willard.nas.nasa.gov (David S. Browning)
- Subject: Computer Controlled LDPs (Was: ISA card, software compatible with MMotion?)
- Followup-To: comp.multimedia
- References: <C0tBLJ.IFH@news.cso.uiuc.edu> <C0x1rB.4z2@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>
- Sender: news@nas.nasa.gov (News Administrator)
- Organization: NAS Program, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 93 00:13:38 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.001338.23153@nas.nasa.gov>
- Reply-To: browning@willard.nas.nasa.gov
- Lines: 58
-
- In article <C0x1rB.4z2@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>, tmp@mentor.cc.purdue.edu (Tom Putnam) writes:
- |> In <C0tBLJ.IFH@news.cso.uiuc.edu> amead@s.psych.uiuc.edu (Alan Mead) writes:
- |> |> We have an application that manipulates video from a videodisc player
- |> |> by issueing commands through INT 0x7f to the MMotion Control Program on
- |> |> PS/2s. I've heard that there is a ISA architecture card that is 100%
- |> |> compatible. (Ie, would allow my application to run without
- |> |> alteration).
- |> |>
- |> |> If anyone has heard of such a beast -- or, better yet, used it --
-
- |> There is a card which is mostly M-Motion compatible from a small
- |> Florida company called 21Tech Corporation (an offshoot of
- |> DynaByte). It is called the School Board. We have recently
- |> started using it in a chemistry lab with the videodisk-based
- |> "Comprehensive Chemistry Curriculum" developed by Stan Smith at the
- |> University of Illinois. So far, it seems to be working fine.
-
- |> It is an ISA bus card and works with anything from a low-end 286 on
- |> up. I think they designed it to work in IBM PS/2 model 25 as a
- |> low-cost alternative to the higher PS/2 models. The education
- |> price is $876 including software, compared to $1,350 last time I
- |> looked at educ. prices for IBM's M-Motion card.
-
- Excuse my ignorance. I'm about to assemble a multimedia presentation
- system, in which a PC controls a LaserDisc Player and various displays
- and devices, such as lights and motors. The "action" is coordinated
- with the video presentation, hence the computer must control the LDP.
- Is this what the M-Motion and 21Tech cards do? I know of another
- card, the Bravado from TrueVision (an AT&T spinoff?) which does this
- (supposedly -- I've only seen sales literature), and has many features
- similar to the 21Tech card Tom describes.
-
- Does anyone out there have experience doing this type of thing? The
- video output from the LDP would go directly to a big dedicated
- monitor, so I don't need any video capturing or editing capabilities.
- In particular, I'm looking at the Sony MDP-1100. This seems to be
- Sony's entry-level LDP with an RS232C interface. I don't know
- anything about the command interface (yet). I read another post where
- someone said Pioneer had ftp-able driver software for their
- computer-controlled LDPs. This may be a good reason to get a Pioneer!
- (If the LDP control is easy enough to do "by hand", maybe I don't need
- the Bravado-or-equivalent card. On the other hand, it would be
- convenient during development to capture the output of the LDP in a
- window, and wait until the last minute to get the LDP display monitor.)
-
- Again, if anyone has experience with computer-controlled LDPs, with or
- without the cards we've talked about, I'd like to hear from you.
- Thanks!
-
- -- David
-
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