翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Halcott Mountain
・ Halcott, New York
・ Halcottsville, New York
・ Halcottville Railroad Station
・ Halcro and Pakashan
・ Halcro, Saskatchewan
・ Halcrow
・ Halcrow Group
・ Halcrow railway station
・ Halcrow, Manitoba
・ Halcurin
・ Halcyon
・ Halcyon (album)
・ Halcyon (Best Of)
・ Halcyon (book)
Halcyon (console)
・ Halcyon (Delphic song)
・ Halcyon (dialogue)
・ Halcyon (genus)
・ Halcyon (Orbital song)
・ Halcyon (role-playing game)
・ Halcyon 23
・ Halcyon Castle
・ Halcyon Days
・ Halcyon Days (book)
・ Halcyon Days (Bruce Hornsby album)
・ Halcyon Days (BWO album)
・ Halcyon Days (company)
・ Halcyon Days (Ellie Goulding album)
・ Halcyon Days (play)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Halcyon (console) : ウィキペディア英語版
Halcyon (console)

The Halcyon was a home video game console by RDI Video Systems. The system was planned to be released in January 1985 with initial retail price for the system was US$2500. Fewer than a dozen units are known to exist and it's not generally believed that the system ever made it to retail. The design featured a laserdisc player and attached computer, each the size of an early-model VCR. Of the six games planned only two games were completed: ''Thayer's Quest'' and ''NFL Football LA Raiders vs SD Chargers''. RDI Video Systems claimed that the system would be entirely voice-activated, and would have an artificial intelligence on par with HAL 9000 from ''2001: A Space Odyssey''.
==History==
Rick Dyer was one of the many fans of the interactive fiction game ''Adventure''. He envisioned a game that would feature illustrations of every scene in this game, the first prototype being a roll of printing calculator tape that would be wound forward and backward via microprocessor to show illustrations and information drawn on its surface.
Later this was refined to a slightly different technology of a filmstrip projector, which was later synchronized to a tape recording of a narrator reading the text normally shown by the game as the player entered each scene.
With the advent of the videodisc player, Dyer realized he could consolidate onto one medium the audio and visual content, which was called ''The Fantasy Machine''. Presentations of this device to prospective toy manufacturers failed.
Later it was realized that still images with narration were insufficient to capture the toy market, so animation projects began. The first project was titled ''The Secrets of the Lost Woods'', which included a section known as the ''Dragon's Lair''; this latter portion would go on to be developed into its own game.
''Dragon's Lair'' and ''Space Ace'' supplied enough profits and credibility for RDI Video Systems to progress toward realizing their technology into a home entertainment and edutainment format.
To help control the consumer price of this unit, it was first designed around the RCA Capacitance Electronic Disc player. When RCA canceled the production of these players prior to the completion of the Halcyon project, it was re-designed to use a laserdisc. One of the biggest obstacles in this re-design (after its significantly higher cost) was the short 30-minute-per-side capacity of Constant Angular Velocity or random access laserdiscs.
Suffering from a retail price tag that would discourage consumers and content that would require several laserdiscs to contain, investors and manufacturers saw little success in the future of Halcyon. Its few hand-assembled prototypes went into the hands of certain investors and collectors. Well-known names among these investors included Merv Griffin, Quinn Martin and Cassandra Peterson.
Ironically, ''Dragon's Lair'' was not part of Halcyon's initial content repertoire. ''The Secrets of the Lost Woods'' footage was used to develop firmware for the unit prior to Fred Wolf's production of the ''Thayer's Quest'' animation.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Halcyon (console)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.