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CED Digest Vol. 3 No. 27 • 7/4/1998 |
From: "Colasanti" To: ceds@teleport.com Date: Wed, 24 Jun 1998 23:52:50 -0500 Subject: Re: CED Digest Internet Mailing List Let me make this short & quite possibly sweet for CED collectors out there: We have between 1200 & 1500 CED's, mostly RCA SelectaVision titles, all in good to excellent condition, as well as a dozen or so CED players. We would like to sell as a single lot. So ... Make an offer. All serious inquiries entertained. Thanks / lmc Lou Colasanti Fern Hill 1680 Upper Notch Rd. Bristol, VT 05443 phone: {802} 453-5124 MAILTO: fernhill@sover.net ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: "Daniel P. Cayea" To: "Tom Howe" <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: The TCE Preservation Project Date: Sun, 28 Jun 1998 14:04:01 -0400 Dear CED Enthusiasts: Many remember the debate to get CED going again, well the race is on. Telecom Capacitance Electronics is now the first on the reactivation battlefield first starting with a complete media preservation. To subscribe to the TCE Newsletter send email to tti@westelcom.com with TCE Subscribe in the subject line and you will be added to the mailing list. If you would just like a list of currently preserved titles you also send email to tti@westelcom.com however put TCE Database in the subject line. I hope that many of you will take interest. Thanks for the support. Sincerely Daniel P. Cayea TCE/TTI ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: MELBANEW Date: Mon, 29 Jun 1998 09:37:12 EDT To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: CED'S For Sale FOR SALE --- Entire CED collection, consisting of 1200 - 1300 different cataloged disc--- 500 - 700 miscelaneous disc --- many players and parts. Will sell the whole collection for $2,000.00. Billy F. New 1155 Edith Drive Phone: 904 252-1783 Daytona Beach, FL 32117 Email: BILLYFNEW@AOL.COM ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: Beaumontj Date: Mon, 29 Jun 1998 21:28:55 EDT To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: Re: jerky picture i have a panasonic sgt 200 which plays discs fine until about the 30 minute mark, when the movie (and audio) seems to skip frames. it's definitely the player. any suggestions about how to fix it? thanks. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: "Daniel P. Cayea" To: <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Active Channel for CED Magic Date: Thu, 2 Jul 1998 11:09:17 -0400 Dear CED Enthusiasts & Tom: Would it be possible to have CED Magic an Active Channel for Internet Explorer 4.x and up? Daniel P. Cayea ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Fri, 03 Jul 1998 21:54:31 -0700 From: Neil Wagner To: *CED Digest <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Videodisc History Part 29 >From the February 1984 issue of Popular Science - VIDEO TEACHERS A new RCA interactive videodisc player offers much more than just movies. It plays games, lets you select scenes from its repertoire, and even functions as a teacher. (Yes, it also gives you a test.) And an unusual future probably awaits it. by William J. Hawkins [Part 1 of this article appeared in CED Digest vol. 3, no. 26.] Interactive-disc playing is a first for the RCA capacitance electronic disc (CED) format, which uses a stylus. But its competitor, the laser disc, has had interactive capability for some time. (Scooting a laser beam of light over a disc surface was technically easier to do than moving a mechanical stylus to a precise point on a CED disc.) In comparing the two systems, I found little difference in access time (the longest it took to find a particular section was about 30 seconds), ease of use, and picture quality on a conventional TV. However, the SelectaVision 400 did have a few new programming features. Besides being able to start at specific bands, you may also choose specific scenes by entering the minutes and seconds at which they begin and end. (The playing time is digitally recorded on the disc and can be displayed on the screen for reference.) The 400 then plays just that portion of the disc, allowing you to view specific material--or merely watch your favorite scene of a movie over and over. One other handy feature is a button called "Memory." When you press it, it electronically marks the scene you are seeing (by storing its location by time in a memory). You can auto- matically return to it later. Naturally, you also can manually hunt out a scene by using a visual-search button (you see the images at 16 times normal speed) or a high-speed button for scanning at 120 times normal speed. Computer match-up? There's one other way you can find specific areas of an interactive disc that RCA isn't talking about yet: with your home computer. At the rear of the 400, there's a small connec- tor. The brochures don't mention it; the instruction manual for the 400 simply says it's for future use. But the technical manuals (for servicing) show that it is a serial interface (connection) for a computer. Combined with a home computer, the interactive capabilities are limitless: video games that never play the same way twice; disc-based encyclopedias containing thousands of pictures and facts that pop up on the screen in response to your keyboard query; and teaching aids that progress with each student's abilities. Why doesn't RCA advertise this computer capability? My guess is that RCA is saving that bit of information for when it introduces its own home computer. (RCA has just reorganized and created a "Special Products Division" that sounds suspi- ciously like home-computer development to me.) If I'm right, remember that you read it first in "Popular Science." Right or wrong, however, it's clear that the variety of new discs and imaginative concepts that is bound to come will soon give a whole new meaning to "home entertainment." The price for the SelectaVision 400 is $500. Interactive discs will be approximately $20 to $30 each. Besides "A Week at the Races," two mystery discs--"Many Roads to Murder" and "Murder, Anyone?"--are currently available. [The title photograph shows a SelectaVision 400 {I presume}, with a rather bulky remote, a CED titled "A Walk Through The Universe," and in the background, a TV monitor showing the main menu of said disc. The infrared remote has three columns by 6 rows of buttons on the left half, and two individual colums of 6 buttons each on the right half. The picture is too small to make out the writing above any of the buttons. Overall, the remote appears about 6 inches square.] [An accompanying diagram shows the "Videodisc recording format" --it looks like a pizza sliced 8 ways--and notes that "odd sectors contain audio-control information," "even sectors contain band information," "one video field per sector", a "vertical blanking interval" between each sector, and "audio information located on line 17 of each vertical field."] [A series of photographs has this caption: "Each videodisc contains digital information about its contents {diagram discussed above}. One piece of data may tell the player to freeze frame. Other data tell it to reproduce stereo sound or add CX noise reduction. The disc also contains time and band numbers used for inter- active play; the photos above show how to proceed through information about early astronomers. The player's connec- tions {final photo} are for RF, video, and audio--and 'control.'" The same "A Walk Through The Universe" disc was used for demonstration of the menu structure in the series of photos.] -- Neil - nw1@gte.net
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