This also gives me a bit more understanding of how the Video Toaster was possible to architect in a day with such slow CPU clock speeds. It seemed like magic at the time compared to limited capabilities of IBM PC clones. I hadn't realized how much capabilities these other Amiga chips provided.
bitwize · 13m ago
The Video Toaster was built for the Amiga mainly due to the Amiga's buult-in genlock. A similar contemporaneous product for PCs existed, the Matrox Studio, but it was pricier (due to needing extra hardware) and not as cool.
Alice, Lisa, Paula were some of the chips that made the Amiga the Amiga.
Razengan · 1h ago
I kinda wish each "era" of computing/video games lasted 3-5x longer than it did.. :')
I'd have loved to live through 10 years of the Commodore 64, 10 years of the Amiga, 10 years of the NES, 10 years of the SNES...
dylan604 · 16m ago
The PS1 survived quite a while as well to the point some complained it was eating into PS2 sales numbers
Keyframe · 57m ago
Seems we were the lucky generation. In a way we did. As they say, when you're 10, 1 year is 10% of your life and lasts forever. Now, years turned into months. Time _does_ pass slower when you turn off the intertubes though.
uz3snolc3t6fnrq · 1h ago
we'd still be on the pentium pro by now. but imagine all the Doom clones we could have!
nullsmack · 40m ago
That gave me a nightmare vision of Doom clones where you pay money to appear as a different sprite and it's inflicted with last man standing type game modes and all kinds of other bad things modern games do.
uz3snolc3t6fnrq · 24m ago
you pay money to appear as a different sprite with shiny particles around it. important distinction, of course.
and iddqd costs ten bucks to unlock, but it's part of a lootbox with all the other cheat codes in it
Razengan · 1h ago
I'm fine with that
only if we got more Heretic/Hexenlikes too!
… Ya know, I think Doom may have actually been a parallel-universe/built-by-aliens type of fluke: It seriously accelerated gaming and the social perception of gaming, and in turn pushed computer technology adoption towards 3D cards (and everything else required to support them) much faster than it may have happened without Doom.
So I think if certain "killer apps" weren't released when they did, then maybe people might have been fine with tech chugging along at a more relaxed pace..
smallstepforman · 43m ago
With the current silicon temperature dissipation limits, we’re in a 10 year cycle now (and growing)
Razengan · 35m ago
But everything feels pretty much the same and has been "good enough" for a long while now, with little left to look forward to.. I mean just look at the Switch 1 vs Switch 2.
Back in "those days" you could literally count the extra colors you could see on screen with each new generation!
nsxwolf · 51m ago
I think those all had close to or more than 10 years. SNES had the least but C64 was a retail product for 12 years.
lawlessone · 1h ago
Stuff would certainly be very well optimized near the end of each era.
Razengan · 44m ago
Just look at the demos people are still making now for the C64, ZX Spectrum, and even the OG IBM PC! Multicolor 60 FPS on CGA!
https://youtu.be/OXT5MrDdyB8?si=cZChImbAi3JBbFFl&t=49
This also gives me a bit more understanding of how the Video Toaster was possible to architect in a day with such slow CPU clock speeds. It seemed like magic at the time compared to limited capabilities of IBM PC clones. I hadn't realized how much capabilities these other Amiga chips provided.
what are these not-CPU chips even capable of?
Alice, Lisa, Paula were some of the chips that made the Amiga the Amiga.
I'd have loved to live through 10 years of the Commodore 64, 10 years of the Amiga, 10 years of the NES, 10 years of the SNES...
and iddqd costs ten bucks to unlock, but it's part of a lootbox with all the other cheat codes in it
only if we got more Heretic/Hexenlikes too!
… Ya know, I think Doom may have actually been a parallel-universe/built-by-aliens type of fluke: It seriously accelerated gaming and the social perception of gaming, and in turn pushed computer technology adoption towards 3D cards (and everything else required to support them) much faster than it may have happened without Doom.
So I think if certain "killer apps" weren't released when they did, then maybe people might have been fine with tech chugging along at a more relaxed pace..
Back in "those days" you could literally count the extra colors you could see on screen with each new generation!