Interactive videodiscs: beginnings of multimedia and catalyst for multimedia cartography

IF 0.4 Q4 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS International Journal of Cartography Pub Date : 2021-05-04 DOI:10.1080/23729333.2021.1912253
W. Cartwright
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Abstract

In 1985, I was lecturing in the Geography Department at Portsmouth Polytechnic. My lectures focused on cartographic design and production which focussed on the manual production of colour separation artwork, as part of the photo-mechanical production process, that led to subsequent printing via the printing press. Even thoughmy lecturing programme at the time was focused around paper production and delivery of geographic information, I was searching for an alternative, non-printing, and non-computer-driven, alternatives for portraying geographic information. I had experimented with interactive slides, film, photography, and television. In looking for a medium that would allow me to experiment with a conglomerate of graphics +maps, what I found in 1985 was interactive videodisc. In that year, I attended the Association of British Geographers conference and heard a paper presented by Doctor Helen Mounsey on Birkbeck College’s involvement in the development of the BBC/Philips/Acorn Computers-supported Domesday Project interactive videodisc. I later visited Birkbeck College in London in 1985, where I was briefed about their involvement in the project and viewed the ‘real thing’. The Domesday project was produced to commemorate the 900th anniversary of the original Doomsday Book of 1085. It was seen as a contemporary version of the 1085 book and a contemporary (1985) record of the geography and social activities carried out throughout Great Britain. Rather than being stored and delivered as a bound paper book, as the original Domesday records did, this product was a hybrid analogue/digital product. The possibilities of what could be achieved by interposing a computer and software between the keyboard and tracker ball allowed for the frames on the video disc to not just be viewed sequentially, but a specific frame could be viewed, frames could be played as movies and these could be accompanied by text and sound. It must be noted that the Domesday videodisc wasn’t the first geographically-related videodisc package. This was the Aspen Movie Map Project (1978), developed at the MIT Architecture Machine Group. This package used videodiscs, controlled by computers, to allow the user to ‘drive’ down corridors or streets of Aspen, Colorado (Negroponte, 1995a). Exposure to this videodisc system changed completely how I thought about how geographic information could be delivered, and it was the catalyst for my research in interactive integrated multimedia cartographic systems over the following 35 years.
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交互式视频光盘:多媒体的开端和多媒体制图的催化剂
1985年,我在朴茨茅斯理工学院地理系讲课。我的讲座侧重于地图设计和制作,重点是手工制作分色艺术品,作为光机械生产过程的一部分,随后通过印刷机进行印刷。尽管当时我的授课计划主要是关于地理信息的纸张制作和传递,但我一直在寻找一种替代方法,一种非印刷、非计算机驱动的替代方法来描绘地理信息。我尝试过互动幻灯片、电影、摄影和电视。在寻找一种能够让我尝试各种图形和地图的媒介时,我在1985年找到了交互式视频光盘。那一年,我参加了英国地理学家协会的会议,听取了Helen Mounsey博士关于伯克贝克学院参与开发BBC/飞利浦/Acorn计算机支持的《末日计划》互动视频光盘的论文。后来我在1985年访问了伦敦的伯克贝克学院,在那里我了解了他们参与项目的情况,并看到了“实物”。《末日审判》的制作是为了纪念1085年《末日书》问世900周年。它被认为是1985年出版的那本书的当代版本,也是一部当代(1985年)的英国地理和社会活动的记录。不像《末日审判》的原始唱片那样以装订好的纸质书的形式储存和交付,这款产品是一种模拟/数字混合产品。通过在键盘和跟踪球之间插入计算机和软件可以实现的可能性允许视频光盘上的帧不仅仅是顺序观看,而是一个特定的帧可以被观看,帧可以作为电影播放,这些帧可以伴随着文本和声音。必须指出的是,《末日审判》视频光盘并不是第一个与地理相关的视频光盘包。这就是阿斯彭电影地图项目(1978),由麻省理工学院建筑机器小组开发。这个程序使用视频光盘,由电脑控制,允许用户在科罗拉多州阿斯彭的走廊或街道上“开车”。接触这个视频光盘系统完全改变了我对地理信息如何传递的看法,它是我在接下来的35年里研究交互式综合多媒体制图系统的催化剂。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Cartography
International Journal of Cartography Social Sciences-Geography, Planning and Development
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
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