Re: TV Guide Discontinuing EPG?
Posted: Fri Dec 17, 2010 12:45 am
As much as I hate to say it, guys, I think the end of the noninteractive program guide is almost here, and soon there will unfortunately be no scrolling grids in use, at least in terms of the mainstream.
To be honest, I never really had the same kind of "love" for the post-blue grid version of the software, I guess because it runs on "standard" PC hardware (albeit likely with server-like features such as redundant PSUs, etc) and because it can be remotely administered, making it impossible to ever get a glimpse at the "inside" of the system on-air. Besides, with the way people here are experimenting and learning how to feed commands and data to a running Prevue installation, it will eventually be feasible to purchase a real Amiga and set up one's own personal Prevue Guide channel. Maybe we might even one day be able to either patch the software or figure out a way to hook in a piece of software to adapt the Prevue-specific genlock controls to any generic genlock (although TBH I'm not really sure what controls there are - Prevue never used any "in-between" key settings, just 100% background video for color 0 and 100% Amiga graphics for everything else). I'm pretty sure that ESQ takes over the machine while it runs rather than closing the Workbench screen - if it was the latter, when quitting ESQ you would see the Workbench screen reopen, and without closing the initial CLI it's impossible to close the Workbench screen. In this case, we probably couldn't write an OS hook (and if ESQ directly bangs the hardware then an OS hook would be pretty much useless - might be possible on an 030 or higher machine to utilize the MMU to trap certain address ranges but that seems pretty damn complicated, I've never even coded for the Amiga much less for the 030/040 MMU).
To be honest, I never really had the same kind of "love" for the post-blue grid version of the software, I guess because it runs on "standard" PC hardware (albeit likely with server-like features such as redundant PSUs, etc) and because it can be remotely administered, making it impossible to ever get a glimpse at the "inside" of the system on-air. Besides, with the way people here are experimenting and learning how to feed commands and data to a running Prevue installation, it will eventually be feasible to purchase a real Amiga and set up one's own personal Prevue Guide channel. Maybe we might even one day be able to either patch the software or figure out a way to hook in a piece of software to adapt the Prevue-specific genlock controls to any generic genlock (although TBH I'm not really sure what controls there are - Prevue never used any "in-between" key settings, just 100% background video for color 0 and 100% Amiga graphics for everything else). I'm pretty sure that ESQ takes over the machine while it runs rather than closing the Workbench screen - if it was the latter, when quitting ESQ you would see the Workbench screen reopen, and without closing the initial CLI it's impossible to close the Workbench screen. In this case, we probably couldn't write an OS hook (and if ESQ directly bangs the hardware then an OS hook would be pretty much useless - might be possible on an 030 or higher machine to utilize the MMU to trap certain address ranges but that seems pretty damn complicated, I've never even coded for the Amiga much less for the 030/040 MMU).