Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 18th Jun 2012 12:19 UTC
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RE[2]: Comment by anevilyak
by anevilyak on Mon 18th Jun 2012 15:03
in reply to "RE: Comment by anevilyak"
RE[3]: Comment by anevilyak
by MOS6510 on Mon 18th Jun 2012 15:10
in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by anevilyak"
RE[2]: Comment by anevilyak
by zima on Mon 18th Jun 2012 16:46
in reply to "RE: Comment by anevilyak"
But Amiga CDTV and CD32 don't really boot into anything if there's no media, IIRC (only one buddy with CDTV, one with CD32, everybody else had 600, and it's been some time). They just display an intro of sorts, encouraging you to put the CD in (kinda like all the other Amigas & their floppy animation)
Yeah, they can play audio CDs, but I imagine that NEC TurboGrafx-CD (1988) also does that - and anyway, PS1 added nice audio visualisations
(then there's still that memory card manager)
RE[3]: Comment by anevilyak
by MOS6510 on Mon 18th Jun 2012 17:08
in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by anevilyak"
RE[3]: Comment by anevilyak
by bert64 on Mon 18th Jun 2012 21:13
in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by anevilyak"





Member since:
2011-05-12
The Amiga CD32 (September 1993) was basically an Amiga 1200 dressed up as a game console and it could easily be turned in to one.
And the Commodore CDTV came even earlier, March 1991. It was an Amiga 500 turned in to an interactive CD playing device.