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#1
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in 1970 national geographic had a computer issue (forget which month)
that showed a flight simulator with graphics that looked pretty advanced for those days. does anyone know what system that was, and if it has been emulated? |
#2
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When I was a Kid, mid eighties, I went to a computer show and there was a
flight sim on an amber screen monitor. I think it was based on a cessna with wire graphic scenery that looked like oil well towers in texas. Just cant remember anymore than that. Anyone know about this? Thanks, Paul, UK. "Mad Scientist Jr" wrote in message om... in 1970 national geographic had a computer issue (forget which month) that showed a flight simulator with graphics that looked pretty advanced for those days. does anyone know what system that was, and if it has been emulated? |
#3
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if you dig up the nat. geographic magazine from 1970, there are color
pictures that show full color graphics of a runway - this is years before color video games began to appear. what system was this??? |
#4
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"Mad Scientist Jr" wrote in message
om... if you dig up the nat. geographic magazine from 1970, there are color pictures that show full color graphics of a runway - this is years before color video games began to appear. what system was this??? I don't know -- I don't have that magazine around for me to dig up -- but flight simulators predate wide-spread use of computers by at least a decade, possibly more. Early flight simulators include the pneumatically powered Link instrument flight trainers, and visual trainers that used terrain models and a video camera that was moved along the modeled terrain according to pilot inputs. If I had to guess, I'd guess that the simulator depicted in the 1970 National Geographic issue is one of the television-based simulators. Pete |
#5
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It was probably for a Radio Shack TRS-Model 1 computer. I had one and
bought the software. A six mile by six mile virtual world. You could just fly there or go into the soppwith camel combat mode and fly, shoot at things like targets on the ground, etc. It was crude, yes, but I learned a lot about flying way back then. I even talked to Bruce Artwick himself, one time, on the phone. I'm still thrilled at talking to such a genius. A few years later, in Chicago, I talked with a lady that used to work there making SCENERY DISKS covering all of the United States. I still enjoy FS-2004 with the ULTIMATE TRAFFIC 2004 Add-on. Peter Duniho wrote: "Mad Scientist Jr" wrote in message om... if you dig up the nat. geographic magazine from 1970, there are color pictures that show full color graphics of a runway - this is years before color video games began to appear. what system was this??? I don't know -- I don't have that magazine around for me to dig up -- but flight simulators predate wide-spread use of computers by at least a decade, possibly more. Early flight simulators include the pneumatically powered Link instrument flight trainers, and visual trainers that used terrain models and a video camera that was moved along the modeled terrain according to pilot inputs. If I had to guess, I'd guess that the simulator depicted in the 1970 National Geographic issue is one of the television-based simulators. Pete |
#6
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"jbarnes0995" wrote in message
... It was probably for a Radio Shack TRS-Model 1 computer. [...] Unlikely, for a variety of reasons. One, because the TRS-80 Model I (I assume that's what you meant) didn't have a color display, nor was there any flight sim for that computer as far as I can recall (I owned a Model III and would have had a flight sim if one were available...with a screen resolution of 128x48, it wasn't really suitable for flight simulation anyway). Bruce Artwick's original program was for the Apple II, not the TRS-80 (later available on the Commodore 64 and Atari 800, and of course eventually on the IBM PC published by Microsoft). The most compelling reason it wasn't the TRS-80 Model I, though, is that the original poster is writing about a magazine issue from the year 1970, nearly a decade before the TRS-80 Model I was made. I think it's great you've enjoyed computer flight simulation for so many years, but your memory has left you high and dry. Pete |
#7
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message ...
"Mad Scientist Jr" wrote in message om... if you dig up the nat. geographic magazine from 1970, there are color pictures that show full color graphics of a runway - this is years before color video games began to appear. what system was this??? [...] Early flight simulators include the pneumatically powered Link instrument flight trainers, and visual trainers that used terrain models and a video camera that was moved along the modeled terrain according to pilot inputs. If I had to guess, I'd guess that the simulator depicted in the 1970 National Geographic issue is one of the television-based simulators. I think you're probably right. Or perhaps it could've been an Evans & Sutherland prototype. I believe they were just getting started around then. Kevin |
#8
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Actually there were quite a few interesting graphics posted in that
Nat Geo issue, not just the flight sim. This was a year before even Computer Space, 2 years before Magnavox Odyssey and Pong, 6 years before Night Driver. Even earlier, there is a "computer graphics timeline" online (search for it) that cites wireframe animation done in 1963 for a TV ad (possibly by Bell Labs?). Also, I always wondered what system they used for the "death star tapes" in Star Wars. |
#9
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Kevin Darling wrote:
"Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... If I had to guess, I'd guess that the simulator depicted in the 1970 National Geographic issue is one of the television-based simulators. I think you're probably right. Or perhaps it could've been an Evans & Sutherland prototype. I believe they were just getting started around then. General Electric http://home.chello.no/~pal.nass/oldgeflightsim.jpg I've "thumbed" through the whole article without finding any more mention of it. Reading it is a strain on the eyes, I don't have the paper copy, it's the entire NatGeo on CDs. (it is the November 1970 issue, for those with a well-stocked library nearby. Article is "Behold the computer revolution", by Peter T. White.) |
#10
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That's no oil-well, that's the Sears Tower. It sounds exactly like the
stone-age version of MSFS. When I was in HS in the mid-80's I took two semesters of computer-sciences, mostly learning BASIC on the school's Apple II (they had a bunch of "Franlin Ace" sets as well. In a box of 5.25" floppies were two marked "Flight Simulator", but which I could never get to work right - it would freeze on the opening screen. Otherwise, it sounds exactly like what you describe. Even a year later, when I moved up to a color version for my XT, buildings like the Sears tower and the Empire State Building looked like oil towers or something like that. |
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