[Coco] Interface hardware for the coco (was talking about light guns/pens)
Steve Bjork
6809er at srbsoftware.com
Tue Apr 26 00:18:44 EDT 2011
When I was the king of light pens for the TRS-80 model I (before the coco came out) we did not have access to the video timing of the screen. But I was able to find where the light pen was without blinking ever char. on the screen. My code was so fast that I could find the pen in about 1/10 of a second.
This same technology could used on the CoCo with a VGA monitor if not for the slow refresh rate of LCD screen. They hold the image too long and would slow down my technology and take close to a 1/2 second to find the pen.
As for making this stuff work with old games, I agree that's a lost cause.
A better technology is what I'm using right now, a touch screen. They come down in price and both types of touch screens could easily interfaced into the coco. I like the new capacitive type (Apple and others) since you only need your fingers to control it. The older resistive touch screen need a small pen to make them work well.
Think how much easier gams like Polaris and clowns & balloons would be by just moving your finger around on the screen.
Now there is a project!
Steve Bjork
Sent from my iPad 2
On Apr 25, 2011, at 6:42 PM, gene heskett <gheskett at wdtv.com> wrote:
> On Monday, April 25, 2011 09:33:20 PM Frank Pittel did opine:
>
> With modern LCD monitors, and their much more continuous light output (no
> scanning beam), I would have to assume it is a problem that cannot be
> solved in a real time situation. One would have to blink, one at a time,
> every pixel on the screen to reliably detect the aim point of the light
> gun. Given the number of pixels, even when done with blocks of several
> pixels to essentially duplicate the coco's far lower pixel count, it would
> be a several second period just to blink every pixel once. How would the
> light gun detect that in the face of a shaky aim?
>
> Lost cause IMO.
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