

NUON As Open Source Gaming Platform 91
jjustice writes: "About a month ago, Richard Miller, CEO of VM Labs, announced that "In the near future (I don't want to commit to a date until we are sure of it), we will release to the open development community the tools and documentation that were used to develop these titles - both the games and the movie enhancements. We will also release a few sample applications that can be freely downloaded from the Internet, burned onto CD-R discs, and run on NUON DVD players that can read CD-Rs. Currently only the N501 has this capability, but we anticipate that all future NUON based DVD players will read CD-R and DVD-R media." It's not Linux, but unlike Indrema, the boxes are available. And the technology may not rival PS2 or XBox, but he also says the latest version of the chip is 2-3 times the power of the existing model and cheaper to produce. Besides, I'll support any platform with games from Jeff Minter." No use for all those electronics going to waste, eh?
Availability of a Nuon player (Score:1, Insightful)
Anyway, I think I can do without Tempest 4000, or whatever version Jeff Minter is developing now.
Re:Availability of a Nuon player (Score:1)
Although please note that these dates are not official yet - samsung are unusually secretive about their new releases. There is a spec sheet for the N705 at Samsung [samsungelectronics.com][Samsungelectronics.com].
Cheers
Chris
Nuon to play DVD movies (Score:4, Interesting)
The N501 sounds like a nice enough deck. It has the new "expanded" VLM and supports MP3 CD-R/RW. I will probably pick one up as an "extra" DVD deck and for T3K of course. I was in Best Buy last week, and they DID have some retail NUON presence as promoted months back. On impulse, I got a Logitech pad and T3K "while I still could", planning to pick up the N501 at its EOL pricecut.
Re:Nuon to play DVD movies (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:First NUON is dead post (Score:1)
Re:First NUON is dead post (Score:2, Informative)
Jeff Minter (Score:1)
But, thats the problem, he only ever develops for crappy hardware no one actually owns! Anyone know why!!!
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:2)
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:1)
Check him out on The Grunting Ox [magicnet.net].
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:1)
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:1)
(still play Iridis Alpha from time to time when I dust off my C64, and Llamatron on my ST)
You need to check your keyboard setup, by the way - your exclamation point has a twitchy auto-repeat, and your question mark is mapped to exclamation point, too
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:2)
Which immediately shows you to not have been a fan of his work for as long as you might think. Real Minter fans look back with fondness on Gridrunner on the Vic 20 and Mutant Camels on the C64...
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:2)
No Need!
I was just showing off that I had a Falcon! I too remember the old Grid Runner - my mate Paul had a Vic 20 - but I had to wait until my C64 to own my own Minter games. He was the reason I bought an ST instead of an Amiga as revenge of the mutant camels was
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:2)
...gonna have to dust off the 'ol ST one of these days and see if it still works.
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:2)
...gonna have to dust off the 'ol ST one of these days and see if it still works
The PC version worked fine under DOSEMU last time I tried...
Re:Jeff Minter (Score:2)
Still around (Score:2)
http://myweb.magicnet.net/~yak/
Sample quote:
Trawling my drive C yielded a total of 143 instances of file or folder names containing the string "sheep", and my HD is approximately 16 gigs, of which 11.8 gigs are currently in use. So my Total Sheep Index is 143, and my Sheepiness Quotient is 143/11.8 = approximately 12.12 sheepies per gigabyte.
Last Caress? (Score:3, Interesting)
However, NUON is mainly a DVD enhancement technology that "happens to" play games (as opposed to PS2, a game console that "happens to" play movies). There are few NUON titles other than Atari Jaguar sequels and the occasional CD-ROM shovelware (Myst). Therefore they can't convince DVD player manufacturers to place NUON chips in their systems. However if they make it an "open" console technology, then they can convince hobbyists and the like to make software for it. Then the increased demand makes for more of a push to put the NUON technology in DVD players, and NUON then has a more viable platform to encourage development for.
On the other hand, it could just be that NUON is on its way out the door and his handing off its source to people so that something can become of the technology eventually. They release the tools and such, then go out of business. Like DIVX players, NUON players become cheap and get snatched up by /.-ers.
I dunno, (Score:2)
I was thinking about a pingus [seul.org] port or make interactive movies out of ordianry ones (however that would be pretty much impossible)
I think it is going to be very hard to make useful games/apps for this thing...
disclaimer: this is not a flamebait
Re:Minter! (Score:1)
"Guns for show, knives for a pro" - Fletcher
Woah... woah... waitasec... back up. NUON? (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Woah... woah... waitasec... back up. NUON? (Score:2, Informative)
I've got the N501...I had the N2000 but I eBayed it in favor of the N501 because of it's CDR and MP3 capabilities, and improved VLM (a super-trippy on-screen light show when you play CD's). Easily the most feature-filled DVD player I've ever seen.
Re:Woah... woah... waitasec... back up. NUON? (Score:2)
A better menuing system and some MP3 feature enhancements would be cool, but what features am I missing?
Re:Woah... woah... waitasec... back up. NUON? (Score:1)
Check out my URL above for a ton of info on NUON, if you're interested in further research.
-Kevin
Re:Woah... woah... waitasec... back up. NUON? (Score:1)
-Kevin
All I want for christmas... (Score:1)
Re:All I want for christmas... (Score:3, Informative)
D
THANK YOU! (Score:1)
Re:All I want for christmas... (Score:1)
that's my job (Score:1)
--
I should live at home. I'm 17.
Be interesting to see how their tech works (Score:2)
That said, the NUON hardware has been described in some intriguing ways, like "non-von Neumann" and "non-traditional" which certain piques my interest." Even though I think learning the NUON system at this time is best left to those few die-hard Atari fans who never know when to drop something, it will still be interesting to see how it works.
Here's some high-level info on the tech (Score:2)
It's moderately non-traditional, being a VLIW architecture with 5 functional units and 4 cores on the die in SMP, but it's certainly not non-von Neumann. You can develop in C (they ported GCC) or assembler. The low (for VLIW) number of functional units makes this eminently feasible. You'd probably only want to do that for your innermost rendering loops though. The only other significant oddness is the colour space is YCrCb native instead of RGB.
All in all I thought it was a fun piece of hardware, with a lot of potential. Get 16 cores on the die, with more cache each, a better memory controller and a decent process to bring the clockspeed up and you could probably rival PS2 for overall graphical appearance, more or less. No idea what the price-performance tradeoff would be like, however.
Re:Be interesting to see how their tech works (Score:1)
A quick introduction to NUON (Score:5, Informative)
NUON, for those who don't know, is an integrated DVD processor produced by VMLabs, currently available in the US in three consumer models Toshiba SD2300, Samsung Extiva and Samsung N501. There are european models due RSN. It provides advanced processing capable of at least N64 level games as well as enhanced DVD playback (>20x digital zoom, advanced frame management) and NUON specific DVD content. It also features Jeff Minter's VLM2 which is an update to the Jag VLM and, were VMLabs to realise it, is about the coolest thing on the planet at the moment.
The NUON open SDK does exist, and _will_ be made available to the public RSN. But, it hasn't been released yet. There is a FAQ available at NuonDev.com [nuondev.com] which, although not official, does show the currently known state of open-NUON.
Cheers
Chris
Re:A quick introduction to NUON (Score:2, Informative)
The reason that I invested in VM Labs and Nuon was the potential to have an open computing platform for the living room. Just like a PC. Open like a PC, and software availability like a PC. Don't compare Nuon to a Playstation or a Nintendo, compare it to a PC.
Although games are an interesting application of the Nuon, I honestly don't think it is the primary one. And it is certainly not the reason that I invested in this technology. Much more relevant and interesting are codec's such as JPEG, Quicktime, Divx;) etc. Basically, any digital file format will now be able to be displayed in your living room.
This is one of the key reasons why the source is being opened up. Because it's not just for games, but to get as broad and diverse a development community as possible. That not just develops games, but all kinds of awesome applications that are better suited for viewing and use in the living room from 10 feet away, as opposed to a PC that is 2 feet away.
Imagine subsequent generations of these products that include USB and a hard drive. The possibilities very quickly become very interesting. Now imagine the same system with an MPEG2 encoder, and a CD-RW, or a DVD-R. I think you get the idea.
Rob
Re:A quick introduction to NUON (Score:1)
I've heard things as simple as a slideshow JPG viewer, but CODECs like DIVX/MPEG4 and such would be an excellent option to have available in the living room, rather than just on the PC.
-Kevin
Re:A quick introduction to NUON (Score:1)
Ok... I can try to think of it as more of a PC then a console.
I'm just trying to imagine how this won't get plowed under by what the Xbox and PS2 will eventually become over the next few years.
I just don't see whats compelling to the consumer here.
Re:A quick introduction to NUON (Score:1)
Re:A quick introduction to NUON (Score:1)
You can download free software from the internet, and if you are a developer, then you will be able to make it do all sorts of interesting things.
Ok... being a developer... I'm thinking 'why bother'. There's no critical mass of demand here. What the heck would people want to do on their DVD player they can't do elsewhere? Just because we can do it for 'free' now, it doesn't mean that there's a need to do so. The "make-it-free-and-apps-will-come" approach has been proven to be .... unoptimal.
I want MAME on NUON (Score:1)
I want a original classic Arcade games on my TV, Moon Patrol anyone?
Re:I want MAME on NUON (Score:2)
Re:I want MAME on NUON (Score:1)
Where? WalMart doesn't sell it anymore, BestBuy has it for full price (US$100 for Sports2K pak or whatever it's called) and all the e-bay auctions for working models are commanding at least $50 for a basic system. That's not too cheap in my book, especially for a system that has been officially end-of-lifed by Sega.
I'd love to get my hands on one of these for a MAME host or simple Linux box. So, what's a souce for cheap ones??
Re:I want MAME on NUON (Score:1)
I own the new Samsung, and the VLM lightshow is worth the price of admission. Not to mention pan-and-zoom, P-strobe, etc, etc. There's a NUON dev discussion group here [nuontalk.tv]. We're all anxiously awaiting the dev kit. Go buy one ($188 at Best Buy). Don't forget to buy a controller too, since they don't come packed with one.
Re:I want MAME on NUON (Score:1)
Maybe a reason to use that damn controller! (Score:3, Insightful)
One other warning - the N2000 is a successor to the N501 player. Since the N501 could handle CD-Rs, I assumed that the N2000 could as well. I was wrong. CD-Rs aren't recognized at all, and VCDs burned onto CD-RWs will display "VCD" on the display, but they won't play. Buyer beware.
-JC
Re:Maybe a reason to use that damn controller! (Score:2, Informative)
As for emulation on the NUON? I'm sure that will happen as soon as the SDK is publicly available...
Oh yeah, and try Tempest 3000!
Cheers
Chris
Nuon - why? (Score:2)
This is exactly what we all want - a decent games machine, with a stack of games, coming along with a bit of kit as standard. Even if Nuon came with a handful of b&w GAMEBOY games as demos it would excite people more than the dross thats there just now.
Sony should bundle the original PS with all their kit, DVD players, TiVos, anything that points at a TV. Put a handful of PS games on a few DVDs and away you go!
Or they should licence the old SNES and Genesis from Nintendo (yeah right!) and SEGA and put EVERY GAME EVER on a CD. That would be a neat little freebie with your new $300 DVD wouldn't it?
Certainly more fun that NUON!
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:1)
That'll show those damned terrorist!
Save me from NUON (Score:2, Informative)
It is a piece of crap, that takes forever to start up movies, and has a tendency to stall for seconds at a time between tracks (like its catching up on some computations of some sort).
Now they want to release enhanced-nuon-boxes, so buying the original nuon is even more of a joke.
This thing has been out for 2 or so years now, and it has less than 10 titles for it. Shut up and sit down, this thing is dead.
Re:Save me from NUON (Score:1)
If it had been my unit, and not my 70 year old father's who thinks this is how DVD's are supppose to behave, I would have returned it. I will get the exact model number the next time I am home. It works similar to many software codecs I saw on early DVD enabled computers, so I have no basis to think it is broken, since it works somewhat better than most of those early ones.
Maybe not every NUON player made, is made as poorly as my Father's, but get real, these things will never have any broad penetration past playing regular DVDs, and I have every reason to believe, some units got chintzy on MPEG decompression, assuming software and NUON could make up the difference for some dedicated firmware most other DVDs have.
BTW, and as an aside, have you ever tried explaining to someone over 70, why the Play button on a DVD won't start Playing the DVD, and you have to push Select first??? The screen says Play, the button says play (but of course it won't). If you want to call someone a moron, how about the person that didn't think this through on a DVD interface.
Using CD-Rs to test (Score:1)
Ultimate home emulation console. (Score:2)
Please?
Jason
This is a really interesting chain. (Score:2)
What does Jeff Minter and Atari have to do with it? Why is this guy an assembly programming genius or a smelly hippy?
There really isn't much software for it, is there? That is, no real compelling reason to run out and get one, aside from the upcoming open sourcing?
How good is the processor on this? Is it completely custom and doesn't fit anything out there? Need a special compiler? How much memory?
Re:This is a really interesting chain. (Score:1)
Yes.
Wow! (Score:1)
With games like these, who needs Viagra!
Re:Wow! (Score:1)
-Kevin
Jeff Minter (Score:1)