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Hawkins will sell his games on compact discs -- the same silver platters that have taken over the music business and been adapted as storage devices for machines built by Sega, Philips, Commodore and all the major computer manufacturers. But unlike most of his competitors, Hawkins sees CDs as a temporary solution. Ultimately, he says, interactive motion pictures will be delivered to home game machines not on a disc but through the fiber-optic networks being built by cable and telephone companies. This summer he announced plans to sell a new version of the Multiplayer that plugs directly into a coaxial...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Amazing Video Game Boom | 9/27/1993 | See Source »

...plots. Meanwhile, the programmers have been joined by a new generation of Hollywood executives who, having tasted the power of computerized special effects, are eager to create a whole new form of entertainment that can be beamed over a cable line, bought in a cartridge or played from a compact disc. Both sides talk excitedly about making interactive movies with synthetic actors, of allowing players to take full control of the character's action and even, with the proper equipment, to enter a virtual reality in which they are the character...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Amazing Video Game Boom | 9/27/1993 | See Source »

Mortal Kombat is not the first violent video game -- or even the worst. In Night Trap, a controversial compact-disc game that plays on the Sega system, five scantily clad women are stalked down by bloodthirsty vampires who like to drill holes in their victims' necks and hang them on meat hooks. In both Night Trap and Mortal Kombat, live-action video technology makes the violence that much more realistic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Too Violent for Kids? | 9/27/1993 | See Source »

...Paramount-Viacom deal can be completed, it would enable the combined company to move into new ventures that neither firm would have the means to undertake separately. For example, Paramount chairman Martin Davis said last week that the new company might develop a music business to record and market compact discs under the MTV label. And since Viacom and Paramount together own a total of 12 TV stations, the two companies could combine them into a fifth broadcast network. "If it presents an opportunity, we will clearly seize it," Davis says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will They Reach the Altar? | 9/27/1993 | See Source »

...there it languished, obscurely, until the advent of compact-disc technology, which permitted Bryars to fashion a version twice as long -- and at least four times as ambitious. Beginning with a fade-in of the tramp's a cappella singing, it slowly builds and swells, with new instruments constantly added to a basic string quintet. Cellos and basses come and go; horns, trombones and contrabassoons add color; a full string orchestra emerges, along with a vocal choir. Finally, pop singer Tom Waits joins in, his raspy, passionate baritone contrasting with the old man's reedy tenor. Its long journey finished...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Minimalist Magic | 8/23/1993 | See Source »

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