December 1987
The quest for home video
Compact Disc-Interactive

[Source: Terra Media Archives]
Another chicken-and-egg problem
Ever hopeful, despite repeated delays, that the Compact Disc-Interactive (CD-i)
format would become a global interactive medium, Philips published a manual for
software designers. Recognising the 'chicken'-and-egg' hardware/software
conundrum that had bedevilled the video disc, Philips International's D C Geest
(Senior Managing Director and Chairman, Corporate Group—Home Interactive
Systems) wrote in the foreword:
'But the establishment of a specification, and the building of CD-i players is
only one part of the picture. The other essential element is the software—the
range of CD-i discs that will join the players to form the basis of a new
publishing industry. It is the purpose of this book to help those interested in
participating in this new industry to understand the possibilities and
techniques of CD-i, as well as to appreciate the basics of CD-i disc design.'
The scale of the problem is indicated by the book's editor, J M Preston in
the preface to the second edition (March 1988):
'This book ... cannot be used as a vademecum while designing a CD-i disc. At the time of
writing there is an insufficient body of experience to enable such a guide to be
written—only two CD-i discs have been displayed to Licensees, one by Sony in
June 1987 and one by Philips in December 1987. ... The long term success of CD-i
is going to be determined by the foresight of the publisher and the ingenuity of
the designer; so the more experience can be shared at this stage, the greater
the effort that can go into original design work.'
1987
The quest for home video
index