How did they have this no latency tech in the 80s when we were still playing Atari games?

How did they have this no latency tech in the 80s when we were still playing Atari games?

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  1. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Most of this was done with analog systems, wasn't it? No computers involved.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >analog
      >hud
      frick off Black person. This is the 80s we're talking about. Planes like the F-16 and F-18 literally can't fly without a digital computer controlling them.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        the HUD can still be analogue homosexual

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          Not with numerical indications it can't.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            You could use radio waves to create the numbers or use an electromechanical system involving holographics

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            It could be just a mechanical instrument projected onto a screen, easy to do.

            I mostly know about how physically limited the 2600 was from the Halo port (yes its real). Master Chief's visor in that was a pong ball because that was the only way they could add a second color to the sprite. The reason it worked is because the pong ball had uts own dedicated chip, meaning it didn't have to share colors with the rest of the system.

            2600 was made to display sprites. It had limitations because it was made for one thing, sprites on TV.

  2. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    That UI is 100% fictional. Go look at DCS footage for actual 80s vintage tomcat HUD symbology.

  3. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Because it was all VERY highly specialized computer hardware. You had chips that are designed JUST to run this HUD and basically only ever do that. These are not general purpose computers and can't just be tasked to do anything significantly different.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >it was all VERY highly specialized computer hardware
      Ok but I definitely remember seeing a video of dudes playing Star Wars X-Wing on an F-14's MPD.

  4. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    it's just a Vectrex (1982)

  5. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >How did they have this no latency tech in the 80s
    by the power of precision analog electronics

  6. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    >80s
    Been around since the 70s, starting with the A-7E

  7. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    All that stuff is relatively simple to do, its just math and vector graphics, all you need is an 8 bit processor and some assembly code. Hell, you probably could do that on Atari (although not the 2600, it'd have to be one of their home computers or later consoles) Pic related is a screenshot from the game "Tempest" released by Atari in 1981.
    If you want to know why tech today takes so much more effort to do the same things it did back in the 80s go ask PrepHole. They'll give you a novel length rant about lazy programmers and pajeets which is mostly accurate to the state of the tech industry.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Atari 2600 could produce some detailed graphics.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Yeah, but most of its processors were single purpose, so it was pretty limited in what it could actually do. For example, it couldn't do vector graphics, so the Star Wars port had to fake it with sprite graphics.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          >it couldn't do vector graphics
          > Star Wars port had to fake it with sprite graphics
          SW had a vector display, a TV is raster graphics. A lot of 2600 ports were lazy.

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            I mostly know about how physically limited the 2600 was from the Halo port (yes its real). Master Chief's visor in that was a pong ball because that was the only way they could add a second color to the sprite. The reason it worked is because the pong ball had uts own dedicated chip, meaning it didn't have to share colors with the rest of the system.

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              It could be just a mechanical instrument projected onto a screen, easy to do.
              [...]
              2600 was made to display sprites. It had limitations because it was made for one thing, sprites on TV.

              2600 was specifically designed to play Pong style games. So it has sprites corresponding to the paddles and balls of Pong. More complicated games were created due to programmer ingenuity.

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                The Texas Instruments chip was. You can get round it though. The deeper problem is that its only representation of the screen is what it exposes directly to the display, there is no buffer. And you have to 'race the beam' because the whole thing got its timing off the display raster time, so you have to have changes to the screen ready before the phosphor gun gets there. Its functionally just about a computer but extremely close to the hardware. Fun to program for actually if you have the interest.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Software bloat and lazy code and scripting is the bane of modern processing yes.
      A 1970s computer designed to do one thing, take 2 or 3 off set images, run a script to determine speed and distance based on the offset of those images, and then project that info is stupidly simple.
      Running 300 apps and scripts in the background just to keep your os running while also constantly receiving and sending wireless data packs from the wifi, multiple Bluetooth devices, shared network devices, etc etc, while also running a game poorly coded by an overworked sleep deprived 23 year old is absolutely brutal in comparison.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Oh I agree completely, that why I specified "the same things". I was referring to simple tasks which computers have been able to do for decades being needlessly overcomplicated by moder devs.
        Also
        >Game
        >Coded
        >In current year
        Lmao

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          >>Game

          >>In current year
          >Lmao
          I haven't touched the stuff since college in the late 2000s, you're right its all scripts going down now.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          >>Game

          >>In current year
          >Lmao
          I haven't touched the stuff since college in the late 2000s, you're right its all scripts going down now.

          Unreal makes stuff so easy that code is limited to highly specific scenarios of design where clicking together function blocks won't cut it, and they're improving more and more to not need even that.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >go ask PrepHole.
      Jesus don't do that. They are by far the fricking dumbest frickers on the PrepHole.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        You're saying that like wartime /k/ doesn't exist

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      >They'll give you a novel length rant about lazy programmers and pajeets which is mostly accurate to the state of the tech industry.

      I listened to rants like this for a couple decades. Had a /tg/ friend that tried to make a career of being a Navy officer but got laid-off during a Carter military cut back. Went back to college, grabbed a masters in programming in 1981, and jumped into the military industrial complex. I know one of the big things he programed on was the original Advanced Field Artillery Tactical Data System (AFATDS). I know the big disconnect he had with young people was the amount of emphasis and bloat put into GUIs. Fancy graphics that add nothing to the function and only rob possessing resources.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      You know the adage of "work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion"?
      A rather similar thing happens when it comes to compute resources and software. There's little impetus to highly optimize software when the hardware is so powerful. Like designing an incredibly comfy saddlebag for a horse to carry two and a half pounds on each flank.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        I know, but its still mildly infuriating when I need a 3 ghz cpu and 8gb of ram to browse the web without slowdown when a 300mhz pentium 3 could the same exact thing 20 years ago.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      PrepHole is borderline moronic. Don't ask them, for the sake of your sanity.

      But to help out a bit. Highly specialized chips fabricated specifically to do one task only. That's what powered 70s/80s fighter jets

      Nowadays with newer jets, it's mostly real-time computing.
      The gist of RTC is to program applications in such a way that every function or calculation meets a deadline. Typically programmed with languages that are designed for this, like Ada.
      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real-time_computing

      t. PrepHoleautist

  8. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    indians and webshits can't program

  9. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Most military aircraft from at least the F14 Tomcat used custom made digital electronic integrated circuits.

    The F14's CADC chipset had a 20 bit FPU capable of carrying out parallel multiplication and division operations, and an ADC.

  10. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    They used real-time operating systems running on a cluster of interconnected instruments as opposed to a single computer running a general purpose OS. The latency is programmed away by bounding all computational tasks to a specific timeline.

    This is the case for aircraft and many modern cars. You'll also find it powering factories, ships, and Martian rovers.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Martians dont exist idiot.

  11. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    ?t=196
    it just werks

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      I'm surprised that reflector glass huds haven't become common on cars given how simple they are.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        I know someone who tried to Kickstart one, it's not feasible for small players to do, and the various countries' road transport authorities don't (yet) allow the big boys to do HUDs. I suspect they worry about apps interfering with driver concentration.
        >because you just KNOW some zoomer is going to try and watch Tiktok on the windshield while doing eighty in a school zone

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        I know someone who tried to Kickstart one, it's not feasible for small players to do, and the various countries' road transport authorities don't (yet) allow the big boys to do HUDs. I suspect they worry about apps interfering with driver concentration.
        >because you just KNOW some zoomer is going to try and watch Tiktok on the windshield while doing eighty in a school zone

        The C5 and C6 Corvettes both had a HUD.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          Not for projecting anything useful, like a map

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Yeah, they were quite basic. But the point is that

            I know someone who tried to Kickstart one, it's not feasible for small players to do, and the various countries' road transport authorities don't (yet) allow the big boys to do HUDs. I suspect they worry about apps interfering with driver concentration.
            >because you just KNOW some zoomer is going to try and watch Tiktok on the windshield while doing eighty in a school zone

            is clearly mistaken about there being some sort of big legal issue with HUDs in general. They have been done before. Hell, I just googled "cars with huds" and there are stacks of relatively recent cars with them. I have no idea how good they are, but they're certainly a thing.

            • 11 months ago
              Anonymous

              That's me
              I should have clarified: when I say HUD, I don't mean something that just shows basic dashboard displays. That's useless. I mean a HUD that projects a phone screen or car navigation screen. It would be very useful to display a map, you don't have to take your eyes off the road to read the map.

              AFAICT, all HUDs currently don't have anything like that. They're quite basic.

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                So what is the exact wording of this law or policy which allows some HUDs and not others? What exactly is it that they are banning?

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                how the frick do I know, I was just speculating
                YOU tell me why no car manufacturer has produced even just the OPTION to put a HUD map up, when clearly it's well within technical capabilities

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                >I was just speculating
                I figured.
                I have no idea why no car makers have done this. I just call BS on the theory that the law is the problem.

              • 11 months ago
                Anonymous

                More than likely no manufacturer wants to deal with insurance company bullshit that would accompany it.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        Only know this because I got a loaner from the dealership but Mazda does them now, at least in their crossovers. It's pretty slick and way less intrusive than the gay ass digital displays and voice systems on other brands. They call it an active driving display or some shit.

        • 11 months ago
          Anonymous

          >They call it an ADD or some shit.
          Fitting. Active Driving High-definition Display when?

          • 11 months ago
            Anonymous

            Whenever a manufacturer decides to dick around and see if it'll be popular. Their current one's are actually pretty solid quality and don't get washed out by bright light, basically work like an RDS reflection. The one in my loaner can show a compact version of the full dashboard plus basic GPS and direction function. It'll also track the speed limit for a given road, upcoming stoplights and signs, and a few bit more things I"m sure I haven't seen yet.

      • 11 months ago
        Anonymous

        They're starting to pick up traction, my 2019 BMW X5 has one

  12. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Surprisingly you don't need a 4090 to run an hud (which is just an powerpoint presentation)

  13. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Atari games could have extremely low latency, actually. The hardware did not have any memory to buffer things in, so the game had to read input as it was generated, advance game logic when it could and alter the image being emitted to the screen pretty much at the same time. This could result in latencies of 1/60 of a second or less, which is fine for most human users.
    Modern machines are easily thousands of times faster, but they're also vastly more complicated than this. Nobody wants to program them like people did back then, and nobody wants to pay for competent software engineering either, so we get systems where updating the screen in response to a keypress takes longer than pinging another machine on the other side of the planet.
    But latency doing something that basic isn't really much of a hardware performance issue.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      stfu nerd youll never have sex lamo

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      but the pajeets are SOOOOOOO cheap!

  14. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    Most families weren't willing to spend $15,000 on a console to play video games.

  15. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    How does an aircraft know it's been locked on?

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      In addition to its own radar the aircraft also has a radar receiver in it which detects when outside radar hits the plane. Certain types of signals and their behavior is indicative of a radar lock-on.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      Dedicated detectors for radar, laser and other peculiar signatures.
      They don't necessarily always work, especially with modern systems that can find the target using guidance data linked from somewhere else.

    • 11 months ago
      Anonymous

      The aircraft knows where radar is because it knows where it isn't. By subtracting where it knows radar isn't, from where it knows radar is, it can get a clear picture of a radar lock. When a radar is activated, the airplane detects where the radar now is, and can subtract it from where it knows radar isn't. This can be called the radar direction indictator. When the radar source moves, the place where the radar wave were is now where the radar waves aren't, and conversely, the place where the radar waves are, is the place where the radar waves weren't. The plane then updates its knowledge and depiction of where the radar waves are so the pilot can avoid them and move to where they aren't.

  16. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    There was no latency on Atari vector graphics machines zoom-zoom.

  17. 11 months ago
    Anonymous

    You got HUDs with Atari level graphics XD

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