E-3 AWACS Exhibit at OmniPlex Air Space Museum

The Air Space Museum at OmniPlex Science Center
The Assignment
For some time, the AWACS exhibit had been static because the expensive
industrial laserdisc player failed often and was expensive to repair
and/or replace. Further, the control system which allowed menu
selection of AWACS video scenes was broken and the manufacturer could
not be found. BCD was called to convert the laserdisc video to
interactive DVD, and to provide a control system that would interface
with the existing buttons in the AWACS simulator. .
Designing the System
Disc Geography
- Attract Loop
Previously, the video screen showed a static video menu (from the disc)
when the video was not playing, burning the menu image into the
monitor. BCD suggested using an Attract Loop
made up of 5 still images grabbed from the video. Each image of this
slide show lasts for 10 seconds, and the sequence repeats if no button
is pressed. There is a caption on each slide saying Press Button for Menu
which prompts the user to press a button. This sequence is also a DVD
Menu with 5 options, corresponding to the 5 available buttons. Pressing
any of the 5 buttons takes the user to the video Menu screen with its 5
choices.
- AWACS Video (5 segments)
Each of these
5 segments is a DVD Video Motion Menu. Any button press during the
playing of a sequence returns the user immediately to the Main Menu.
This decision was made because there are so many impatient school
children who may not want to see a video segment through to its
completion.
Disc Player
For this
installation, Omniplex chose a Philips DVD-711 player because they
already had one on hand. Further, the player presented no messages
on-screen when a menu choice was selected.
The BCD VC-16 required no
special custom programming for this project. Exhibit technicians just
connected buttons 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 to the ribbon cable of the VC-16.
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