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Apple Interactive Television Box

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Prototype
DeveloperApple Inc.
Product familyMacintosh Quadra 605 or LC 475
TypeSet top box prototype
LifespanEarly 1990s
Discontinued1995 (1995)
Operating systemSystem 7.1
StorageROM
InputRemote control
PlatformMacintosh
Marketing targetConsumer, enterprise, and hospitality
PredecessorMacintosh TV
SuccessorPippin
Apple TV

The Apple Interactive Television Box (AITB) was a television set-top box developed by Apple Computer (now Apple Inc.) in partnership with a number of global telecommunications firms, including British Telecom and Belgacom. Prototypes of the unit were deployed at large test markets in parts of the United States and Europe in 1994 and 1995, but the product was canceled shortly thereafter, and was never mass-produced or marketed.[1]

Overview

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Rear of the unit

The AITB was designed as an interface between a consumer and an interactive television service.[2] The unit's remote control would allow a user to choose what content would be shown on a connected television, and to seek with fast forward and rewind. In this regard it is similar to a modern satellite receiver or TiVo unit. The box would only pass along the user's choices to a central content server for streaming instead of issuing content itself. There were also plans for game shows, educational material for children, and other forms of content made possible by the interactive qualities of the device.

Early conceptual prototypes have an unfinished feel. Near-completion units have a high production quality, the internal components often lack prototype indicators, and some units have FCC approval stickers. These facts, along with a full online manual[3] suggest the product was very near completion before being canceled.

Infrastructure

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Because the machine was designed to be part of a subscription data service, the AITB units are mostly inoperable. The ROM contains only what is required to continue booting from an external hard drive or from its network connection. Many of the prototypes do not appear to even attempt to boot. This is likely dependent on changes in the ROM. The ROM itself contains parts of a downsized System 7.1, enabling it to establish a network connection to the media servers provided by Oracle. The Oracle Media Server (OMS) initially ran on hardware produced by Larry Ellison's nCube Systems company, but was later also made available by Oracle on SGI, Alpha, Sun, SCO, Netware, Windows NT, and AIX systems. These servers also provided the parts of the OS not implemented in ROM of the AITB via the OMS Boot Service. Therefore, an AITB must establish a network connection successfully in order to finish the boot process. Using a command key combination and a PowerBook SCSI adapter, it is possible to get the AITB to boot into a preinstalled System 7.1 through an external SCSI hard drive.

In July 2016, images were published on a video game forum that appear to show a Super Nintendo Entertainment System cartridge designed to work with the British Telecom variant of the AITB.[4] The cartridge is labeled "BT GameCart" and includes an 8-pin serial connector designed to connect to the Apple System/Peripheral 8 port on the rear of the box. A BT promotional film for the service trial discusses a way users could download and play Nintendo video games via the system.[5][6][dubiousdiscuss]

Specifications

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The Apple Interactive Television Box is based upon the Macintosh Quadra 605 or LC 475. Because the box was never marketed, not all specifications have been stated by Apple. It supports MPEG-2 Transport containing ISO11172 (MPEG-1) bit streams, Apple Desktop Bus, RF in and out, S-Video out, RCA audiovideo out, RJ-45 connector for either E1 data stream on PAL devices or T1 data stream on NTSC devices, serial port, and HDI-30 SCSI.[3] Apple intended to offer the AITB with a matching black ADB mouse, keyboard, Apple 300e CD-ROM drive, StyleWriter printer, and one of several styles of remote controls.

The hard drive contains parts of a regular North American System 7.1.1 with Finder, several sockets for network connection protocols, and customized MPEG1 decoding components for the QuickTime Player software.

History

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A few units contain a special boot ROM which allows the device to boot locally from a SCSI hard drive that has the OS and applications contained within the box; these devices were used primarily by developers inside Apple and Oracle, and for limited demonstration purposes. In normal network use, content and program code was served to the box by Oracle OMS over the network to implement the box's interactivity.

A few hundred to a few thousand units were deployed at Disneyland California hotels and provided in room shopping and park navigation. Approximately 2,500 units were installed and used in consumer homes in England during the second interactive television trial conducted by British Telecom and Oracle, which was in Ipswich, UK. The set-top applications were developed using Oracle's Oracle Media Objects (OMO) product, which is somewhat similar to HyperCard, but was enhanced significantly to operate in a network-based interactive TV environment.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Apple Interactive Television Box". Shrine Of Apple. September 15, 2011. Archived from the original on March 27, 2019. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  2. ^ Frommer, Dan (September 9, 2015). "A visual history of Apple's TV products". Quartz. Retrieved July 14, 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Apple Interactive Television Box: Setting up and using the equipment" (PDF). Apple Computer, Inc. 1995. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 5, 2013. Retrieved March 26, 2019.
  4. ^ "Any idea what this is?". Archived from the original on March 29, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2016.
  5. ^ BT Interactive TV, archived from the original on August 18, 2016, retrieved July 26, 2016
  6. ^ "BT Joins Forces with Nintendo". Telecompaper. June 28, 1995. Archived from the original on February 23, 2020. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
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