• =?UTF-8?Q?Re=3A_Retro-Acronym_Of_The_Week=3A_=E2=80=9CFMV=E2=80=9D?=

    From Steven Thomsen-Jones@steven+usenet@thomsen-jones.dk to alt.folklore.computers on Sat Feb 7 21:52:24 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 30/12/2025 00:08, Lawrence DrCOOliveiro wrote:
    There are quite a few acronyms, now long forgotten, which were bandied
    around a lot back in the day, when the technologies they represented
    were new, exciting, and above all, still unusual enough to be worthy
    of comment.

    One of those from the early 1990s is rCLFMVrCY, which is casually dropped, without explanation, at 1:28 in this video <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxSCNhblC3g> on The 8-Bit GuyrCOs
    channel, which is about the old Philips rCLCD-irCY (rCLCompact Disc InteractiverCY) format.

    It stands for rCLFull Motion VideorCY. The idea of being able to watch digital video clips at a decent resolution and frame rate on a regular
    PC was still pretty cutting-edge at the time. The CD-i machines needed
    a special add-in card, which was quite an expensive option, to achieve
    this. The card had hardware designed for real-time decoding of MPEG-1,
    which was the state of the art for video compression technology (at
    least as intended for the mass market) at the time. And at 320|u240 resolution, it was only considered to be about equivalent in overall
    quality to VHS.

    I recall being very excited getting our first CD-ROM drive to play Star
    Wars Rebel Assault, although it's full potential didn't hit until Wing Commander III IMO.

    I wonder if I had my Gravis Ultrasound by then?
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