The masses were effectively kept out of the big PC94 Personal Computer show at Darling Harbour last week.
Signs said: “”No children under 18 allowed”. And if that was not enough, there was a $15 entry fee. Naturally serious buyers could get free tickets, in the same way serious gamblers get free beer at the casino.
So it was all suits and ties and mobile phones in a great exhibition hall with 300 exhibitors (three of Exhibition Centres five halls were joined for purpose). None the less, having excluded the kids, the sounds were unlike past computer exhibitions. Instead of soothing elevator music being piped homogeneously throughout the hall, a cacophony emerged from competing computer sound and games systems such that it was impossible to hear yourself talk on a mobile phone.
Business and kids stuff dominated the show. Education took back desk. Accountancy packages and games dominated the software displays. We have heard so much about multi-media. Well the junk is coming first. Movies, movies, movies. Games, games, games. And dinosaurs. Pick a movie; click the director; up comes a head shot; and there are all the other films she directed. There are one or two encyclopedias on CD ROM and the birds of Australia and a couple of Atlases. But there is a long way to go on the range of CD ROM books. It’s a pity because keyword and concept searching is a superior way to work, learn and research.
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