

Gaming floor control and configuration system Method and apparatus using insertably-removable auxiliary devices to play games over a communications linkĭevice and method for wirelessly accessing game mediaĬonfigurable gaming machine and method for configuring games in a gaming machine Priority Applications (2) Application NumberĪpplications Claiming Priority (1) Application Numberįamily ID=30770954 Family Applications (1) Application Numberįamilies Citing this family (13) * Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party Publication numberĪrithmetic device, method, and program using remainder representation Watch music videos on your favorite apps, streaming services, and devices, including YouTube, Apple TV.


The control (24) responds to the input signal and causes the video disk transfer device (22) to transfer the videodisk to the video disk player (14). Vevo is the worlds leading music video network. The user selects the desired title using a user operable videodisk selector (26). Videogame titles are displayed on a title display (18). video game cartridgesĪ video disk player (14) has a disk interface for reading gamed data from multiple videodisks stored in a disk storage device (20).
#ARCADE JUKEBOX PROGRAM SERIAL#
That said, a serial touchscreen it all it has been tested with.
#ARCADE JUKEBOX PROGRAM DRIVERS#
It shouldn't specifically require a serial touchscreen, as long as the drivers look like any other mouse driver. The closest product that met my needs was Virtual Music Jukebox, but it doesnt run on Windows 10 and emails to them went unanswered, so here we are. XP is pretty compatible with the touchscreen later versions of Windows are not. Here are the archived versions of the site: On Windows 98/XP, any touchscreen LCD may work (hope so there's also a win32 binary inside).Īlternatively, a trackball or some knobs will also do, I assume.Īnyway, it's still a neat little project, I think. In order to be able to press the "buttons" on pure DOS. (The project originated from the arcade cab scene which used to use the DOS-based MAME emulator.)Īlso, you likely need a touchscreen/LCD with touchscreen with RS-232 interface

The original DWJukebox site is down and the author apparently has no interest in DOS anymore. Please note that this was written about 12 years ago. The article/blog entry is available here: While browsing, I just noticed that there once was a projectĪbout a Jukebox with an LCARS interface (skin there are many more).
