[1] It was installed into a number of electronics, including the Atari Jaguar CD and Nuon DVD players.
The Virtual Light Machine is similar to what would later be seen in music visualizations included with Winamp and other Media players.
The VLM is set apart from simple music visualizers by an interactive mode that allows users to manipulate graphics generation on the fly.
A prototype dubbed VLM-0 was demonstrated at several concerts and raves but was not made widely available.
The player released by Toshiba only featured 8 VLM effects, less than the Samsung DVDN-2000.