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-
- _ ____ ___ ______ _______ _
- d# ####b g#00 `N##0" _agN#0P0N# d#
- d## jN## j##F J## _dN0" " d##
- .#]## _P ##L jN##F ### g#0" .#]##
- dE_j## # 0## jF ##F j##F j##' ______ dE_j##
- .0"""N## d" ##L0 ##F 0## 0## "9##F" .0"""5##
- .dF' ]## jF ##0 ##F ##F `##k d## .dF' j##
- .g#_ _j##___g#__ ]N _j##L_ _d##L_ `#Nh___g#N' .g#_ _j##__
- """"" """"""""""" " """""" """""" """"""" """"" """"""
-
- *---== Amiga Report International Online Magazine ==---*
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
- "The Original Online Magazine"
- from
- STR Publishing
- """"""""""""""
- [S]ilicon [T]imes [R]eport
-
-
- April 23, 1993 No. 1.06
- ==========================================================================
-
- -----------------------------------------
- * THE BOUNTY BBS *
- Home of STR Publications
- * RUNNING TURBOBOARD BBS *
- 904-786-4176 USR DS 16.8 24hrs - 7 days
- -----------------------------------------
- * NOVA BBS *
- Amiga Report Headquarters
- * RUNNING STARNET BBS *
- FidoNet 1:362/508
- An Amiga Software Distribution Site (ADS)
- 615-472-9748 USR HST 14.4 24hrs - 7 days
- -----------------------------------------
-
- ____________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- > 04/23/93 STR-Amiga 1.06 "The Original * Independent * Online Magazine!"
- """""""""""""""""""""""
- - The Editor's Desk - CPU Report - New Products
- - NAB Show Report - STR Confidential - Amiga Tip of the Week
- - Dealer Directory - STR Online - Usenet Reviews
- - AmiBack Tools Review - Retina Review - Save Key West!
- - 12 A'Clock Review - New A1200 Accelerator
-
- -* FDPro Flight Recorder Review *-
- -* NewTek Announces Toaster 4000! *-
- -* Desktop Video on a Shoestring Budget Continues *-
-
- ============================================================================
- Amiga Report International Online Magazine
- From STR Publications
- [S]ilicon [T]imes [R]eport
- The Original * Independent * Online Magazine
- -* FEATURING WEEKLY *-
- "Accurate UP-TO-DATE News and Information"
- Current Events, Original Articles, Tips, Rumors, and Information
- Hardware ~ Software ~ Corporate ~ R & D ~ Imports
- ============================================================================
- GENIE ~ DELPHI ~ NVN ~ BIX ~ PORTAL ~ FIDO ~ INTERNET
- ============================================================================
-
-
- :HOW TO GET YOUR OWN GENIE ACCOUNT:
- _________________________________
-
- Set your communications software to Half Duplex (or Local Echo)
- Call: (with modem) 800-638-8369.
- Upon connection type HHH (RETURN after that).
- Wait for the U#= prompt.
- Type: XTX99587,CPUREPT then, hit RETURN.
-
-
- GEnie costs only $4.95 a month for unlimited evening and weekend access to
- more than 100 services including electronic mail, online encyclopedia,
- shopping, news, entertainment, single-player games, and bulletin boards
- on leisure and professional subjects. With many other services, including
- the biggest collection of files to download and the best online games, for
- only $6 per hour.
-
- MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! Any time during your first month of membership if
- you are not completely satisfied, just ask for your $4.95 back.
-
-
- GEnie Information copyright (C) 1991 by General Electric
- Information Services/GEnie, reprinted with permission
-
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
-
- > From the Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- Service and support. That's what it's all about. Or at least that's what
- it USED to be about. The computer industry today thrives around the lowest
- price. That is what is luring so many people to buy Clones. Everywhere
- you go, there's a cheap clone. 486SX's about, from Circuit City to Sears
- to Wal Mart. And you can get into a loaded one for under $1500. Yet the
- average buyer has no idea what he's getting himself into. So many times in
- past odd-jobs (as a waiter for example), somebody at work buys a PC, and I
- invariably hear, "I bought a computer. Can you come over and show me how
- to use it?" Sheesh. I usually end up doing so, when I'd rather say, "you
- bought it, you didn't ask me for advice, YOU figure it out."
-
- That's one reason the Amiga is ignored. We all know it's the best computer
- money can buy, but since the average consumer has no idea what makes it a
- better machine, he'll end up buying what he can at the lowest price. Sure,
- An Amiga 1200 fully outfitted will run about $1500 with a hard drive,
- monitor and 4 meg of RAM. Yet people are put off because its not in a
- two-piece case, and because you can't buy one at every discount store. Yet
- after somebody buys a DOS Box, they have no idea what to do with it.
- They're completely lost with DOS and Windows. Windows is not a very
- intuitive interface, as we all know. So it comes back to somebody with
- a REAL computer (like an Amiga) that gets stuck helping somebody that made
- a stupid decision and bought a CLONE. And because we're good people, we
- help them, not saying a word.
-
- Where am I going with this? If this individual bought his PC at Wal Mart,
- and then goes back there for support, nobody there will be able to help
- him. Nobody there really has a clue, anymore than the customer. And
- heaven forbid Mr. Consumer goes to a 'real' PC dealer, like ComputerLand.
- "Where did you buy your computer?" "Wal Mart." "I'm sorry, we can't
- help you."
-
- So many people are apprehensive over buying a computer that not many
- people have heard of, and cannot buy locally. Yet, if they had bought an
- Amiga and had trouble, they could have called the dealer and gotten any
- help that they needed. Sure, it might cost them a long distance phone
- call, but the problem would have been solved.
-
- Or people will say, "but there's no software because it doesn't run DOS."
- Uh huh, right. Again, all it takes a little initiative. Grab an Amiga
- magazine off the newstand. AmigaWorld is on every newstand I've ever
- been in, and is even showing up in grocery stores. The dealer where
- they bought the machine could recommend software packages. And then
- there are the user groups. My local user group isn't very large, but
- everybody there is just as helpful as can be. If one person doesn't have
- an answer to a question, somebody else surely does.
-
- All it takes is a little initiative, and the average consumer can do just
- fine with a computer like the Amiga. Now all that must be done is to let
- these people know the machine exists. Hopefully, Commodore will oblige
- and provide some decent advertising. It doesn't have to be spectacular
- TV spots, but hit all of the major magazines -- Newsweek, The Wall Street
- Journal, Time, Money, etc. Educate the public. We can help too. If you
- know of anyone in the market for a computer, tell them about the Amiga.
- Reassure them that it's not a dying breed, and that you and your user
- group will be there for them if they need help. Until a stronger dealer
- network can be established, it is up to us, the users, to help the Amiga
- survive and prosper.
-
- A few other notes... Mike Troxell is off again this week, as finals have
- taken their toll on him. The last time we spoke, he kept muttering some-
- thing I couldn't quite make out, though it sounded remotely Klingon in
- nature. It may take him a day or two to recover.
-
- Last week, we ran several press releases from the GEnie 5-Minute News
- without giving due credit. The releases for ASDG's T-Rexx Professional,
- VLab, the Retina graphics board and CSA 12-Gauge came from last week's
- 5-Minute News. We apologize for the oversight.
-
- Rob @ Amiga Report
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- Amiga Report's Staff DEDICATED TO SERVING YOU!
- """"""""""""""""""""
-
- Editor
- ------
- Robert Glover
-
-
- Technical Editor Graphics Editor Contributing Editor
- ---------------- --------------- -------------------
- Micah Thompson Mike Troxell Tom Mulcahy
- GEnie: BOOMER.T M.TROXELL1
- FidoNet: 1:362/508.5 1:260/322
- Delphi: 16BITTER
- Bix: HELMET
-
-
- Contributing Correspondents
- ---------------------------
- John Deegan David Gilbert
- David Griffiths Jeff Hanna
- Nikolaj Peddie-Richers Michael Heinz
-
-
-
- PC DIVISION ATARI DIVISION MAC DIVISION
- ----------- -------------- ------------
- Roger D. Stevens Ralph F. Mariano R. Albritton
-
-
- IMPORTANT NOTICE
- """"""""""""""""
- Please, submit letters to the editor, articles, reviews, etc...
- via E-Mail to:
-
- Delphi........................ ROB_G
- GEnie......................... ROB-G
- Internet.......................ROB_G@Delphi.COM
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
- > CPU STATUS REPORT LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS
- =================
-
-
-
- COMMODORE AND NEWTEK JOIN TO MARKET AMIGA 4000 AND NEW VIDEO TOASTER 4000
-
- (West Chester, PA --- April 18, 1993) Commodore Business Machines, Inc.
- is pleased to announce it is participating in a joint marketing effort with
- NewTek, Inc. built on bringing powerful, cost effective technology to the
- video marketplace. The vast acceptance of Commodore's Amiga (R)
- computer and NewTek's Video Toaster TM as quality video products is
- unprecedented. The newly formed alliance coupled with NewTek's
- announcement of the Video Toaster 4000 will encourage further
- widespread acceptance of the Amiga and Toaster within the rapidly
- growing personal video production industry.
-
- Since its introduction in 1985 the Amiga has been recognized as the most
- video oriented microcomputer. Every Amiga is equipped with an array of
- video features such as NTSC horizontal scan rate compatibility, interlaced
- and non-interlaced video modes, RGB analog signal and overscan
- capabilities. A dedicated video slot provides easy access to the Amiga's
- video bus for integrating performance enhancing devices like NewTek's
- Video Toaster.
-
- In September of 1992 Commodore introduced the Amiga 4000 featuring the
- Advanced Graphics Architecture TM (AGA) chip set. AGA greatly
- enhances the computer's videographics capabilities by enabling users to
- display and animate graphics in selectable resolutions at up to 256,000
- colors from a palette of 16.8 million.
-
- The Video Toaster 4000 hardware includes a real-time effects engine and
- two 16.8 million color broadcast-quality frame buffers. Also included is an
- advanced character generator, four input switcher, a broadcast-quality
- paint program, color effects, a 3D modeling and animation program, and a
- luminance keyer.
-
- Amiga and Advanced Graphics Architecture are trademarks of
- Commodore-Amiga, Inc. Video Toaster is a trademark of NewTek, Inc.
-
- Commodore Business Machines
- 1200 Wilson Drive
- West Chester, PA 19380
- (215) 431-9100
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- MICROBOTICS ANNOUNCES 1230XA ACCELERATOR FOR AMIGA 1200
-
- M1230 XA
- High Speed, 50MHz 68030 Acceleration,
- Hardware Floating Point,
- 32-bit Wide Memory Expansion (to 128 Megabytes),
- and Realtime Clock for the Amiga 1200
-
- The MicroBotics M1230 XA is presented to Amiga 1200 owners as an extremely
- powerful, yet cost-effective, upgrade solution providing a high speed 68030
- processor, a 68882 Floating Point Unit (FPU) and supporting the install-
- ation of up to 128 megabytes of 32-bit wide Amiga FastRAM. In addition, a
- high-accuracy, battery-backed realtime clock circuit is included. The M1230
- XA board installs internally on the Amiga 1200's standard 150 pin bus
- expansion connector. M1230 XA speeds up general operations by as much as
- five times that of the native A1200. Using a single, 72-pin standard wide
- SIMM, as much as 128 megabytes of memory can be added to the A1200 (making
- it the biggest memory space available for the machine). The M1230 XA is
- delivered with a 50MHz 68030, making it absolutely the fastest '030
- accelerator available as well.
-
- M1230 XA Specifications
-
- CPU Clock Speeds Supported: 50MHz 68030 installed as standard. M1230 XA is
- also available with either a 33MHz 68030 or 40MHz EC030 (EC=no MMU).
-
- FPU: Motorola 68882 math chip; PGA (Pin-Grid-Array) component. FPU can be
- matched to same-speed FPU or run at a different speed by resort to a
- separate oscillator.
-
- Target System: Amiga 1200 Personal Computer.
-
- Installation: Internal to Amiga 1200; resides on the 150-pin card edge
- connector. User or dealer installable.
-
- Compatibility: Designed for general compatibility with all Amiga system
- software; AmigaDOS system 3.0 and later.
-
- Memory Support: Supports the addition of a single, optional, 32 bit wide,
- 72-pin SIMM (Single Inline Memory Module). SIMMs are available in sizes
- from 1 megabyte up to 128 megabytes, single or double sided. This provision
- for industry standard SIMM support insures that the M1230 XA will always be
- useable with state-of-the-art memory technologies. M1230 XA provides the
- biggest memory space available on the Amiga 1200.
-
- Memory SIMM Types: 72-pin "wide-body" SIMM organized N-megabytes x 32 bits
- (the four megabyte SIMMs used in the Amiga 4000 and in MicroBotics' MBX
- 1200z are compatible with M1230 XA). Memory speeds from 40ns to 80ns are
- supported. The SIMMs used in the M1230 XA are available from numerous third
- party suppliers (i.e., they are not an expensive and limited proprietary
- SIMM-type). Typical name-brand SIMM: MT16D232 (eight megabytes) from
- Micron. SIMM socket is first-quality, professional metal-latch type for
- ease of insertion and secure contact with no breakage-prone plastic "ears".
-
- Realtime Clock Calendar: An Epson RTC 72421B clock/calendar backed by a
- long lasting, user replaceable lithium battery cell (CR 2032), is
- supported.
-
- System Compatibility and Mapping: RAM is autoconfigured under AmigaDOS 3.1
- or software configured under 3.0. RAM can be withheld from the free memory
- list (for test purposes) via a jumper. RAM maps at hex-8 000 000 (and thus
- does not compete with PCMCIA peripherals). CPU and Math chip can operate
- without installed memory. The realtime clock is totally compatible with
- AmigaDOS; no additional software is required.
-
- Software: Includes MBRTest-2, a comprehensive diagnostic program for Amiga
- memory and SetXA, a configuration utility to read and write to M1230 XA's
- EEPROM.
-
- Applications: Useful in any speed, memory, and/or math intensive
- application such as animation, ray-tracing, morphing, scientific
- calculation, and image processing .
-
- Power Consumption: 600 milliamps (approximate).
-
- Configurations Available: Available with or without the 68882 installed,
- without
-
- memory or with any of the eight possible SIMM sizes.
-
- Product Availability: Worldwide distribution via Amiga dealers and
- distributors.
-
- USA Suggested Retail Prices: $399 (40MHz EC030); $429 (33MHz 68030);
- $499 (50MHz 68030). All units with realtime clock; memory and FPU at
- additional cost. Actual
-
- Selling price determined by dealer.
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- PRE-ANNOUNCEMENT OF MAILING-LIST FOR KANJI-AMIGA USERS
-
-
- All of you who are interested on currents of Japanese-version
- of Amiga Computers, we are about to start the first Mailing-list directed
- to the Amiga community in Japan.
-
- Problem is, due to the language-barriers between 1 byte-based
- Alphabet languages and 2 bytes-based Asian languages, at first we are
- considering this to be circulated only on JUNET(Japan Unix Network) where
- Kanji-written(Japanese-EUC coded) transactions are standard.
-
- In case you have great interest, but don't have the system/knowledge
- to read Japanese, please E-mail me to the account cited below. If the
- responses from outside-Japan pass beyond 100, then Japanese<->English
- translation will be done on all posts. If it doesn't reach 100, then we will
- dump the translation process and keep this in JUNET only. (Those of you
- who've subscribed, will get the notification if this will be done or not.)
-
- Those who have Japanese-enabled-system installed on your terminal
- like ANS for Amiga, KanjiTalk for Mac, JLE for Sun, DOS 5.0-J for
- PC-Compatibles) can also get the circulations in Kanji-form.
-
- WHAT TOPICS WILL BE COVERED??
-
- The topics will cover everything relating to Amiga's circulated
- here in Japan. If you are a software developer and happen to have interest
- in Japanese Amiga market, here is your chance. If you work as a Japanese
- professor and happen to own an Amiga, you'll know how to create your own
- Kanji-fonts in ANS. If you work in a computer-graphics production, you'll be
- surprised how many Amiga-created TV graphics are shown on here in Tokyo.
-
- WHEN WILL THIS START??
-
- We are about to get certification from our system manager. Therefore
- the name of this mailing-list address is not eligible at this time, but it
- should start running within 1-2 weeks. But like I said before, if requests
- from outside-Japan don't reach over 100, it won't be cirulated outside the
- JUNET community and no English translation will be given. No annoucements
- will made here later on, also.
-
- THEN WHERE CAN I SUBSCRIBE??
-
- If you want this to be circulated over Internet w/English
- translation, send us your Internet address before April 20th, in the
- following simple form:
-
- To: c88660ts@sfc.keio.ac.jp
- Re: Kanji-Amiga mailing-list
-
-
- ENGLISH SUBSCRIBE <your Internet address>
-
-
- That's it!! Any questions & suggestions can be made to me, who will
- doing all the translation stuff.
-
- c88660ts@sfc.sfc.keio.ac.jp
- Taizo Shiozaki
- Keio University
- Faculty of Economics
- Tokyo, Japan
- PHONE:+81-045-564-4677
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- INTUITRACKER V1.50 AVAILABLE FOR FTP
-
-
- TITLE
-
- IntuiTracker
-
- VERSION
-
- 1.50
-
- COMPANY / AUTHOR
-
- Triumph Software Design Team
- Nils Corneliusen
- Heyerdahls vei 17
- 0386 OSLO
- NORWAY
-
- email: nilsco@ifi.uio.no
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- Intuition based module player with a nice looking spectrum analyzer.
- The replayer is currently the fastest available for such players,
- and supports ProTracker, SoundTracker and NoiseTracker without
- problems regarding timing etc.
-
- IntuiTracker works with all screenmodes and processors. Also, Intui-
- Tracker is currently the only player with supports multiply crunched
- XPK modules.
-
- REQUIREMENTS
-
- Kickstart v37.175 or newer
- Fastram recommended
- Any screen resolution higher than 399 pixels recommended
-
- PRICE
-
- IntuiTracker is distributed as FREEWARE.
-
- HOST NAME
-
- Should be available on aminet, f ex amiga.physik.unizh.ch.
-
- DIRECTORY
-
- mus/play/intuitracker.lha - contains executable, docs and the
- IntuiTracker intro
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- EPU V1.4 AVAILABLE FOR FTP
-
-
- TITLE: EPU
-
- VERSION: 1.4
-
- AUTHOR: Jaroslav Mechacek
-
- E-MAIL: jara@adelard.dcs.muni.cs
- (jara@lion.ics.muni.cs)
-
- DESCRIPTION:
-
- EPU is Stacker-like program.
-
- After installing EPU to any device (HardDisk, Floppy, Rad: etc.), every
- file written to the device is compressed and any
- compressed file read by any application is automatically
- decompressed.
-
- That means the EPU doubles your disk capacity!
-
- EPU is very easy to install or remove, its size is very small,
- and it works with many compression libraries like lh.library or
- xpk(NUKE,...).
-
- The file sizes are not limited by memory,
- (maximum file size is about 1GB).
-
- There are no differences or limitations when you are working with
- EPU installed or without it (of course it can be slower if the CPU
- is slow.)
-
- More info is in epu.doc
-
- NEW FEATURES:
-
- 1. This version runs on ALL machines and with ALL OS
- (The previous 1.0 version didn't work on A3000/A4000)-KS1.2 was not
- tested.
-
- 2. Now EPU can work with xpk sublibraries like NUKE etc.
-
- SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: None
- xpk????.library suggested.
-
- epu14.lha was uploaded to aminet:
- HOST NAME: amiga.physik.unizh.ch(130.60.80.80) and its mirrors.
- DIRECTORY: /pub/aminet/util/pack
- FILE NAME: epu14.lha
-
- If you can't download it you can ask for it at jara@adelard.dcs.muni.cs
- (but first try BITFTP or ftpmail).
-
- PRICE: SHAREWARE fee is US $20
- Read the epu.doc file for more info.
-
- DISTRIBUTABILITY:
- Can be distributed as shareware - all unchanged files must be included.
- The original epu14.lha file can be posted by e-mail or uploaded
- without any permission.
-
- NOTICES:
- 1. EPU14.lha contains two compression libs.
- The xpk compression libraries are not included in archive.
- They can be found at:
- amiga.physik.unizh.ch (and its mirrors)
- dir: util/pack
- file: xpk...
- or on Fish Disk Number 754
-
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- GROFF V1.07 AVAILABLE FOR FTP
-
-
- TITLE
-
- GROFF
-
- VERSION
-
- Version 1.07 (for the Amiga)
-
- COMPANY
-
- None... This is GNU software. You can reach the author
- of this release on the internet at the following address:
-
- Rob Tulloh
- INTERACTIVE / SHL Tel: (512) 343 0376 x116
- 9442 Capital of Texas Hwy. North Fax: (512) 343 1414
- Arboretum Plaza One, Suite 700 Net: robtu@itx.isc.com
- Austin, Texas 78759
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- Groff is the GNU version of U*nix troff and associated programs.
- For those unfamiliar with troff (or ditroff), it is a facility
- similar to TeX for typesetting and formatting text by embedding
- commands in the text which are then interpreted by troff to change
- the way the text is displayed. For example, you can change
- attributes like page margins, font, and point size. You can do
- formatting operations like centering, filling, and justifying.
- This does not even begin to describe all the things you can do with
- groff. There are whole volumes of text at your local bookstore
- which do a much better job.
-
- Groff is good to use for formatting and displaying text directly in
- your screen. In ascii mode, you can print files to PRT: directly.
- To get even fancier, it is also very useful in conjunction with
- other programs such as GNU GhostScript (version 2.5.2 available on
- aminet), Post (version 1.86 available on aminet) and Nenscript for
- formatting output for postscript drivers. It should also be
- suitable for producing dvi output for TeX post-processors.
-
- The GNU version of troff comes with all the de facto standard
- pre-processing programs: eqn for formatting arithmetic expressions,
- pic for drawing pictures, tbl for formatting tables of data, grap
- for drawing graphs, neqn, refer, indxbib, and much more!
-
- Also included are several post processors including one that causes
- troff to produce PostScript, ASCII, latin1, and dvi output. There
- are several macro packages including man, mm, me, and ms. Using
- these macro packages allows you to format documents using higher
- level expressions designed to make n/troff easier to use. With the
- man macros, you can now display or print all those man page files
- that come with other Un*x packages distributed for the Amiga!
-
- The Amiga version of groff has been distributed in 2 parts. One
- archive (groff-1.07bin.lha) contains a run-time distribution only.
- It includes all the files you need to install and run n/troff on
- your Amiga. Also included are some of the interesting text files
- from the original distribution. These were included to help users
- to use groff more effectively and to resolve problems.
-
- If you want to compile and build groff yourself, the archive
- groff-1.07src.lha contains the source plus patches you need to
- compile, build, and install groff on your Amiga (using g++ and
- gmake). It does not contain any runtime code. Of course, there
- are many requirements to do this. I would only recommend this if
- you have problems running the version I built. See the
- README.amiga file included with the distribution for a list of
- requirements needed to build groff.
-
- NEW FEATURES
-
- Upgrade from version 1.06 posted earlier this year. This was a GNU
- update, see the file ChangeLog in the release for specific
- features/bug fixes in 1.07.
-
- SPECIAL REQUIREMENT
-
- You probably need KS 2.x for full compatibility with AmigaDOS.
- This is mostly due to dependencies on ixemul.library which is best
- suited for 2.x (and higher?) systems.
-
- You are encouraged to get and install pdksh on your system so you
- can take advantage of the shell scripts which come with groff.
- Pdksh is not required; everything done in shell scripts can be
- converted to AmigaDOS syntax.
-
- You need the lha program to unpack the archive.
-
- HOST NAME
-
- The archives were uploaded to aminet (amiga.phsysik.unizh.ch) on
- April 9, 1993. They have migrated to the aminet file tree (see
- below).
-
- FILE NAME
-
- util/gnu/groff-1.07bin.lha
- util/gnu/groff-1.07src.lha
-
- PRICE
-
- Free.
-
- DISTRIBUTABILITY
-
- Freely-distributable. The GNU copyright/copyleft
- restrictions apply. See the file COPYING for more
- information.
-
- See the file COPYING.LIB for information on
- distribution/copyright of Markus Wild's excellent implementation
- of ixemul.library (thank you, thank you Markus!)
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- ACE V1.02 BASIC COMPILER AVAILABLE FOR FTP
-
-
- TITLE
-
- ACE - Amiga BASIC compiler.
-
- VERSION
-
- v1.02
-
- COMPANY
-
- Private developer.
-
- AUTHOR
-
- David Benn
- Usenet: dbenn@leven.appcomp.utas.edu.au
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- ACE is a PD Amiga BASIC compiler which, in conjunction with A68K and Blink
- produces standalone executables. No special run-time shared libraries are
- required.
-
- The language is both a subset and superset of AmigaBASIC with many features
- not found in the latter such as: turtle graphics, recursion, SUBs with return
- values, structures, arguments, include files, a better WAVE command which
- allows for large waveforms, external references, named constants and several
- extra functions.
-
- In total, ACE currently supports some 150 commands and functions.
-
- ACE is still under development, but is quite usable in its present form.
-
- NEW FEATURES (since v1.01)
-
- - KILL and NAME commands.
- - ON..GOTO and ON..GOSUB.
- - ON <event> GOTO added to Event Trapping
- (already had ON <event> GOSUB).
- - Improved SAY command. Asynchronous speech is
- now supported.
- - SAY(n) function added so that asynchronous
- speech can be monitored and mouth width/height
- can be read (only works properly under 2.04/higher
- at the moment).
- - Faster INSTR function.
- - New #include files: fexists.h, julian.h for file
- existence checking and date calculations respectively.
- - Compiler switch (-i) to create an icon for
- the executable produced by ACE.
-
- There were a few bug fixes also. First, string variables were sometimes
- being associated with bogus addresses. Second, there was a 32K limit
- on branches due to gratuitous use of bsr/bra instructions which was
- corrected by use of jsr and combinations of jmp and beq/bne.
-
- See docs/history and readme.first in the ACE archive for details on these
- and other changes.
-
- SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS
-
- ACE has been tested on machines ranging from an A1000 running Wb 1.3
- with 512K of RAM to a 68030 machine running Wb 3.0 with 5M of RAM.
-
- For moderately large programs to compile however, 1M is required.
-
- I run ACE on an unaccelerated A500 with 3M of RAM and a 52M
- hard drive under Wb 2.04.
-
- HOST NAME
-
- amiga.physik.unizh.ch
- nic.funet.fi
-
- DIRECTORY
-
- /amiga/dev/lang (amiga.physik.unizh.ch)
- /pub/amiga/programming/basic (nic.funet.fi)
-
- FILE NAMES
-
- ace102.lha
- ace102.readme
-
- PRICE
-
- ACE is FreeWare.
-
- DISTRIBUTABILITY
-
- The ACE archive may be freely distributed, but no source code
- is currently included. Even when the sources are included, I
- will retain the copyright to them.
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- ARMYMINER V1.0 AVAILABLE FOR FTP
-
-
- Description:
-
- ArmyMiner is a logic board game where some of the squares
- do contain bombs. When clicked, the bomb-free squares display
- the number of bombs in their neighbourhood. The objective of
- the game is for the user to mark all the squares having bombs
- in a minimum of time. The game requires good concentration
- and offers a very interesting mental challenge.
-
- There are many instances of that game on different
- platforms (Minesweeper on IBM-compatible, XMines on XWindows,
- etc). ArmyMiner v1.0 integrates all of the good aspects I've
- seen on all the versions of that game available on
- personal computers. Its options include:
-
- - Automatically mark or clean the neighbours of a square
- - Safe start (no explosion at first click)
- - Safe click (gadget-like behavior for squares)
- - Question marks (for configuration analysis)
-
- You can also specify your own custom board settings.
- The game has a very useful pause option, sound effects,
- high-score tables and a very nice interface. It works
- on either OS v1.3 or 2.0, under NTSC or PAL.
-
- ArmyMiner v1.0 is public domain, binary only. You are free
- to use it as long as you leave my copyright notice intact.
- You can distribute that program as long as you don't ask any
- more money for it than a nominal fee for copying, and if you
- keep the "ArmyMiner.doc" file with it. If you want to include
- this program in a commercial package, you need my written
- permission.
-
- ArmyMiner v1.0 is currently available on the following
- FTP sites:
-
- Switz. amiga.physik.unizh.ch (130.60.80.80) pub/aminet/game/think
- Scand. ftp.luth.se (130.240.18.3) pub/aminet/game/think
- USA ftp.etsu.edu (192.43.199.20) pub/aminet/game/think
- USA oes.orst.edu (128.193.124.2) pub/aminet/game/think
-
- Filename: ARMYMINER.LZH
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- EVAL V1.13 AVAILABLE FOR FTP
-
-
- TITLE
-
- Eval
-
- VERSION
-
- 1.13
-
- AUTHOR
-
- William L. Menninger
- willus@ilm.pfc.mit.edu
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- A full-featured floating point expression evaluator, Eval
- evaluates expressions (C-like syntax) and instantly prints the
- result. Eval includes several built-in functions, many
- predefined constants (scientific constants, conversion factors,
- etc.), and built-in documentation. Just run the program.
- Number base conversion and bitwise operators are also included.
- Full ANSI C source is included. Eval has been compiled on
- Amiga, Unix, VMS, MS-DOS, and Macintosh environments. The
- source has no system dependent conditional compile directives.
- Instructions are included in the source so that you can easily
- customize Eval with your own functions and predefined constants
- by modifying and recompiling the source.
-
- HOST NAME
-
- Eval 1.13 is available on Aminet sites.
-
- PATH
-
- pub/aminet/util/cli/Eval113.lha
-
- DISTRIBUTABILITY
-
- Freely redistributable according to Gnu Public License, Version 2
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- Computer Products Update - CPU Report
- ------------------------ ----------
- Weekly Happenings in the Computer World
-
- Issue #16
-
- By: John Deegan
-
-
- CANON OFFERS NEW NOTEBOOK - Canon Computer Systems Inc. has introduced a
- new notebook computer with a built-in laser-quality printer. The NoteJet
- 486 weighs 7.7 pounds and incorporates a miniature Bubble Jet printer that
- prints laser-quality text and graphics at 360 dots-per-inch resolution on
- plain paper. An optional fax-data modem that can be plugged into one of
- the unit's two Personal Computer Memory Card Interface slots allows users
- to receive and print faxes on plain paper.
-
- Prices range from $2,499 to $2,999. Prices for the optional data/fax
- modem -- available in May -- range from $399 to $899, depending on
- speed.
-
-
- ADDITIONS TO PERFORMA LINE - Apple Computer Inc. is adding three systems
- to its Macintosh Performa line. The new computers -- Performa 405, 430 and
- 450 -- include a modem to connect with phone lines and come with America
- Online and Checkfree services. They also come with more educational
- software and games than the earlier Performa models. Apple said it expects
- the new machines to range from $1,300 to $1,850.
-
-
- MICROSOFT SHIPS 2 MILLION DOS 6 UNITS - Since its March 30 unveiling,
- the new MS-DOS 6 upgrade has been shipped to a record 2 million customers,
- publisher Microsoft Corp. says. The numbers does not include DOS 6
- versions supplied to hardware manufacturers to ship with new PCs.
-
-
- DELL TO OFFER NextStep-BASED SYSTEMS - Dell Computer Corporation says it
- will offer buyers of its Intel 486-based personal computers and future
- products the option of equipping the system with Next Computer's NextStep
- for Intel processors.
-
-
- REPORT SEES PC SALES SLOWING - A new research report by InfoCorp
- predicts growth in worldwide PC sale will fall to 15.9% in 1993 from 17.6%
- in 1992. The study sees the second half of 1993 registering flat to
- negative year-to-year growth, compared to the second half of 1992.
-
-
- ABUSE OF A POLICE COMPUTER PROBED - Authorities are investigating a
- report that an Anaheim, Calif., Police Department computer was misused to
- find private information about a man targeted by abortion foes.
-
- Police Chief Joseph Malloy has been quoted as saying an unidentified
- employee used the computer to gain access to confidential Department of
- Motor Vehicles records for Chris Criner, who volunteers at a family
- planning clinic. The information included Criner's home address.
- Protesters picketed in front of Criner's home in February.
-
- "Civil-rights experts and abortion-rights advocates said releasing
- private information could endanger lives in light of last month's slaying
- of a Florida doctor by an abortion foe. Under state law, unauthorized
- disclosure of DMV records is a misdemeanor with penalties up to one year in
- jail plus a fine of $5,000."
-
-
- WRIST, HAND SITE OF MOST WORK-RELATED INJURIES - The reported incidence
- of repetitive stress injuries (RSI), the pain and related weakness caused
- by constant small movements such as those experienced by computer keyboard
- operators, have tripled in the past ten years, making RSI the number one
- cause of worker complaints to the Occupational Safety and Health
- Administration.
-
- Although more progressive European companies have made an effort to
- prevent such injuries through special regulations, outside San Francisco
- and affluent Suffolk County, New York, few local governments here in the US
- have given any serious attention office regulations that might reduce RSI
- injuries.
-
- The following steps are recommended to avoid such injuries:
-
- Computer operators should be encouraged to stretch frequently, moving
- head, neck, shoulders, and arms briefly to balance muscle tension.
-
- The worker should be seated properly with the chair providing firm
- support for the back, with either adjustment capability or shape that
- allows for the addition of a cushion. The seat height should be adjustable
- so that, with the operator seated, the keyboard can be used with the elbows
- in about 80- to 90 degrees of flexion. A freely adjustable footrest should
- be used to prevent fatigue.
-
- The keyboard should be positioned so that the operator's wrists are
- supported with an appropriate wrist rest, which maintains the wrists in a
- neutral position with the fingers comfortably on the keys.
-
- Work should be placed slightly behind, and to the side of, the keyboard
- at a comfortable reading distance and at the proper height to prevent a
- stoop-shouldered position. The computer screen should also be positioned at
- proper eye level.
-
- And, in some situations, specific keyboards or other adaptive equipment
- may be suggested for individual workers.
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- MOTOROLA JAPAN EXPANDS SEMICONDUCTOR PLANT
-
- TOKYO, JAPAN -- Motorola Japan is going expand its semiconductor business
- in Japan. The firm has recently purchased a large amount of land for its
- processor design and manufacturing plant.
-
- It will be the third design center of the firm in Japan. Motorola Japan's
- new design plant will be located at Izumi science park in Sendai, Miyagi
- Prefecture. It is said the firm has paid five billion yen ($45 million) to
- purchase the 42,900 square meter land.
-
- Motorola Japan will build the chips design center along with a development
- and manufacturing plant in the area. It is expected to be completed and
- ready for operation in 1995. It will initially have about 200 employees.
-
- The new design center will be interconnected with Motorola's other design
- centers in Japan and abroad via a space satellite, and will jointly develop
- powerful chips for Japanese market. Those chips may include application
- specific integrated circuits (ASICs), one-chip microprocessors, linear ICs
- and smart MOS (metal oxide semiconductor) chips.
-
- Motorola Japan will link this new plant with another plant in Sendai.
- Motorola is currently producing memory chips and personal computers'
- processors at an existing Sendai plant jointly with Toshiba.
-
-
- FUJITSU UPS HARD DISK PRODUCTION FOR US MARKET
-
- TOKYO, JAPAN, -- Fujitsu is planning to ship more hard disks to the US
- market. It is reported that the firm is receiving increased orders for
- small hard disks from personal computer and workstation makers.
-
- Fujitsu is preparing to increase production of its small-size hard disks
- such as a 3.5-inch and a 2.5-inch hard disks.
-
- Fujitsu will make a 3.5-inch hard disk at its Yamagata plant. It is a
- one-gigabyte (GB) type and the firm is currently producing 10,000 units
- per month. Due to the demand, Fujitsu will increase production to 30,000
- units per month in September. The company will also lower production of its
- 520 megabyte (MB) model, shifting production resources to the 1GB model.
-
- Regarding the 2.5-inch type hard disk, Fujitsu is developing larger storage
- models. The firm will produce a 240MB type 2.5-inch hard disk this May at
- about 5,000 to 6,000 units per month to start, which will increase to
- 20,000 units monthly beginning in August. Also, Fujitsu plans to ship 350MB
- and 500MB versions by the end of the year.
-
- The 3.5-inch and the 2.5-inch hard drives will be used for workstations as
- well as notebook personal computers. It is said many of the products will
- be shipped to the US market. There is a strong demand in the overseas
- market.
-
-
- POLICE CHARGE MAN WITH SOFTWARE PIRACY
-
- TOKYO, JAPAN -- Police have raided the house of a man who they claim was
- illegally making and selling copies of computer software through personal
- computer networks. The man has been arrested for software's piracy.
-
- It is thought to be the first instance of software piracy through personal
- computer network in Japan. The man, whose name is being withheld, allegedly
- made illegal copies of popular programs such as Microsoft Windows, Lotus
- 1-2-3, and a Japanese word processing program Ichitaro.
-
- During the raid, the police confiscated 5,000 to 6,000 programs that were
- illegally copied.
-
- It is claimed that this man was advertising the software at low prices
- through personal computer networks such as Nifty-serve and PC-VAN.
-
- Under Japanese copyright law, the man can be sentenced to three years or
- fined up to one million yen ($9,000).
-
-
- NAB SHOW -- QUANTEL SOLDIERS ON
-
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA -- Amidst all the excitement about digital video
- production and standards-based products ranging from the Silicon Graphics
- Indigo through the Apple Macintosh to the Amiga-based NewTek Video
- Toaster, Quantel soldiers on.
-
- Quantel, which is based in Berkshire, England, remains a leader in
- producing video editors with names like the Harry, which sell for up to
- $750,000 each. While they are all computer-based, they are also
- proprietary. At this show, the company introduced a simpler version of its
- off-line editor called the Micro Henry, a tapeless on-air presentation
- product called Clipbox, and improvements to its digital compositor - known
- as Hal - as well as its on-line editor, Henry.
-
- The company remains quite formidable in its market because it gives
- broadcasters precisely what they want. Its Paintbox graphics workstation
- is hugely popular, not only in video but in publishing, for its super high
- resolution images.
-
- US spokesman Dominic Lunney told Newsbytes that the company has no worries
- about competitors like Silicon Graphics - which can undercut its prices by
- a factor of 10 - or NewTek - whose Toasters may cost one-hundredth as much.
-
- "A general purpose system is compromised," he insisted. "A guy who invests
- in a hardware platform can be toast when the hardware changes. We're
- dedicated to maintaining our buyers' investment as the hardware changes."
-
-
- NAB SHOW - NEWTEK INTROS A NEW VIDEO TOASTER
-
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, -- In two booths, one in the main show hall and one in
- the adjoining Multimedia World center, NewTek announced a new version of
- its famed Video Toaster, the Video Toaster 4000.
-
- The new model is based on the new Commodore Amiga 4000, but company
- spokesmen ranging from vice president Paul Montgomery to product
- demonstrators including former "Star Trek: The Next Generation" actor Wil
- Wheaton emphasized that the software has been completely updated.
-
- The new Toaster has a switcher with four video inputs and three internal
- digital sources, close to 300 video effects, an integrated graphics loader,
- a 24-bit character generator, and a new paint system.
-
- The Toaster also runs LightWave 3D, a three-dimensional modeling, rendering
- and animation system, and ToasterPaint, a video paint system. The company
- announced that Lightwave will be used to create graphic effects for Steven
- Spielberg's "seaQuest DSV," debuting this fall on NBC. The Toaster also
- works with local area networks, including Novell NetWare, meaning it can be
- the video element in a corporate network.
-
- Huge crowds and big talk have become something of a tradition with NewTek
- since it introduced the Toaster in 1990. This year was no exception. At
- Multimedia World, a host of small companies offered Toaster enhancement
- software, harder, and training, amidst hand-painted signs seldom seen at
- major shows since the 1970s. Said Montgomery. "Since 1990 we've formed a
- new industry - Personal Video Production. What we represent is the end of
- this show."
-
-
- NAB SHOW - SILICON GRAPHICS NOW DEALS DIRECT
-
- LAS VEGAS, NEVADA, -- Perhaps the biggest computer story of the 1993
- National Association of Broadcasters' show was Silicon Graphics Inc's
- (SGI) decision to step from behind the curtain of its software developer
- and meet the industry at its own booth.
-
- SGI graphics supercomputers, which work under Unix, have long been the
- power behind standard broadcast post-production products like Chyrons and
- Wavefronts. But now SGI is dealing with the industry directly, through a
- new effort called "Silicon Studio."
-
- Silicon Studio is a complete set of offerings aimed at TV, video, and film
- producers. Featured is a new video server, called the Challenge, with 16
- gigabytes (GB) of main storage, capable of handling up to 30 hours of
- uncompressed on-line video.
-
- Also new from SGI are: Galileo Video, which provides video input, output,
- and effects for all of SGI's Indigo systems; Cosmo Compress, a real-time
- JPEG compression and decompression option for Indigo computers; and Sirius
- Video, a digital video option board which provides broadcast-quality video
- on the company's high-end boxes. All these products should ship by the end
- of September.
-
- But that's not all. The company also worked with 15 of its major video
- product partners to integrate their offerings into the Silicon Studio
- framework. And it signed a deal with its major video customer, Industrial
- Light & Magic, to produce high-end graphics under the label JEDI.
-
- "A new economics is coming about," said David Bagshaw, the company's vice
- president of marketing. For the first time desktop-based computers offer a
- real alternative in terms of quality, and a huge advantage in price,
- against single-purpose, proprietary machines from traditional suppliers
- like Quantel. Silicon Studio lets producers treat video effects like those
- in "Terminator 2" the same way publishers treat PageMaker files, passing
- them across a network, moving them from servers to clients, editing or
- creating effects almost at will.
-
- Steve Ursenbach, the company's vice president of applications, said the
- Silicon Studio concept emerged from a 15-month development process called
- the "Boulder Experience," after the Colorado city where key meetings were
- held. Perhaps the most important of the new links is with Avid Technology,
- whose on-line editing suites based on the Apple Macintosh have become very
- popular. Avid will have an SGI-version based version of its Media Composer
- by the end of the year.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > ONLINE WEEKLY STReport Online People... Are Talking!
- =============================
-
-
- From GEnie's Amiga RoundTable:
- -----------------------------
-
-
- From Denny Atkin (DENNYA) about his new PC...
-
- I replaced the motherboard in my PC last night. It works now. I sat looking
- proudly at the successful results of my major surgery, and figured that now
- that it didn't crash every five minutes I should try to do something fun
- with it.
-
- I stared at it for about a minute, then I realized I did indeed have a
- useful purpose for it. I stuck an INXS CD in the CD-ROM drive, put it on
- shuffle play, turned off the monitor, and loaded up Fighter Duel Pro on
- my Amiga 4000. :-)
-
-
- Some good news from ICD (ICDINC) about the new Syquest 105 meg cartridge
- drives...
-
- We just received two new Syquest drives... the SQ3105A and the SQ3105S.
- Very nice work from Syquest. The S model is about the same speed as a
- Quantum LPS105S (maybe 10% slower). It works great out of the box with
- our SCSI controllers.
-
- The A version (IDE) also works out of the box with our IDE host adapters
- but it looks like we need to add support for removable media in our IDE
- driver.
-
- --------------------
-
-
- From SWAMPTHING about computer purchasing decisions...
-
- A friend of mine recently decided to buy an Amiga, and is now changing her
- mind due to the following reasoning:
-
- 1. Availability of Amiga software locally is quite poor. She doesn't
- like the idea of mail-order. She said, "Would you ever buy a car
- over the phone?"
-
- 2. Many people she has asked said they thought Commodore went bankrupt
- a few years ago, or had never even heard of Amiga. "If it's so great,
- why isn't it well-known???"
-
- 3. Is there's a future for the new Amiga models, why are all the software
- developers dropping like flies? She's a game addict and wants to play
- those games she reads about in other mags.
-
- 4. Given the standard Amiga does not come with a hard drive or monitor,
- she feels the upgrade path is far more expensive than the same on a
- clone. Where are all the package deals like the ones you find on the
- clones? She really does not like ordering peripherals through mail.
-
- 5. And lastly, where would her software/hardware support come from?
- She'd love to be able to just ask anyone because IBM clones are
- "such a standard" and "everybody has them." Because everyone has
- them, her rationale is also that a "clone is essential to success
- in the business world" should she decide to use the computer for
- other purposes.
-
- I know these are alot of points, but I would love to have someone address
- each of these so I could print it out and show her.
-
- BTW... has anyone here ever thought of uploading a file called AMISALEPITCH
- or something to that effect which would detail the best reasons for
- purchasing an Amiga instead of a clone? Anytime you wanted to give someone
- all the straight facts in a well-reasoned argument, you could just download
- the file, print it, and pass it to them. I hope someone here considers
- this idea...
-
- --------------------
-
-
- A reply from Dave Butler (D.BUTLER31)...
-
- Swampthing, I was very interested to read the points your friend made for
- not buying an Amiga. They are exactly what my sister told me when she
- decided to buy a clone. I too would be very interested in a response to
- these points. I know the Amiga is a superior machine, but it is very
- difficult to make a convincing argument to someone who knows very little
- about computers, much less multi-tasking and operating systems. My sister
- told me she didn't need a simpler operating system because she already
- knew how to 'do everything' on a computer. This meant she worked in an
- office and 'used' a pc there. She now has a clone at home and is
- struggling with the simplest of things. She thought she knew everything
- about computers but at work someone else set everything up for her.
-
-
- --------------------
-
- From J.EVERS1...
-
- Here's something else Commodore is doing right.
-
- Commodore has changed it's warranty policy, and now we, the unwashed masses
- can open up our 1200's and put in a clock or a hard drive, without voiding
- our warranty!
-
- This news come from two seperate conversations to gold service techs on two
- different days from members of our users group. One of our members got one
- of he bad 1200's and called gold service to get them to pick it up. He told
- them he had a 120 meg HD installed. The gold service tech told him to open
- it up and take it out! He then added that Commodore had changed it's
- policy, and that users could now add their own HD's. This news was a little
- hard to swallow, so another member called gold service the next day to
- confirm this story. He was told the same thing!
-
- Since nobody has heard of this yet, Denny, could you call commodore and
- confirm this? I know people will belive anything you say.
-
-
- --------------------
-
-
- From Denny Atkin (DENNYA) about why the Mac's Chicago Font keeps showing
- up in Star Trek: The Next Generation...
-
- RE: Computers displaying text in Chicago font
-
- Starfleet gave the ship's computer contract to Apple in 2241. Although
- Microsoft claimed to have a more popular ship's computer system, it was
- abandoned when it was discovered that at least six additional warp nacelles
- would have to be added to the ship in order to give the computer enough
- power. Apple's ship OS is quite popular, except for the fact that it
- doesn't multitask well at all, which is why you often see them having to
- take the replicators offline when they're using the sensors and such.
-
- The Borg, of course, were founded by disgruntled Commodore-Amiga software
- engineers, which explains their sheer destructive power. :)
-
-
- --------------------
-
-
- Ever wonder why the current version of Aladdin has no billing clock?
- Here's the REAL story from Mike Holda (M.HOLDA) of the Aladdin RT:
-
- Actually the billing clock was removed because people were
- complaining that Aladdin's estimate didn't match their GEnie bill, even if
- the actual GEnie bill was lower! They thought GEnie must have screwed up
- somewhere, there wasn't any way Aladdin could be wrong. Also, if GEnie
- really didn't want you to know how much $$$ you were spending, they
- wouldn't have replaced the billing clock with the connect history function.
- I think that since you have to calculate the $$$ yourself with the
- connect history, it's more obvious that it's an estimate.
-
-
- --------------------
-
-
- Some inside information from WP.DAVE (a Word Perfect rep) about non-IBM
- and Mac versions of Word Perfect:
-
- The last semi-official information that I had concerning WPCorp's support
- of Amiga, Apple ][, and Atari products was that support would be
- discontinued as of 1 June '93.
-
- The Winter '92 issue of "WordPerfect Report" listed the 800/801 support
- numbers for "Apple/Amiga/Atari" as 800-336-3614 & 801-226-5522, which are
- the same numbers as for Macintosh support. However, in the Spring '93 issue
- of "WordPerfect Report" there is no mention of any numbers for Amiga et
- alia.
-
- The 68000 support BBS number, 801-226-1605, has been renamed to Macintosh
- support in the Winter '93 "Report" as well, but the Libraries et cetera
- continue to have the other 68000 platforms support files.
-
- To get the "straight scoop" there are two options: 1) call 800-336-3614, or
- 2) trot on over to the WordPerfect RoundTable at page 521;1 and ask our
- WPCorp Amiga/Atari representative in Category 4, Topic 1.
-
- For the indefinite future, the WordPerfect RoundTable here on GEnie will
- continue to maintain Library 4 for Amiga support files as well as the BB
- area for questions/answers/problems/solutions --- most likely, a WPCorp
- representative will continue to be available there for Amigans to query.
-
- For those that were not aware, let me iterate that neither I nor the
- WordPerfect RoundTable on GEnie is affiliated with the WordPerfect
- Corporation though the WPCorp has been most cooperative over the years.
-
-
- --------------------
-
-
- Having trouble getting your Emplant working? Here are some tips from
- T.SALAZAR:
-
- I've got Emplant running. Just wanted to pass along a few notes.
-
- Get MacII2.0 (ver 2.0+). It is really faster than the others and works the
- best.
-
- Verify that all the libs are of the same version of your emulation software
- (MacII).
-
- Make sure to place RsrvMem37 in the first line of your startup (NOT in the
- user-startup) AND use the following:
-
- RsrvMem37 >NIL:
-
- Make sure RsrvMem37 is in your path ie C: If your Screen prefs are screwy
- then you don't have >NIL: in the line.
-
- I use 2048k of fast mem. I have 6 meg on the Amiga. Allocate everything to
- 32bit memory.
-
- Sybil READS great with ver 2.0! No screwing around with the trim pot! But
- writes are another story. It will format, write and read itself but so far
- Mac willnot read mine. And when it writes to itself and reads the screen
- doesnot go goofy. (I do have to test if another Mac can read it though.)
-
- Sybil does NOT work with Toaster, IV24, or anything else that messes with
- the video slot (internal genlocks?).
-
- One other thing... Yes, a Mac is that slow. Yer watching a blazingly fast
- Mac!
-
- --------------------
-
-
- Here are some comments from Tank Taylor (T.TAYLOR4) about the number of
- Amiga software developers...
-
-
- Software developers dropping like flies? The reason they are dropping is
- because Amiganuts don't want to blow 50 bucks on Space Quest 35 with it's
- cheezey 16 color CGA graphics, dog slow, MONGO Cheeze "animations" and poor
- system level ports. Not when you can snag something like Black Crypt, or
- Abandoned Places II. Eye of the Beholder is perhaps the best port I've
- seen... and don't forget Dungeon Master, which debuted in 1988!
-
- Frankly, we have more software titles arriving every week from europe than
- ever before. They are better than the clone ports we've been fed in the
- past. Just try to do Street Fighter II on an 8mhz XT, or any clone for that
- matter. It won't happen. You'll just have to trust me on this one. I work
- in an Amiga store, we're getting more GOOD software than ever before.
-
- Swampthing, the best sales pitch is to take her to a clone store. Show her
- what they can do. Take her to your machine and show her what it can do...
- I dumpped a $3500 Mac SE30 almost five years ago for a dual floppy A500,
- just because I wanted to be a part of such a revolutionary design concept.
- She could get a 4000 and a 386 emulator for about $2800. And have the best
- of both worlds. Or spend $1200 for a 1200 and Crossdos.
-
- Hopefully, with NewTek and C= working as closely as they are now, C= will
- learn some marketing from NewTek.
-
- The Toaster 4000 is here ... !!!! It includes 250 Adobe fonts for CG!!!
-
-
- Another doomsaying "dwindling software" message. Really, who's gonna miss
- those cheeze-wiz Sierra games anyway. Compared to a real amiga game they
- look and play stupid.
-
- Dean, so you'd go drill local car salesmen about their products, and then
- buy one mail order? Well, if you did that with your computer and software,
- then don't feel free to say anything bad about dealer support, or lack of
- dealers. I for one am getting real tired of doling out my hard earned
- knowledge so people can save $10 mail order.
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
- From Portal/Usenet:
- ------------------
-
-
- TITLE: Vegas NAB Report from Harv Laser
- Grabbed from Usenet:
-
- NAB/Vegas musings
- Date: Mon Apr 19 23:15:51 PDT 1993
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
-
- More NAB (National Association of Broadcasters) Las Vegas convention
- musings from your on the scene reporter :)
-
- This morning I got to the Convention Center too late to get a decent
- parking space, so after parking my car in East Jesus (a small suburb
- of Vegas) and a very long walk, I got in line to get my convention
- badge. (Invoke "Treasure of Sierra Madre" quote here, except in the
- case of these Vegas convnetions, if you DON'T show them your
- steekin badge yer out on yer ass!).
-
- One and a half hours later I made it to the front of the line and got
- my badge printed. Rule #1 - show up early to get a good parking space
- and not have to wait for 90 minutes in line if you don't pre-register.
- I didn't pre-register. >>duh<<
-
- With what was left of my energy, I crawled over to the Hilton Hotel
- next door to the Multimedia Showcase Expo thingie where all the Amiga
- action at NAB is and started strolling the aisles. I found the
- Video Toaster User (magazine) Pavillion and saw a number of regular
- and not so regular Amiga trade show booths, and picked up some
- literature - see below. The Toaster 4000 was being demoed on a
- little pseudo tv studio stage setting and drawing good crowds.
- Familiar faces (to me, anyway) were in evidence: Lou Wallace and
- Linda LaFlame, of Desktop Video World and Amiga World (DVW had a
- booth in this hall) said Hi. Perry Kivolowitz and Gina and Aaron others
- from ASDG sporting their spiffy black satin jackets were working
- both the T-Rexx Professional booth section of the VTU area (Keith
- Williams' Toaster-drivin'program has been picked up by ASDG and he
- now works for them). Tomorrow, ASDG has Dean Stockwell who plays
- "Al" on Quantum Leap, visiting their booth, signing autographs, and
- etc. I wonder if he'll bring Ziggy with him.
-
- Scott Thede & co-horts of Axiom Software
- showing off Pixel 3D Professional and Anim Workshop. The usual
- crowd of Texture City from West L.A. had a piece of the booth
- as did the Real 3D folks (Godfrey & Associates).
-
- Jim Plant, Ed. of VTU magazine was chatting 'em up and there were
- stacks of the current issue everywhere for the taking. Trade show
- rule #2 - don't start filling up your tote bag with heavy magazines
- on your way INTO a show. Grab them all on your way out unless you
- want to lug around pounds of paper for hours. I also filled out a
- card to get free 6 mo. subs to CGWorld and Computer Artist magazines.
- Digital Creations was there showing the usual stuff: DCTV, genlocks,
- Brilliance (still not released as far as I could tell) and a converted
- PC mini-tower called "Video Slot Box." (see below).
-
- On the other side of the hall, Centaur Development had a large
- booth with about 50 canvas chairs arranged in a seating area and they
- were doing OpalVision demos. The new extra modules were not in
- evidence. Greg Niles was doing painting demos and John Sievers
- was hustling sales... nice guys both. I also spotted Frank Khulusi,
- owner of Creative Computers & Centaur in his customary natty
- black suit schmoozing around. I recently got an OpalVision Main
- Board so I didn't pay that much attention to Centaur's booth, besides
- Creative/Centaur lives about 5 miles from my home and I go down there
- often anyway. Any questions about using Opal, I'll be glad to try
- to handle them here. And keep your eyes on Compute's Amiga Resource
- for an upcoming review :) Opal is an *excellent* product.
- Not strictly Amiga-related but ViewPoint Technologies of Orem, UT,
- purveyors of some of the most incredible 3D objects (they call them
- datasets) you've ever seen had a nice booth and were handing out
- catalogs and such. They'll have another set of freely distributable
- objects ready to hand out at Siggraph in Anaheim CA later this
- year, and I chatted with Walter, one of their tech guys who
- pointed out some of the objects they hope to get onto these free
- disks, one of which will be St. Basil's Cathedral in Moscow.
- ViewPoint sells their 3D datasets in about 20 different formats
- and for the Amiga they come in Imagine, LightWave and Sculpt
- formats. These guys make the 3D objects that show up in such things
- as network teevee Honda car commercials and such. They have
- digitizers big enough to drive a car into. Their objects are not
- cheap (the catalog I have lists them from appx $50 to over $5000
- each) but again, they are incredibly accurate. By the way, those
- of you with Imagine 2.0, those objects: the cow, shoe, Beethoven
- bust, and etc.. those are ViewPoint Datasets.
-
- I recently posted their suite of freely-distributable datasets
- in both LW and Imagine formats to Portal's Amiga Zone and to the
- "Aminet" FTP server sites. This was the set they handed out in
- '92. As soon as I get the '93 set from them, I shall do likewise.
-
- Across from Centaur stood another ASDG booth. Here, Perry & Gina
- and crew had no Amigas but they were showing three new products
- for the Mac and SGI machines - "Elastic Reality - a Third Generation
- Morphing System" looked like Morph Plus with some pretty snazzy
- enhancements. I watched programmer Paul demo it on an SGI Indigo.
- And I gently fondled this lovely, purple, $20,000 machine as he did so.
-
- Instead of vectors and edges it uses bezier curve drawing
- tools and splines. Very sexy stuff. "No Strings Attached" another new
- product is an Automatic Wire and Scratch Removal program using AI
- routines. Let's say you've shot footage of a model airplane against
- a background suspended by wires or filament lines. This program
- will go thru the frames and intelligently remove the wires and
- lines and fill in the background seamlessly. Again, SGI only.
- "Image Independence" looks like the ADPro image conversion stuff
- ported to Mac and SGI, with a difference - its graphical interface
- can be incorporated into other programs giving them the ability
- to read and write any supported image-file format.
-
- And now, as I make my way thru the small pile of literature I
- picked up, I'll type in some highlights...
-
- -Real 3D V2, NAB show special price $499, regularly $699
-
- -Euclid Object Grabber (see their ads in VTU), small size for
- objects up to 8" radius, 6" height: $5900.00. Larger size
- for objects sizes up to 18" radius, 12" height: $6700.00.
- (This thing requires 8 Meg Fast, 1 or 2 Meg Chip, Dos 1.3 or
- higher, ARexx, serial port, a Toaster 2.0, Lightwave 2.0 or
- higher and they recommend an 030 or better and a 1.2 Gig hard
- drive or better)
-
- -DMI Vivid 24 bit color graphics co-processor for the 3000
- display 24 bit images up to 2048 x 2048. Standard config: $2995.00
- Various upgrade modules listed.
-
- -DMI Digital MediaCaster - full motion real-time MPEG video playback
- outputs to NTSC, PAL, S-Video, and RGB Analog. 24 bit color. Single
- step and slow motion playback. Fits 2000, 3000, 4000. MSRP: $1295.00
-
- -DMI Digital BroadCaster non linear editing system. Full motion
- JPEG technology (formerly known as Digital Editmaster). Direct 32
- bit pixel bus. SMPTE time code read/write. 720x486 resolution.
- MSRP: $2495.00
-
- -Digital Creations:
- Video Slot Box - $TBA. This thing is a mini PC tower case with
- 4 Amiga video slots, 3 PC/AT bus slots, 230W power supply, two
- 5" and two 3.5" drive bays, and can be hooked to any video-slotted
- Amiga.
- DCTV NTSC $299.00 }
- DCTV PAL $299.00 } new, lower Retail prices here
- DCTV RGB Converter $199.00 }
- Brilliance paint pgm $249.00
-
- That's all for now. Excuse me while I go soak my aching feet.
- Feel free to re-post this article anywhere but kindly do not sell nor
- re-edit it nor chop my name off of it. All opinions are my own
-
- Harv
- Sysop: The Amiga Zone on Portal
- harv@cup.portal.com
-
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
-
-
-
- From FidoNet's NEWS_AMY echo:
-
-
- Message forwarded by Craig Atkinson from area [NEWS_AMY]
- Original From: Craig Atkinson
- Original To : ALL
- Original Subj: TOASTER 4000!!!
- Original Date: 20 Apr 93
-
-
- THIS IS IT!!! The TOASTER 4000 has been announced!!! Now, I can spill
- the beans!
-
-
- NewTek announced today at The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB)
- the TOASTER 4000. Unfortunatly, I could not be there to see the Toaster 4000
- first hand. However, I do have in front of me the "VIDEO TOASTER 4000 ITS
- PAYBACK TIME!" brochure. I will be quoting from it extensively. NAB is
- showing from April 19th through April 22nd (Thursday). You should be
- hearing A LOT about the Toaster in the next few days.
-
- The Toaster 4000 brochure is a quite colorful three page foldout. The
- front has a picture of a skateboarder with a video camera. Above is "In an
- average week the networks bring you 4.2 days worth of commercials, 2 days of
- soap operas, and 16 hours of bad sitcoms..." When you open the page, you
- see across the top in bold letters "VIDEO TOASTER 4000 ITS PAYBACK TIME!"
- Nice theme, if you ask me... 8^). There is a nice picture of an AMIGA 4000
- one one page and a Skateboarder, Tony Hawk on the other. You can also
- plainly see "Video Toaster 4000" on the upper left portion of the A4000
- faceplate. Yep, thats true, the "C= Commodore A4000/040 AMIGA" emblem is
- not there. Apparently Newtek has had special A4000 faceplates produced.
-
- The quoting begins...
-
-
- "Video Toaster 4000 is you personal video switcher, character generator,
- paint system, effects and 3d animation system.
-
-
- SWITCHER & VIDEO EFFECTS
-
- The core of personal video production. Cut between scenes with
- dissolves, wild wipes and incredible digital video effects. You have
- hundreds of transitions that you can't get anywhere else. In real time your
- video can squeeze, fade, warp, peel, shatter, bend and burn.
-
-
- CHARACTER GENERATOR
-
- SCREAM with full screen titles in over 16 million colors. See your words
- crawl across the screen. Overlay messages on live video with amazing
- PostScript fonts in any size of style. Kick in shadows, borders or even
- transparent colors. Want the same high resolution you see on the networks?
- Get ToasterCG. This isn't some cheesy titler. This is absolute full
- broacast quality.
-
-
- TOASTERPAINT & CHOMAFX
-
- Become a digital Michelangelo or spray on video graffiti in ToasterPaint.
- You have all the tools of an artist and 16.8 million colors in broadcast
- quality. The ChromaFX color processor gives your productions the cutting
- edge look of a music video with posterize, color cycle, day for night,
- negative and nuke attack.
-
-
- LIGHTWAVE 3D
-
- Virtually real. Totally accessible. Killer 3D animation. LightWave 3D
- lets you build your own world and make it come ot life. Sculpt it. Mold it.
- Morph it. No other animation system give you the power and
- flexibility of LightWave 3D. You want 3D like the networks use? This is
- what they use! And you can only get it here.
-
-
- MAKE TELEVISION. CONQUER YOUR PASSION. COMMAND YOUR DESTINY.
- INFILTRATE THE NETWORKS.
-
- How far can you take personal video production? Ron Thornton took
- command of his destiny with the Toaster. Ron set a new standard for video
- graphics production when he use the Toaster to create all the special
- effects in Babylon 5, a Warner Bros. television movie.
-
- Over 60 million people saw the sensational Toaster graphics created by
- Jennifer McKnew for the 20th Annual American Music Awards. Jennifer
- infiltrated the networks. You can too.
-
- Stacy Peralta conquered his passion for skateboarding through personal
- video production. The result: The rebirth of skateboarding as a sport. The
- creation of a successful manufacturing company. The launch of a flourishing
- career in video. Look for Stacy's work on Nickelodeon's "The Wild Side."
-
-
- ROLL YOUR OWN TV
-
- Don't wait for network TV to get it right. Make it right yourself.
- Enter the age of personal video production. It takes about $7000 to get
- rolling. Here's where you start:
-
- The video Toaster 4000, the soul of personal video production. The
- Toaster 4000 replaces over $100,000 worth of broadcast production equipment.
- It gives you all the lethal weapons the networks have, in one box. A fully
- configured Toaster 4000 system costs under $5000.
-
- When the Toaster shattered the video production price and performance
- barriers, other technologies were soon to follow. To complete your personal
- video production studio here's what you need:
-
- Camcorder: The latest generation of camcorders, including some 3-chip
- models, are now indistinguishable form broadcast cameras the networks use.
- Prices range from $500 to $3000.
-
- VCR: With over 400 lines of resolution and improved video circuitry, today's
- VCR not only can edit, but produces exceptional picture quality. Prices
- begin at $600.
-
- Editor: Only the high priests of video had them before. Now, easy to use
- editors are available everywhere starting at around $200.
-
- TBC: Time base corrector, a vital tool for TV producers, makes your video
- image better, allows you to produce better dubs and makes your VCR output
- broadcast quality. Only two years ago they cost $5,000. Today, you can buy
- one for under $800.
-
-
- Personal video production. The best way to get your ideas on TV.
- Everybody's doing it, from surgeons to sixth graders. International
- skateboarding champion Tony Hawk does it. Tony loves skateboarding. He
- wants to show the world skateboarding. He makes skateboard TV."
-
-
- The back page of the Toaster 4000 brochure has a picture of the Toaster 4000
- effects control screen. The brochure explains what some of the buttons and
- gadgets do. The right side of the page has four nice pictures of some of
- the effects that can be done with the Toaster 4000.
-
- The first picture is a page folding effect with video. The second is a
- demonstration of PostScript fonts in different sizes. The third is a picture
- (quite nice) of Kiki Stockhammer wearing black leather and standing infront
- of a black fan. This picture shows some of the character generator effects.
- The fouth picture is showing a wireframe of a plant in LightWave 3D. The
- fifth and last picture is of a front view of a Movie Theatre and the marque
- stating "NEWTEK" and "LIGHTWAVE 3D MODELER 3D". Now until I read Lightwave
- and Modeler 3D, I THOUGH the picture of the theatre was REAL. It is very
- difficult for me to tell whether this picture is real or generated! Its
- simply too small for me to tell...
-
-
- Now, a couple thing not in the brochure...
-
- - The Toaster 4000 in NOT YET available. It will go into production in one
- or two months... RSN (real soon now) 8^).
-
- - The Toaster 2.0 IS UPGRADABLE. The unoffical word is that you can send in
- your Toaster 2.0 card and get the Toaster 4000 sent back. I have no pricing
- at this time. I recommend you wait a month or two before you start calling
- NewTek about this one. I don't think they will be giving good answers until
- the Toaster 4000 is in production.
-
- - The Toaster 4000 was SPECIFICALLY DESIGNED AROUND THE A4000!
-
- - The Toaster 4000 WILL WORK in the A2000. However, it will not allow you to
- access many of the features that are only avialable in the A4000.
-
- The Toaster 4000 IN an A2000 WILL NOT perform as well as the existing Toaster
- 2.0.
-
-
- I hope you enjoyed this little (evil grin) news bulliten.
-
- This was written with no knowlege or consent by NewTek.
-
- I will be happy to answer any questions I can. And I should have more
- information and pricing RSN (another evil grin).
-
- For more information:
-
- NewTek, Inc.
- 215 SE 8th Street
- Topeka, KS 66603
-
- (800) 847-6111
- (913) 231-0100
- FAX: (913) 231-0101
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > Amiga Tip of the Week
- =====================
- By Robert Glover
-
-
- One of the little things I've wanted to do with my Workbench directories
- are alphabetize the icons. I had hoped there was a way to do it without
- arranging them by hand. There is!
-
- Open the window in which you want to alphabetize the icons. Select all of
- the icons in that window (Right Amiga-A), and choose UnSnapshot from the
- Icons pull-down menu. Now select Update from the Window pull-down menu.
- The disk will whir (or make whatever noise your particular hard drive
- makes), and all of the icons will appear at once -- alphabetically. Now
- choose Snapshot Window Only from the Windows menu, and you're set. If you
- resize the window, just be sure that you only snapshot the window, and the
- icons will take the form of that window.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > Save Key West! STR Special Feature
- ===================================
- By Robert Glover
-
-
- Have you watched the show, "Key West," which was on Tuesday nights at 9 pm
- Eastern time, right after "Class of 96?" If so, then you know how
- delightful, funny and insightful it was. One newspaper said, "Key West has
- enough bizarre characters to make Northern Exposure seem like The Love
- Boat!"
-
- Unfortunately, the show was pulled only after a handful of episodes, and
- was replaced by Robert DeNiro's "Tribecca." The show faced two major
- problems: First, the advertising portrayed it as a "binkini-babe" show,
- rather than the intelligent drama it is. Secondly, the Tuesday night
- timeslot is one of the most challenging, squaring off against ABC's
- "Roseanne."
-
- Many people feel that "Key West" got the short end of the stick. Many
- have written letters to Fox, including myself, only to receive an
- unsigned, mis-dated form letter promoting "Tribeca." We refuse to stand
- for this treatment, and have organized a petition drive to bring back
- Key West.
-
- Below is a sample petition. Cut it out, print several copies, and start
- having your friends, neighbors, coworkers, ANYBODY sign it. When each
- page is full, mail it to the address below. Once Fox receives several
- thousand of these, I think it may reconsider its stand on the fate of
- "Key West."
-
-
- SAVE "KEY WEST"
-
- ATTENTION FOX TELEVISION,
-
- We the undersigned would like to express our disappointment in the
- recent removal of the series "Key West" from Tuesday night programming.
- We would also like to express our interest, as former viewers, in
- seeing the show come back to television, either at it's previous time
- or in another prime-time position. We believe that the show was a
- quality program and should be given a second chance.
-
- Formerly Yours,
-
- Name Address Signature Occupation
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
-
- When you're done with the petition send it to:
-
- Save 'Key West'
- 642 N. Larchmont Bl
- Los Angeles, CA 90004
- Attn: Marissa
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > Usenet Review: Fighter Duel Pro Flight Recorder
- ================================================
- By Jeff Hanna
- (sacke@ecn.purdue.edu)
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Fighter Duel Professional Flight Recorder (FDPro-FR)
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- A unique World War II flight simulator that records your flight path
- (and up to two enemies' flight paths). You can then convert this data into
- a demo, a Lightwave motion file, a Lightwave object, an Imagine staging
- file, an Imagine object, a Videoscape 3D object, or a Vista Pro camera file.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Jaeger Software
- Address: 7800 White Cliff Terrace
- Rockville, MD 20855
- USA
-
- Telephone: (301) 948-6862
-
- E-mail: Jaeger Software has a support category on GEnie.
- Page 555, Category 24.
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- US $59.95
-
- I paid US $25.00 to upgrade from Fighter Duel Pro to Fighter Duel
- Pro Flight Recorder
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- HARDWARE
-
- No special hardware required. An analog adapter and analog
- joystick are highly recommended.
-
- Requires 3 MB of RAM.
-
- FDPro-FR does not require a hard drive.
-
- FDPro-FR works on all processors available for the Amiga.
- When using a VXL-30/VXL-RAM32, you need to have the 32-bit
- memory mapped to the High memory area.
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- FDPro works on all versions of the OS later than 1.3. To
- run it off of a hard drive on AGA machines you need to turn
- Mode Promotion off and use a Low Resolution pointer.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None!
-
- FDPro-FR installs on a hard drive. It uses Commodore's Installer
- program.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- Amiga 500, VXL-30/40mHz, VXL-RAM32, DataFlyer IDE w/50MB HD
- 1 MB Chip RAM and 2 MB of 32-bit Fast RAM
- Kickstart 2.04 and Workbench 2.1
- Imagine 2.0, DCTV, and Video Toaster/Lightwave
-
- REVIEW
-
- I am an airplane buff, and have tried numerous times
- (unsuccessfully) to make an animation of a dogfight. It is next to
- impossible to make a correct flight path for an airplane with today's
- rendering/modeling packages. But with FDPro-FR, you just fly the airplane,
- and the software takes care of the tedious job of making a flight path for
- you!
-
- Fighter Duel Pro Flight Recorder is an extension of Jaeger
- Software's World War II flight simulator, Fighter Duel Pro (FDPro). FDPro
- is the most accurate WWII flight simulator available (for any platform,
- IMHO). It contains 16 fighters, runs at 28 fps on an unaccelerated Amiga,
- and contains a highly detailed and accurate flight model. FDPro lets you
- fly against up to two computer controlled enemies. You can also connect
- with another person via modem or null modem link and duel them (this is
- where FDPro really shines). FDPro will run at 28fps on a 1200 bps
- connection. With FDPro you can connect two machines together with a special
- parallel adapter and use the second machine as a slave "rear view" machine.
- The second Amiga will show you the view out of the back of your airplane.
-
- FDPro-FR contains all that FDPro does and also lets you record your
- flights. The recording is invisible to the end user. You just fly FDPro-FR
- like you would fly any simulator: pick a plane, take off, find an enemy,
- and engage in a fight. When you are done, you can convert the flight data
- into any of the following formats:
-
- FDPro-FR Demo (requires FDPro-FR to playback)
- Lightwave Motion Path
- Lightwave Object
- Imagine Staging File
- Imagine Object
- VideoScape 3D Object
- Vista Pro camera file.
-
- FDPro-FR makes animating logos, spaceships, airplanes, cows, etc..
- so simple that it is fun. I really cannot give a definitive list of what
- you can/cannot use the output from FDPro-FR for, because it is limited only
- by your imagination.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- Printed documentation is included. This consists of two manuals,
- the Fighter Duel Pro documentation and the FDPro-FR supplement.
-
- The documentation is very detailed. The FDPro manual covers
- everything would need to know to run FDPro-FR. It also gives detailed
- information on the 16 planes included with the package, covering weight,
- length, armament, rate of fire, top speed, sustained turn rate, and more.
- The FDPro-FR supplement shows you how to convert your data into a usable
- format for the supported rendering packages. Tutorials are given for each
- rendering package.
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- My only dislike about this program concerns its Imagine output.
- FDPro-FR cannot write out a path for Imagine that you can see and edit
- within Imagine. It will create only an entire Staging file for Imagine.
- When this is loaded into Imagine, you cannot see nor edit the path.
-
- According to the author, Jaeger Software did contact Impulse to see
- if they could get help in making Imagine paths. From what I gather, Impulse
- was very uncooperative. Jaeger Software only managed to add Imagine support
- by reverse-engineering an Imagine Staging file. I have been told that due
- to the overwhelming acclaim this program is getting in the video journals,
- Impulse would now like to help Jaeger Software include Imagine Path support
- in a future release.
-
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- There isn't anything else like FDPro-FR for any platform.
-
- BUGS
-
- There are no known bugs with FDPro-FR.
-
- As I stated earlier, If you have a VXL-030 with VXL-RAM32 card, you
- must have the 32-bit Fast RAM mapped into the High memory area (accessible
- only in 68030 mode). If you have the memory mapped into the Low memory area
- (accessible in 68000 and 68030 mode) the program will crash. I do not know
- what causes this, but I would tend to believe that the VXL-RAM32 card is at
- fault.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- Jaeger Software's customer support is excellent, especially when you
- consider the size of the company (they are extremely small). I first
- contacted them in December 1992, regarding a problem I had with the
- original Fighter Duel. Matt Shaw, one of the programmers, called me back
- (at his expense) and helped me out. He was informative, knowledgeable, and
- was not going to give up until my problem was solved.
-
- Matt was also very helpful in determining that I needed to change
- the VXL-RAM32 configuration in order for FDPro/FDPro-FR to work properly.
-
- Jaeger Software has a support category on GEnie, which Matt
- moderates. Whenever there is a question or a problem Matt posts an answer
- within 24 hours.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- 90 day warranty on the medium on which the program is recorded.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- Fighter Duel Pro Flight Recorder is the most innovative 3D rendering
- tool I have ever seen. I would recommend it to anyone who is a hobbyist or
- professional 3D animator.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- Copyright 1993 by Jeff Hanna. All rights reserved. Reprinted
- with permission.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > Microbotics 12 A'Clock STR Review
- ==================================
- By Tom Mulcahy
-
-
- For one reason or another C= decided not to include a battery-backed clock
- on board the A1200. The 12 A'Clock from Microbotics remedies this problem
- thankfully. Apparently, from what I'm hearing on the various echos Micro-
- botics is going to include this clock on board with their MBX RAM/FPU
- boards. You can identify the newer boards with the clock on board by
- the 'z' tacked onto the 1200... e.g. MBX1200z.
-
- The 12 A'Clock itself is very small and compact, roughly the size of a
- half dollar. The units consists of a 40 pin connector, the clock and
- one IC. Installation is quite straightforward with the help of the short
- and concise instruction sheet. Basically installation is as follows:
-
- Unscrew the screws from the bottom of the A1200. Flip the A1200 back over
- and lift the keyboard. You will need to remove one screw from the heat
- shield and one clip located in the bottom left hand corner. To the right
- of the hard drive, assuming you have one installed, there is another small
- heat shield. Gently pry the fasteners up and remove this little shield.
- Place this in a safe area(the junk drawer) as it is recommended that this
- not be replaced since it would place undue pressure on the 12 A' Clock.
- Under the shield you will see a 40 pin connector. On some of the first
- production units of the A1200 only half of this 40 pin connector is
- present. Only half of these 40 pins are actually needed.. the right half.
- If you see only half of this 40 pin connector on your motherboard you
- should have no problems as long as they are on the right side and not
- the left. Some early production units had the pins soldered on the
- wrong side. I purchased my A1200 back before Christmas and it had all
- 40 pins on the motherboard. Once you press the clock onto the pins it's
- time to put everything back together. The entire installation procedure
- takes about 5 minutes.
-
- Upon power up you will need to go to your WB Prefs and click on the time
- icon to set the time and date. Once done power down again for a few
- seconds to confirm and convince yourself that your A1200 is actually
- keeping the correct date and time. As you will find out it is!
-
- Microbotics, Inc.
- 1251 American Parkway
- Richardson, Texas 75081
- (214)437-5330 (9am - 5pm)
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > Desk Top Video on a Shoe String Budget - Part II STR Special Series
- ====================================================================
- by Michael Heinz
- (mheinz@ssw.com)
-
-
- First thing's first: Due to technical circumstances beyond my control, an
- error was entered into my last article. While three burly sumo wrestlers
- sat on me, a despicable MicroSloth employee altered my article to state
- that the Amiga 3000 has a composite video jack. Sadly, this is not true.
- But don't worry, A3000 owners can still use the A520 encoder to get
- composite output, so they aren't totally out of luck.
-
- Now, last time I told how to hook up your Amiga to a VCR and I gave you
- some ideas for experimenting with that set up. This time I'm going to tell
- you how to add sound just as easily. But first, I want to show you how to
- plan your videos.
-
- Writing the Great American Video
-
- When you're just doing a plain slide show, you can usually improvise through
- the whole thing. You draw a bunch of slides, maybe a short cartoon and
- then you throw them up on the screen. No problem. But when you add sound,
- you have to synchronize your sound with your images. If you don't, you'll
- have the slide show version of a Kung-Fu movie -- the sounds wont match
- whats going on the screen.
-
- To get around this, you have to write a script. It doesn't have to be
- complicated, it just has to show when each slide or sound starts and when
- it ends. I break my scripts into four columns, like this:
-
-
-
- Background Sound
- Video: Music: Effect: Narration:
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- (0:00-0:05)
- (0:00-0:30) Title Screen Theme to 2001
- (0:05-0:10)
- (0:05-0:010) Second Title "Welcome to my first home video."
- (0:10-0:40) Spaceship animation
- (0:35-0:36) Rocket engine sound
- (0:36-0:40) "Its one small step for me, one
- giant leap for mankind."
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Look at how this works. I broke the sound into three categories:
- background music, sound effects and narration. You don't have to have all
- three categories -- in fact, I highly recommend that you start with just
- one and work your way up. Anyway, check out how this will work on video.
- I want my first title slide to appear just as "Thus Spake Zaruthsta"
- begins (you know, dum, Dum, DUM, DAHDAH... dumdum dumdum dumdum...). While
- the music continues to play I want my second slide to appear, AND have a
- voice saying "Welcome to my first home video." Then I want my rocket ship
- animation to start, and have a rocket-engine sound effect begin at just the
- right point (when the rocket is landing on the moon, of course.) Finally,
- while the animation is finishing up, I want a voice to say "Its one small
- step for me, one giant leap for mankind." Can you imagine getting these
- things right >without< writing it all down ahead of time? I can't. So
- give it a try.
-
- The Sound and the Fury
-
- So okay, how do you get all these sounds into the VCR in the first place?
- Lets start with sound effects and music. Hooking your Amigas sound output
- up to the VCR is as easy as hooking up the video output was. If your VCR
- has stereo sound input, all you have to do is run two cables between the
- Amigas sound jacks and the sound inputs of the VCR. Like the video cable,
- the audio cables should be heavily shielded. This isn't to protect the
- sound (audio is much less sensitive to signal noise) but to keep the sound
- from leaking out of the cables and messing up the video signal. Anyway,
- if your VCR is monophonic (i.e., it only has one sound jack) you need one
- more cable. Run down to the nearest Radio Shack equivalent and spend two
- bucks on a "Y" adapter cable. This cable lets you combine the Amigas
- stereo output into a monophonic signal.
-
- What can you do with this setup? Well, now you can play "SMUS" songs and
- "8SVX" sound effects while you display your slides and animations. SMUS
- stands for "Simple Music" and is the format used by many commercial music
- programs. "8SVX" is the format us ed to store sound effects and
- digitized samples. Most bulletin boards have hundreds of sounds and
- songs in these formats. They also have other formats ("MOD" and "MED,"
- for example) but I'm going to stick to these two for now.
-
- Using SMUS and 8SVX files is very easy. Programs like AmigaVision make
- combining SMUS, 8SVX and video straight forward. In the PD world,
- AGMSFilm is less powerful than AmigaVision, but its still a good tool for
- combining animations and sound. Even better, it can play the animations
- straight from hard disk easing the memory crunch that large presentations
- can cause. And even without AGMSFilm you can still use SMUS and 8SVX. If
- you use CLI scripts, you can use basic utility programs and still get video
- and sound. For example, suppose you download "mostra", "play" and "sound."
- "Mostra" shows slides and animations, "play" plays SMUS songs, and "sound"
- plays 8SVX sound effects. Now, put them together in a script, like this:
-
- resident ask play sound
- run mostra <the slides and anims you want to show>
- ask
- play <background song 1>
- ask
- play <background song 2>
- ask
- sound <sound effect 1>
- ask
- sound <sound effect 2>
-
- When you run this script, it starts displaying your slides, and, at the
- same time, runs the "ask" command. Ask is normally used to read input from
- the keyboard, but here its used to force the script to wait until the
- return key is pressed. When the return key is pressed, the script will
- start playing "background song 1," while your slides are still displaying.
- When the song is done, the script will wait for the return key again. When
- it is, the script will play the second song. When that finishes, it will
- wait again, then play sound effect 1. And so on. You can do this as many
- times as you like. If you know REXX, you could do even more, even assign
- different keys to different sounds.
-
- This process is quite workable and effective, but you have to carefully
- time when you start each sound. You have to watch the screen, and at the
- right time you have to press the key and start the music or sound effect.
- You may even have to press the return key early, so that the program has
- time to load the sound into memory before playing it. The process does
- work, however, and its not that hard to get the timing down.
-
- Adding narration is a bit harder, but I've come up with a similar way to
- cheat. Get a cheap audio tape recorder, the kind with a built in
- microphone. (Or use your boom box, if it has a mike.) Now, give your
- script to the person who will be doing the narration, and tape record them
- saying each piece. Make sure you put a small (1 second or so) gap in
- between each bit. Now, get another pair of cables from Radio Shack. The
- first is another one of those "Y" cables that mix two inputs. The second
- should convert from whatever your tape recorder uses for a headphone plug
- to an RCA jack. Plug one end into the tape recorder and the other into
- the "Y" cable. Plug the Amigas output into the other side of the "Y" and
- then plug the whole mess into your VCR. Rewind the audio tape, and press
- play and pause. Now, each time you want a piece of narration to start,
- release the pause button. When the narration is done, press pause again.
- Presto! Narration, sound effects, music and video in one, er, elegant
- package.
-
- Obviously this set up is a real hack, and theres a lot we could do to
- improve it. The biggest is to replace those "Y" cables with a patch board
- or with an audio mixer. Simple mixers cost around $30, and are designed to
- accept several inputs and produce a single output. Unlike my "Y" cables,
- they can change the volume of the different inputs, preventing your sound
- effects from drowning out the narration. The better mixers can also accept
- microphones, allowing you to do your narration on the fly, rather than
- recording it ahead of time. (Although I recommend doing it ahead of time
- - one less thing to worry about when youre recording the video tape.)
-
- Another improvement is to replace that script I showed you with a real
- presentation program. I mean, the script works, but remembering when the
- press the return key during a long video can be rough. PD products like
- AGMSFilm and commercial products like Lights! Camera! Action! (which I
- bought used for $5...) have capabilities far better than any simple CLI
- script. As I have mentioned before, I use AmigaVision because I got it for
- free; but there are many other products out there. Check the reviews
- section of your bulletin board, or the Amazing Computing Product Guide for
- more information.
-
- Finally, if you get anything out of these articles, it should be this:
- Experiment. Don't be afraid to try different things. Just because I used
- "mostra," "play" and "sound" doesnt mean you cant use "ALook,"
- "DeliTracker" and "bpd". "MOD" files are also good to work with. While
- few commercial programs support them, they sound a >lot< better than
- SMUS music. Play around, try things out -- you cant break anything. Worst
- case, you erase the video tape and start again. Above all else, have fun.
- If you enjoyed making it, people will probably enjoy watching it.
-
- Next Time: Building a video one piece at a time or,
- "I need >how many< megs of RAM?"
-
-
- On a More Serious Note: Music and Copyrights
-
- We need to cover one non-technical issue before you run off and add the
- theme from the "Cosby Show" to your latest home movie. You need to pay
- attention to the law, and to copyrights. Even if the author of a song
- never formally requests a copyright registration he/she still holds all
- rights to that song -- and you can be in big trouble if you use it without
- the authors permission.
-
- Now, this doesn't have to be a big limitation. First, there are thousands
- of completely public domain SMUS, MOD and MED files out there. In
- addition, any song older than fifty years is automatically PD. So, while
- you can't use the theme from Cosby, you can use Mozart, Beethoven and that
- crowd. Moreover, the law distinguishes between stuff you do at home, and
- stuff you do in public or for money. While you need to be very careful
- when making tapes for your church or PTA, if youre only making a tape for
- immediate family, no one will call the police if you use the theme from
- "Dragnet".
-
- Obviously copyright laws are not often enforced, but the ethical issue
- remains. You don't want someone to take your movie and sell copies
- without your permission, do you? So why should Paul Simon give you
- unlimited use of his lifes work?
-
-
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
- IMPORTANT NOTICE!
- =================
-
- Amiga Report International Online Magazine is available every week in the
- Amiga Forum on DELPHI. Amiga Report readers are invited to join DELPHI and
- become a part of the friendly community of computer enthusiasts there.
-
-
- SIGNING UP WITH DELPHI
- ======================
- Using a personal computer and modem, members worldwide access
- DELPHI services via a local phone call
-
- JOIN -- DELPHI
- --------------
-
- Via modem, dial up DELPHI at 1-800-695-4002
- then...
- When connected, press RETURN once or twice
- and....
- At Password: type STREPORT and press RETURN.
-
- DELPHI's Basic Plan offers access for only $6.00 per hour, for any
- baud rate. The $5.95 monthly fee includes your first hour online.
-
- For more information, call: DELPHI Member Services at 1-800-544-4005
-
- DELPHI is a service of General Videotex Corporation of Cambridge, MA.
-
- Try DELPHI for $1 an hour!
-
- For a limited time, you can become a trial member of DELPHI, and
- receive 5 hours of evening and weekend access during this month for only
- $5. If you're not satisfied, simply cancel your account before the end of
- the calendar month with no further obligation. If you keep your account
- active, you will automatically be enrolled in DELPHI's 10/4 Basic Plan,
- where you can use up to 4 weekend and evening hours a month for a minimum
- $10 monthly charge, with additional hours available at $3.96. But hurry,
- this special trial offer will expire soon! To take advantage of this
- limited offer, use your modem to dial 1-800-365-4636. Press <RET> once
- or twice. When you get the Password: prompt, type IP26 and press <RET>
- again. Then, just answer the questions and within a day or two, you'll
- officially be a member of DELPHI!
-
- DELPHI- It's getting better all the time!
-
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
-
-
- > Usenet Review: AmiBack Tools
- =============================
- By David Griffiths
- (dgriff@unixg.ubc.ca)
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- AmiBack Tools (version 1.02)
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
-
- AmiBack Tools is a "disk maintenance" program which can diagnose and
- repair many common disk problems, and offers a variety of utilities which
- help with maintenance and security.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Moonlighter Software Development Inc.
- Address: 3208-C East Colonial Drive, Suite 204
- Orlando, Florida 32803
-
- Telephone: (407)384-9484
- FAX: (407)384-9391
-
- BBS: (407)292-6080 (12-9600)
- (407)295-6992 (12-14.4)
- (407)292-6952 (12-24)
-
- BIX: gwholland (Gary Holland)
- michaelmounier (Michael Mounier)
- CIS: 76420,606 (Gary Holland)
- GENie: f.aziz (Hap Aziz)
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- As this is a new product, I haven't seen a list price for it... I
- purchased it for $64 Canadian. [MODERATOR'S NOTE: I believe the list price
- in the USA is $79.95, with street prices approximately $45-55. Moonlighter
- offers a special price to owners of AmiBack, their backup program, and a
- "trade-in" price to owners of other disk tools programs. Contact
- Moonlighter for details. - Dan]
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- HARDWARE
-
- 512K RAM required.
-
- In order to perform many operations on a hard drive, a
- SCSI drive is required, although the IDE drives in the
- Amiga 4000/4000T, 600, and 1200 will also work.
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- Kickstart 1.2 or higher.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- - Amiga 1200 (KS 39.106, WB 39.29)
- - 2MB Chip RAM, 4MB Fast RAM
- - Microbotics MBX 1200 (4MB Fast RAM & 68882 math coprocessor)
- - Maxtor 2.5" 120MB hard drive
-
-
- ABOUT AMIBACK TOOLS
-
- AmiBack Tools has a wide variety of utilities which can deal with
- most disk problems an Amiga owner will encounter. The product is packaged
- neatly in a white cardboard container with a full-colour cover.
-
- Inside the package is a neatly printed manual, and one disk
- containing the Commodore Installer application and a ReadMe file with
- updates to the manual. Installing the program is easily accomplished by
- clicking the "Installer" icon and following the prompts. Installation
- takes approximately 1 minute.
-
-
- PROGRAM OPTIONS
-
- The "REVIVER" option allows you to recover files quickly and easily
- which have been deleted from a drive, as long as they have not been
- overwritten nor wiped with the "ANTISEPTIC" option. The REVIVER is easy to
- use, and VERY fast, even on large drives. Files can be recovered by simply
- marking them, then clicking the "Revive Data" gadget. The program can
- identify duplicate files when reviving data, and notify the operator to
- rename or skip the file.
-
- "ANALYST" searches a drive for errors, and allows the operator
- easily to repair any errors found. Common errors such as "Drive Not
- Validated," "Key Already Set," and "CheckSum" are easily corrected here.
- This module operates quite quickly and can be set for "AUTO" or "Ask Repair"
- modes. The program can also check all information on the drive, or simply
- check the file headers.
-
- "911-RECOVERY" allows you to recover files from drives that, due to
- some problem, are no longer recognized as AmigaDOS devices. This option
- allows the user to recover files from the damaged device by storing them on
- floppies or any other accessible AmigaDOS device. This module has two modes
- of operation. In the "Recovery" mode, the program reads all data blocks
- from the damaged device, attempts to locate files on the drive, and presents
- you with a window with a list of the files. Then, you can indicate which
- files you want to recover. Files can be recovered onto another device, and
- may also be compressed if you are recovering to floppies. After you recover
- all of the files, the program is set to the "RESTORE" mode, the files are
- read back from the drive (only necessary with floppies), and the information
- can then be written to any valid AmigaDOS device.
-
- "GENERAL PRACTITIONER" is the optimizing module, which rearranges
- your drive data more efficiently. Fragmented files are combined into a
- single unit, free space is combined, and directory access speeds are
- improved. This operation takes quite a while to complete (20-30 minutes on a
- 45MB partition); however, it dramatically speeds up file loading times and
- directory accesses. It is possible to turn on/off any of the optimization
- options, so you can (for example) tell the program to optimize files/free
- space/directories only in order to speed up the optimization process.
-
- "LAB TEST" allows the operator to generate and store a "CRC" table
- for all files on any device. Your files may then be compared to the table
- entries at a later date to check for corruption due to natural or artificial
- means (viruses). It is easy to build database modules with this option,
- although it takes some time even on accelerated machines. After the
- database has been built, AmiBack Tools can reread the database and
- compare the files on the drive to the database file.
-
- "ANTISEPTIC" is a security operation which allows the user to
- overwrite all empty space on the drive or the entire device with random
- information, so files cannot be recovered by any means. This operation is
- very fast, and an option is available to provide multiple "passes" to ensure
- that data is totally erased.
-
-
- CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
-
- AmiBack Tools offers a wide variety of configuration options which
- allow the operator to set the look and feel of the program, as well as
- security and caching options. The security option allows the operator to
- restrict "write" access to the drive, so that a password must be given
- before any data is modified with the program. The Disk Cache improves
- optimization times in the "General Practitioner".
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS FEATURES
-
- As of version 1.02, the ARexx port is not installed; however, a
- note in the README file on the disk promises that a patch will be available
- in the future to include ARexx commands.
-
- Included with the program is "AmiSched-II", a very slick scheduling
- program which can allow you to run both AmiBack Tools and AmiBack (the HD
- backup program) on a scheduled basis without operator intervention. The
- interface is nicely done, and the program works well.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- Documentation is contained in a 66-page manual, bound on the spine
- with a plastic (CERLOX) edge.
-
- The documentation is nicely styled, with large arrows to mark
- important or dangerous operations. The manual also offers a section at the
- beginning called "In Case of Emergency." The documentation is written for
- all levels of users, from beginner to expert, although expert readers may
- find it slightly wordy.
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- Likes:
-
- The program's functionality is excellent. The "REVIVER"
- (undeletes files) is amazingly fast, even on large drives. All of
- the other modules are easy to use and work well.
-
- Dislikes:
-
- The disk optimizer seems rather slow. I still find "ReOrg"
- [on a Fish Disk] to be a MUCH faster optimizer, although it doesn't
- work with the new Directory-Cached Filing Systems of AmigaDOS 3.0
- (and AmiBack Tools does).
-
- My only other dislike is that the "Save Password" option
- saves the password in the config file in "S:". I would much prefer
- having it write directly into the file to reduce the possibility of
- tampering. This would also be handy if you install it on an
- accessible computer at work: if the employees don't know the
- password, they're less likely to walk away with a copy.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- AmiBack Tools performs many of the same operations that
- "Quarterback Tools" does (i.e., Undeleting files, Optimizing Drives,
- repairing errors, etc.). AmiBack's slick user interface and compatibility
- with new filing systems give it much more functionality than Quarterback
- Tools has. Quarterback Tools has not been updated (to my knowledge) since
- 1991, and has fallen far behind the other disk maintenance tools.
-
- The new version of DiskSalv 2 from Dave Haynie is also quite
- similar to AmiBack Tools, and performs many of the same operations.
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: As of this writing, DiskSalv 2 is not yet generally
- available. - Dan]
-
-
- BUGS
-
- None found.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- Excellent! The author has released two freely-distributable patches
- already, and will likely continue to produce patches to correct bugs and add
- features as time progresses.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- None.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- AmiBack Tools is on the cutting edge of disk maintenance utilities.
- A slick user interface combined with a functional program make this utility
- a "must" for all Amiga owners.
-
- I have no problems giving AmiBack Tools a 5-star rating (out of a
- total of 5), both for the program's functionality, and for Moonlighter
- Software's support for their products.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- > Star Trek Meets Unix
- ====================
- Author Unknown
-
-
- "Scotty, I want full power to the megabit RAM chips and to the hard drives."
-
- "Captain, yer overloadin' her as it is. The power supply just isn't built
- to take two hard drrrives."
-
- "Power, Scotty! I want more power! Chekov, install the disk cache. Spock,
- any word on the millions of instructions per second?"
-
- "Fascinating, Captain. It seems as if the turbo accelerator board is
- overrunning the hard drive, which, due to its poor response time, is
- slowing down the system performance."
-
- "Scotty, where is that power!?"
-
- "Captain, I'm givin ye all she's got. It's that miserable 80986 with the
- 512K bit bus multiplexed down to one pin. The wee beastie has these teeny
- weeny little segments that can only handle so much. You'll have to install
- an extended memory board, do bank switching, and allocate a huge RAM disk
- if you want to go any faster."
-
- "Chekov, install the EMS board."
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "Uhura, any word from mainframe command?"
-
- "Well, Captain, we're received several interrupts from the serial port,
- but because we're not multitasking, the data is just sitting there."
-
- "Scotty, how much longer until we can shift into Unix?"
-
- "Captain, if ye can squeeze another 80 megabytes onto that hard disk,
- we might have room for Unix and a couple of system utilities. Possibly
- an application. We'll need to increase the clock speed to 28 gigahertz.
- I think we can do it, but there are too many unknown proper shakedowns."
-
- "Spock?"
-
- "Unix is a massive system, Captain, and the commands have to be decoded
- from hieroglyphics invented back in ancient times. It may be more than we
- can handle."
-
- "Sulu, put in the 80 meg hard drive, install Unix for mouse drive. Prepare
- to go to Task speed on my signal."
-
- "Mouse drive? ......Aye, Captain."
-
- "Now, you just have a little spreadsheet work, mailing labels, and some
- word processing. Don't you think you're overdoing it a bit?"
-
- "Sulu?"
-
- "Captain, she's shifting into multitasking. Task one. Task two....
- Captain, I'm losing control at the helm. It looks like we've encountered
- a bad sector."
-
- "Put it on visual, Sulu."
-
- "Captain, the VGA is not responding. Shifting resolution into EGA mode."
-
- "Spock? What's the problem?"
-
- "Unknown, Captain. Unix seems to be rerouting all input to a null
- device. Trying 'grep,' whatever that is."
-
- "Scotty, what's happening with those '/dev' subdirectories?"
-
- "Captain, she canna take much morrre.... Another fifteen seconds and me
- math chips'll burrrn up for surrre...."
-
- "Scotty, we're not using the math chip."
-
- "Sorry, Captain, but I haven't been able to say that for twenty minutes."
-
- "Uhura, notify mainframe command."
-
- "Captain, either communications is breaking up, or you're dropping into
- Shakespearean stutter mode again."
-
- "Captain, she canna take much morrre.... Another fifteen seconds and me
- math chips'll burrrn up for surrre...."
-
- "Enough Scotty!"
-
- "Captain! I'm getting a message from mainframe command......Apparently,
- sir, they're going to time-warp previously forgotten modes of data
- handling, it looks like SQL syntax is forming in the language port now."
-
- "Scotty, quick, pop-up the menu shields. This could be a trick to get us
- back to card punching."
-
- "I'm sorry, Captain, but Dbase CLXIX doesn't have pop-ups that work yet."
-
- "Chekov, we need hardcopy! Fire HP LaserJet!"
-
- "Aye, sir."
-
- "Bones, how do I see which tasks are active?"
-
- "Dammit, Jim! I'm a doctor, not a command shell!"
-
- "Scotty! Why can't I get a directory on this thing!!?"
-
- "Captain, ye just canna have a mouse driven pull down menu system with
- Unix. It's like matter and antimatter, the system's too bogged down.
- Yer drainin me quartz crystals."
-
- "Chekov, report."
-
- "Captain, the little arrow is responding, but it gets to the side of the
- screen before the windows have a chance to move..."
-
- "Spock? What's happening to our multitasking?"
-
- "It appears as if the needs of the one are outweighing the needs of the
- many."
-
- "Captain, she's not even runnin on reserve now. We'll have to do a cold
- boot for surrre."
-
- "Reboot scotty "
-
- "I can't, Captain..we have lost CMOS"
-
- "Install floppy backup"
-
- "We can't captain...intense magnetic radiation from overloading the power
- supply has wiped the backup floppies"
-
- "Doctor?"
-
- "It's dead, Jim."
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- > Usenet Review: Retina 24-bit Graphics Board
- ============================================
- By Nikolaj Peddie-Richers
- (nrichers@trentu.ca)
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Retina 24-bit graphics board
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- High-resolution, 24-bit graphics board for the Amiga 2000/3000/4000
- with 1, 2, or 4MB of on-board 32-bit wide RAM. (The 4MB version is tested
- in this review.) Comes with a Workbench emulation and VDPaint, a 24-bit
- paint program.
-
-
- COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: MacroSystem Computer GmbH
- Address: Friedrich-Ebert-Strasse 85
- 5810 Witten
- Germany
-
- Phone: (+country code) 02302/80391
- FAX: (+country code) 02302/80884
-
-
- DISTRIBUTORS
-
- The card was bought from:
-
- Promigos Switzerland
- Mr. H. R. Wenger
- Hauptstrasse 37
- 5212 Hausen bei Brugg
- Switzerland
-
- Phone: 011-4156-322132
- FAX: 011-4156-322134
- BBS: 011-4156-322133
-
- The North American distributor is (thanks to Rudolf Neuhaus for this
- information):
-
- MacroSystem US
- Mr. Robert Tingley
- 17019 Smugglers Cove
- Mount Clemens, MI 48038
-
- Phone: (313) 263-0095
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- DM 798,- for 4MB version plus shipping and handling; 1 and 2MB are
- versions cheaper. Paid sFr. 798,- plus s&h (1 DM = sFr. 0.85, I think).
-
- In American money, that's about $570, subject to variations in the
- exchange rate. Your bank can tell you what the exact exchange rate is.
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- - Amiga with an empty Zorro II slot.
- - Monitor (at least a VGA one recommended) and monitor cable.
- - Kickstart 37.175 and Workbench 37.67, or higher.
-
- MacroSystem recommends 1MB Chip RAM, 4MB Fast RAM, and a 100MB SCSI
- hard drive. You can run with less, but the recommended minimum
- configuration for VDPaint is 5MB RAM and lots of free hard drive space, due
- to the size of 24-bit pictures. Plus I recommend a _big_ screen. At high
- resolutions, things get small.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None. The VDPaint version included will run only on the Retina.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- - Amiga 3000/25
- - 2MB Chip RAM, 8MB Fast RAM, 100MB SCSI HD
- - Kickstart 37.175 (2.04) and Workbench 37.71 (2.05)
- - Samsung Syncmaster 17-inch multisync monitor
- - Retina with 4MB RAM
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- The following discussion consists of a short introduction, the "ins
- and outs" of software and hardware installation, the setup of the Workbench
- emulation, and some real-life impressions of the card with the programs I
- use. All of it carries personal bias; I bought the Retina for a specific
- purpose, and I can tell you how well it lives up to my expectations. That
- is, I am not interested in (or capable of) a full technical review of the
- card, nor in some general, lofty, can-she-fly-to-the-moon-in-principle kind
- of discussion. Furthermore, I have had the card for four days only, and I
- am discovering new features all the time. This review is not exhaustive,
- then.
-
- For a long time, I have wanted to use higher resolutions on my
- Amigas. I spend much of my waking life researching and writing philosophy
- papers on a bizarre Austrian philosopher called Ludwig Wittgenstein, and I
- am tired of flickering, dog-slow overscanned screens on a small monitor. If
- you spend entire nights writing, then you certainly know what I mean: the
- standard Amiga output, including AGA, doesn't quite do the trick for this
- kind of work.
-
- There are a number of Amiga graphics boards on the market; but
- until very recently, all of them were aimed at the graphical artist or CAD
- users. Often, these boards are very expensive, putting them out of my
- reach.
-
- Enter the summer of 1992. I was in Switzerland and heard of a
- high-resolution board called Domino by XPert systems. I didn't get one in
- time, having to leave for Canada before any boards were actually shipped.
- Some time later, I heard that the board is actually quite slow, since it
- relies on the CPU for blitting operations; it's a "dumb" VGA card with a
- Zorro II adapter. But its most interesting feature, besides its
- high-resolution, is a so-called Workbench Emulation, which allows the card
- to be integrated into the Amiga Workbench environment.
-
- Winter 92-93: through USENET discussions, I get to know Rudolf
- Neuhaus, who tells me about a card he bought at a computer show; it's
- called "Retina" and does the same as the Domino, but more. In particular,
- it has 24-bit display modes and comes with its own blitter. It sounds
- great. In fact, it sounds so great that I decide to take the plunge and
- order one blind through my father in Switzerland in early March. Promigos
- is back-ordered, and it takes _three_ shipments from the manufacturer to
- fill my order. My card has the serial number 18086, the 102nd Promigos
- sells.
-
- A 17-inch monitor rounds off my leap into serious Amiga power;
- judging by how small things get even on a screen like this, I would
- recommend this as a minimum configuration.
-
- Three days ago, my card arrived via courier; the packaging is OK.
- Two disks and two manuals are included: one each for the Workbench
- emulation and VDPaint. The card itself is quite small, full-length, but
- about half-height with relatively few chips on it; my (untrained) eye can
- discern some ZIP RAMs, a big NCR chip, which must be the VGA/graphics chip
- itself, a memory controller, and EPROMS. The card has a 15-pin VGA socket
- on the back. With 4MB, the limit for the Retina, every other ZIP RAM
- socket is populated; with 2MB, all sockets are populated, but with lower-
- ensity chips; at 1MB, every other sockets is populated again. All cards are
- identical except for the amount of RAM on them; a jumper alters timing
- slightly for the different configurations. Most applications don't need 4MB
- RAM; it is only once you get into 24-bit graphics work or need to open a
- large number of Retina screens under the Workbench emulation that things
- get memory-intensive. The card itself is a 32-bit card with a 16-bit
- Zorro II interface and connector.
-
- The hardware installation is relatively simple; always ground
- yourself to prevent static build-ups, and let a technician do the
- installation if you don't trust yourself fully.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: As the review mentions, do not attempt to
- install any hardware device unless you are comfortable and
- experienced at doing so. If you are careless, you may void your
- warranty or even damage your Amiga. If you are in doubt, have
- a professional do the installation. - Dan]
-
- On my Amiga, the warranty seal was broken by CBM itself when they installed
- additional memory after I bought the machine directly from CBM Switzerland.
- Be aware that opening your machine voids any warranty, at least in some
- countries. After unscrewing five screws, the A3000 cover can be slid off,
- and the daughterboard with the expansion slots becomes visible. Unscrew one
- of the slot covers on the back, and slide the card into the corresponding
- empty slot until it sits in the slot firmly. Screw in the one screw that
- holds the backplane of the card. On my card, the was a small gap between
- the A3000 case and the Retina backplane; to screw it on, I would have had
- to bend the metal backplane, the thought of which went against my very
- soul. Two small washers from Home Hardware solved the problem, and the card
- now fits _perfectly_, much to my delight. I recommend you do not
- re-assemble your machine fully until you've successfully installed the
- included Workbench emulation and have run it. If you're afraid they'll
- arrest you for running a pirate radio station, slide the cover back on.
-
- Once the hardware is installed, you can power up your Amiga and
- install the software. First gripe: if you just click on the HD_Install
- icon, nothing appears to be copied, contrary to what the manual says. It
- turns out the install script works fine when run from Shell. I just copied
- the entire disk onto my "System:" partition. Later I re-installed
- everything with the install script; both ways work. The software includes
- the retina.library for the Workbench emulation, RetinaEmu (the Workbench
- emulation itself), RetinaScreenMode (to set your display preferences and
- your monitor type), RetinaComm (a utility-commodity), a harlequin.library
- (the card can run programs written for the Harlequin graphics card), and
- some utilities which allow you to test the Retina, define new monitors, or
- to display pictures and animations. Information for programmers is
- included also. Further, the software comes with support files for VLab,
- apparently a digitizer also from MacroSystem, a saver module for ADPro,
- and an ARexx script for ImageMaster. I am not familiar with any of these
- programs; maybe someone else can write how well the Retina works in
- conjunction with these. VDPaint is installed separately (cf. below). To
- redirect all output to the Retina automatically upon boot-up, you also need
- to either copy RetinaEmu into your WBStartup drawer or include in your
- s:Startup-Sequence or s:User-Startup; the startup file is better, since you
- start displaying "stuff" earlier.
-
- The Workbench emulation is a piece of software that allows all or
- some output to be redirected from the Amiga's custom graphics chips to the
- Retina. This means that you can run most programs on the Retina, but at
- higher resolutions and/or higher refresh rates, making use of the Retina's
- capabilities, but not loosing Workbench support at the same time; this is
- the best of both worlds, as it were. So that, with the Retina, your Amiga
- _behaves_ and _looks_ like an Amiga, just at much, much higher resolutions.
- RTG support for the Retina has been announced in the manual; but until this
- by now mythical animal is ready, the Workbench emulation of the Retina is an
- excellent solution. For the installation process, two monitors are
- preferred, since until you've fully installed the Workbench emulation, some
- output will be through your normal Amiga monitor socket or the Retina's. So
- I deprived my understanding wife Jennifer of the CBM 1960 multisync from our
- flicker-fixed A2000 for the duration of the operation.
-
- Once the software has been transferred to hard disk (you could run
- the card on a floppy-based system, if you had to), you need to run
- RetinaScreenMode to set the preferences for your monitor; particularly what
- your vertical and horizontal frequencies are; this will limit your display
- possibilities, and you will be given a list of possible resolutions for your
- monitor. You select your frequencies by choosing from a list of monitors on
- the left of RetinaScreenMode's windows, having the list of possible display
- resolutions on the right. Beware, though; you need a monitor that can do
- 64KHz (?) vertically to make full use of the Retina; mine can do 49.8KHz
- only, excluding me from some of the nicer (more flicker-free) resolutions.
- Then you need to run the ScreenMode program from your Prefs drawer; you have
- to enter higher values for your horizontal and vertical pixel number. I
- entered 1024x768. You need to activate auto-scrolling. In IControl, also in
- your Prefs drawer, you also need to switch off "Screen Menu Snap." Now you
- can run RetinaEmu and select your Workbench screen resolution; I have mine
- set to 1024x768 at 57Hz non-interlaced. (Actually, since writing this
- review, I now have a virtually flicker-free 1280x1024 @ 87Hz. See the end
- of the review.) Rudolf Neuhaus can run his at the same resolution, but at
- 76Hz since he has a 64KHz monitor! RetinaEmu is written as a Commodity and
- can be called up through a hotkey or Commodities Exchange.
-
- In RetinaEmu, you can define a default screen resolution; for each
- program, display can be on the Amiga graphics chip or on the Retina board
- (I set all screens to be displayed on the Retina). Whenever a program
- opens a screen, it will be opened on a default-size Retina screen. But, once
- you've run a program, the Retina emulation usually can identify the screen
- by i) public screen name, ii) screen title (in titlebar), or iii) path and
- name of the program run; a list is kept of all programs run. You can now
- change the parameters for the screens of specific programs from the list
- of possible screen resolutions. I have not yet found a program that cannot
- be identified. This method of allowing you to customize screens is extremely
- flexible and _very_ reliable; I have not had any problems.
-
- The manual of the Retina does not say what the limitations of this
- card are, so here is a _partial_ list of the possible resolutions and
- refresh rates which you would get if you had the monitor with the highest
- vertical frequency range in the monitor list (79KHz). This is at 8-bit (256
- colours):
-
- - 1024x768 @ 76Hz non-interlaced
- - 1280x1024 @ 87Hz interlaced
- - 724x566 @ 76Hz (maximum overscan PAL)
- - 1440x1132 @ 87Hz interlaced)
- - 800x600 @ 76Hz
- - 364x283 @ 76Hz
-
- Group modes (cf. below) include:
-
- -1900x1426 @ 70Hz etc.
-
- My monitor's list (50KHz) includes some other resolutions like:
-
- - 1024x768 @ 57 Hz non-interlaced
- - 1280x1024 @ 87Hz
-
- Group mode:
-
- - 2400x1200 @ 50Hz interlaced
- (it works; I've _run_ a 2400x1200 WB! But it does flicker.)
- - 1280x1024 @ 87Hz
-
- There are a large number of screen resolutions, and I have not tried
- them all; this list is just to give you an idea of the kinds of resolutions
- the Retina is capable of. In 24-bit mode your refresh rate drops; I've used
-
- - 1024x768 @ 60Hz interlaced
- - 800x600 @ 50Hz non-interlaced
-
- Group mode:
-
- - 800x600 @ 50Hz
-
- With a bit of calculation you can also figure out why the Retina
- comes with up to 4MB of RAM; at 1024x768x24 bitplanes, you need a whopping
- 1.8MB of RAM just for the picture, independent of the RAM needed for program
- requirements or picture manipulations!
-
- A group mode defines the range of possible screen resolutions, all
- of which must fall within the bounds of the group mode definition. Depending
- on the resolution you need, a screen will open with the _best-suited_
- resolution.
-
- Surprisingly, interlace at high resolutions is actually quite
- usable; I have not experimented too much with this yet, but it seems that
- 1024x768 @ 57 Hz non-interlaced flickers more than 1024x768 @ 91Hz
- interlace! In fact, 1024x768 @ 91Hz _doesn't_ flicker. The loss of picture
- quality is small, and further experimentation with interlace at high-refresh
- rates seems worthwhile. I wonder what 1024x768 @ 114Hz interlace would look
- like. But then maybe it wouldn't be interlace... I don't know. With the help
- of an included ARexx script, you can make up your own monitor definitions.
-
- The Workbench emulation is limited to 16 colours at this point. The
- card itself is capable of displaying 256 to 16.8 million colours at the
- resolutions mentioned above. Since 16 is less than 256 we can conclude that
- the Workbench emulation does not make full use of the card yet. For that,
- we'll have to wait for RTG to make its debut. However, having said that,
- the RetinaEmu allows you to open screens with "extra" colours. This means
- that, for example, if I want to run my ancient DPaint II in low-res at 32
- colours half-bright I can use this mode to do it -- and it works. If I don't
- chose "extra colours," I get 16 colours with the palette repeated where the
- other colours normally are. The manual warns you that, because the Amiga
- has to re-calculate data for these extra colour screens, this mode is quite
- slow. DPaint II seems all right in this respect. VDPaint opens its screens
- in 24-bit, so you can work in 16.8 million colours without problems. Since
- this card has far better output than AGA chips in terms of resolution and
- number of colours, it would be nice to run all those AGA specific programs
- with it. Since I don't have any, I don't know whether it works, but I
- suspect it doesn't, since I don't have Workbench 3.0. However, the display
- program that comes with the Retina, which can display pictures and
- animations, does support formats like HAM8, IFF-ILBM 24 bit, IFF-DEEP,
- IFF-ILBM in 2 to 256 colours, etc.
-
- OK, enough techno-speak. How does the Retina fare when actually put
- to use? The short answer is: very well. You have to see it to believe it!
- I now run my Workbench on a 1024x768 [1280x1024 at the end of review] screen
- with lots of space for my various docks under ToolManager 2.0 and for
- programs that open windows on the Workbench. I can run Term 3.2 on my
- Workbench, having it take up about a quarter of my screen 80x25 mode with
- Topaz 11 as my terminal font. Term 3.2 scrolls in 16-colour mode without the
- usual flicker now; CPUBlit has finally made its way into the Trashcan on my
- system. I don't have a high-speed modem right now, so this is at 2400 Baud.
- Clock, Calculator, Notepad, Agenda, Docks, File Finder, etc., all fit onto
- the screen at the same time, leaving lots of space for other activities. I
- can open about fourteen shells at the default size [at 1280x1024]. Much
- unlike the native Amiga display, things don't slow down on the Retina when
- you have, say, ten or twelve windows open. This is a big bonus, for what
- good is a big virtual desk (the Workbench) if you cannot spread your stuff
- out? The Retina has more than fulfilled my expectations in this way. You
- now have a real Workbench where you can spread out your windows, not having
- to scroll around; seeing everything, but not dying from clutter. It's a
- state-of-the-art work environment.
-
- PageStream 2.22: Since PageStream can be run on the Workbench, using
- it in high resolutions is easy. Suddenly, the page that one could see very
- little of at NTSC-interlaced resolution with maximum overscan can be seen in
- full and flicker-free at a size that is readable [at 1280x1024 resolution].
- You can see two pages at the same time, readable. The detail is incredible; a
- Times outline font looks like Times, without jaggies that usually accompany
- on-screen display; documents are displayed with great detail. A page _looks_
- like a page now. This is a dream come true.
-
- excellence! 3.0: excellence! is a typical example of programs that
- are written for lower resolutions like high-res interlace: when you open a
- screen, the program is cramped into the upper left corner. Now, excellence!
- supports high-res, high-res interlace, productivity modes, and the 2024
- mode. I find there are two possibilities here: either run excellence! in
- PAL full overscan, 724x566, but with a high refresh rate (76Hz) and have a
- rock-steady display but at relatively low resolution. Or use the 2024 mode
- and either run it on 1280x1024 or make your own monitor file that is closer
- to the 1008x1008 of the PAL 2024 resolution, flicker-free as well. However,
- since excellence! -- solid word processing as it otherwise provides -- does
- not allow you to scale your page, things get small in the second case. I had
- excellence! set up to use LetterGothic at 13 points as the default font,
- which means that, together with Post and PostDJ, I can generate and print
- out Postscript files without having to change any of the page parameters.
- But you can also use the four Postscript fonts included with excellence!.
- They sort of "fake" Display Postscript, I gather, and they require a pitch
- of 15. On a normally sized PAL screen, you don't see more than two thirds of
- the page, but in the 2024 mode you do. Of course, you lose colours in this
- mode, since the 2024 mode is limited to four. It's a trade-off; philosophy
- deals with universals, not particulars; and as universals are colourless,
- I'd rather have more detail than more colours.
-
- DPaint II: Much to my surprise, DPaint II runs on the Retina;
- however, it cannot take advantage of the higher screen resolutions. 640x400
- is the limit. But, you can run it in 32-colour mode in low-res interlace,
- or 640x400 in 16 colours, always at a 76Hz refresh rate, which is
- rock-steady. I have noticed that the "fill" tool no longer works; but it
- was buggy even on the native Amiga display and sometimes caused DPaint to
- freeze. But not working and usually working are two different things.
-
-
- VDPAINT
- I cannot say much about this program, but give my first
- impressions. It looks very powerful and has all the standard tools and then
- some. Instead of a toolbar, it has sort of a toolbox that pops up on your
- screen, which you can close or leave open after you've selected your weapon.
- VDPaint usually sells for about DM 800,- and the results you can produce
- with it are stunning; I have taken some 24-bit JPEG pictures and played with
- them. 24-bit colour at 1024x768 is like a photograph. Brilliant quality.
- I've actually sat down in front of the TV after working with VDPaint,
- suddenly thinking to myself "Gosh, that's blurry!" One nifty feature is the
- little preview window in the file requester with depicts a miniature version
- of your picture with some file formats. Maybe somebody more knowledgeable
- can review this program and give it the credit it deserves.
-
- Other programs tested: Snap 1.62, MagicMenu, TinyClock, and
- TPP (Text Plus Professional, a TeX front-end) all run. In fact, I have
- not yet encountered a program that doesn't run. The only program I found
- that caused some problems was 'Liner, a shareware outline program I had lying
- around. It produced a "Retina Alert" which looks much like a AmigaDOS
- alert, except it's in green, not red. The alert told me to switch to an
- Amiga output to see an Intuition alert and returned to the Workbench
- emulation screen afterwards, so I suspect the problem is that 'Liner
- misbehaved, but not in a way specific to the Retina. Even on the native
- Amiga display, 'Liner gets messed up with different font sizes and produces
- Enforcer hits, if I remember correctly.
-
- Things like your pointer preferences make for some comic relief the
- first time you run them. How much space does a 320x200 screen (the pointer
- preference program's screen resolution) take up on a 1024x768 screen? Not
- much! For all later runs you can set the resolution in RetinaEmu, though, so
- that you can have your low-res screen back.
-
- Since the Retina can run Harlequin-specific programs, I'd be
- interested to hear from someone who actually does it.
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION, LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- The card itself delivers excellent performance at a good price. My
- only gripes are with the install script and the documentation.
-
- The documentation is very good for someone who already has some
- grasp of the fundamental concepts in the graphics card business. I don't,
- and I found it quite difficult to find my way round the first time, since
- you have to do this and that and you don't really know why. When things
- don't work out -- the install script is just one instance -- you're in
- trouble. The second day I had the Retina, I powered up my Amiga in the
- morning -- and nothing appeared on the screen after it finished booting. So
- I had to get the second monitor again and go trouble-shooting. There wasn't
- much in the manual. It turns out that for some really _bizarre_ reason,
- RetinaEmu tried to re-direct a screen called "Workbench" onto the Retina,
- which worked the first day I had it. After _hours_ of fiddling,
- desperation, frustration, and an increasingly strong headache, I found out
- that I have to enter "Amiga Workbench" for the screen name to re-direct the
- Workbench output to. (It pays to read screen titles 8-).) Since then, the
- Workbench emulation has worked flawlessly, but I don't want to be in the
- shoes of someone who has even less knowledge about the inner workings of the
- Amiga than I do.
-
- The manual does not give you the full technical specifications of
- the card. I think it has an advanced VGA chip with a pixel clock of up to
- 90MHz. It does state that the card has some BitBlit logic on-board, though,
- which I take to be something like a blitter.
-
- Finally, since the card is now available through a North American
- distributor, there must be an English manual available. In case I haven't
- mentioned it yet, all documentation I received is in German, though the
- programs that come with the Retina are localized/multilingual. That's fine
- with me, but then not everyone reads weird Austrian philosophers for a
- living....
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- - Domino; simple VGA card with Zorro II adapter card. Slow.
-
- - Merlin; similar specifications, but apparently with Zorro III
- support. This card is vapourware still, and the one time I called
- the company about the Domino, they were quite rude. I took my
- business elsewhere in the end, and I haven't regretted it.
-
- - Picasso II; not much information here. Vapourware still, from what
- I can tell, although some people report having seen one on shows.
- Possible 1MB on-board RAM limit.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- None found. One behavior that is a feature and not a bug is the
- effect of running KCommodity and working with VDPaint whilst leaving the
- screen blanker option of KCommodity on. Since VDPaint seems to avoid the
- Workbench emulation and run on the card directly, inputs under VDPaint don't
- seem to count for KCommodity. So your screen blanks. But since you can't
- hit a key or move the mouse that would "un-blank" your screen, you're sort
- of stuck. I have managed to switch back to the Workbench screen, but
- without a mouse pointer. Included with the Retina is RetinaComm, though,
- which resolves that problem (my Trashcan is getting fuller).
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- No experience; so far, I have been able to resolve all the problems I
- encountered. Once set up, the Retina is virtually maintenance free. Rudolf
- Neuhaus has been in touch with the programmer at MacroSystem who seems to
- be very helpful.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- I have not found anything in the manual about a warranty. I think
- this may be because German law requires some basic warranty to be offered;
- for example, six months or so. Wer weiss mehr?
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- Buy one! This is an excellent deal for an excellent card. And get a
- big monitor, too. The Retina allows you to enter the realm of
- workstation-level display quality _now_ with a reliable Workbench emulation
- and free-but-fully-functional 24-bit paint program -- at a very reasonable
- price. It integrates fully into your normal work environment, once it is
- installed. The software makes the Workbench emulation setup for your
- applications painless (after you've installed the Retina emulation itself);
- all they need to do now is to provide a manual more aimed the beginner and
- get rid of that install script problem. An advanced user will find the
- current manual quite satisfactory, I think.
-
- The Retina represents a new breed of Amiga display card which is
- guaranteed to become much more important, once the fabulous RTG makes it
- into broad daylight. The Retina deserves highest marks for its resolution
- and colour capabilities, outstandingly well-done Workbench emulation, speed,
- and availability. A Retina-equipped Amiga is a competitive workhorse.
-
- [Writing this review has had one positive side for me also; after
- all the experimentation I did with settings to get straight about the
- workings of the Retina emulation, I have settled for a new screen
- resolution; 1280x1024 @ 87Hz interlaced; the whole screen is virtually
- flicker-free and I get even more space! Once you get this feeling of having
- lots of space to work on, sitting down at a 14" monitor running a 600x400
- screen makes you feel almost claustrophobic! Freedom is addictive.]
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- > NVN WANTS YOU! STR InfoFile Another Network Supports Amiga!
- """""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- National Videotext Network (NVN)
- ================================
-
-
-
- National Videotext Network (NVN) has recently added an Amiga Forum to it's
- growing lists of available services. The Amiga Forum is ready and waiting
- for you!
-
- Order an extended NVN Membership of 6 or 12 months, pay for it in advance
- and receive a bonus in connect time at no additional charge. Choose from
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-
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- ------------------
-
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- or try out new ones. You could save as much as $45.*
-
- For more information about either of these plans, give us a call at
- 1-800-336-9096.
-
- NVN HIGHLIGHTS
- ==============
-
- For the newcomers....
-
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- - Amateur Radio comes to NVN! Old-timers and newcomers, visit the Ham
- Shack.
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- - What are eight *advantages* of searching online for information?...
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- - Introducing the Mental Health Forum with a registered Psychiatrist on
- board!
-
- -=* 9600 BAUD USERS *=-
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-
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- By voice phone 1-800-336-9096 (Client Services)
- or
- via modem phone 1-800-336-9092.
-
-
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
-
-
- > Usenet Review: Microbotics VXL 32-bit RAM Expansion
- ====================================================
- By David Gilbert
- (dgilbert@jaywon.pci.on.ca)
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- VXL*32 32-bit RAM expansion for Amiga 500
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- As I joyfully announced in c.s.a.hardware and c.s.a.misc, I got my
- VXL*32 8 meg RAM expansion. I have the 25Mhz VXL30 68030 accelerator, and
- have been desiring this upgrade for a long time. This review is based on
- approximately six months experience with the product.
-
-
- TEST SYSTEM
-
- For the reader's reference, here is the current review system:
-
- - Amiga 500
- - VXL30 68030 accelerator with 68882
- - VXL*32 8 meg RAM (80ns) expansion
- - GVP Series II (4 megs deactivated RAM)
- - 105 meg Quantum LPS
- - 155 meg Wren III (ESDI w/ Emulex board)
- - 44 meg Bernoulli
- - 2 Commodore floppy drives
- - 1 meg Chip RAM via Supra board
- - 2400 Zoom modem
- - SupraFAX v.32bis v.42bis modem
- - 2 Original XT 200-watt power supplies (paid $30 Cdn)
- powers all units, including the Amiga, and the three
- hard drives
- - Deskjet printer
-
-
- PRODUCT INFO
-
- Company: Microbotics
- Address: 1251 American Parkway
- Richardson, TX 75081
- USA
- (214) 437-5330
- Product: VXL*30 RAM expansion
- Configuration: 8 megs of 80ns RAM installed
- Price: $800 (Cdn) approximately
- Availability: Got it from my local dealer
-
-
- IMMEDIATE OBSERVATIONS
-
- When I originally got the VXL30 board, there was some speedup in
- some programs. I was rather disappointed, actually. When I bought the
- 68882, I found some applications (such as Post) much faster, but overall,
- again, I was unimpressed.
-
- When I installed the 8 meg RAM board, the machine even booted about
- four times as fast! Every single application (especially Emacs) showed a
- marked improvement in speed. I was impressed.
-
-
- THE SAME BOX???
-
- When I got to my dealer, I almost thought he'd got the wrong item
- for me. The box for the VXL*32 is exactly the same as the box for the
- VXL30! In fact, the only difference is a stuck-on label proclaiming the new
- product. The installation disk is also re-used -- underneath the VXL*32
- label, you can see the VXL30 label. No problem, I guess, they probably just
- had too many disks printed. It looks like the VXL*32 disk will also be
- shipped with the new VXL30's.
-
- They also shipped the same 1-page, cheaply-printed instruction
- sheets. Not that the instructions are hard to follow or too short,
- just that they might think of making a little booklet --- it would look
- more professional. Actually, the VXL*32 came with 4 sheets of paper,
- with lots of information on them. They only lacked one tidbit, but
- that's for the next section.
-
-
- INSTALLATION
-
- I cannot recommend that any of you install this for yourself: I'd
- get sued a million times if I did. But: it isn't that hard, and the layman
- should be able to do it. Well... not the layman who has never pulled chips
- (he should have a friend to help him); but otherwise, the installation is
- simple, and should go off without a hitch.
-
- The first thing you all should know is that all of the V1 and V2
- type serial numbers will require a number of chips to be replaced on the
- VXL30 itself. These are provided free of charge to all purchasers
- (currently). This might have been the reason that it took so long to
- develop the RAM expansion.
-
- In my unit, all but 4 of the DIP packaged, socketed chips had to be
- replaced. I own a V1 unit. This operation is not hard, and all chips are
- numbered for easy identification. The toughest of thing that must be done
- to these older boards is a line that runs from one chip to the underside of
- the RAM board. This line is apparently for DMA access. They provide chip
- "8" with a soldered wire, and there is a socket on the underside of the RAM
- board for the wire. No problem.
-
- After I had done all this, I installed my 2.04 ROM on the RAM
- board. I will caution buyers of the VXL*32 NOT to buy a Kwickstart board.
- You can place one ROM on the RAM board, and one ROM on your motherboard.
- The ROM on the RAM expansion cannot be accessed in 68000 mode; but if you
- think about this, it is not a problem.
-
- Wherever the ROM is, it can be loaded into 32-bit RAM after bootup.
- This operation does not seem to require a re-boot (as some others do).
- Benchmark programs, however, seem to verify that the ROMs are in 32-bit
- RAM. This does NOT require an MMU.
-
-
- CAUTIONS, WARNINGS, PROBLEMS, AND GRIPES
-
- First of all, it's about time! I bought one of the very early VXL30
- units, and at that time, the RAM was promised "soon." Well, they said
- "soon" for a long time. But, it's here, so I'll stop griping about that. I
- almost considered getting the GVP530 instead.
-
- One thing that they don't mention is what to do about the jumper
- on the 2.04 ROM. On my motherboard, it's required that it remain. On
- the VXL*32 RAM board, it must be cut. There is no mention of this in
- any of the VXL*32 RAM documents, and I was very reluctant to cut it
- (it would be difficult to put back together). The symptom of this was
- that it wouldn't boot, and the screen was purple.
-
- I have no way of testing the following, so I'll just pass on the
- information that I got. The RAM expansion supposedly will work perfectly
- with accelerators up to 40Mhz, but with 50Mhz they require ONE of the
- following:
-
- - 60ns RAM (256x4 are available, 1MBx4 available Fall92).
- - Higher speed FPGA part.
- - Defeat burst mode.
-
- I have not done any of the above as I have a 25Mhz model. In
- addition, they recommend that RAM be mapped out of DMA address space
- for the 50Mhz mode OR burst turned off. This is another item I
- suspect gave them enough trouble to delay it.
-
- Among the other warnings that came with the product are that a new
- power supply should be considered. (I have a 200 watt supply.) This is
- only sensible due to the nature of having 8 meg of high speed (and
- power-demanding) RAM in the system.
-
-
- BENCHMARKS
-
- What review of processors and RAM would be complete without a
- benchmark? First off, the unit scored as a whole similar to an Amiga
- 3000. In integer and floating point performance, it will identical,
- if not a few fractions of a percent higher. This is to be expected as
- the RAM and processor that I have are identical to the 3000.
-
- The unit is slower, however, in the Chip RAM access department. It,
- of course, is still dealing with the 16-bit bus of the A500. Although I
- would like to have a 3000, I think I'm going to wait for the dust to settle
- and the new machines to come out. Despite this, AIBB's "Writepixel" test
- declared that this board was slightly faster than the 3000.
-
- The 8 meg of RAM, however, seems to be slightly faster than the
- 3000. This could be due to design, or it could be due to the fact that the
- moon is in the wrong phase. I've never really trusted benchmarks. The
- reported difference was in the range of 1-5%.
-
- I will upload the AIBB module that I created to wuarchive.wustl.edu
- (128.252.135.4). You can all take a look at the specs. Suffice it to say
- that I am pleased!
-
-
- FROM BENCHMARKS TO THE REAL WORLD
-
- You can look at the AIBB module, and compare to your heart's
- content. This section, however, is dedicated to the observed speedup in
- programs that I use every day over their performance before the RAM
- expansion. The difference between the stock system and adding the VXL*30
- was not terribly large. Probably similar in magnitude to when I added the
- 68010. There were some things ran perceptibly faster, but not too much.
- Similarly, when I added a 68882 to the setup, several applications more than
- doubled in speed, but others were not affected.
-
- With the addition of the RAM, however, there was an overall increase
- in speed. Post, for instance, which was vastly sped up by the addition of
- the '882, went from 1min/page to 30sec/page to 3sec/page for TeX generated
- Postscript going from 68010 to 68030+882 to 32-bit RAM. Another application
- that received a major jump is IBeM. My personal theory is that since the
- author used instructions that access odd addresses, a worst case scenario
- happened: access byte 3 or 4 of a longword, and the 68030 puts the address
- of the longword on the address bus to find that it's 16-bit (remember that
- memory signals the 68030 as to what width it is), then it has to cycle again
- to get the byte. I'm just guessing that this happens... I don't know much
- about the processor, but if it doesn't know that the memory's not 32-bit,
- wouldn't it ask for the longword first? Anyways, IBeM gets 100x speedup ---
- from waiting for characters to almost as fast as my V30 laptop. In fact,
- some games play faster --- to the point of unplayability.
-
- Other applications such as Desktop Publishing, Emacs, gcc (GNU C
- compiler), and even MED are all perceptibly more responsive.
-
-
- OF SCSI DRIVES AND AUTOCONFIG
-
- One of the first things I found out is that my older Series II hard
- drive does not like memory it can not DMA to. I may be able to adjust
- parameters in the menu of FaaastPrep for it, but at this point, I don't
- know. When I configured my 4 meg 16-bit RAM to be Autoconfig, and the 8 meg
- of 32-bit RAM to be outside Autoconfig, I got SCSI errors randomly. I
- decided to leave it for now. I'm pretty sure the problem is the GVP, and
- not the VXL. One very obvious potential culprit is the GVP ROM --- it's
- quite old at this point. 3.something, I believe.
-
- As far as DMA ability, the RAM passes with flying colors. I have
- tried all the standard DiskSpeed tests, and my drives are almost exactly the
- same as they were before --- if not a tiny bit faster. The CPU Availability
- Index has gone up significantly, too. With only the 8 meg RAM installed, I
- have had no complaints from my drive.
-
- The RAM Autoconfigs wonderfully. It comes up automagically when the
- card is set to map the RAM into Autoconfig space. It even appears as a full
- Autoconfig board. FYI, it has a product number of 68 (the accelerator shows
- up as product 69). The keeper of `Sysinfo' might want this information.
- One interesting thing is that you can change the position of the RAM using
- software (and I don't have an MMU). You can also map the ROM into RAM ---
- again without the MMU. I thought that you had to reboot when you move the
- ROM, but this does not seem to be the case with the VXL. Maybe the software
- is smarter?
-
-
- THE MOST SURPRISING THING HAPPENED...
-
- The most surprising thing happened when I switched to 68000 mode,
- however. The full 8 meg of 32-bit RAM *becomes* 16-bit RAM. I would assume
- the circuitry for this is similar to that which makes it so DMAable.
- However... I *never* expected it. The ROM on the RAMboard is not available
- in 68000 mode, but I use the 2.04 ROM on the RAMboard, and the 1.3 ROM on
- the motherboard... this makes sense... when you *must* drop back to the
- 68000, chances are you don't want the 2.04 ROM either.
-
- This can be turned off... I think there might be games that don't
- like 8 meg of RAM, but I haven't found them. It's still nice to know.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > Portal's Amiga Zone STR Infofile
- =================================
-
-
- The AFFORDABLE alternative for online Amiga information.
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Portal Online System is the home of acclaimed Amiga Zone, which was
- formerly on the People/Link System. Plink went out of business in May
- 1991 and The Amiga Zone's staff moved to Portal the next day. The Zone
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- read months worth of postings. They don't scroll off, ever!
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-
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- mailbox. Send letters of any length to computer users in the
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- Portal email has some amazing features: you can even run a mail
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- for example. Grab Usenet articles and store copies in your mailbox.
- Email a program to a friend in Australia or Sweden or just about
- anywhere.
-
- - The USENET hierachy of thousands of "newsgroups" in which
- you can read and post articles about virtually any subject you can
- possibly imagine. Usenet feeds into Portal many times each hour.
- There are 14 Amiga-specific Usenet newsgroups with hundreds of
- articles posted every day, including postings by Commodore
- personnel. Since Usenet is distributed worldwide, your questions
- and answers can be seen by literally hundreds of thousands of
- people the same day you post it.
-
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- NeXT, UNIX, Science Fiction, Writers, amateur radio, and a graphics
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-
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- releases fed into Portal many times each week. Stay on top of the
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- paper to arrive.
-
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- TELNET, MUDS, LIBS. Free to all Portal customers with your account.
- Internet Services is a menu driven version of the same kinds of
- utilities you can also use from your UNIX shell account.
-
- All the files you can FTP. All the chatting you can stand on the IRC.
- And on IRC you can chat live, in real time with Amiga users in the
- U.K., Europe, Australia, the Far East!
-
- Portal's Internet Services opens up the entire world to you. Those
- expensive competing systems don't, can't, and probably won't ever
- offer these features.
-
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- waiting email, messages, Usenet groups and binary files! Reply to mail
- and messages offline using your favorite editor and your replies are sent
- automatically the next time you log into Portal.
- (PortalX requires Workbench 2.04 or higher)
-
- How does all that sound? Probably too good to be true. Well.. it's true.
-
-
- Portal Signup or for more information:
-
- 1-408-973-9111 (voice) 9a.m.-5p.m. Mon-Fri, Pacific Time
- 1-408-725-0561 (modem 3/12/2400) 24 hours every day
- 1-408-973-8091 (modem 9600/14400) 24 hours every day
- or enter "C PORTAL" from any Sprintnet dial-in in the USA,
- or enter "portal" from any Tymnet "please log in:" prompt, USA & Canada
- or telnet to "portal.com" from anywhere.
-
- All prices shown are in U.S. Dollars
- Total Total Total Total
- Cost Cost Cost Cost
- Fee 1 hr. 5 hrs. 10 hrs.30 hrs.
- Service Startup Monthly Per Per per per per
- Fee Fee Hour month month month month
- $ $ $ $ $ $ $
-
- Portal 19.95 19.95
- 2400/9600/14.4Kbps, *direct 24 hrs 0.00 19.95 19.95 19.95 19.95
- 2400/9600bps nonprime Sprint or Tymnet 2.50 22.95 32.45 44.95 94.95
- 2400/9600bps prime Sprint +% or Tymnet 5.50-10 29.95 69.95 119.95 varies
- 2400/9600bps non prime # PCPursuit 1.00 20.95 24.95 29.95 49.95
-
- * plus cost of phone call if out of Portal's local dialing area
- Direct rates also apply to connections made to Portal using the
- UNIX "telnet" or "rlogin" programs from an account you may already
- have on an Internet-connected system.
- % 9600 bps Sprintnet and Tymnet available in 100 major metro areas
- + $10 rate prevails at smaller US Cities
- # PCPursuit is a service of US Sprint. Portal is a PCPursuit
- "Direct Access Facility" thus connection to Portal with a PCP account
- is simply a matter of entering C PORTAL,PCP-ID,PCP-PASSWORD at the
- SprintNet login prompt instead of C PORTAL.
-
- Notes:
-
- Portal Direct 9600/14400 bps service is availble for both USR HST
- modems, and any V32/V32.bis modems. There are 48 direct, high speed
- lines into Portal. Busy signals are rare!
-
- SprintNet 9600bps service is V.32 modem protocol only.
- Tymnet 9600bps services is V.32 modem protocol only.
- Again, Portal does NOT surcharge high speed modem users!
-
- Portal subscribers who already have an account on an Internet-capable
- system elsewhere, can use that system's "telnet" or "rlogin" programs
- to connect to Portal for $0.00 an hour. That's right ZERO. From anywhere
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-
- Call and join today. Tell the friendly Portal Customer Service
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-
- That number again: 1-408-973-9111.
-
- Portal Communications accepts MasterCard, Visa, or you can pre-pay any
- amount by personal check or money order. Sorry, no American Express or
- "checkfree" at this time.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > The Editor's Mailbag
- ====================
-
-
- GE Mail
- Item 1951188 93/04/18 15:01
-
- From: R.SCHNASE R.A. Schnase
-
- To: ROB-G Robert Glover
-
- Sub: Amiga Report blurb
-
-
- Most everyone who uses an Amiga for a short time appreciates what an
- absolutely wonderful system it is. With a reasonable amount of RAM,
- quick response multitasking is a real plus in our system.
-
- I have a project for programmers which could add to Ami's usefullness.
- The name I have put to it is MicroMultitasking. It consists of
- multitasking within an already-in-use program. Case in point is the
- termimal program JRComm. Why can't I access JRComm's directory
- screens while downloading a file? It is obvious that I could not
- cause changes to that portion of the program which is active during
- the download, but the busy pointer won't let me even check a setting.
-
- With a machine as capable and quick as the Amiga, it seems such a
- waste to let micromultitasking go unfulfilled. JRComm is by no means
- the only program which could benefit from this extra step in
- programming. Any ideas?
-
-
- ----------
-
-
- Mr. Schnase:
-
- Your "micromultitasking" idea is a good one. I can think of several
- programs that would benefit substantially from internal multitasking.
- Aladdin, GEnie's front-end program is one. It'd be great to be able
- to read messages in one area after the program has completed its pass
- of that particular area, without having to load another copy. Back
- when I only had 2 meg of RAM, I couldn't get two copies of Aladdin up
- at once. This would be a tremendous help to users without much memory.
- Unfortunately, there are no plans to make Aladdin 2.0 multitask internally.
-
- Other programs that would benefit from this feature (in my opinion) are
- Directory Opus, PageStream (to edit other documents while printing),
- and even Workbench! I don't know how many times I've started copying
- several large files to floppies, only to realize that I'm now stuck
- until it finishes, because I didn't use a directory utility. If I'm
- lucky enough to have opened a shell, I can start another program and
- continue my business, but if not, I get to wait until the copy is
- completed.
-
- Hopefully programmers will read your letter and realize ways that
- their programs can be improved.
-
- - Rob @ Amiga Report
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > STReport CONFIDENTIAL "Rumors Tidbits Predictions Observations Tips"
- """""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- Aging Supercomputer Awaits Its Fate
-
- SAN FRANCISCO - Call it a symbol of technologica! obsolescence, or
- a museum piece, perhaps. But a Cray I supercomputer, once the
- world's fastest computational device, is now sitting in a South
- San Francisco warehouse, where it will either be sold to a
- collector or get melted down to recover the five tons of copper,
- gold and other materials inside.
-
- Hayward businessman Tony Cole bought the supercomputer for
- $10,000 at a surplus equipment auction at Lawrence Livermore Na-
- tional Laboratory. When purchased new in the late 1970s, the Cray I
- cost $19 million, lab officials said.
-
- "We got our money's worth out of it," said Derrol Hammer, a
- purchasing agent at the lab. "We ran that machine for over 10 years
- at 24 hours a day."
-
- But Hammer said it cost more than $35,000 a month to run the
- Cray I, a cylindrical machine that is 7 feet tall and 9 feet in
- diameter, and requires its own electrical substation to provide it
- with power.
-
- A desktop workstation of the Sun type, or a Silicon Graphics
- workstation that we can put on a desk, is a Cray I equivalent," Ham-
- mer said. "You can buy a work station for the monthly cost of main-
- tenance" on the Cray I.
-
- So in 1980 Livermore pulled the plug on the aging supercomputer,
- and began asking other government and university labs if they want-
- ed the 10,000 pound digital dinosaur. When no takers surfaced, the
- lab auctioned off the machine in February.
-
- Enter Tony Cole, 29, founder of VIPC Computers, a 10-year-old
- Hayward firm that salvages useful components or scrap metals from
- surplus machines. Cole offered the highest of seven bids, "We're
- sure to make our money back on the scrap value of the metal alone,"
- Cole said. "There's at least $15,000 worth of gold in that thing."
-
- But rather than crush the machine for its metals, Cole would
- like to sell it intact as a relic of the early supercomputer age.
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
- > STR Dealer Directory These are not ads -- just a reader service!
- ====================
-
- Armadillo Brothers
- 753 East 3300 South
- Salt Lake City, Utah
- VOICE: 801-484-2791
- GEnie: B.GRAY
-
-
- MicroSearch
- 9000 US 59 South, Suite 330
- Houston, Texas
- VOICE: 713-988-2818
- FAX: 713-995-4994
-
-
- (Dealers: To have your name added, please send Email!)
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- Amiga Report's "EDITORIAL CARTOON"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- > A "Quotable Quote"
- """""""""""""""""
-
-
- "Thanks for the application. We'll be in touch."
-
-
-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
- Amiga Report International Online Magazine ~ STR Publications
- -* [S]ilicon [T]imes [R]eport *-
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
- STR Online! "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" April 23, 1993
- Amiga Edition Copyright (c) 1993 All Rights Reserved No.1.06
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
- Views, Opinions and Articles Presented herein are not necessarily those of
- the editors and staff of Amiga Report International Online Magazine or of
- STR Publications. Permission to reprint articles is hereby granted, unless
- otherwise noted. Reprints must, without exception, include the name of the
- publication, date, issue number and the author's name. Amiga Report and/or
- portions therein may not be edited in any way without prior written per-
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- the original meaning is kept intact. Amiga Report, at the time of pub-
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- information contained herein or the results obtained there from.
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-