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- {subhead} Amiga article found on BetterWeb.com{def}{p}
- Article by {link http://www.BetterWeb.com}http://www.BetterWeb.com{end}
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- Just a little something I found on BetterWeb.com. Another case of the
- Amiga getting back into the consciousness of the mainstream public.
- So hold on, there may yet be hope.
- -Mark Tierno
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- Amiga Comeback Led by Internet Intrinsics
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- As the needs of an every more diversified technology consumer mount
- in a connected marketplace, the underdog technologies are seeing
- victory within their reach--at last.
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- Long swept under the rug by Microsoft, these underdogs have remained
- persistent, if not visible, supported by small, emphatic groups of
- enthusiasts. One of the best examples is the Amiga OS, a commercial
- operating system made popular in the late eighties by Commodore.
- But when Commodore went out of business, the Amiga OS's troubles, and
- those of its host system the Amiga Computer, began to mount.
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- Five painful years after the Commodore liquidation, the Amiga OS
- somehow emerged as the property of Gateway, the large PC OEM.
- Strangely enough, however, Gateway hasn't made a big stew about this
- technology. Though Amiga enthusiasts believe their system to be
- superior to the best efforts from Redmond, Gatewayh as sat quietly on
- the Amiga patents for a few years now while steeps of Amigans converge
- on the Internet to support their habit.
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- What is essentially an unsupported computer technology has been able
- to survive, and some might say flourish, under conditions of nurturing
- by its users--and the catalyst of the Amiga's survival has been the
- Internet.
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- If the Internet is good at doing one thing, that's allowing people to
- communicate. The Amiga's eccentric operating characteristics and
- elegant design would have been tossed into the bit-bucket years ago if
- it weren't for the Internet. In fact, the Web is about the only place
- Amiga users can find any kind of support for their beloved pet.
- {p} {p}
- While a dozen legitimate Amiga dealer storefronts and a single
- (48-page) Amiga-only magazine may yet exist in North America, only the
- Internet connects Amiga users with the urgency and blatancy that
- they've come to require through a life of supportlessness. Try asking
- CompUSA if their video capture parallel adapter will work on an Amiga.
- CompUSA can't tell you, but the Web can.
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- So, while Gateway and the farm gang in South Dakota may elude to their
- keeping the Amiga platform alive, any seasoned Amiga user will be
- quick to point out that the Amiga's presence, however miniscule, in
- the marketplace, is exclusively because of the Internet.
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- The popularity of any idea or practice can be prolonged using the
- Internet. Take Linux, a young operating system whose blazing
- popularity is mostly due to Web intrinsics. The Amiga is no different.
- It serves as a shining example of the power of communications: a
- doomed platform, preserved by a perfectly-suited communication tool.
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- Now, imagine being able to harness that power. Interesting thought,
- isn't it?
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