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MEGABITES
VIRUS UPDATE
** Have a look at the "Editorial" for information about the possible
emergence of a new virus.
The most recent Australian MacWorld goes on frantically and at great
length about the various viruses endemic in the World of Mac, and the
strains they have seem to be particularly virulent. Since MD6, no new
viruses seem to have surfaced, but there must be many new users out in
AmigaLand who are puzzled by the odd things their computer is doing - they
can't reboot, the screen turns blue or just goes blank, formatting a disk
can't be done because the virus (BYTE BANDIT) is writing itself to disk at
the same time, thus interfering. The VACCINE virus killer by Martin Boyd
and Mike Hansell, and VIRUSX, both of which were on MEGADISC6, will check
for both the SCA and BYTE BANDIT viruses, giving you the option of
eliminating them as soon as they are detected. Having detected a virus
anywhere on your system, you should turn off the computer, wait 15 seconds
or so, and boot up with a Workbench you know is clean - even your
original Workbench if you're not sure (you probably haven't used that for
some time). Then use VACCINE from MD5 or wherever you've put it to check
through all bootable disks which could possibly have been infected.
If you don't have MD6, here's another way to handle them (courtesy Amigan
Apprentice magazine) - having booted up with an undoubtedly uninfected
disk, enter the CLI (hit CTRL-D as you're booting up to enter the CLI in
the quickest way), and enter
1> INSTALL DF1: without hitting RETURN yet. Put an infected disk in
df1: and just as activity begins (the disk being verified), hit RETURN to
send the INSTALL command. Once the disk light has gone out, remove your
now uninfected disk.
If you have neither MD6 nor a second disk drive, try the following:
having entered the CLI as above, enter
1> copy c:install to ram:
1> ram:install df0: without hitting RETURN
Now place the doubtful disk in your drive, and hit return as verifying
starts.
The only problem we may have in the future is some jerk coming up with a
virus which doesn't operate from the boot block of a disk - you can be
sure however that many people are on the lookout.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
NEWS FROM COMMODORE
* The big news is the fact that Commodore has overtaken Apple in
Australia in sales of computers - see Editorial for details.
* Version 1.3 of the Operating System will not speed up access to floppy
disks (that will have to wait till V. 1.4), but hard disks that use DMA
(Direct Memory Access) will benefit greatly from the new FFS (Fast File
System). The major developments of 1.3 will be in the printing
capabilities (new printer.device and drivers, some of which are already
available on Gamma releases of Workbench on which some new software from
the States is being released, such as Shakespeare & ProWrite), and FFS
mentioned above which will be standard on ALL disks/devices as of version
1.4. It is said that FFS will also speed up the Recoverable RAMdisk and
5.25" drives, but not 3.5" drives. Moreover, many of the C commands will
be smaller and faster and bug-free (?). RUN has RRUN and RUNBACK (see
"BestOfPD") built in, and INSTALL automatically checks for odd
boot-blocks (virus checking).
It seems that by Version 1.4 (which will be a BIG upgrade to the OS,
both Workbench and the FFS will be in ROM (Read Only Memory).
The new Preferences has more graphics options, including a 3rd
selection screen and graphics sizing is now independent of the text margin
settings. The CLI will always be on, rather than having to be specially
selected.
An Enhanced Chip Set will be available soon - Fattest Agnes,
New Denise & Gary chips) which will make possible 640X400 non-interlaced
screens with 4 out of 64 colours. These chips will also make possible
software control of either PAL or NTSC. There will also be new monitors
which will be able to handle the various new video modes as well as the
current ones.
For the A2000, there will be 2 different Genlocks, a 2090A
auto-boot hard disk controller, and the various 68020/80286 boards as
described in MD5.
There's even talk of a new Sidecar Workbench arriving soon.
The information above comes from a USENET report about the Amiga
Developers' Conference (DEVCON), amongst other reports. It seems that
relations between Commodore and the developers have been improved quite a
lot, with a much better level of cooperation. Let's hope that continues.
* The front page of "Computing", a trade mag, on June 6 featured a story
of Commodore being prosecuted by the Trade Practices Commission for
alleged breaches of the Trade Practices Act. It seems that some dealers
were upset by being required to recognise a minimum price on Amigas, ie
$2945. The law requires dealers to recognise a maximum price, but not a
minimum.
* Commodore has opened a PR department led by Craig Tegel with the aim of
improving customer relations, and it is said to be working.
* Amigas are selling very well, and some dealers are finding a shortage
of supply of monitors for the Amiga. Sales seem to have taken everyone by
surprise, including Commodore's manufacturing section.
* Sales worldwide for the Amiga are said to be over 600,000 and half of
those have been sold outside the States. In Australasia, figures are said
to be about 35,000 to 40,000. Certainly, Amiga is outselling Atari and
Apple locally, and it is predicted that eventually 70% of current C64
users will move to the Amiga - so far 7 million C64s have been sold
worldwide, the biggest-selling computer of all time.
* X-CAD will be released at the end of July. This is a high-end CAD
package designed to compete with AUTOCAD in the world of IBM. XCAD is said
to be 10-20 times faster on re-draws than AutoCAD...The 3D version is to
be released in Feb/March next year.
* Commodore has a Tektronix 4693D driver available, not on the public
domain. Mr Tony Cuffe requests that anyone who wishes access to it should
apply to him in writing...
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
SOFTWARE UPDATES AVAILABLE
PROFESSIONAL PAGE VER. 1.1 - See your local dealer for a free upgrade if
you got it locally; otherwise send off to Gold Disk.
VIDEOSCAPE - NTSC to PAL upgrade now available from Commodore.
THE MUSIC STUDIO - Version 2.0 available by sending Page 1 of your manual
and US$33.50 to Activision, P O Box T, Gilroy, CA 95021-2249 USA. The new
version has many new features, and full MIDI support (see article on MIDI
in this issue.
8-BIT COMPUTER UPGRADES FROM ELECTRONIC ARTS - Anyone with a C64/128 or
other 8-bit machine can send in the manual cover of any EA program and get
the Amiga version for half price. Enquiries: from Australia, 415 5717171,
from US, 800 2454525, or contact:
Electronic Arts, 1820 Gateway Drive, San Mateo, CA 94404 USA.
ELECTRONIC ARTS IN AUSTRALIA: See address in OZ_PRODUCTS, and get your
EA stuff from them, rather than the address above.
NB: Electronic Arts have also decided to remove all copy-protection from
their disks in future, and will also remove it from existing products, so
send in Proof of Purchase within 90 days of buying a copy-protected EA
program, for a non-protected version. Otherwise a $7.50 charge is payable.
All this applies to Deluxe Paint II, Deluxe Music Construction Set, Deluxe
Video 1.2 and Deluxe Print.
PROWRITE V 2.0 - Many improvements in this version, it can be upgraded at
a cost of US$20 to registered users. New Horizons Software, P O Box 43167,
Austin Texas 78745, USA TEL: 512 328 6650.
(See review in this issue in FEEDBACK.)
CITY DESK V 1.1 - Free update to this version for V 1.0 users. Enquire:
Microsearch, 9896 Southwest Freeway, Houston TX 77074 USA
TEL: (713) 988-2818
PUBLISHER PLUS - Publisher 1000 registered users should send their
original disks with US$18.50 (check for overseas costs) to:
Northeast Software Group, Attention: Publisher Plus Upgrade,
165 Dyerville Ave, Johnston, RI 02919 USA
TEL: 1 401 273 1001
MICROFICHE FILER - Version 1.02 now available, supporting the European
character set, and including a standalone Text Import Utility. US$9 for
registered owners.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
PUBLIC DOMAIN/SHAREWARE UPDATES (See the PDLIBRARY in MD_INFO)
NEWZAP 3.18 - In response to a shareware donation, John Hodgson sends his
latest version of NEWZAP, with a couple of minor bugs removed (it was
always a very tightly-written program). He put it on a copy of FISH 58
which is now available as such from the MD PD collection. It is a "disk
editor", allowing you to search for and modify either hex or ASCII
listings of programs, and is just the thing for those interested in
getting into the real structure of AmigaDOS. Don't forget to send him a
small donation if you use his program.
Also on John's disk were a cute little hack "MACGAG" and what is said to
be an excellent printer driver for the EPSON-JX80 (especially for
graphics) and a useful program called PARSNAG, which does more or less the
same as Caroline Scheppner's CMD (on Workbench 1.3), ie, sends all the
information for a printout to a file, and then allows you to send that
file to the PAR: (parallel) device for faster, more efficient printing.
John can be found at:
P O Box 1643, CA 93953 1643 USA
AMIGAN DISK #16
Have a look at the PD_Library update on this disk for the full listing of
what's on this most recent arrival from the AMIGAN APPRENTICE & JOURNEYMAN
magazine disk collection, which leans towards utilities rather than
graphics or flash demos, and which includes, amongst other things, the
latest versions of ARP (AmigaDOS replacement project), CONMAN 1.1, FIXVDK,
FLIP1.1, MACH (very useful utility), UNDELETE (gets files back), and
PATCH1.2 (gets around a couple of bugs in Kickstart which lead to gurus!).
NEW FISH AND AMICUS DISKS AND THEME DISKS
Check out the PD_Library updates on the disk for new Fish Disks from 139
to 146 and 2 new Amicus disks, as well as recent Theme disks added to the
Library.
TERRY GINTZ SENDS DISK
Terry is the author of the PD programs PLOT, HYPOCYCLOIDS, and ICONMERGER,
along with a number of Shareware programs, such as
VISION
FINANCE
INVENTORY
which he kindly sent a couple of months ago for one-off publication.
Now arrived from Terry is another disk with a number of rather interesting
and unusual programs, and I quote:
"...There are 3 tools for C programmers... FLING, SOUND & CARDMAKER create
C data for inclusion in other source code...FURNISH is an Interior
Decorator's tool that uses "brush images" to create onscreen roomfulls of
objects or other arrangements. This took 10 years to find a suitable
computer to program it on, and a lot of graphics' study...
NAPOLEON is a British card game...which uses full-color card images,
speech, sound effects, simple animation and is almost entirely
mouse-driven. This represents a first of its type on a micro-computer..."
I have yet to clarify if Terry is happy about putting these programs out
as a Theme disk, but if you're interested in the programs get in touch
with him at:
4430 Pinecrest Drive, Eugene, OR 97405 USA TEL: 503 345 8169.
Thanks for the response, Terry.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
RAM CHIPS AVAILABILITY
Andrew Wilson, who makes expansion devices for the Amiga (See OZ_Products)
tells me that shortages, as we're currently experiencing, are a regular
feature in the industry - about every 1.5 "generations" (a generation
being a new, bigger chip) shortages occur in the supply of those chips
which will be next to become obsolete. So the next demand is/will be in
1-meg chips, and manufacturers are loath to gear up for expanded
production of a dying chip. Other factors in the current shortage are
reported variously as being earthquakes in Japan (also blamed for
shortages and subsequent high prices of disks at times...), the US trade
embargo on some Japanese high-tech goods, etc. What it means to us is
higher prices for RAM expansion, since the 256 chips have gone from prices
like $5 to $17 in some places! Andrew reckons that prices should drop down
from about September. In fact, 4-meg chips are currently available for
developers to play around with.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
MAGAZINES AVAILABLE
AMIGAN APPRENTICE AND JOURNEYMAN - Recently received Vol III, No 2
(May/June issue) from AA&J, and it gets better all the time. For those who
didn't read the review in MD6, this is the best paper magazine for the
Amiga anywhere, except for those who like to read ads - there aren't any.
Chockablock as usual with hard information from enthusiasts who have
really used whatever they're writing about. Plenty of information for
programmers, particularly in C and in Assembler, written by the best
exponents in the business (John Toebes & William Hawes). Edited by Dick
Barnes, AA&J is published bi-monthly, and is available by subscription for
US$24 or US$34 from Australia (airmail) from:
P O Box 411, Hatteras NC 27943, USA Tel: 919 986 2443 (BH)
Articles of Interest:
* "Ramble Around Desktop Publishing" - includes tests on an inexpensive
laser printer; review of Calligrapher & DeskJet printer; information about
a new Amiga DTP system (see "DeskTopPub" in Articles drawer); and more.
* "Hardware New & Reviews" - Bernoulli Box; Ground or Replace PALS;
Microbotics RAM expansion; About 68020;
* Reviews - M2Amiga; WShell; 24 printer output
* Fortran V C
* Life with the A2000
* DOSKwik - a PD compacter for use with copying to Ram, etc.
AHOY!'S AMIGAUSER - May 88 is the Premier Issue of this US magazine, with
a small section for the 64/128. Plenty of information and a lean towards
utilities and hardware rather than games, it's well laid out, though most
of the colour seems to appear in the ads rather than the editorial. Some
features- mini-reviews of about 30 Amiga books; "AmigaUserTerm", a
terminal program in AmigaBasic (lots of typing - this is where diskmags
come in!); some good programming & CLI information; etc. Artgallery
contents were fairly boring.
Subscriptions are US$23 (US$30 from Australia) for 8 issues, from:
Ahoy!
P O Box 341, Mt Morris IL 61054-9925, USA. TEL: 815 734 4151
AMIGA USER INTERNATIONAL: From the UK, a colourful and energetic mag with
a good spread of information, though leaning towards games. Plenty of
British ads (see "Hawk Scanner" below), and now published monthly. 46
Pounds sub overseas airmail from :
Subscriptions Manager, Amiga User International
40 Bowling Green Lane, London EC1R 0NE, UK. TEL: 01 278 0333
AUSTRALIAN USER GROUPS NEWSLETTERS
[If there are any other newsletters out there, please send them in, and
we'll let others know of your existence. See FEEDBACK for a listing of
User Groups and BBSs in Australia.]
* CURSOR - Edited by Ralph de Vries, this magazine always has plenty of
interesting reading. Amongst its regular features, Vol4 No. 10 has reviews
of Superbase, Benchmark Modula-2, the Proton 5.25" disk drive; Guide to
Public Domain software; about the signals at boot-up; pattern-matching
under AmigaDOS; and an article for single drive users. Associated with the
Commodore Computers User Group QLD Inc., membership enquiries can be
directed to : The Secretary, P O Box 274, Springwood, QLD 4127.
* AMIGA MAG - The Journal of the Amiga Users Group of SA INC., and edited
by Brian Astill, there are 21 issues so far, Issue 21 containing, amongst
other things: Reviews of ARC, Kind Words, Conman, thoughts on piracy by
Nick Bruining, Notes on the Sidecar, and a fine BASIC tutorial by
Johnathan Potter (see MD this issue too). Membership enquiries to P O
Box 486, Glenside, SA 5065.
* WORKBENCH - The journal of the Amiga Users Group, located in Melbourne,
this one has about 1100 members. Issue NO. 25 just turned up, and covers
reviews of Arkanoid, Ferrari Formula 1, "Simple Paint", Jet; a BASIC
tutorial, an overview of the Amiga developers' conference, and more.
Membership enquiries at P O Box 48, Boronia Vic 3155.
* RAY-TRACING NEWSLETTER - By Cathryn Graham, on a disk for US$6 & p&p.
Four issues have been released so far, and can be got from:
P O Box 579, Sandia Park NM 87047 USA.
* TRANSFORMER NEWSLETTER - Called "Transformer Talk", this goes into the
ins & outs of the Transformer software (of which there is a recent updated
version). US$10 per year from Suzanne Mitchell, Box 7969, Tyler TX 85811.
By the way there is a PD program called ATPATCH which patches Transformer
in its earlier version to work with Version 1.2 OS. A bit academic now that
the new software is about to be released (well, September according to
Commodore Aust).
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
GOOD BOOKS
FOR MANDELBROT FREAKS - "Chaos, Making a New Science" by James Gleick,
Viking PUblishers: Explores the ways in which mathematicians have been
trying to model nature, using Catastrophe Theory, Mandelbrot's ideas and
all sorts of strange approaches. The problem is how to predict the
unpredictable, and will appeal to those who have created Mandelbrots using
Thomas Wilcox's "Mandelbrot Set Explorer" (available from MD's PD
collection). For a discussion of Mandelbrots, check the article "Fractals"
on MD2.
For a list of books for the Amiga, check out BOOKS.RVW on MD6, and BOOK.RVW
on this issue.
THE FATAL SHORE - totally non-computer related, read this book by Robert
Hughes to get some insight about why we Australians are the way we are.
Very well written, keeps your interest throughout.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
VIDEO TOASTER BY NEWTEK
Soon to be released, this will be the ultimate Desktop Video/professional
tool - it has its own video RAM to capture real-time video at 60 frames per
second, the resulting images in Ram then being able to be manipulated at
will. Apparently the possibilities are endless, and the unit will come with
its own software with such effects as blinds, fish-eye, sphere, page flips,
mosaic, etc. The unit will also double as a broadcast quality Genlock, and
a 1/60-second digitiser with high resolution. Future additions will include
a video co-processor board, chroma-key, video switcher, a 16-million colour
paint program, and more...! It is said there is no loss of signal
throughout all the processing since all input is digital. Price is said to
be under US$1000. NewTek sure stay ahead of the game.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A PORTABLE AMIGA
It is reported (in Info magazine) that Dynamac, who built portable Macs,
are going to design a portable Amiga. Commodore is supposedly keen to
support the idea. But what about the flash colour graphics? There'll have
to be a big jump in flat colour monitors to make it look even vaguely like
an Amiga.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
RAMBO RAM EXPANSION UNIT
A reader warns others about this firm - there is no user service here in
Australia, so that if there's a problem with the device, it has to be sent
back to the US, and response there is slow to non-existent.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
LOWEST COST CAD FOR AMIGA
INTROCAD is now available from Progressive Peripherals and from DiskWorks
in Sydney - works on all Amigas, and is the commercial version of the PD
program mCAD, available on the Fish Disks. It combines quad-density,
laser-like output with CAD and has many features found in high-end CAD
packages. Supports many printers and plotters. Price is A$130 from
DISKWORKS in Sydney Tel: (02) 4362976
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
WORM - 800 : MEGASTORAGE FOR THE AMIGA
CSA, probably the most active and innovative hardware developer for the
Amiga, has come up with another first - WORM (Write Once, Read Many)
optical disk drives, using front loading, removable, double-sided optical
disk cartridges up to 800 Megabytes. Internally mountable in the A2000,
and designed to run with CSA's SCSI (Small Computer Systems' Interface)
controller card and software driver package. CSA make many more useful
devices for the liquid Amiga user. Enquiries:
CSA, 7564 Trade St, San Diego, CA 92121 USA
TEL: 619 656 2890
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
DRIVING A 2000
A French company called Mercuriel has started selling an interactive
driving simulator. They want to sell it to driving schools in France.
The simulator runs on an Amiga 2000, with an attached videodisk. The price
is 120 000 French Francs (about US$20 000?). A truck driving simulator should
follow.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
FLICKER FIXER FOR THE A2000
I'm told that by the end of July, a "flicker-fixer" card will be available
for the A2000, which will remove all flicker. Rather expensive at A$800
but for those who can't stand the flicker, it may be worth it. Microway
(Tel: (02) 4398400) will be importing it and MicroComputer Spot may be
distributing it.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
NETCOMM A500 POCKET MODEM
Recently arrived for review, there will be an in-depth one next issue. In
the meantime, it looks good - very small, it actually would fit in a
pocket, and capable of various standards: CCITT V21 (300 bps)
CCITT V22 (1200 bps)
CCITT V23 (1200/75)
The absence of LEDs (light emitting diodes) on the front may irritate some
people who like to see what's happening, and though it has supposedly been
designed for the A500, it is connectable to any RS232 serial port. The
modem takes its power from the computer, and the manual gives clear
instructions on how to connect it up to all 3 Amigas, as well as C64/128 -
in fact the manual is generally quite clear, considering the mess of codes
and standards that infest the area of telecommunications. Fully Hayes
compatible, so that you can use all the usual Hayes Commands, you can also
of course set up the modem via your software package.
Greg Perry, whose GPTERM Viatel/general communications program for
the Amiga is reviewed in this issue, has written a version to run
specifically with this modem, and for those who must have VIATEL access, I
can't recommend a better combination. Cost of modem is approx $355.
Incidentally, connecting up the Pocket Modem to my A1000 required
finding a "PATCH BOX" at Tandy (about $34), a device which allows you to
rewire a serial cable with a little soldering - the pin numbers are
clearly labelled, and the connection can be extended with some ribbon
cable.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
APRIL BYTE MENTIONS AMIGA - SHOCK HORROR!
Yes, it's true, the Amiga has actually been mentioned in BYTE magazine for
the first time in many months...some commentators have speculated on the
possibility of mass hypnotism of Byte staff by an Amiga guru, while others
simply see it as evidence of a return to sanity. Whatever the case, it is
a review of the A2000 by Charlie Heath, Amiga programmer extraordinaire,
and not surprisingly is a well-written overview that comes to the
conclusion that the Amiga 2000 ain't bad at all.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
THE AMIGA AT WORK
"Video Facilities" at Roselands in NSW uses a number of Amigas for video
editing, and links the Amigas in with Fairlight equipment for music
dubbing. They also create slides for business applications and even use
the Amigas for business applications
Ivor Davies uses Amigas to control his music equipment in his studio at
Erskineville.
The Astronomical Society in Canberra uses a number of Amigas in their work
- anyone who has any more details, please contact us.
** Anyone who uses the Amiga in some business application, be it Music or
Video or whatever, let us know so we can spread the word.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ END OF MEGABITES ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^