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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st
- Path: sparky!uunet!newsflash.concordia.ca!cumin.telecom.uqam.ca!CC.UMontreal.CA!kosmatoo
- From: kosmatoo@JSP.UMontreal.CA (Kosmatos Odisseas)
- Subject: Re: Falcon030 -- Truth not Fiction
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.050240.29299@cc.umontreal.ca>
- Summary: Fine. Here's truth.
- Sender: news@cc.umontreal.ca (Administration de Cnews)
- Organization: Universite de Montreal
- References: <1h5ppkINNp78@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 05:02:40 GMT
- Lines: 66
-
- In article <1h5ppkINNp78@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> aa399@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Len Stys) writes:
-
- >Ok, I'm going to ask a few questions and I only wish for people that
- >know enough about the Falcon030 to answer them.
-
- [millions of questions deleted]
-
- >Are you going to buy a Falcon030?
- >
- >If so, WHY?
- >
- >If not, WHY?
-
- You want an individual, personal answer, with an honest opinion?
-
- Yes. I will buy one within the first week they are available, because I
- suspect I will have a lot of fun with it. I believe that in general, I
- like the kind of people who buy Atari's. Somehow, we have lots of fun. (really)
-
- Everyone I know who buy's Amiga and Atari ends up having lots of fun
- with their computers. I'm simply one who opted for Atari at first, a matter
- of lower cost in the 1985 days. (I was 15 then, a young teenager.)
-
- I'll be frank. For 5 out of 7 years I had my ST, I had lots of fun with it.
- It cost more money than 'other' computers to upgrade (for example to
- get a double sided drive, TOS in ROM, 1 Meg ram, etc.) but the people on
- local BBS's that had ST's were always a lot of fun to chat with and it
- was worth it. We enjoyed programming weird things, playing games, discovering
- new software, etc.. Sure, things change, and In the last two years or so I
- have sorta outgrown my ST, and besides there's not much action in the local
- Atari community. So I've been saving up, ignoring home computers in general
- and using the ones in school. But, I'd like to have a new computer at home
- and the Falcon sounds like more fun than a PC or MAC would be. It is cheap too.
-
- When I get the Falcon, I plan on spending a fair amount of time writing some
- colorful 3D graphics routines (the Falcon may not be too powerful, but in
- my case I don't care since for really processing-intensive graphics I will
- end up using the Iris workstations we have access to for our 2D/3D graphics
- course in university), I will learn about DSP programming, and try my hand
- at voice recognition, neural-nets, etc. with the DSP. The Falcon will be
- a useful learning tool for my general C.S. knowledge.
-
- Also, I like to support the underdogs.
-
- Moreover, I also think the Amiga is very interesting too. If the Falcon
- didn't have a DSP, I would give the Amiga 1200 a much closer look.
-
- Final clarification: Its not so much the fact that the Falcon is overall
- much more powerful than the ST is that I will get one, but more that
- reason also combined with a renewed interest by a given group of people
- towards a computer. People (at the very least myself) will get more moti-
- vation, I think, out of newer, and fancier hardware.
-
- P.s. You realise that I speak as someone who uses their home computer
- not only for real-life tasks such as Word Processing, etc. but also
- as a tool to hone my programming, game playing, and .GIF picture
- admiring skills. Have fun, Len. I hope you understand my point of view,
- and feel free to reject, accept or ignore it.
-
- >--
- >Len (aa399@cleveland.Freenet.edu)
- --
- ___ ___ , ^ ,
- =*= Odisseas Kosmatos =*= "Cul bien vide, tete plein d'idees."
- =*= kosmatoo@jsp.umontreal.ca =*=
- =*= shammer@mafalda.math.mcgill.ca =*=
-