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- Path: menudo.uh.edu!menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: swithing@ic.sunysb.edu (Scott Withington)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: World of Commodore-Amiga, Toronto, December 1992
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Date: 21 Dec 1992 17:49:39 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 249
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1h503jINNl38@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: swithing@ic.sunysb.edu (Scott Withington)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: trade show, commercial
-
-
- NAME
-
- World of Commodore-Amiga, Toronto
- The International Centre
- Mississauga, Ontario
- Friday, December 4 to Sunday, December 6, 1992
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- This is a review a recent World of Commodore-Amiga show held
- in Toronto, Canada. It features demonstrations by Commodore and various
- 3rd-party vendors.
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- The World of Commodore Toronto was fascinating on Saturday (the only
- day I was there). First, Commodore's booth was large, with a big front area
- split between displays showing the A4000 & A1200 quite effectively. You then
- walked through a doorway to their "interactive multi-media" display. On the
- right were two Virtuality Cyber 1000 stand-up units linked together and two
- virtual reality studio environments from Mandala (one from Star Trek that
- caused your image on the screen to appear to go through a transporter
- sequence, and the other one a game that used themes similar to Nickelodeon's
- Nick Arcade show).
-
- Continuing on through the booth you went to the back, which had a
- history of Commodore presentation being run by several Amigas, each using a
- display generated by Scala to show a different phase of system development
- in C='s history: founding - 1970, 1970's, 1980's, and the Amiga. They also
- had on display several products from each period. These included: a Commodore
- manual typewriter (they started off as a typewriter repair shop and office
- supply store in Toronto, then bought their supplier), Commodore adding
- machines, hand-held calculators, digital watches, and other electronic
- gadgets.
-
- The next phase surrounded the purchase of companies manufacturing LCD
- screens and circuit boards. After Texas instruments (their supplier of
- integrated circuits) started manufacturing calculators (and raising their
- prices to competitors), they bought up a small IC manufacturing company, MOS
- Technologies.
-
- The next display began with the production of the first hobbyist
- micro computer (beginning the 6502 computer craze that created Apple and
- Atari computers in the garages of their respective founders) and then the
- first consumer microcomputer, the Personal Electronic Transactor (or PET)
- which grew in sales so fast that it caused CBM to cease production on almost
- all other products at the time. The next monitor covered the VIC-20, the
- Commodore 64, 16, +4 (yeah I know, enormously successful, but did you know
- that, except for RAM the 16 was superior to the 64 - more colours, higher
- resolution better sound, and so on?).
-
- On display were prototypes of the VIC-20 (painted silver) and the C=
- 64 (painted gold), as well as the SX-64, the Plus-4, and the C= PC-10,
- Commodore's entry in the IBM PC compatible market. The final monitor told
- the story of a little company called the Amiga Corporation and the exciting
- computer they were developing, C='s acquisition of it, and the history to
- this date. On display here... well you can guess, can't you?
-
- The final section was a TV set playing all of the TV ads from the
- late 70's and early to mid 80's which helped sell 13,000,000 + C= 64's (this
- laser disk should be mandatory viewing for C= marketing people) including
- hard-hitting ads showing what you would need to ad to an Apple II or an IBM
- PC to equal the 64 which retailed for a fifth the price.
-
- If you continued to the right, you passed C='s MS-DOS compatible
- systems, including a colour 486-DX laptop (grrrr......). You then went on to
- a small section with A500s, A3000s and CDTVs. On the other side was a DPAINT
- IV art contest on A4000's.
-
-
- SEMINARS
-
- I went to two seminars at the show, one on Amigavision Pro and a
- public session with Lewis Eggebrecht (VP of Engineering). I'll cover Lewis
- Eggebrecht's talk first.
-
- Mr. Eggebrecht began his talk telling us a little about his past
- experiences. Starting off at IBM, he led the team in Boca Raton which was
- responsible for developing the original IBM PC. He then moved to Franklin
- Computers where he helped to develop the 1st Apple II clone chips. After a
- period of serving as an independent consultant, he then moved to C= where he
- took over as VP in charge of the the MS-DOS clones. While there he became
- interested in the Amiga, and when position of VP of engineering opened up,
- he took it.
-
- He then covered the anatomy of C= engineering (only 200 full time
- employees) the Largest being CATS, followed by VLSI design (23 people), also
- System Hardware, System Architecture, Software Development, Product Planning,
- Agency Certification (FCC, etc), Publications, Product Assurance, Test
- Engineering, Mechanical Design (cases, etc), Component Quality, and
- Engineering Services.
-
- Next was an AmigaVision slideshow and address concerning engineering
- goals. Objectives included:
-
- - enhancing and extend the Amiga architecture
- - improving development tools and design methods. This will allow
- for faster development of new systems
- - producing a family of state of the art Amiga systems, from the low
- (sub $500) home & family systems, to high-end systems to compete
- with the most powerful graphics and sound workstations
-
- He then covered the VLSI chipset development strategy. Key points included:
-
- - this area is the key to new product development and therefore a
- top priority of the engineering department
- - aimed at providing a quick response to industry developments, so
- that C= can be the one of the first companies out with a platform
- incorporating new technology, This includes new processors such
- as the forthcoming Motorola 68060.
- - upgraded development methodologies, including going to an all
- CMOS-based system, and using the most powerful development tools
- available
- - low-end systems will be cost-effective, and retain backward
- compatibility as much as possible
- - high-end systems will cater to markets which require significant
- performance and extensive graphics capabilities
-
- Next he covered the current AGA chipset:
-
- - this development marked the first use of new development tools
- and procedures (took less time to develop than ECS)
- - Lisa manufactured by third party (NCR (AT&T) and HP)
- - 4x video bandwidth of ECS
- - 25 bit palette (24 bitplane colour + 1 genlock bit)
- - 8 bit display
- - sprites useable in screen border (overscan)
- - 2, 4-bit play fields useable in all resolutions
- - Scroll with 35 ns granularity
- - 16, 32, and 64 bit wide sprites supported independent of screen
- resolution
-
-
- FUTURE VLSI CHIP SETS
-
- CONSUMER AND LOW END SYSTEMS
-
- - 2 chips each with >100k transistors
- - synchronous to video clock
- - 160 - 280 pin packages
- - 32 bit DRAM or VRAM
- - 57 MHz pixel clock
- - ECS & AGA downwardly compatible. Ensuring this is one of the
- things that slows development
- - Support for 1, 2, & 4 MB floppy drives using standard technology
- - support for ALL 32 bit Motorola CPUs (including 680x0, and 880x0)
- - 8x memory bandwidth over AGA, 2x (at least) blitter performance
- - 800 x 600 72 hz resolution, higher at lower refresh rates.
- - 1 - 24 bit colour at any resolution (this was decided the week
- before WOCA, at Pasedena he said 16 bit)
- - FIFO serial port with large buffer to support very high baud rates
- - 8 meg chip RAM, all but unlimited fast RAM
-
- HIGH END SYSTEMS
-
- - 4 chips (750k - 1M transistors)
- - 32/64 bit VRAM
- - 57 - 114 Mhz pixel clock (asynchronous design)
- - chunky pixel mode (commonly used in IBM PC systems) which will be
- supported by the blitter (bit instead of word)
- - CD-ROM with 100 Mbit/sec transfer rate
- - frame buffer/grabber built in
- - screen promotion
- - 1k x 1k x 24 bit 72 hz screens (more at lower refresh)
- - 8 voice 16 bit >100Khz sound
- - on-demand DMA
- - 12 - 20 x memory bandwidth (32-64 bit memory)
- - 32 bit blitter (8x performance of AGA)
- - 24 bit true colour mode
- - will support multiple simultaneous chip sets working together,
- allowing separate displays, or drastically higher resolutions
- (multiprocessing)
- - enhanced hardware compress/decompress including JPEG/MPEG
- - video upgrade modularity
- - 100 Khz
- - 32 bit processor independent bus for new CPU's (multiprocessing)
- including RISC chips (they should announce a choice for RISC chip
- in less than 1 year)
- - asynchronous design
- - 1 downside is that it may not be 100% ECS/AGA compatible
-
- Immediate, and near (less than 1 year) plans
-
- - AGA and above across entire product line
- - modularity of all new systems to ease upgrade path
- (slots/motherboard swaps)
- - all surface mount chips
- - timely introduction of new processors and upgrades
- - Add DSP support (040-DSP board almost ready, using AT&T 25 MHz DSP
- & "personality" slot built in)
- - SCSI II 32-bit fast & wide controller, with >10 MB/s transfer
- rates (mid-January 1993 delivery)
- - move CD-ROM (CDTV) across product line.
- - add full-motion, full-screen video (MPEG, & better) to Amiga family
- - cost reduce & enhance CDTV (including upgrade (MB-swap) to
- existing users)
- - upgrade Amiga software & multimedia capabilities
- - accelerate deployment of VLSI
- - become active partnerships with other companies
-
- AmigaDOS, "THE TRUE MULTITASKING OS"
-
- Ongoing development in terms of:
-
- - compatibility
- - stability
- - flexibility
- - localization (international - 18 languages and growing)
- - retargetability
- - increased performance
- - multimedia extensions
-
- Future AmigaOS releases:
- - 3.1 - API networking extensions, file exchange, printershare,
- DSP support
- - 4.0 - retargetability, full postscript support (including display)
-
- Additional details from Q&A session:
- - intend to move high-density floppy across line
- - new family of monitors forthcoming (QuadSync)
- - new third-party bridgeboards for 4000 & 1200 (386 DX, 486)
- - laptop will have to wait until they finish converting from HMOS to
- CMOS (the models they've prototyped are < 1 hr life and HEAVY), they
- have not done anything to hinder 3rd parties from developing them
- - totally programmable resolutions at high end
- - full design kit for A-1200/4000 is available through CATS
-
-
- Amigavision Professional
-
- Well, what can I say its 100% improved, full support for AGA, CDTV,
- and several new formats. Much better editing and debugging tools and a
- freely distributable player. Price - for AV owners - $90, list $299.
-
- -Scott, the Amigavangelist
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Send reviews to: amiga-reviews-submissions@math.uh.edu
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-