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- COLUMN: read.me
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- July 31, 1996
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- AMIGA PASSES THE TEST AS A WEB BROWSER
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- By SANDY McMURRAY
- Toronto Sun
-
- Sandy McMurray
- Months ago, I got e-mail from a guy named Dan Robinson. He asked when
- I was going to write something about the Amiga computer. My answer was
- simple: "Probably never."
- I didn't have an Amiga, and I didn't know anyone with an Amiga.
- Besides, what does the Amiga have to do with the Internet?
- I remembered the Amiga as a game machine with fantastic sounds and
- graphics. And somewhere in the fuzzy back of my head, I seemed to
- remember that Commodore had gone out of business. Dan gave me a quick
- history lesson. Yes, Commodore went out of business in 1994, but it
- was not the end of the Amiga. A German company called Escom bought the
- Amiga and announced plans for an affordable new Amiga called the
- Walker that was to debut this year. (Amiga has been sold again since.
- See below.)
-
- HONEST REVIEW
- I was interested. Dan arranged for me to have the use of a new Amiga
- 1200, supplied by Amiga retailers Comspec and National Amiga. Dan
- asked me to use the machine, then write a simple, honest review of it.
- "If you think it's terrible, I want you to say that it's terrible," he
- said. "If you think it's great, I want you to say that."
- So here I am.
- The Amiga has always been an engineer's dream machine. Like the
- Macintosh, the Amiga was years ahead of PC technology.
- When the Amiga 1000 debuted in 1985, the industry was impressed by
- its custom chip set, and its excellent sound and graphics
- capabilities. The 1000 shipped with four-channel stereo sound and a
- 4096 colour output (better than the 16 colours most computers used at
- the time). Years after the Amiga did it, PC manufacturers are finally
- figuring out that consumers might want stereo output (RCA plugs) from
- their computer.
- The Amiga was also the first computer with a true "preemptive
- multitasking" operating system, which allowed it to do several things
- at once -- something a Pentium running Windows 95 still can't do as
- well as an Amiga. And the Amiga 1000 cost about US$2,000 when its
- competition -- a "singletasking" 286 PC -- cost about $4,000.
- These days, many Amiga users are into complicated image processing,
- 3D modeling, etc. This is possible on the Amiga using inexpensive
- software and very little memory or hard disk space.
- But my interest is the Internet connection. The Amiga 1200 is a
- relatively inexpensive way to browse the World Wide Web in all its
- graphical glory. The latest "IBrowse" and "AWeb" software supports
- HTML 3.2 commands, so you won't feel like a second-class Web citizen.
- And e-mail software like YAM (short for "Yet Another Mailer") works as
- well as anything I've used for the PC or Mac.
- As PC manufacturers slowly catch up with the Amiga's multimedia
- power, Amiga owners bitterly lament the marketing and business
- mistakes that have made the Amiga an artifact rather than Everybody's
- Computer. I know this is an overused analogy, but the Amiga is like
- the Betamax video machine: Technically superior, but a loser in the
- marketplace.
- Amiga evangelists will be pleased to know that Chicago-based Visual
- Information Service Corporation (VIScorp) hopes to bring Amiga
- technology into every home. VIScorp has just purchased the Amiga from
- Escom, and they plan to build and market a sort of Internet appliance
- using Amiga technology. See (www.vistv.com) for more information.
-
- NOT EASY TO USE
- My quick review would be that the Amiga 1200 is powerful, but not
- especially easy to use. My parents, who are just getting used to their
- Macintosh, would not be comfortable at all with the Amiga, but I think
- anyone with a mind for programming or engineering would learn to love
- it.
- If you're interested, the Amiga is an inexpensive and powerful
- computer that can get you on the Web. See (www.amigasupport.com) or
- call me at (416) 947-2416 for more information. I'll write more about
- the Amiga as I continue to use it.
- How's that, Dan?
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