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Amiga DirectoryOpus 4 Released Under GPL

deadl0ck writes "The Amiga DirectoryOpus 4.12 has been released under GPL. Anyone up for porting it?"

4 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. Nnnngggghhhh! by GregWebb · · Score: 5

    This was announced last week and, not wishing to be smug, but I submitted almost exactly this story the day it was released. Rejected VERY quickly.

    Oh well...

    For anyone who hasn't used this, do. It's fantastic and would be a real asset to the GNU community. Even if it means downloading UAE and using that just to try it out. This program could convince almost anyone to move away from CLIs for file management and was Amiga Format's highest rated product until Lightwave 3.5 came along - 97%.

    Please, can someone port it?

    Greg

    --

    Greg

    (Inside a nuclear plant)
    Aaaarrrggh! Run! The canary has mutated!

    1. Re:Nnnngggghhhh! by MartinG · · Score: 4

      > Please, can someone port it?

      Before anybody starts to port it, why not have a look at Worker at freshmeat. It's described there as follows:

      Worker is a file-manager exclusive for X based on the famous filemanager "DirectoryOpus" on the AmigaOS. It is configurable on the fly without restarting Worker. Any extern program can be easily integrated in the GUI, including a button and a hotkey. Worker uses real file-recognition on file-content AND/OR file-ending, where each file-type can get an own action.

      --
      MartinG.

      --
      -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
  2. Re:Amiga again? by LocalH · · Score: 4

    How is this news? I don't get why Slashdot keeps on posting stories about Amiga. Sure, Amigas may have been cool at the time, but they haven't been made for years, and with all the advances in computing technology since then, I don't understand why everyone keeps fawning over them, much less why they're still relevant to any of us.

    Just because they're not made anymore doesn't mean they are dead. The life of a system is based on it's userbase, not how many corporations throw money behind it. To use another classic computer as an example - the C64. You may say it is dead, and it is commercially in my eyes. However, if you tell me that the 64 is dead based on the sheer number of users it still has, then I will laugh in your face, sir.

    I can sort of understand why the story about the PET was posted -- that was a true original revolution in personal computing

    And the Amiga wasn't? It was 15 years ahead of it's time (the Amiga still has bragging rights on certain capabilities that haven't happened anywhere else), the only problem it had was Commodore.

    But the Amiga is a dead platform, yet Slashdot has a whole category for Amiga posts.

    That's because many geeks were brought up on the Amiga, such as myself. The Amiga platform is still fairly popular if you consider how long ago Commodore filed for bankruptcy, and also the fact that when a PC is obsoleted, many people just trash them and upgrade. I can give you a list of things that the Amiga is capable of out of the box that PC manufacturers just haven't figure out how to do yet.

    Doesn't anyone else here get tired of constantly hearing about Amiga?

    No, I used an Amiga ever since AmigaDOS 1.2, and I was amazed at the speed and stability of the system, so amazed that even after I had sold all my Amigas (yes, I did :) and bought a PC, I still yearned for more. So now I have an A3000 sitting in my home, that does things running at 25MHz and with only 4MB of RAM that my 333MHz K6-2 can't with 128MB of RAM. So yes, I do still own an Amiga, and yes, I enjoy hearing news about it, at least it still gets some press coverage.

    Rob & Co., I appreciate all the effort you put into Slashdot, but I think all of us would like stories that cover what we're interested in today.

    If you're not interested in the Amiga, then pass by the article instead of trying to raise a stink. Some people actually still like the Amiga, you know.
    _______
    Scott Jones
    Newscast Director / ABC19 WKPT
    Game Show Fan / C64 Coder

    --
    FC Closer
  3. DOpus can't be judged by screen shots... GET UAE! by Macfox · · Score: 4

    While I agree this might not a as news worthy as a lot of other stories, there is a large
    portion of /. readers who are x-amiga fans and like to see this kind of news now an then...

    Three major things that Dopus was to the amiga...

    1) The only file manager with a decent GUI. Back when I first met John Potter and he
    was coding the first version there was no API short cuts to coding a nice consistent
    interface. Only the horrible 1.3 WB interface existed. Hardly worth using and only if you
    had access to the ridiculously priced amiga developers books. Johns own GUI set the
    standard and I had my suspecisions that many of the WB 2 widgets appeared very
    similar. :)

    2) Many have commented that they had a 50k file manager that did the same... Hardly...
    DOpus's GUI was not only most easiest and clear to use GUI, it was also very intuitive
    and could be customized very easily... A very rare thing to find in an program back then.
    These are the best points and they can't be demonstrated by screen shots!

    3) Behind the GUI layed a very smart file recognition system that didn't rely on dumb file
    extentions, a text and hex editor, media players, and a host of WB tools that allowed the
    creation and modification of icons for files and folders.

    Overall DOpus filled a big gap. Only after it was so successful was there a host of clones
    that never matched DOpus for what it was.

    Anywayz my 0.02c AUS

    Rob

    --
    Area51 - We are watching...