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New Amiga Hardware Runs Mac OS

Ethan writes: "A developer on the Yahoo Amiga One mailing list has successfully installed MacOS 9.2 using Mac On Linux. And it seems that adding OS X support is on the to-do horizon for the MOL developers. I think that it will be interesting to see the people at Apple lose some sleep now that a low cost, fast, off the shelf solution exists to run Mac OS, without any Apple hardware. If it doesn't do anything else, at least it will give the people buying the new Amiga One G3 PPC board an existing software base." Mind you, I've never even seen an Amiga One, but it would be a pretty silly thing to make up ;) Update: 07/05 07:03 GMT by T : Mike Bouma piped up with a link to a page featuring the same hardware, in this case running Debian, OpenOffice.org and Mozilla.

326 comments

  1. Executor by dknj · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Speaking of MacOS.. why hasn't a decent MacOS emulator been made for the PC yet? Executor was neat, but it hasn't had any major advances in almost 5 years!

    -dk

    1. Re:Executor by bobtheprophet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Making a mac emulator for PC also requires emulating the hardware, which isn't easy to do. There are a few out there, but they don't work terribly well. here is the google directory.

      --
      Don't give me none of this "nature theme" business.
    2. Re:Executor by zztzed · · Score: 3, Informative

      BasiliskII (Google for it, I'm too lazy to find a link) has worked fairly well for me. Note, however, that it only emulates 68k Macs and requires a valid Mac ROM image.

    3. Re:Executor by RevAaron · · Score: 2

      Heh, Executor way blows. Executor only emulates, reliably, up to Mac OS 6.0.7. Which is older than a lot of readers on Slashdot, literally.

      A couple different companies have promised new emulators that can emulate PowerPC, updating their emulators that still only emulate up to a 68040. I know one company that is working on a PPC emulator is:
      http://www.microcode-solutions.com/

      But they certainly don't seem to be in a hurry. Why? I don't think there's much market at all for a good Mac emulator. There isn't much that runs on Mac OS that you can't get an equivalent elsewhere. For those apps that are like that, the performance isn't good enough to use an emulator- so they jujst get a real Mac. :)

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
    4. Re:Executor by SuperCal · · Score: 2

      BasiliskII is awsome. I've tried all of them and BasiliskII is the only one I kept. I love to see my friends freek out when they see the MacOS boot screen on my Sony Laptop. Anyway, I'm assuming that sence you asked about it you actually want to give Emulation a shot, so here's a tip or two. After you download the BasiliskII files(They are hosted on Sourceforge) find a nice person who has a good basic virtual Mac HardDrive file. Sence the Emulator uses a big file to simulate a harddrive you can just boot from that. Oh, I'm sure you wouldn't pirate on purpose, so make sure you only load the ROM of a Mac you already own ($25 on EBay will get you a Mac with a ROM you can use) and buy a copy of MacOS 8, or save a few bucks and stick with MacOS7 which is free from Apple. Oh one final tip, look for the JIT version, It is very well done. I'll stop rambleing now...

      --
      Business News and Resources: www.usasource.net
    5. Re:Executor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      If you're that lazy, why don't you STFU? Oh, I see, better that 100, or 1000, or 10000 slashdot readers should have to go googling for the link than that you should waste your oh-so-much-more-precious time doing so. You self-centered, antisocial fuck. OBTW, the link is Basilisk II

    6. Re:Executor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A couple different companies have promised new emulators that can emulate PowerPC, updating their emulators that still only emulate up to a 68040. I know one company that is working on a PPC emulator is:
      http://www.microcode-solutions.com/"

      microcode have made a ppc mac emulator already .... on the AMIGA ! freaking i know :P
      Its been sold to someone else now and looks canned until OS4 , which is interesting because IIRC this is the same emulator (ifusion) that they were going to port to x86.

      If only ifusion ran on my ppc card :(

    7. Re:Executor by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      Because most PC Users do not have a need to emulate Mac stuff on their PC. It usually is the other way around, some DOS or Windows program that a Mac User cannot do without forces them to by PC Emulation software.

      So really there isn't any money to be made in making a Mac emulator for the PC, no market, no money, so why do it? The main part is emulating the PowerPC processors, nobody to my knowledge has done that yet, but the 68K processors they have. So we have 68K Mac emulators, but they don't do much business.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  2. I don't really think Apple will lose any sleep. by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple has basically abandoned everything pre-OS X, and Steve Jobs has already declared Classic(OSX) dead.

    1. Re:I don't really think Apple will lose any sleep. by mattkinabrewmindspri · · Score: 1

      Damned html! I put the less than carrot in there. If you didn't already know, Classic is any Mac OS which is 9.2.2 or below.

    2. Re:I don't really think Apple will lose any sleep. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to clarify, Steve declared Classic dead for MacOS developers. He has not taken that stance for the user community. I'm sure OS9 will be around for awhile, but with no new products.

      The user community should take Steve's comments as a blatant end-of-life warning and look at upgrade solutions.

      Tom

    3. Re:I don't really think Apple will lose any sleep. by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

      Good. UNIX for people that bathe regularly is one of the things our society needs most. I'll stick with Linux, but it's great to know that idiot-proof UNIX exists.

      --
      You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  3. sue happy by blugecko · · Score: 1

    i can't help but wonder how many nasty-grams apple is gonna send out over this one...

    --
    Lysergic Acid Diethylamide, not just chemistry, reality!
  4. Not likely... by PRickard · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Mac OS simply will not run without the hardware ROMs. I don't see how the Amiga could run it, much less run it decently - and if it can, Apple will have their hair. This is a vaporware announcement.

    --

    == Paul Rickard, Editor of The Microsoft Boycott Campaign ====

    1. Re:Not likely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the ROM requirement was only from older versions of the Mac OS. They are running one that doesnt reqire apple's ROM.

    2. Re:Not likely... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2

      "Mac-on-Linux lets you run MacOS under Linux/ppc. MOL runs natively on the processor, i.e. it is very fast. Unlike most mac emulators, MOL can run MacOS 8.6 and later WITHOUT A ROM IMAGE."

      mol-0.9.63.tgz doesn't look like its alpha, let alone vapor...Anybody running this?

    3. Re:Not likely... by Matthias+Wiesmann · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Mac OS simply will not run without the hardware ROMs.

      This is getting less and less true, so called new world machines only rely on the ROM for booting (all machines since the iMac are new worlds machines). The ROM that contains the toolbox code is basically a memory mapped file (you can see this file in the system folder).

      Darwin does not need any special ROMs (how would it run on x86 machines?). And Mac OS X basically runs on top of darwin (this is how unsupported machines can run OS X). The only part of the Mac ROM that needs to be somehow emulated is the open firmware booting code that sets up the device tree and hands it to the kernel. Open firmware is IEEE standard.

      So roughtly to run OSX on a unsupported machine, you need to implement a booting system that can hand a device tree to the kernel and write darwin drivers for your hardware / emulation plateform. As far as I know, you can do both legally.

      Of course there might be some hidden checks in OSX, but the open source nature of Darwin make this improbable. I don't think that Apple will care about this simply because it does not seem to be a serious threat to their marketshare...

    4. Re:Not likely... by Perdo · · Score: 1

      It becomes a serious threat to their market share when a company decides to start producing clones... OS X on x86. Dream OS on faster cheaper hardware than Apple offers.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    5. Re:Not likely... by Patrik+Nordebo · · Score: 2

      It's highly unlikely that an x86 is going to be running PowerPC code faster than a PowerPC, and since MacOS X is only available as PowerPC binaries, I doubt Apple has much to fear from someone selling x86 machines running MacOS X.

    6. Re:Not likely... by Kikaid. · · Score: 0
      OS X has actually been a 10 year project. This article talks about how the main goal of one of OS X's first initiatives was to run on Intel-based hardware.

      --

      (This post does not contain emoticons or l337.)

    7. Re:Not likely... by RevAaron · · Score: 2

      MOL doesn't require a ROM. When the original iMac came out (did it happen before with the pre-B G3 towers? I don't know myself) Apple got rid of the ROM on hardware after that. I have no Toolbox ROM in this nice iBook on which I'm typing this. I run Mac-On-Linux (it works quite well, btw), and never once had to do any ROM ripping.

      So, if there is no ROM, what happened with those functions? The reason they were in ROM has gone away with much faster RAM, CPUs and disks. So the ROM functions are stored in a loadable library, rather like most function libraries.

      Doing research is overrated! Besides, since when has anyone needed to know what they're talking about before they write a post anyway! Oh well, you would've been right if this were 1995. Better than nothing!

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
    8. Re:Not likely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...huh?

      If you buy MacOS9.x on CD you have the newworld ROM on the CD. MOL can use this to boot.

      learn what you talk about please boy!

    9. Re:Not likely... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      how can this be insightful when it's completely WRONG? AFAIK, Macs have not needed hardware ROMs since at least OS8.5 - about 5 years ago. At least.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    10. Re:Not likely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever heard of Shapeshifter? An Amiga with a MC68060 was the fastest non-PPC-Apple.

    11. Re:Not likely... by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      Mac OS simply will not run without the hardware ROMs.

      Indeed. Apple's already demonstrated their caution in protecting their ROMS and their willingness to protect them back in the days of the Apple ][, so...

      I think that it will be interesting to see the people at Apple lose some sleep now that a low cost, fast, off the shelf solution exists to run Mac OS, without any Apple hardware.

      News Flash: Apple loses sleep!

      Toss

      Turn

      Wake up

      Call lawyers

      Resume sleeping peacefully

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    12. Re:Not likely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Macs did not need ROM since the launch of the
      iMac 233 which was running 8.1.

      Lucky us that 8.1 thing only last a couple of months.

    13. Re:Not likely... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      yeah, I didn't want to go that far because my brother had a Rev B (266Mhz) iMac that came with 8.5, and his was definitely New World stylee

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    14. Re:Not likely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well the topic is silly and funny, this has noting to do With Amiga One at all,
      ---
      The Hardware Roms are not bundled with Amiga One, Amiga OS4.0 or Linux PPC, so there is no way any
      lawyer can sue Amiga or 3RD part PPC hardware manufactures or 3RD party OS's
      like linux for this kind of actions, the only one can be sued is the
      developers of MacOnLinux if they bundled it with the ROMS,
      otter vies they are offering there own program that has noting
      to do with Apple otter the emulate the hardware, and this is legal as far as I know.
      ---
      Hemmm this is about the same nightmare as WINE on linux.

  5. The Amiga is coming back. by cbr372 · · Score: 1, Troll

    I've predicted this for a long time. The first generation of Amiga platforms were revolutionary, and blew away offerings from other personal computer manufacturers. In fact, it was only recently, with AGP systems, that modern PCs could even match the first Amiga (the A1000) in terms of graphics sync/performance.

    The new generation of Amigas will be running on PPC-compatible hardware. (Even older Amgias can get extension boards with PPC chips on them, though), and will truly rock. It's been a while since we've seen a truly good mixture of hardware and software, working together well to build the ultimate platform. That was... hmm - the late 80s and early 90s. The Amiga. The x86 hardware has (and still does) prohibit the PC from reaching this level, and MacOS (up until MacOS X) has been a complete toy operating system.

    Just when PCs and Macs are starting to catch up with the original Amiga, the new Amiga is getting ready to be unleashed.

    Very timely, actually. Things could get interesting in the next few years.

    --
    Cedric Balthazar Rotherwood
    Sun Certified Programmer for the Java Platform +
    System Admin. for Solaris
  6. I used to... by m.batsis · · Score: 1

    ... love Amigas. I remember dreaming about 4000T and even a clone named draco (or something). Slick mean graphics machines with a great OS. I have no idea about the current status, is there any Amiga Os or something or some new *2n*x flavor?

    --
    "You laugh at me because I am different. I laugh at you because you're all the same." --Vick Imbornoni
    1. Re:I used to... by Brymouse · · Score: 1

      The 4000T was the top of the line, that's for sure!

      I had one that I had got out of the garbage. It had a PPC board, all scsi disks, a CD burner, 3 TBC IV, V-scope, a toaster 4000, and a flyer! You wont believe why it was thrown out.....

      Seams they NEVER dusted it out, and inches of dust made the power supply go bad. I cleaned it out, put a new PS in, and it booted up.

      All it needed was a mouse, and monitor. Mouse was easy, just a Bus Mouse (i.e. dumb mouse), the monitor was easy, the connector was not. Anyone ever seen a DB-23 connector, what kinda crack were the designers smoking when they decided to use this connector?

      Works wonderful for video editing, and live shots as well. This machine was truly before it's time. Hell in 1993 people were using Win 3.11, and a P100 was the top of the line.

    2. Re:I used to... by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 1

      AmigaOS4 is a complete rewrite of the classic AmigaOS for PPC hardware which includes tons of new features to make it a modern operating system again.

      PPC AmigaOS will use re-targetable graphics and sound. Cheap mainstream hardware component are used like modern graphics cards, sound chips, USB devices, etc.

      There should become a PCI bridge solution available from Escena allowing direct AGA chipset hardware access (PCI/cable to A1200 board). The processor on the A1200 board will be left unused as AmigaOS4 will have a fast 68k JIT intergrated. Older Amiga software using graphics cards should be able to work without an A1200 board attached.

    3. Re:I used to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy crap! What kind of garbage do you hang around? The coolest thing I ever found in the garbage was Halloween chocolates that were thrown out behind a shopping mall after Halloween. I mean fresh BOXES of stuff. I was sick for days after. I was a kid of course, this was in the 80s, I guess no one heard of discount stores and just assuumed no one would buy candies with Halloween pictures on them after Halloween. (Halowe'en? Hallowe'en?)

      Ah, the 80s. Ronald Reagan, Spitting Image and Dunkin Donut boxes full of 5-1/4" C64 floppies with warez on them...

    4. Re:I used to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1993 the fastest pentium you could buy was the shortlived 60 and 66's with the buggy CMD chipsets and 70 ns SIMMS.
      100's didn't really get released to public until mid 94'

  7. Pretty neat, but..... by G3ek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    OS X is the perfect marriage between a simple, intuitive, aesthetically marvelous end user interface and the power, stability, and hardcore good geekness of UNIX. Furthermore, the OS is designed to run almost absolutely flawlessly on Apple hardware. So what do you get? You get a Mac, the best computer on the planet, period. Someone figured out how to put Mac OS 9.2 on something else....I think that's really cool, and OS X would be cool too....This will let others get a taste of what an awesome OS it is and further propel them to want the real thing. HAHA, the Mac will eventually dominate the planet as planned! It's almost too easy..... ps. my first post!

    1. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by CountBrass · · Score: 1

      >>HAHA, the Mac will eventually dominate the planet as planned! I don't think so. Lets face it, Geeks prefer Linux, and end users prefer the os they use at work every day: Windows. Subjective "Cool" and "best" have no chance.

      --
      Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
    2. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by foniksonik · · Score: 2

      Actually a lot of the 'geeks' I know are 'switching' to Apple hardware, specifically because they can run YDL and OS X and Microsoft Office/Virtual PC.

      If you can run your all important (no sarcasm intended) Linux distro on it then who needs Windows (gameplay) especially when more and more games are being ported to OS X within a month or two of Windows and at the same time as Linux (NWN), which is likely to shrink to a month or less over the next year.

      The only thing missing is a more mainstream distro of Linux or the merging of say Redhat with YDL for big business.

      Add to this economies of scale with more people buying Apple hardware == Apple hardware gets cheaper, and you have a winning combination (unless Apple gets too greedy).

      --
      A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    3. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by thales · · Score: 2

      "the Mac will eventually dominate the planet as planned!"
      So we switch from having Microsoft dominating the software to having Apple dominating the software AND the hardware? Sounds like a step backwards to me. Sorry I have no intrest in placing Steve Jobs in a stronger postion than Bill Gates is in today.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    4. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh. and then a lot of geeks became disgusted with the absolute shit hardware that it ran on. and then they found out that apple has a 10-day-we'll-take-your-balls-anyway 3rd reich style return policy and said 'FUCK!'. we still need windows because the new games just won't run properly on apple's 1997 pc architecture. hell, they've already obsolesced my _NEW_ powerbook with their new os x 10.2 release. great. my pII 350 had the same system bus as this stinker.

      i shudder to think how NWN will run on these machines if warcraft 3 in 640x480 with all the effects off and the quality at its lowest brings the entire thing to a grinding stop.

      this is on a 4 month old tibook 667/512mb/radeon
      that cost me more than $3000 dollars.

      my year old $1000 pc runs the exact same game flawlessly at 1280x, with the framerate limited only by the monitor refresh.

      the os would be nice if the hardware could handle it. geeks will not tolerate being trapped in a forced upgrade chain for hardware that costs 3x more than it's worth for long.

    5. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll never understand this idea of promoting the Mac as a games machine. It isn't, and never was. If you want to replace your Pc with another games machine, you have PS2, GBA, NGC and X-Box to choose from - all of which are FAR better than the PC and FAR, FAR better than any Mac for games. If you don't dig Windows, get a PowerMac and a PS2 and you need never worry about missing out on games again. That's what I did.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    6. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      right on - I'll only support Apple over M$ until the day that they are equal, and then they can fuck off and look after themselves. I think if Apple ever get back more than 20% of the market they'll turn back into the uncompetitive, unresponsive, idle, arrogant fuckers that REALLY want to be. It's only the evil empire that keeps the bastards honest. Like a lot of highly talented people, Apple is FUCKING lazy, they only show their best with a gun at their balls.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:Pretty neat, but..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if Apple was a company full of saints, it still wouldn't be a good thing to have them dominate the industry. A Healthy mix of Windows, Mac, Linux, and BSD boxen would be far better than having ANY one of them dominating the industry.

  8. Who cares? by ducasi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How much would one of these machines cost to put together and how does it compare to the current generation of Macs?

    There's not many Macs still using the G3, but the G3 iMac is very cheap and doesn't require any hacks to get Mac OS and Mac OS X to run!

    I think it's cool that this is happening - it's always been clear to me that with Darwin being open it will only be a matter of time before Mac OS X is running on non-Apple hardware - but I don't think Steve Jobs will be shaking in his boots just yet.

    1. Re:Who cares? by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 1

      The boards including AmigaOS4, AC97 sound, modem, 10/100 ethernet and 600 Mhz G3 should cost around 550 USD.

      If you want to have an indication of what a complete system would cost you. Check out these pre-order (non binding) links at Computer City, an AmigaOne dealer in the Netherlands. English and Dutch.

    2. Re:Who cares? by thogard · · Score: 1

      I helped a friend get a PC. She spent AU$417 for about the same stuff (900mhz intel, ethernet, winmodem, sound, video). She already had a hard drive and memory. That $417 also paid for a "cute" case as well. Thats about US$200.

      I would love to get a Power PC board but the only ones I've seen will set me back over a thousand dollars so I'm not buying.

    3. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 600MHz G3 is a lot faster than a 900MHz x86.

    4. Re:Who cares? by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      No, it isn't. A 600Mhz "G3" (you didn't mention which model) is approximately equivalent to something like a 7-900Mhz Pentium III, all else being as equal as possible. And that's MacOS9 vs Win 98, other OSs will make a difference.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:Who cares? by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      No it isn't. This has been repeatedly demonstrated to be false. Take a reasonable app such as photoshop...

      If you use Intel benchmarks, of course, your results will be different.... oh, and you got to exclude floating point performance, yeah, that's a requirement. IF you do all this, you can pretend that you aren't paying way too much for too little processor when you buy an x86 machine.

      (Actually too much for too much processor as the size of the x86-- HUGE-- is why it draws absurd amounts of power, costs so much (fewer per die) and runs so slow (386 emulation processor) and has such a crappy pipelining system.) Oh, and when you talk about laptops its even worse-- on battery power, Intel processors run at 1/4th or 1/6th the rated clock speed cause otherwise battery performance would be zilch. Which means that a powerbook is actually something like 20-30 times the speed of a PC laptop on battery power, when fully utilizing the processor (say playing back a DVD while flying cross country.)

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    6. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you actually own any computers fitted with these exciting CPUs? didn't think so.

  9. More likely than you'd think by CmdrTaco+(editor) · · Score: 2, Informative

    You can download a ROM image for the Power Macintosh 7200, 7500, 8200, 8500, and Starmax 4160 because apparently they don't have the correct hardware ROM. I don't see how that would be so different from doing the same thing with an Amiga system.

  10. This isn't quite "running MacOS" by NeoOokami · · Score: 4, Informative

    MacOnLinux basically loads OS 9 in a simulator. And that's what he got working, not OS 9 itself. Yes he's able to use most (non hardware specific) MacOS apps, but he did NOT get MacOS to boot, and without cracking Apple's bios, that's not gonna happen. He provided proper hardware and then made a small emulation field, it doesn't look like he accomplished anything new there at all.

    1. Re:This isn't quite "running MacOS" by norwoodites · · Score: 1

      Since NewWorld Mac's (iMac and newer), the Macs have actually been CHRP machines.

    2. Re:This isn't quite "running MacOS" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      >cracking Apple's bios

      Oh for fuck's sake. the mac's firmware isn't fucking encrypted you retard. it's in software for all the newworld macs. or you could use romgrabber for older ones.

    3. Re:This isn't quite "running MacOS" by transient · · Score: 2, Informative

      cracking Apple's bios

      yes, it can be quite difficult to crack well-documented industry standards.

      --

      irb(main):001:0>
  11. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by josh+crawley · · Score: 2, Insightful


    ---"I've predicted this for a long time. The first generation of Amiga platforms were revolutionary, and blew away offerings from other personal computer manufacturers. In fact, it was only recently, with AGP systems, that modern PCs could even match the first Amiga (the A1000) in terms of graphics sync/performance."

    Sounds like you're an Amiga fanboy. Care to back up your "Assertions" with real numbers?

    ---"The new generation of Amigas will be running on PPC-compatible hardware. (Even older Amgias can get extension boards with PPC chips on them, though), and will truly rock. It's been a while since we've seen a truly good mixture of hardware and software, working together well to build the ultimate platform. That was... hmm - the late 80s and early 90s. The Amiga. The x86 hardware has (and still does) prohibit the PC from reaching this level,"

    Care to mention examples? Perfreablly comparing to the Amiga (the old ones)

    "and MacOS (up until MacOS X) has been a complete toy operating system."

    Agreed.

    "Just when PCs and Macs are starting to catch up with the original Amiga, the new Amiga is getting ready to be unleashed."

    I'll believe it when I can use it somewhere. I've heard about the "Amiga 1" ever since '98 from usenet. Unless you're talking to the developers, I see this as much fud as the Troll "BSD is dying".

  12. That isn't true. by autopr0n · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ever heard of a company called Compaq?

    All you have to do is write a work-alike rom that does the same things as the apple one. And since this is mostly being done for the hell of it, and you arn't limited by hardware you can make it as big and slow as you'd like.

    You can also patch diffrent versions of the OS to run without the ROM if you want to. Or you can use a combination of the two methods (for example, taking out any verification code in the OS to make sure it's running with a genuine apple ROM)

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:That isn't true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Compaq could clone the PC because they could call up Microsoft and licence the operating system.

      Certainly it's technically possible to clone a Macintosh, but you couldn't make a business selling the things without a OEM licence from Apple.

  13. Did you even click the link? by phriedom · · Score: 2, Funny

    Oh you did? You looked at the Mac On Linux site and this:
    "What Is Mac On Linux? Mac-on-Linux lets you run MacOS under Linux/ppc. MOL runs natively on the processor, i.e. it is very fast. Unlike most mac emulators, MOL can run MacOS 8.6 and later WITHOUT A ROM IMAGE

    I didn't add the emphasis, by the way. So you read that and decided it is all a big fat lie. I wish I was smart like you and knew everything about everything.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  14. Heh. by autopr0n · · Score: 2

    It would be funny if it wasn't for the fact that there are really people like this out there.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Heh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "out" there? i thought they were all incarcerated in those places... oh what are they called... mental institutions?

    2. Re:Heh. by BitGeek · · Score: 2


      What's really sad is I haven't given up on slasdot yet. Really should go just read the headlines and stop reading the articles-- to many bigoted idiots such as yourself.

      You assume that "slashdot" means "geeks" and "geeks" mean "higher than average intelligence" but really the Linux community seems to really be AOL type people who are too cheap to pay for software--- rather than geeks who actually *write* software.

      But slashdot makes no distinction.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
  15. Guys by Sleeper · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have huge respect for Amiga. But I have to tell that I've been hearing about Amiga comming back many times in the past five or so years (including here). And I have yet to see this actually happenning.

    --
    - Back off man. I am a scientist
    1. Re:Guys by Kamel+Jockey · · Score: 3, Funny

      And I have yet to see this actually happenning.

      It just needs to be predicted on The Simpsons! Remember the episode in which Bart sold his soul to Milhouse, who then sold it to Comic Book Guy in exchange for Alf pogs? That was a few years back, and of course Milhouse told Bart (about Alf) "He's coming back, you know!" And now he is back! So write to Fox, et al. and have them feature this, we'll have a tangible product in no time!

      --
      In case of fire, do not use elevator. Use water!
    2. Re:Guys by Seehund · · Score: 1

      "Amiga" (the hardware platform) is NOT coming back, contrary to what this very badly researched article says.

      Amiga Inc. is a software-only company these days and AmigaOS4 will run on PPC hardware by third parties, like this TeronCX-based POP board, a.k.a. "AmigaOne G3SE". The "AmigaOne" name is merely a trademark which one distributor, Eyetech, has licensed from Amiga Inc.

      Read more here.

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  16. Better design by Sheetrock · · Score: 1
    Sounds like you're an Amiga fanboy. Care to back up your "Assertions" with real numbers?

    The Amiga motherboard circuitry was designed with a bit more logic (pun intended) than our PC motherboards. Until AGP, the PC graphics hardware had more layers of abstraction to pass through because of the distance from the bus. I don't have hard numbers, but I'll bet this is what he's referring to; they got rid of a lot of cruft when we went AGP.

    As far as hardware goes, we're still maintaining backwards compatibility with the 16-bit days (80286). The Amiga is cut loose from that type of restriction because they can use emulation and still achieve a closer compatibility mesh than we can with flipping between our 16-bit and 32-bit registers.

    Basically, we're cranking up raw speed in our components, but they're designing for efficiency, after which they can throw money into faster components and end up well ahead of the game. If you've followed the Amiga demoscene, I'm surprised you didn't pick up on this.

    --

    Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
    -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




    1. Re:Better design by OneFix · · Score: 5, Informative

      The great thing about the Amiga was that the performance of the system didn't rely solely on the CPU + MEM combo.

      My 14MHz A-1200 still seems more responsive than even some high end wintel boxen. Now, I know the OS is partly to thank forthis, but the problem with modern wintel hardware is that everything is being designed to run off of the CPU...Softmodems, integrated video, sound, and even integrated IDE interfaces use the CPU and System Memory.

      The Classic Amiga wasted as little CPU time on non-mathematical functions as possible. Which seems to be the exact opposite directon the wintel platform is going.

    2. Re:Better design by mgv · · Score: 2

      My 14MHz A-1200 still seems more responsive than even some high end wintel boxen.

      Yes, I have to agree. My amiga was as fast as any system made yet in terms of the windowing. It never slowed up, never ground down. Given that it did what it did as fast as it did it, I can't see how any OS can be faster in terms of user interaction than it was.

      Of course, I don't think it would decompress MP3's on the fly.

      Say what you like (I'd love to see them back, but if BeOS didn't fly, cant see how AmigaOS will) about it being a piece of history - it was a good piece of history.

      but the problem with modern wintel hardware is that everything is being designed to run off of the CPU...Softmodems, integrated video, sound, and even integrated IDE interfaces use the CPU and System Memory

      Yes, its a fault and a feature. A CPU is so flexible its cheaper to make one fast one and spread it around than 50+ hardware widgets. Having said that, more things should be on the motherboard these days - like soundcards, modems, and some general logic unit to decompress MP3's and DVD's.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    3. Re:Better design by OneFix · · Score: 2

      Of course, I don't think it would decompress MP3's on the fly.

      Oooh, how wrong you are on this one :)

      There's a good CLI-based MP3 player for the Amiga called MPEGA. I think I had to combine to MONO to play back at 44/48Khz, but there is even a neat little "hack" for the Amiga called 14-bit dynamic sound. There are a couple of methods, but it gives the Amiga essentially 16-bit quality stereo sound by combining the 4 stereo channels into 2 :) This happened a while after the death of C=, so it's certainly an excusable offence :)

      more things should be on the motherboard these days

      Agreed, but none of them should be "stealing" memory or clock cycles from the system :)

    4. Re:Better design by io333 · · Score: 1

      My 7 MHz A1000 + 4megs +80Meg Hard Drive seems more responsive than my current 1gig duron + 256megs + 60gig 7200rpm. Why? Heck, I'm not really sure. Something about lots of functions being done in specialized hardware and ram, that PCs, even to this day need to rely on processor and regular ram to do? Or something like that...

      Unfortunately when the platform died, so did most software development. Also, when it comes down actually crunching gazillions of numbers, obviously a 7Mhz processor isn't going to touch my Duron. But as far as having wild and fun graphics stuff happen on the screen, loaded off of the boot sector of a 800 Meg floppy disk in about half a second -- no PC can touch that.

      Commodore (the company that took over the Amiga, and then proceeded to do everything they could to kill it -- and succeeded), was like the primitive prototype of Worldcom style management. For those too young to remember, Commodore had a string of CEOs and management teams -- a new set every 6 months or so, who proceeded to rape the company for as much as they could get away with before going to jail; then they would turn it over to the next team that would do the identical thing, until there was nothing left except scraps for the creditors to pick over at bankruptcy proceedings.. Jerks.

      Of note though, I've noticed that the same types of folks that embraced the Amiga way back when, seem to be embracing Linux today. I'm not sure what that means.

    5. Re:Better design by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 2

      The hack for the original Amiga to create higher fidelity stereo playback uses the 8 bit sound samples and 6 bit volume in conjunction with each other to simulate "14 bit" sound. It's not truely that high quality, but it does sound much better than simply 8 bit.

      It is true that it does cut you down to just 2 channels, though. Left and Right. For playing back sound samples, that's all you need. For playing back anything else, such as MODs or OctaMEDs, it doesn't help you in the least bit -- but ...

      I've actually used the hi-fi sound hack, whatever it was called and I was very impressed. I don't think it was exactly practical, but it did allow me to listen to 16 bit WAV files which was all I really needed to do at the time anyway.

      Oh, and it ran fine on all three of my Amigas without any modification. An A2000, an A1200, and an A4000.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    6. Re:Better design by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      until AGP?? IIRC, AGP landed in '96 - SIX FUCKING YEARS AGO. Do Amigans just studiously ignore the real world or is there some kind of method to their madness? Face it, Commodore has GONE and they took the Amiga with them. The Amiga brand can be re-sold and re-sold until the end of time but it's NEVER coming back. It was developed by a (then) solid computer manufacturer, and it can't ever live again ourside that environment. Move on, please. This is just nostalgia.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:Better design by mindstrm · · Score: 2

      I think maybe AmigaOS is an RTOS, so you don't end up with messages stuck in queues and such, waiting for things to happen after you asked them to? Not sure.

      An RTOS is not faster; average kernel latency is actually higher, but it's entirely predictable.. so user interfaces can be designed to be have precisely how you want them to.

      I agree.. an old amiga still feels really responsive. It's amazing.

    8. Re:Better design by Explo · · Score: 2

      Yes, I have to agree. My amiga was as fast as any system made yet in terms of the windowing. It never slowed up, never ground down. Given that it did what it did as fast as it did it, I can't see how any OS can be faster in terms of user interaction than it was.

      Well, I didn't have any problems causing a truly bad slowdowns with for example running DeliTracker and using pseudo-14 - bit playback for 16/32 - channel modules with some back-then-neat visualising genie running. That was on A4000 with 68040/25 MHz...(which I still have and even occasionally use) And of course a workbench with eg. 64 colors using AGA was a very easy way to cause major GUI slowdown. It's not a bad machine for its age, but even a lightweight OS can't 100% prevent slowdowns if the running tasks are heavyweight for the hardware.

      --
      Everyone who makes generalizations should be shot.
    9. Re:Better design by OneFix · · Score: 2

      Of note though, I've noticed that the same types of folks that embraced the Amiga way back when, seem to be embracing Linux today. I'm not sure what that means.

      I think it's fairly simple. Most Amiga users don't see M$ as a good choice of OS (for whatever reasons ... evil, slow, poorly written, etc). In the mid 90's, after C= died (when alot of Amiga ppl left), there was only 1 popular alternative ... MacOS.

      Which meant buying a Mac and remaining tied to another proprietary hardware platform ... and personally, MacOS has never seemed quite as powerful as AmigaOS. There's also the CLI (based on UNIX)...until recently, MacOS didn't have a command line and still doesn't come standard with one.

      Also, alot of Amiga users already owned Macs for whatever reasons. And, quite a few also owned a PeeCee box as well. I think Linux was a choice because it was in the right place at the right time. X86 boxen were cheap (Macs are anything but), most Amiga users were already well versed in the basics of software development, Linux was not only good, but it was also cheap. Which was Jay Miner's origonal vision for the Amiga anyhow...

    10. Re:Better design by gudin · · Score: 1

      >>MacOS didn't have a command line and still doesn't come standard with one.

      er....what? "Doesn't come standard with one?"

      Yes, every mac "comes standard with on." No, you don't have to use it (nor did you have to use the CLI). It's simply an app in the utilities subfolder of the Applications folder. Oh yeah, and unlike the Unix-like CLI, the mac terminal IS bsd unix.
      Where do you get this stuff?

      >> X86 boxen were cheap (Macs are anything but)

      I dunno, you can get a g4 mac with 17 inch monitor for under $1100. That's the same price as an A500 + 14inch monitor in 1989 dollars. It always amazes me that people keep spouting this stuff. Yeah, yeah...you can build your own PC for a few hundred less, but you could never do that with the Amiga.

      The problem is (and I expect some of the same will be true for Linux on the desktop) the people who had them were much like the build your own crowd...they're also the ones who didn't buy much software. They had fun tinkering, but not buying software will prevent much of a consumer software base, and eventually kill the likelihood of the thing taking off in the consumer space, and did in the amiga's case.

      With the mac, the computer is not something to tinker with, it is something to use. You could do some tinkering, but those with professions bought it to make money using it, not to tinker. With OS X, you can tinker more, if you'd like. All the advantages on Linux, with the polished GUI and software of the mac.

    11. Re:Better design by OneFix · · Score: 2

      Yes, every mac "comes standard with on." No, you don't have to use it (nor did you have to use the CLI). It's simply an app in the utilities subfolder of the Applications folder. Oh yeah, and unlike the Unix-like CLI, the mac terminal IS bsd unix.
      Where do you get this stuff?


      I wasn't aware that OS X was being distributed with a Shell...I was told that it must be installed seprately...anyhow, OS X as you said is BSD. And the fact that the Amiga was "unix like" rather than UNIX didn't hurt it for all of those Amiga users.


      I dunno, you can get a g4 mac with 17 inch monitor for under $1100. That's the same price as an A500 + 14inch monitor in 1989 dollars. It always amazes me that people keep spouting this stuff. Yeah, yeah...you can build your own PC for a few hundred less, but you could never do that with the Amiga.


      Lets not compare it with the A500, compare it with an A1200. The A1200-HD could be had for well under the origonal price of the A500, and came with a harddrive. I think I bought my A1200-HD for $599 in '92, and you can't compare the price of a monitor (monitors get cheaper as time goes by). Compare it to what was available at the time...

      And the monitor issue is interesting, as I belive that most Amiga monitors could be converted to a PC monitor using nothing but a $20 cable.

      I think the truth of the matter is alot of the "last" Amiga users wanted to escape the propreitary hardware thing because they were looking at a proprietary platform with no real support. And lets not forget that M$ has backed Apple as well (which for some would be just as bad as going to Windoze)...

    12. Re:Better design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And WHAT THE FUCK has happened in six years?

      Nothing much, if you think about it.

    13. Re:Better design by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      No, it's not. I've done a bit of Amiga programming and you have to deal with queues all the time; not just in the OS, but also in the copper chip (although there the queues tend to be pretty short :)

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    14. Re:Better design by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >Of note though, I've noticed that the same types of folks that
      >embraced the Amiga way back when, seem to be embracing Linux today.
      >I'm not sure what that means.
      >
      WRONG. Most Linux users have NOTHING in common with Amiga Assholes like yourself. In fact many former Amiga users like myself left the Amiga behind because of shitheads like you. We got sick and tired of the rumor-mongering and outright lies that came out of the mouths and keyboards of people like you. We got fed up with the phony product annoucements idiots like you kept releasing in the Amiga newsgroups. I don't see any of this kind of crap going on within the Linux userbase and I doubt I ever will. Do us ALL a favor and crawl back under the rock you crawled out from under. Amiga users like you are nothing but pure poison. You idiots wrecked the Amiga and when you fled like the bunch of rats that you are to BE, you killed pretty doomed that platform as well.

    15. Re:Better design by gudin · · Score: 1

      >> I wasn't aware that OS X was being distributed with a Shell...I was told that it must be installed seprately...anyhow, OS X as you said is BSD. And the fact that the Amiga was "unix like" rather than UNIX didn't hurt it for all of those Amiga users.

      Yes. It is. It even comes with emacs and a bunch of other unix tools from bsd and elsewhere. Standard.

      It also comes with the complete developers tools including the ide, cocoa, java 2 built into the os and java developers tools, as well as the usual support for C, C++, Objective-C and others. THOSE need to be installed if you want them (the cd comes with every mac, and every os x retail copy). I wish CBM did that back in the day.

      >> Lets not compare it with the A500, compare it with an A1200. The A1200-HD could be had for well under the origonal price of the A500, and came with a harddrive. I think I bought my A1200-HD for $599 in '92, and you can't compare the price of a monitor (monitors get cheaper as time goes by). Compare it to what was available at the time...

      Well... The A500 was also $599. in both cases, WITH a monitor, it would be around what the 17inch g4 is now.... in current dollars. I also didn't mention hard drives. Obviously the g4 mac comes with one as well!!! My point is that a complete set up, is about $1100, whether it was an A500 in 1989, an A1200 in 1992, or the g4 eMac today.

  17. Re:the ROM's aren't hardware anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IIRC Mac OS 8 was the first rev to not require hardware ROMS anymore. they do it in software instead. I just looked in my Classic system folder and see a 3MB file titled Mac OS ROM. So it is quite possible they have got OS 9 running on a non Apple rig. Another thing that sticks out in my memory is that someone had OS 8(because of the software ROMS) running on a CHRP compliant computer but since that endevour ate sh*te before it even got established. Apple never had to worry about that kind of competition.

  18. Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here you can see some screenshots of Debian, Mozilla 1.0 and OpenOffice 1.0 running on the AmigaOne. If you would like to support the AmigaOne/AmigaOS4 then you should read Bill McEwen latest exec update.

    1. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by ObviousGuy · · Score: 2

      That's great and all (notice that timothy posted your link in the story writeup), but what about pictures of the hardware? Or of an actual amiga OS running something that we'd not normally see in our "oh so lacking" mainstream OSes.

      Sometimes I think that the Amigo is an absurd liberal myth.

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    2. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 1

      > but what about pictures of the hardware?

      You can find some pictures of the actual AmigaOneG3-SE hardware here. An upgrade option to AmigaOne-XE board will be avaiable through AmigaOne dealers.

      The first boards come with modem, AC97 sound, modem (via an AMR riser card), 10/100 ethernet, soldered 600 Mhz G3 (XE version will have a socket) and AmigaOS4.

      Some pictures of an earlier prototype running TurboLinux can be found here.

    3. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hardware pictures are avaiable here
      (pictures of a Amiga One board in an expensive Naya atx case)

      Some more hardware pics on a dutch page and finally some screenshots of os4
      and Hd toolbox

      /Weasel

    4. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 3, Informative

      A special note to the people viewing the screenshots. These early AmigaOS4 screenshots are only meant to demonstrate some features of the OS. These are not meant to demonstrate the final look of AmigaOS4. Things like the new fonts system, new GUI art by Matt Chaput and loads of other stuff aren't being shown in those screenshots yet.

      The basic idea behind the GUI screenshots is to demonstrate that almost everything of the GUI can be modified according to the taste of the user. The HD Prep Util is mainly meant to show its new features.

      BTW a PPC native version of the Amiga browser IBrowse should come with AmigaOS4. And a new PPC native version of MUI should become available as well.

    5. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

      That Dutch case is exactly the kind of thing I'm looking for in a case (though the plexiglass one isn't anything to shake a stick at). Where can I get it?

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    6. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The case came from compcity.nl

      direct link to case specs

      /Weasel

    7. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ick! this is really ugly. this is Linix? thank Steve i'm not a geek.
      e

    8. Re:Screenshots of Debian running on AmigaOne by Seehund · · Score: 1

      > If you would like to support the AmigaOne/AmigaOS4 then you should read Bill McEwen latest exec update [amiga.com].

      Are you an Amiga Inc. employee? That ridiculous pre-order^W lottery^W T-shirt sale^W market research^W^W club membership scheme has nothing to do with supporting AmigaOS or any hardware. That money doesn't go to Hyperion who are developing AmigaOS and it doesn't go to Eyetech who are distributing these motherboards.

      If you want to support those projects, send 50 bucks to Hyperion, Eyetech or Mai instead. Then you're at least funding a product.

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  19. Re:Throw out the good, replace it with the bad by B3ryllium · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    While he was in Chinatown, some bum rolled him and left him unconscious ... when he woke up, he was dazed and confused.

    For six months, he thought he was CowboyNeal. Hasn't been laid since.

  20. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by CountBrass · · Score: 1

    I think you're living in a dream world. The best hardware and software, even when combined, don't always win, and even when they do they generally don't do so because they were the best. I would have thought betamax, os/2 and linux would have told you that. Personally I've always considered Apple to be a far worse company than Bill's - they're just nowhere near as competent from a business pov.

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
  21. Yah come on by red5 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Seriously ObviousGuy, I'm intrigued what happens next.

    side note: for those who aren't in "the know" OG lives in Japan.

    So did you meat her? Was she cute? Aren't you married?

    --
    I know I'm going to hell, I'm just trying to get good seats.
  22. Not for long... by OneFix · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Don't get me wrong, this is kinda kewl and all, and assuming this isn't a fake (dunno why it would be) ... Why would anyone want to buy an AmigaOne just to run MacOS???

    Now, I realize that it is just another OS that will run on the hardware, but Apple has a much larger selection of hardware and then again, there is obviously going to be no support from either Amiga, Inc. or Apple. Both are proprietary hardware (how ever similar they may be) and will require support for things like new firmware, hardware, etc.

    I'm sure you can expect both companies to attempt to make this next to impossible (Amiga, Inc. wants to sell their OS as much as Apple wants to sell their hardware) ...

    So, does it really matter that this works for now? This is likely to become something like the PS2 Linux Distro...nice, but not very widely used...

    1. Re:Not for long... by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 2, Informative

      Most AmigaOne costumers/developers are mainly interested in AmigaOS4, for which a large development group is working full-time to ensure everything is as polished as possible when upon general consumer release.

      By having MacOS9 and several other OSes including Linux running on the AmigaOne now it offers people a much more wider choice of applications. It will take time to port applications like Mozilla or OpenOffice to AmigaOS4. By having Linux running on the AmigaOne now, makes the wait alot easier.

    2. Re:Not for long... by RevAaron · · Score: 2

      > Why would anyone want to buy an AmigaOne just > to run MacOS???

      Did you even read the story summary? :P

      The AmigaOne runs Linux. There is this prorgam called "Mac-On-Linux" that lets you run Mac OS from *within* Linux. Like VMware on WinDOS or Linux, it emulates/proxies some hardware devices, but does not need to emulate the CPU, so it runs at almost the same speed as if it were running as the real OS.

      That is, you're not just buying an AmigaOne to *just* run Mac OS. You're buying an AmigaOne to run Linux, Mac OS, and Amiga apps.

      Go back and read the summary and maybe even the article. Mac OS doesn't *replace* Linux or AmigaOS on the AmigaOne. Amiga Inc would have no more motive for making this not work than it would making it so you couldn't run AbiWord. Mac-On-Linux and AbiWord are both just applications that run on Linux.

      I believe it is against the EULA on Mac OS 9 to run it on non-Mac hardware. I'm not positive though, but I won't be surprised if/when Apple does try to stop this though. They may not care much as long as MOL can only run up to Mac OS 9 within it's cage, they are fading it out. As soon as Mac OS X is runnable via MOL on *non-Mac* hardware, you can trust that Apple will definately take an interest. Mac OS X is one of the most important reason for buying a Mac, and the best thing Apple has to brag about.

      Similarily, if one got Apple's Darwin running on the AmigaOne, which is open source, one could totally run Mac OS X on an AmigaOne. Drivers for the AmigaOne video and input devices would have to be written of course.

      That is, who the hell would want to run yet another crappy Linux distro that has built-in AmigaOS emulation when you have Mac OS X! :)

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
    3. Re:Not for long... by OneFix · · Score: 2

      But, the AmigaOne is desigend to run the New AmigaOS, not Linux...

      Linux is being used as the development OS for coding and hardware design (like the replacement firmware)...

      So, in the end, only developers should be running Linux on the AmigaOne, and I'm sure that ... as I said before ... Amiga, Inc. doesn't want the new Amiga hardware to become a "cheap Linux PPC box".

      Yes, there will definately be a Linux distro on whatever the new hardware ends up being ... but looking at it from the side of Amiga, Inc., they don't want someone running Linux/MacOS on their system any more than Netpliance wanted ppl running Linux on their systems.

      I was just pointing out that neither company wanted this to be happening.

    4. Re:Not for long... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, there is an effort to move OSI compatable applications to a non-OSI platform....Oh how nice....Did you tell them about the special DRM boot rom they will need to run AmigaOS4 +?

    5. Re:Not for long... by POds · · Score: 0

      Well, Amiga Inc dont have control over the AmigaOne's. Thats Eyetechs concern, and they can sell these boards to whoever they want.

      True the AmigaOne's have special dongal code, but this shouldnt effect the runnin of other OS's, infact, you can get the boards with out the dongal code!

      --


      Giving IE users a taste of their own medicine since 2005 - http://pods.-is-a-geek.net/
  23. Adding some facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    To begin with, the name Amiga was bought by Amino in the begining of year 2000, so no, Gateway don't own Amiga longer. I think Gateway owns the patents thought.

    The new AmigaOS4 is a port of the old ones for PPC, and porting is if I have got everything right mostly made by Hyperion(http://www.hyperion-entertainment.com/).

    The first AmigaOnes will have a G3@600MHz, but will probably ship with G4s later.

    Bplan (http://www.b-plan.gmbh.de/) makes their own Pegasos PPC motherboard which might at some stage run AmigaOS but to begin with with run Linux or MorphOS (http://www.morphos.de/). The Pegasos is a dual PPC motherboard and can use both G3 and G4.

    I always liked Amiga, I still do, and I will probably always do. But I really think it's to late and to slow progress, but who knows. One day...

    // Hagge, IRCnet

    1. Re:Adding some facts by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 1

      Yes, but Amiga Inc does not only own the names but also AmigaOS and related Amiga products. The includes licenses for usage of all Amiga patents and costed them (Amiga Inc employees under Gateway) around 5 million USD.

      Hyperion is leading the AmigaOS4 project and they have several coders working full-time on the project.

      If you would like to see what the PEGASOS is like them here's an interesting demonstration movie showing the hardware running AmigaOS3.x on top of MorphOS.

    2. Re:Adding some facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So does Gateway have some control over the Amiga then? Or are they just trying to milk the licenses?
      It was a sad day when I passed by the Amiga Headquarters by Gateway in N. Sioux City and found that it had closed up.

  24. More to come by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

    It's just a short story. :-)

    But they did tear down the Profecio billboard on the corner of Nishi-shinjuku and Shibuya-ku. This story may not be finished yet.

    I don't grab the tissues anymore because I've got about 50 packets sitting on my desk at work. I've just run out of places to put them.

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
    1. Re:More to come by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Could you also please explain why she was handing out tissues out on the street?

      Is it like a subtle hint for:

      a) Please stop dripping snot all over the place.
      b) Please feel free to masturbate thinking of me and wipe your cum on this piece of tissue.
      c) Please blow your nose on our corporate logo and check out our new products the next time you go shopping.

    2. Re:More to come by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1

      It's all three. Really.

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
  25. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by tunah · · Score: 2
    "and MacOS (up until MacOS X) has been a complete toy operating system."
    Agreed.

    Uh... by that definition, ditto win9x.

    --
    Free Java games for your phone: Tontie, Sokoban
  26. AmigaOne isn't a particular machine, it's a SPEC!! by cgadd · · Score: 3, Informative

    From the amiga website(www.amiga.com),

    "We completed the AmigaOne specification three months ago, and dubbed it the "Zico". It is a specification and not a product because Amiga is a software company, not a hardware manufacturer. The ability of the Amiga DE to host itself on multiple hardware and operating system platforms frees us from hardware dependency and gives our partners and our customers the freedom to chose the hardware that best suits their needs and tastes."

  27. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's hope they finally fix that friggin "GURU MEDITATION ERROR" that corrupted countless disks

  28. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no it's not.

    what you are observing are NOT signs of life from Amiga. Amiga is truly dead.

    Probably just some intestinal bacteria or swelling.

    http://www.so-to-speak-if-you-will.com/mariko/fi n. html

  29. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by OneFix · · Score: 2

    I looked all through the origonal poster's comment, and couldn't find anywhere that he implied the Amiga would "win".

    The Amiga community (as well as the Mac community) realized along time ago that the Wintel platform will be on the top of the heap for along time to come.

    But, that's not to say those "enlightened few" can't use the better hardware.

    You know there is still a place the Amiga has stayed on top...brodacast video...

  30. Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by matthew.thompson · · Score: 4, Informative

    I thought that the new Amiga hardware had been made CHRP compliant and that the development team had been looking to the Mac for inspiration.

    If I'm right then this story is no more than "Man runs an application of Yellow Dog Linux" - it's really no more exciting than me getting YDL running on my iBook.

    MOL developers themselves have been striving for Mac OS X support anyway - it's not as if they've started doing this just becausee the Amiga One hardware can run it.

    Also the 600Mhz G3 Amiga One board from a European vendor is 600(euros) with processor, no case, memory, video, sound, monitor, mouse, keyboard.

    A 600Mhz G3 iMac - the closest system - is around 1000. So Amiga One hardware is hardly cheap. I can pick a higher spec Intel/AMD motherboard and processor combo up for half thay price.

    --
    Matt Thompson - Actuality - Insert product here.
    1. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 1

      The board *will* come with an AC97 sound chip. And modem, 10/100 ethernet, 600 MHz CPU and not to forget AmigaOS4. This all will const around 550 USD.

      No very expensive considering that Apple is able to sell millions of board to cover their development costs. The more people buy AmigaOnes the cheaper the boards/AmigaOS4 will eventually be. It's ALWAYS a chicken and the egg situation. That won't stop many within the Amiga community though as they mainly care about running AmigaOS4.

      Also note that unlike with Apple systems you will be able to use ordinary (cheaper) PC graphics cards. So you don't need to buy a graphics card with a special MacOS ROM, although several such Mac cards are likely to get supported by AmigaOS as well.

    2. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by TWR · · Score: 2
      OK, Apple sells a 500MHz G3 iMac for $800 today. Sure, this is marginally more expensive than that $550 board you just mentioned, but that board is lacking:

      - a case

      -a monitor

      -RAM

      -Speakers

      -Mac OS X or Mac OS 9

      -CD-ROM

      -Hard Drive

      -Keyboard and Mouse

      It's not clear if it's missing an AGP video card, too, so I won't mention it.

      There's zero chance that you can get all of those things for less than the $250 difference in price. So, why would anyone in their right mind buy one of these boards to run Mac OS X?

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    3. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can use cheap PC graphics cards in Macs. I've got a reflashed Voodoo3 in my old G3. A lot of people have been reflashing NVidia's cards.

    4. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by Scott+Wood · · Score: 1
      Who said anything about running MacOS X on this? The article is about running Classic MacOS apps on Linux, and the parent post was about running AmigaOS 4. OS4 won't run on an iMac...

      Besides, even on a purely hardware level, comparing the iMac to the AmigaOneG3SE is silly. The iMac is a hyper-integrated computer, rather than an interoperable component. You can add your choice of video, SCSI, monitor, etc. to the AmigaOneG3SE. You can't do the same with the iMac. And considering the awful monitor that the old iMac comes with, that's quite a problem. Oh, and don't forget the extra 100 MHz on the Amiga board's CPU.

      In other words, if you're looking for the cheapest G3 system you can get your hands on, then an old iMac is probably more suitable than the AmigaOneG3SE. Well, no shit. That doesn't mean that the Amiga board is a horribly bad deal, any more than Apple's non-iMac desktop systems are.

    5. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by TWR · · Score: 2
      No one (outside of a very small, insular community) cares about AmigaOS 4. What advantage does it provide for me over a Mac? What programs run on it that you can't get anywhere else? What industries depend on its technologies?

      You have been able to run Classic Mac OS on Linux for years, so if this article is supposed to be celebrating that fact, it's kind of silly. If you want to run Linux on a PPC, just buy an Apple box. As I'm trying to point out, there is zero (and probably negative) price benefit from this Amiga board compared to an Apple. If the news is that someone is making a PPC-based motherboard besides Apple, um, OK, great. It'll be more expensive than a comparable Mac, less compatible with Apple operating systems, run an additional OS with zero application support, and be less supported than a Mac from Apple. Sounds like a dream.

      What we've got here is a product that exists for no good reason. The market is going to correct for that pretty quickly.

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

    6. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Amigas have always been mac clones. 68000 CPU, WIMP desktop, file drawers....

      but d00d, they did have r0X0ring 6r4fiX before anyone else.

    7. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by Seehund · · Score: 1

      > I thought that the new Amiga hardware had been
      > made CHRP compliant and that the development team
      > had been looking to the Mac for inspiration.

      First of all there is and will be no new Amiga hardware (the article headline is totally misleading), AmigaOS will as you say run on POP/CHRP hardware from third parties. This particular motherboard has nothing to do with AmigaOS or Amiga Inc. other than that its UK distributor has licensed the "AmigaOne" trademark from Amiga Inc. Its designers and manufacturers have most likely never heard of Amigas, Amiga Inc. or AmigaOS (the old Amiga market was never that big in south-east Asia).

      > If I'm right then this story is no more than
      > "Man runs an application of Yellow Dog Linux" -
      > it's really no more exciting than me getting
      > YDL running on my iBook.

      You're right.

      > Also the 600Mhz G3 Amiga One board from a
      > European vendor is 600(euros) with processor,
      > no case, memory, video, sound, monitor, mouse,
      > keyboard.

      The essentially identical TeronCX is "less than $300" without CPU.

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
    8. Re:Isn't the Amiga One more of a mac clone now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I can pick a higher spec Intel/AMD motherboard and processor combo up for half thay price."
      Congratulations on being the one-billionth person to say that!
      Daaah!

  31. Re:AmigaOne isn't a particular machine, it's a SPE by ObviousGuy · · Score: 1, Funny

    So Yellow Dog Linux running on an AmigoOne running an emulation of MacOS 9 is really an emulator running on an emulator running on an emulator?

    The speed must be astounding.

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
  32. Re:AmigaOne isn't a particular machine, it's a SPE by cgadd · · Score: 1

    errr, actually, the spec listed at Amiga.com isn't very up-to-date.

    Here's a manufacturer that is actually shipping boxes that meet the AmigaOne spec:

    http://www.eyetech.co.uk/amigaone/

  33. A machine from Eyetech, specs from Amiga. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the begining that was true, but that text is really old.

    Eyetech (http://www.eyetech.co.uk/amigaone/) makes the AmigaONE motherboard, not Amiga Inc.

    I don't think the AmigaONE from Eyetech actually follows those old specs longer.
    // Hagge

  34. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by josh+crawley · · Score: 2

    --- Uh... by that definition, ditto win9x.

    Correct also. What is the best OS for games? Windows. Games are just really interactive toys, nothing more.

  35. Re:USA - the real rogue state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The US current account deficit is running at a record $34billion. Foreign purchases of the huge US debt are falling rapidly.

    So, is this like a "USA is dying!!" post?

  36. Re:USA - the real rogue state by Juln · · Score: 1

    Yeah, haha, being troubled by abysmal sales, etc!!

    --
    Juln
  37. Urban Myth: VHS was inferior for consumers by joneshenry · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    That VHS was the technologically inferior choice that consumers were "tricked" into purchasing is simply an urban myth that has been exposed by those examining the role of pornography in encouraging growth and adoption of new media. VHS won because its length was more convenient for the renting of pornographic movies versus Betamax's initial targetting of time-shifting. VHS served a real need for people to be able to more conveniently view pornography in the privacy of their home.

    Open your mind and you'll see that the triumph of VHS was the triumph of freedom versus the corporate vision of Betamax, a decision the consumers wisely made. The consumers made the right decision.

    1. Re:Urban Myth: VHS was inferior for consumers by mumkin · · Score: 3, Funny
      VHS won because its length was more convenient for the renting of pornographic movies versus Betamax's initial targetting of time-shifting. VHS served a real need for people to be able to more conveniently view pornography in the privacy of their home.

      The point being that Betamax's 1 hour tape length (designed to record network broadcasts) wasn't long enough to contain the material that consumers wanted to rent - porn.

      Much of the article you link to makes sterling sense, but how many porn movies really need to be over an hour long? I would argue that Betamax might have proven quite the boon to the porn industry, by helping to focus their screenwriting and editing efforts toward producing films with tighter dialog and more efficient plot development. No, I think in this case the consumer lost :)

    2. Re:Urban Myth: VHS was inferior for consumers by Woggle · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, the version I heard said it came down to price. JVC was charging a small fee per tape produced, while Sony wanted you to pay much dinero up front for a license to use the Beta standard.

      Wogs

      --
      Wogs "Freedom's just another word for having nothing left to lose."
  38. Re:Hmm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    You mean you didn't notice until now? Good question. It probably has something to do with the fact that Europe is an overcrowded polluted shithole. OTOH it could have something to do with the antitrust authorities that beat their chests about cracking down on Microsoft and then wind up doing nothing; or it could be something else entirely.

  39. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Mekanix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh Pleeease. Wake up from your dreamworld.

    In fact, it was only recently, with AGP systems, that modern PCs could even match the first Amiga (the A1000) in terms of graphics sync/performance.

    Recently? Already at the time Commodore went belly up Amiga was starting to show its age. Doom was the game to show that Amigas "superior" chipsets wasn't so superior.

    Just when PCs and Macs are starting to catch up with the original Amiga, the new Amiga is getting ready to be unleashed.

    Christ, I dumped Amiga 4 years ago and since then I've been catching up to the rest of the world. The PC's and certainly Mac's surparsed Amiga years ago.

    Very timely, actually. Things could get interesting in the next few years.

    How so? There is absolutely nothing interesting about the new Amiga. The most advanced feature of the new OS is... *gasp* .... some sort of memory protection. How do you create a modern OS in less than a year? You don't, OS4 will mostly be a PPC-port of OS3.1 (H sits on 3.5/3.9).

    And what about software? There have hardly been released anything for the Amiga the last 8-10 years. And even less for all those PPC-addons.

    And then there is the HW... It'l be closed and crippled and "donglelised" as always (just as a Mac)... I'm sure the slashdot-crowd will be more interested in bplan's more open PPC-board.

    No, there is absolutely nothing interesting about the new Amiga.

  40. Ancient history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mike Bouma piped up with a link to a page featuring the same hardware, in this case running Debian, OpenOffice.org and Mozilla.

    Hard to know what's more archaic...Amiga, or Debian.

  41. Non-Apple "Macs" and other thoughts... by i1984 · · Score: 4, Informative
    I couldn't view the site since my browser rejects Yahoo's cookies.

    So without having read the article, I'll comment as best I can...

    The first thing that comes to mind is that this is not the first time an Apple unauthorized computer has natively run the Mac OS. I can think of a few other examples.

    In the early days of the Macintosh there were machines with Apple boards repackaged in to different form factors, but this was still arguably Apple hardware.

    Later, Outbound notebook computers came out that used their own board designs, but were based off scavenged Apple ROMs -- usually from compact Macs. They were nice machines in their day: they had trackbars (which are hard to explain unless you've actually seen one), fast processors, and good B/W screens. Of course, these were still sort of using Apple parts thanks to the ROMs.

    Around the time of Outbound's demise (BTW, Outbound's death boiled down to being priced out of the market by Apple's PowerBook line), an impressive effort was completed to reverse engineer the Mac's ROM from published APIs. The machine this ROM landed in was a Mac/PC hybrid that was theoretically untouchable by Apple's legal department. I don't know what ever happened to this thing, but the fact that it wouldn't run Pagemaker could well have doomed it -- even without help from Apple's lawyers!

    After that machine faded and vanished in to nothing, Apple licensed cloning. Around the same time we started seeing demos of the PReP and CHRP boards. These could have run the Mac OS, along with several other operating systems, but to my knowledge no Mac compatible boxes were ever released (If someone else knows of some, please post!).

    Now Apple's machines use open firmware in place of big ROMs, so any attempt to get the Mac OS running on other hardware might be simpler, but the OF could still be a tricky river for an intrepid cloner to navigate. I don't know much about OF myself, nor Apple's implementation and use of it on their machines, but if you would like to speculate on this subject please do!

    In regards to the motherboard in question, there are a few things to consider:

    a) To the extent the cost of equipment is dependent upon volume, this may not be a high enough volume product to make it as a "mass market" board.

    b) The advance here might be that you can run PowerPC Mac OS apps on non-Apple hardware, which (as Slashdot story pointed out) could be a convenient extra feature for a few users of this board. It is of course fairly common to emulate a 68K Mac. Aqua and the rest of OS X would be bigger advance, but that doesn't sound like an advance that has happened yet...

    c) To get OS X running, you may still have a decidedly different task (remember I didn't read the article; see above).

    d) Unless you use ROMs, etc., that were illegally copied, Apple Legal probably doesn't have much to say against this. They may be annoyed, but probably not scared...up until OS X and Aqua will run on it.

    e) This isn't a mass market solution for running OS 9: You still need to get one of these machines, get Linux up and running, get a Mac ROM, install the compatibility environment, and only then do you get to use OS 9. That's a pretty geeky sequence, but the geeks don't seem to be the ones who want to run OS 9! Of course, once Aqua hits this hardware...

    f) It sounds like this is a G3 board (note: I still haven't read the article). This will limit its appeal; a lot of folks might be looking for a G4 based machine so this might not be the ideal option for them. Of course, the G3 and G4 perform comparably per MHz in non-Altivec operations. OS X, however, on G3 machines seems rather pokey.

    In short, this is pretty cool but the advance to date doesn't by itself threaten Apple; loss of control of hardware that could run OS X's UI would threaten Apple. Also don't forget that there are Mac emulators for PCs and Apple hasn't successfully come down on them. And yes, I know that's different, they're only 68K emulators, and they can be slow, etc., but I still think this doesn't yet threaten Apple. For the time being it's simply another neat thing you can do with a neat 3rd party niche board. I'll keep an eye on developments.

    Finally, I would like to see commodity G4 based boards that could be coaxed to run OS X. That would be killer. Doubtless Apple would agree...

    1. Re:Non-Apple "Macs" and other thoughts... by i1984 · · Score: 1
      Here is a link to info on some of the old Mac clones:

      http://www.lowendmac.com/clones/index.shtml

      Enjoy.

    2. Re:Non-Apple "Macs" and other thoughts... by foo12 · · Score: 1

      they had trackbars (which are hard to explain unless you've actually seen one)

      Don't they just operate like a plotter head in reverse, tracking the coordinates XY?

    3. Re:Non-Apple "Macs" and other thoughts... by stripes · · Score: 2
      Apple licensed cloning. Around the same time we started seeing demos of the PReP and CHRP boards. These could have run the Mac OS, along with several other operating systems, but to my knowledge no Mac compatible boxes were ever released

      Quite a few actually.

      the OF could still be a tricky river for an intrepid cloner to navigate

      OpenFirmware is oddly enough an open standard. IEEE reference materals and all. ou cna even buy OF implmentations for serveral CPUs from several places...and given that it is mosly a big chunk o FORTH code, it isn't that hard to write, and is normally small. This is not a big problem.

      To the extent the cost of equipment is dependent upon volume, this may not be a high enough volume product to make it as a "mass market" board

      That's for sure. This Amiga MB is only about $200 cheaper from buying a CRT iMac with roughly the same specs, and that would come with a (funky) case, power supply, speakers, cables, memory, a hard drive, a CD-RW, a small but high quality monitor, and product support.

      them. Of course, the G3 and G4 perform comparably per MHz in non-Altivec operations

      Well that depends on the G3, and Apple isn't exactly picking G3 machines with the biggest cache and all now, while they are selecting at least some of their G4's with an eye towards speed.

      OS X, however, on G3 machines seems rather pokey.

      OS X tends to use AltiVec in way more places. Including any of the software rendering, which OS X currently does more of then OS9 because of alpha composing and the like (10.2 has been promised to use the 3D accel pipeline to speed up what you would think of as 2D ops...at least for some video cards). The end result is more OS X stuff is AltiVec stuff.

      Finally, I would like to see commodity G4 based boards that could be coaxed to run OS X.

      It is easy to get everything but the graphics to work (and maybe audio). For the video you basically need to use the exact same graphics card Apple does. That makes life painful. I think it also breaks the EULA (don't know if it is enforcable) where Apple only gives you the right to run (most of) their software on their hardware. Clearly if they were MS that would be unenforcable, but they aren't. With 5% or less of the market, they can do all the forced product bundling they want.

    4. Re:Non-Apple "Macs" and other thoughts... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you don't need a mac-rom anymore. You have two types of ROM these days for the mac. You have old-world rom wich is for all the old grey apples. And you have new-world rom. Almost all the colored mac's. The Rom-file is since macos 8.6 on the cd with you operating system. So all you have to do is copy the rom-file from the cd to get mac on linux running.
      If you don't believe it. Try to get macos 8.0 and backwards to install on a new colored mac. Will not work because you are missing a decent ROM. Also the new-world ROM is smaller in size (Kb).

      As for Mac-clones. There are some mac-clones like UMAX - Power computing - Motorola. But these weren't POP our CHRP machines but were modified 7200 boards, wich still needed a ROM.

      As for Mac on Linux it is not an emulator. It is more some sort of virtual machine. If you can play games on mac on linux. Never treid it.

    5. Re:Non-Apple "Macs" and other thoughts... by anarkhos · · Score: 1

      > d) Unless you use ROMs, etc., that were illegally copied, Apple Legal probably doesn't have much to say against this. They may be annoyed, but probably not scared...up until OS X and Aqua will run on it.

      Read the Mac OS 9 EULA. Apple doesn't allow MacOS to run on non-Apple licensed hardware.

      --
      >80 column hard wrapped e-mail is not a sign of intelligent
      >life
  42. Businessweek on Gassee and BeOS by joneshenry · · Score: 3, Interesting

    According to this article from long ago in Businessweek, BeOS would have been the foundation of the modern Apple OS had Gassee simply not wildly overplayed his hand. According to the article, Gassee's minimum asking price was rumored to be around a 200 million dollar stock deal. Considering that BeOS's assets were eventually sold for about 11 million, Gassee overvalued his property by about a factor of 20. Furthermore Gassee missed out on the opportunity to be Apple's savior instead of having the honor go to Jobs.

    1. Re:Businessweek on Gassee and BeOS by ObviousGuy · · Score: 2, Funny

      You're surprised that a guy whose name is Gassee would have a bloated ego?

      --
      I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
  43. Ahhh... reminds me of Shapeshifter by Little+Dave · · Score: 3, Funny

    This takes me back to when I was young and full of piss and vinegar. Had myself a distressingly modified A1200 in a tower case with more processing power and RAM than an Amiga was meant to hold - not to mention a big fat fan tied to the gfx card that somehow caused the case to vibrate like a washing machine. That was when computing was done by real men - I sustained numerous minor fleshwounds and a deep fear of hacksaws when I shoehorned that pesky motherboard into my tower case! I still maintain to this day that a computer isn't truely yours till you've bled on the motherboard and smelled the sweet sweet aroma of silicon and burning blood...

    One of the more attractive features of this painful experience, apart from the surge of testosterone, was that the bitch could run Shapeshifter, a software Mac emu that was better* than the real thing! I used to spend more time in SS than in AmigaOS, mostly to play with Civ 2, but also because of the joy that the "Eep!" sound effect brought to my traumatised mind. Ahhh.

    Happy days...

    * - by "better" I mean "slower, unless viewed through the eyes of an advocate, in which case I mean "faster".

    1. Re:Ahhh... reminds me of Shapeshifter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      You`re a genius and a purist! I couldnt agree more! Gaz.

    2. Re:Ahhh... reminds me of Shapeshifter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      With a graphics card, SS was more or less the same speed as an equivalent spec Mac.

      It was a neat feature to be able to pre-emptively multitask MacOS in an Amiga window or on a separate screen.

      Of course, without a gfx-card, it was sloooooooooow at screen refreshes...

  44. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

    Just like Alf!

    I don't care if I do get modded down, sometimes an alf/pog joke must be said!

    --
    Everything will be taken away from you.
  45. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by RevAaron · · Score: 2

    > But, that's not to say those "enlightened few"
    > can't use the better hardware.

    Indeed. It's surprising when you get that "but it's not as popular as such-and-such" even from the Slashdot community, especially those who spend way too much time and energy promoting Linux, which is still not as popular as that other big x86 OS. Oh well, better just abandon ship then, XP is better now... right? :P

    --

    Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
  46. Inverse pyramid scheme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also the 600Mhz G3 Amiga One board from a European vendor is 600(euros) with processor, no case, memory, video, sound, monitor, mouse, keyboard.

    C'mon man, have some balls. You've got friends, right? So if you can just get 2 of your friends to buy an Amiga, and they can each get two of their friends to get an Amiga and so on, eventually these boards will be cheaper than any other board on the market. So don't complain about price - just execute a solution to the problem. Lazy American.

    1. Re:Inverse pyramid scheme by matthew.thompson · · Score: 2

      Actually I'm british.

      And I used to use the Atari ST. As far as I am concerned what made the Amiga a great computer was it's custom hardware - this has been superceeded god knows how many times and so there's no point to have an Amiga computer.

      The AmigaOS is a different matter - but as far as I can tell from this it's just "Man runs MOL" not "Man runs Mac OS ontop of AmigaOS"

      M@t :o)

      --
      Matt Thompson - Actuality - Insert product here.
    2. Re:Inverse pyramid scheme by Lars+T. · · Score: 2

      Of course that would only make the Amiga cheaper for him, if he actually waited for all those thousands of friends of friends to buy their Amigas first. And how will he make them do it, if he doesn't do so first? "Hey, buy this here great Amiga!" - "How about you?" - "I'll wait till it gets cheaper."

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    3. Re:Inverse pyramid scheme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'm British, and I'm an ex-Amiga user, I still own a couple and I can tell you, what made it great was the OS.

      Pre-emptive multitasking on the desktop in 1985 *WAS* a big deal. It was still a big deal in 1990, and didn't make it to the PC til '95 and the Mac til, what, MacOS 8?

      The OS was wonderful for its time and I still miss some of the features today.

      The hardware was nice for games, video work, etc. and a lot of fun to program - I know, I did - but it wasn't what made the Amiga special.

      But perhaps you had to own one to truely understand the beauty of it...

      It had a tiny footprint, it was fast, it was efficient and most of all, it was responsive. And software "just worked" in an era when DOS software - games in particular - could be a nightmare to set up, and the Apple was still monochrome, single-tasking, and cost a small fortune.

      As for the ST, no disrespect, but TOS was awful. I can't say I used MultiTOS/MiNT enough to comment on their quality, tho' I did some some programming on a Falcon at one point. Nice hardware, shame about the lack of DSP ram... but I digress... ... ahh, I still remember the "why would I run more than one program at one? I can just use one program at a time..." comment from the DOS users....

  47. The point of the OLD Amiga by squaretorus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Surely the point of the old amiga was that it was graphically amazing for its time and it was available at supermarkets before you could get PCs in the high street?

    I had an ST and an Amiga - I got the ST first, so using the Amiga always felt a little unfaithful! But wow, what a machine.

    To have the same impact today I think you'd have to have something that made the iMac look ugly and blew away a hefty desktop PC for $300 - in a box - in the supermarket - next to the gamecube.

    1. Re:The point of the OLD Amiga by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd settle for a tweaked out Gamecube with BeOS on it..

      $300-400 with a smallish harddisk, 485Mhz PPC chip, dedicated sound/graphics hardware and an OS that can actually multitask properly.. I'd be SOOOOO there

    2. Re:The point of the OLD Amiga by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The new Amiga will use mainstream graphics chips like the Matrox Parhelia or ATi Radeon chips.

      At the time when the Amiga was released there were no good graphics solutions available. So Amiga could finally show the world what multimedia computing was like.

      Nowadays mainstream graphic chips are good enough. There are several big graphics companies all spending millions of dollars on Graphic chip development. So today it is best to use of the shelf components and concetrate on the multimedia OS.

      Do note however that many Amiga users have upgraded their machines with graphic boards and sound cards based on mainstream hardware chips. (There are even Zorro/PCI bridges available to allow usage of standard mainstream hardware) So actually this isn`t something entirely new.

    3. Re:The point of the OLD Amiga by stripes · · Score: 2
      To have the same impact today I think you'd have to have something that made the iMac look ugly and blew away a hefty desktop PC for $300

      Um....the Amiga never looked like an indrustrial design masterpiece. From the outside it looked a lot like the other computers of it's era. A more or less rectangler box, muted colors, and some floppy drive slots. Or at least the A1000 and A2000 didn't look special.

      What was special last time around was the hardware and the software. This time around the hardware can't be special, so it's the software or bust.

    4. Re:The point of the OLD Amiga by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      This time around the hardware can't be special

      If the hardware cant be special then why bother! You can't polish a turd! And writing a new OS for standard PC hardware can only go so far. The Hardware HAS to shine!

      But yes, we have to identify how to differentiate the Amiga from the PC - and I'm pretty sure that to have a mass appeal the Amiga should LOOK better than anything else on the market. Get that right, let it fit into the home, and you're winning from the kick off.

  48. Worry not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Roy and Elvis have obviously been very hard at work on this one. Let's just wait and see what else they have up their sleves! :-)

  49. Slow emulators and Open Source Paradox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So yellow dog linux can run Mac OS, its still Mac hardware--the PPC chip. Even if you do get it to run on x86, its still an emulator which means you might as well buy slightly slower Mac Hardware rather than taking a 50% or more performance hit.

    Have you ever seen Virtual PC for OS X? They dumped millions of dollars to get that running as good as it does and it still is SLOW.

    Apple is probably not going to worry about a few geeks with no resources to get this thing done. I mean, Mozilla took 6 years and tons of AOL money...this hasn't got a chance in hell.

  50. not a "decent" one? by rakslice · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are several 68k mac emulators for PC: softmac, fusion, basiliskII, vmac, etc...
    These all emulate the Mac hardware at a lower level than ARDI's Executor, (I'm not sure if you're making that distiction or not) and so they need a copy of the MacOS and a Mac rom image to operate. BasiliskII is notable because it's GPLed, Linux-compatible, and fairly full-featured.

    There are no PowerMac emulators for PC, however. Given this latest news about MOL running on fairly foreign (although still PPC) hardware, it must have a pretty complete architecture emulation. All that would be needed for a portable PowerMac emulation would be for a PPC emulator core to be tacked on and optimized a whole bunch. Although this would take some time, it doesn't seem terribly impossible.

  51. why would you want to do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The cost of an Amiga machine vs. the cost of a current Mac would be similar. The cost of a second hand Mac would be cheaper, and an older upgraded Mac could be cheaper still. Darwin and X and whatever window manager also run on Intel, free! So if it's cheap hardware, buy Intel (erk), if it's the MacOSX experience, buy a Mac, but why pay almost as much for an Amiga, and run MacOSX, a UNIX deritive, on Linux, a UNIX clone? (The ROM issue is a non-event. You would have to pay for a copy of MacOSX, or steal it)

  52. Something I've wondered about by Mr_Silver · · Score: 4, Interesting
    If running OSX on a wintel box suddenly became very easy (and ignoring licence issues), would Linux on the desktop suddenly look rather doomed?

    I've wondered about this and come to the conclusion that ignoring the sort of people that read slashdot and again I state for those people that didn't notice the first time ignoring the sort of people that read slashdot that you'd find that people would be more willing (and likely) to move to OSX because

    • Nice interface brought to you by the people that know how to do interface design properly
    • An excellent selection of software (iTunes, iPhoto etc. etc.)
    • Easy to use for the point-and-click users, no need to go hitting the command line, but power users can if they want
    • Office X. Enough said.
    • Stability

    (I'm definately not saying the Linux doesn't have some of the above, but the steeper learning curve and not as good interface wouldn't go in Linux's favour)

    Of course, we know it wont happen, there are far to many issues that would prevent it from happening. But, if OSX could run on Wintel boxes , would Linux ever see a look in if joe public and general corporations decide to leave Windows?

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:Something I've wondered about by David+Kennedy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I wish I was moderating this - I wonder the same.

      The reason that I wonder the same is that I, as a seasoned software developer and looong time Unix user, recently bought a Mac as my home platform. Everyone assumed I'd build a PC and slap Linux on there. I assumed the same until the 11th hour and then bought a Mac. It's pretty, easy to use, required me to learn nothing about the hardware (I'm a software person through and through) and yet I can run all my favourite apps and there's plenty of already ported Unix/Linux apps, and converting the rest is no more challenging than getting them to build on, say, an older HP or similar.

      I'd very much like to have been able to get my folks a Mac rather than their troublesome Windows box.

      Mac OS X on commodity priced hardware would be VERY attractive in the marketplace.

    2. Re:Something I've wondered about by joneshenry · · Score: 2

      Out of idle curiosity what Windows-oriented software can't your parents do without? Is it Intuit's QuickBooks? (There's a version sold for the Mac but it's a couple of generations behind the Windows versions?)

    3. Re:Something I've wondered about by trevry · · Score: 1

      Are nice interface and stability the two main points here?
      If they are then you should look under the hood of OSx, BSD be there. There's not that much difference in what's on a RH7.2/3 installation and an OSx.
      The reason why Macs have a great reputation for stability is that their hardware is standardised, there's no mucking around with strange devices. It's something that Wintel has been struggling with for years. If the OSx interface were to be ported to x86 I for one would buy it. And probably the associated apps. But if KDE or GNOME were to offer the same features with the same app support then I'd go for them first.
      OfficeX might be attractive, but so is OpenOffice and that's free leaving more money for the beer...
      Given the choice between beer and software i'd choose beer everyday of the week. Anyway the whole thing is a moot point as the stated and restated position of Jobs is that there will be NO OSx on x86 ever!!! Darwin's nice though.

      --
      sic transit biscuitus
    4. Re:Something I've wondered about by MatSimpsk · · Score: 1
      If running OSX on a wintel box suddenly became very easy (and ignoring licence issues), would Linux
      Surely if this were to happen, it'd be OS X that was doomed, not Linux? Apple is primarily a computer company and rely on hardware sales... which they'd likely lose if people could install OS X on wintel machines.
    5. Re:Something I've wondered about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is it runs nicely out of the box.
      No lib BS etc.

      The point is 99.9% of people don't give a rats ass about GNU yadda yadda, they just want to email a picture.

    6. Re:Something I've wondered about by rnd() · · Score: 3, Insightful
      You have an excellent point. Mac OSX represnets what Linux needs to become in order to become a true competetor to Windows on the desktop, and for precisely the reasons that you mention. Mandrake comes a long way, but lacks some of the apps that add sizzle.

      All of the cusomizability of Linux tends to diminish the ease of use for non-geek users.

      We'll get there at some point, but we're still a long way off.

      --

      Amazing magic tricks

    7. Re:Something I've wondered about by blakespot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If running OSX on a wintel box suddenly became very easy (and ignoring licence issues), would Linux on the desktop suddenly look rather doomed?

      As opposed to the "future's so bright I gotta wear shades" prospect that desktop Linux is sporting now???

      I was an Amiga user, and finally went PC when I realized I could use NeXSTEP on PC boxes, and I bought a high end 486 (at the time) to run it. Spent $4,500 on the machine. After 9 months I had to wipe NeXTSTEP and install Windows 3.1 as I needed the desktop apps. It was a sad day. I tried 4-5x over the next few years to run Linux exclusively (desktop use), but was forced to go back to Windows 95 becuase I simply needed the desktop apps Windows offered. I finally saw Jobs return to Apple and saw the plan for NeXTSTEP to merge with some MacOS pieces and become OS X. I bought a Mac, a Blue-and-White G3 400, in Jan '99. I jumped the gun a bit becuase OS X did not really get to rolling until March/April '01. But I had fun with the hardware while I waited (and noted OS 9's decent speed but terrible stability, etc.) Summer '01 I went out and purchased a dual processor G4 800 upon which to run OS X like a beast. I have never been happier with an OS.

      Do you know how much $$ (hardware, purchase of NeXTSTEP) and time (installing Linux 5x over the years, only to uninstall and reinstall Windows) I spent trying to get a UNIX solution on the desktop that worked? It became a hobby in and of itself, the quest for desktop UNIX. But the apps always kept me away.

      As I type this, I sit downstairs, away from my "machine room," using my new iBook 700. I am typing this on IE 5 (which now uses Apple's Quartz text smoothing for so-nice aa fonts) connected to the net via my AirPort base station (WiFi), I have Silverado on DVD playing in a small window, and have Photoshop 7 running in the background because I've been doing some color correction on some digicam images I've imported, via USB, into iPhoto, Apple's free photo management package. I could not be doing these things on the Linux platform. Nor any other UNIX platform. OS X has brought together the best desktop interface I have encountered, the most stable UNIX variant that I have encountered, mainstream application support that leaves the user wanting of nothing, and a company behind it all that has a clear and compelling vision and direction.

      So...would Linux be doomed on the desktop if OS X became available for the PC? Well, you'll have to make that call. It won't happen becuase Apple's main source of revenue is hardware sales and also they currently are able to hold up OS X to the crowds with the stability and ease that only comes from a company controlling both the hardware and the software. Having run NeXTSTEP both on that old PC back in the day (where motherboards / chipsets / CPU's come from one of many vendors) and on my NeXT machine, I can tell you that such dead solid stability comes only from having just that kind of control over both ends of the stick. But OS X is available for Macs--and looking at what one walks away with when they take the plunge into the current world that Apple has built, it seems that the appeal of "free" Linux and the ability to run on super-economy hardware becomes somewhat less mighty....

      Oh....and did I need a new laptop when I already have a DP G4 800 in-house? No. I simply am so enamored of OS X that I wanted to be able to take it with me whenever I like. I've had a few engrossing and satisfying relationships with OS's in the past (AmigaDOS in the 80's, etc.) but nothing like this. This is just...right.

      blakespot

      --
      -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
      iPod Hacks.com
    8. Re:Something I've wondered about by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The reason why Macs have a great reputation for stability is that their hardware is standardised, there's no mucking around with strange devices.
      Mostly false. Someone just published a story about taking a generic, two-year-old IDE hard drive out of a PC, dropping it into a generic IEEE 1394 case, and plugging it into two different PCs running flavors of windows, and into a Mac. Result: Mac found it, and offered to format it. The author had to dig and dig and dig and consult tech support to do the same thing on the PC. Can anyone find the article?

      It's something that Wintel has been struggling with for years.
      Yup.
    9. Re:Something I've wondered about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If running OSX on a wintel box suddenly became very easy (and ignoring licence issues), would Linux on the desktop suddenly look rather doomed?

      Yes.

    10. Re:Something I've wondered about by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 2

      . I am typing this on IE 5 (which now uses Apple's Quartz text smoothing for so-nice aa fonts) connected to the net via my AirPort base station (WiFi), I have Silverado on DVD playing in a small window, and have Photoshop 7 running in the background because I've been doing some color correction on some digicam images I've imported, via USB, into iPhoto, Apple's free photo management package. I could not be doing these things on the Linux platform. Nor any other UNIX platform. OS X has brought together the best desktop interface I have encountered, the most stable UNIX variant that I have encountered, mainstream application support that leaves the user wanting of nothing, and a company behind it all that has a clear and compelling vision and direction.

      As I type this reply on my Toshiba 200MMX laptop in Galeon 1.2.something or another (don't remember what fonts I am using -- but they are not to bad). I am sitting on the couch using some wireless lan card from CISCO that cost about 1/10 what an airport would (the hub is in the basement somewhere). I have "The Road Warrior" playing on the TV next to the couch. I am importing pictures from my cameras Compact Flash card connected to my PCMCIA slot and rotating the ones taken sideways using Gimp 1.something or another -- as soon as I am done transfering the pictures off the CF card -- I am going to delete them and copy over 256 Megs of MP3 files to play on my Nex II portable. (Software cost for this whole setup was $0)

      I read this article and I don't buy the "Linux is useless on the Desktop" crap. There is always alternatives -- the only caveot is to be careful when you buy your hardware.

      --
      (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
    11. Re:Something I've wondered about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Airport card is $100. Not that expensive.

    12. Re:Something I've wondered about by blakespot · · Score: 1

      As I type this reply on my Toshiba 200MMX laptop in Galeon 1.2.something or another (don't remember what fonts I am using -- but they are not to bad). I am sitting on the couch using some wireless lan card from CISCO that cost about 1/10 what an airport would (the hub is in the basement somewhere). I have "The Road Warrior" playing on the TV next to the couch. I am importing pictures from my cameras Compact Flash card connected to my PCMCIA slot and rotating the ones taken sideways using Gimp 1.something or another -- as soon as I am done transfering the pictures off the CF card -- I am going to delete them and copy over 256 Megs of MP3 files to play on my Nex II portable. (Software cost for this whole setup was $0)

      I read this article and I don't buy the "Linux is useless on the Desktop" crap. There is always alternatives -- the only caveot is to be careful when you buy your hardware.
      People who live in glass houses....yadayada


      I enjoy using Chimera sometimes (an OS X "Cocoa" browser based on the gecko engine, like Galeon), but sadly am often forced to use IE given certain sites' leanings towards IE as far as non-platform-independent page layouts. I would not like to lack IE as an option, at any rate. Also, you say your wireless card costs 1/10 what my AirPort card costs. I paid $100, you must've paid $10. Good buy. I do have an actual AirPort Base Station which cost me $300. I could've gone with one of many others, and almost went with the LinkSys, but on two wireless review sites, I found that the AirPort fared better as far as range than the LinkSys, and I assumed I may have problems with range with either and would be forced to place the base station on the 2nd floor, in plain view, rather than hidden away up on the 3rd floor computer room. The AirPort looks far more acceptible for an item in plain view. But, happily, the range is such that I am able to leave it up on the 3rd floor...but I've featured it a bit more prominently than I might were it less interesting looking an item. :-)

      And yea, I watch DVD's on my TV as well. But I can watcth them on my BSD UNIX based laptop and desktop, while you cannot, running Linux. I don't think that placing a laptop near a TV negates the advantage of OS X being able to play DVD's.... And as for MP3's, I hear you about liking to take MP3's on the road. I have a frequently changing 1000 songs on my iPod, and move MP3's to the unit at a rate of one album's worth of music in less than 10 seconds across FireWire. It's great stuff. (I like the iPod so much I run a website about it --> iPodHacks.com.)

      And it may be simple preference, but I find Photoshop 7 to be more conducive to my getting the results I'm looking for than Gimp. (But I do have Gimp, compiled under OS X, using a rootless X-Windows server I've got installed, in case I want to use it.) Your cost for the software was $0. I paid many hundred $$ for Photoshop 7, but I need the app. OS X came with my machine. It retails for $125 though. That's perhaps the best deal as far as "bang for your buck" in software that I've seen in 20 years of using computers.

      And I don't claim "Linux is useless on the desktop." I simply feel that in the face of the existence of OS X in this world, that Linux's viability on the desktop is much more in question. You saved $$ on the software -- but how much $$ is the time needed to cope with that desktop arrangement worth to you?

      blakespot

      --
      -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
      iPod Hacks.com
    13. Re:Something I've wondered about by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      I don't think it'd make much difference, because suddenly OSX aplications would be splintered into versions for different processors.It might not be as difficult for the average person to understand than compiling a program in Linux would be, but it'd still be enough for me to not be able to recomend it to people trying to get away from windows.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    14. Re:Something I've wondered about by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      You saved $$ on the software -- but how much $$ is the time needed to cope with that desktop arrangement worth to you?

      I'm getting very tired of that argument. Unless you're the kind of person that shouldn't be using Linux in the first place, it's not going to take much time to get things set up to be enjoyable.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    15. Re:Something I've wondered about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      I'd very much like to have been able to get my folks a Mac rather than their troublesome Windows box.

      Mac OS X on commodity priced hardware would be VERY attractive in the marketplace.

      Okay, I was with you for the first sentence, then you contradicted yourself in the second.

      Mac hardware isn't "non-troublesome" because of the software. It's because the software and hardware are integrated cleanly. Putting MacOS X on "commodity priced hardware" implies putting it on hardware Apple isn't involved in. How would this not cause "trouble"?

    16. Re:Something I've wondered about by The+Pi-Guy · · Score: 1

      EXACTLY THE SAME. So true - except I didn't actually get a mac. I built my PC instead, and I'm (close to) kicking myself. The iMacs are so inexpensive - I just want an iMac with no monitor, but a VGA output!

      --pi

    17. Re:Something I've wondered about by BitGeek · · Score: 2

      Unless you're the kind of person that shouldn't be using Linux in the first place

      In other words, the kind of people who care about desktop operating systems.

      As a Geek who has worked on advanced operating systems and spent a lot of time with Unix machines, it truly is the case that Linux isn't worth the time getting it all working. I get paid to get my software working on a server and I've certainly been using Unix long enough to be competent-- but still, the time differential is significant enough that OS X -- also being essentially free-- is a far better deal. And thats not accounting for the quality differential-- the desktop experience under OS X is just a LOT better.

      Plus you get more bang for your buck with Apple hardware.

      I applaud all the work to improve the usability of Linux on the Desktop, but poo-poohing the difficulty of the issue doesn't help it.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    18. Re:Something I've wondered about by blakespot · · Score: 1

      Well, I get paid to maintain a number of Solaris servers and Linux servers for my organization. So I don't feel I'd fall under the category of one who has no business attempting to run Linux on the desktop. It was lack of desktop apps that had my 5 attempts at running Linux as my main desktop OS at home failing over the years, not impatiance with the process. I was always hopeful that this time I would be there for good.

      Interestingly it was my last attempt at desktop Linux that put me off, really. I was not trying it at home, but had won a 3 month research grant from my employer at the time, CSC. The grant was to examine the viability of the LAMP (Linux + Apache + MySQL + PHP) application server platform. I needed to setup a workstation--not simply a remote server to attach to via FTP and Telnet, no, the server had to be my workstation as well. I spent so much time configuring the desktop to behave as I wanted that it was just frustrating. I know people generally aren't using Linux desktops in the workplace (mainly at home) but with this example it was easier to feel the "my time is worth money" frustration in twiddling with the config and maintenance of this OS as a desktop solution---because my time was my grant money, slipping away day by day.

      My point to all this is, again, not to say that Linux is useless on the desktop. Just that, with OS X out there, which promises so very much more ideal a user experience with no sacrifice in--nay, with more power to the user...why bother with Linux?

      blakespot

      --
      -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
      iPod Hacks.com
  53. Origami salami by Graymalkin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unfortunately I have to be in the "big whoop" crowd. This is not a terribly impressive feat. I can run MOL on my Powerbook. Terra Soft briQ systems could do the same thing. MOL doesn't require a ROM image in order to run MacOS 8.6 or later because the New World systems don't use the ROM to store the ToolBox anymore, it is a file in the system folder. All the ROM does anymore is tell the system where to find certain devices and stuff. MOL takes care of that as a virtual machine.

    MOL as a virtual machine is impressive in its own right. I use it a bit on my Powerbook when I'm booted into Linux because there isn't always an analog for a Mac program I want to use. It isn't always terribly fast but I can get stuff done with it if I'm a little patient. However an Amiga PPC board running MOL under YDL isn't exactly making me cream in my pants. It is a PPC board that runs Linux well enough and then runs MOL which abstracts MacOS from the hardware. If someone had managed to get MacOS running on the PPC board natively by hacking up their own ROM replacement I'd ooh and ahh. Suggesting the ability to run MacOS in a virtual machine is somehow a competitor to Apple's hold on the desktop PPC market is a bit of an immature statement.

    If OSX ever works directly on the hardware my ears will perk up. However it will only take a small tweak in the Cocoa framework to check for a Mac ROM. Lack of a ROM will keep the whole Cocoa environment from even working leaving you with the Darwin kernel working but none of the rest of what makes OSX unique not work.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  54. Non-stpry by shippo · · Score: 1

    This is just as significant as a post stating that System 7.0.1 will run on an iBook. I got that running at the moment, using the BasiliskII emulator running under XFree86 under MacOS X. It's still emulation/simulation, though.

  55. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Revolutionary as the Amiga systems were, I don't think that this new offering has that much of a chance.

    Apple's current high-quality/low-price hardware strategy will undercut the demand for this thing before it gets off of the ground. Add to that Apple's new NeXT-based OS, and the chances look even dimmer. As for native apps, I think Be's demise should show where this leads.

    The Amiga was killed by several factors. It was a giant leap forward, but after that it languished. Its image was tarnished by the fact that is was available from K-Mart and other discount stores. There were so many games available that the public didn't consider it a "real" business machine.

    I am also a little surprised that you consider the Macintosh OS so lowly. Compared to the other GUI's of the time, it was polished and well thought-out. True, multi-tasking didn't come until much later in the game, but it started the DTP revolution.

  56. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Recently? Already at the time Commodore went belly up Amiga was starting to show its age. Doom was the game to show that Amigas "superior" chipsets wasn't so superior."

    I can't believe how accurate and true this statement is. The shifting from planar format graphics, which made scrolling look great, to the now essential chunky in the games industry was definately the falling point. The ability to plot pixels individually with a colour reference was exactly what you needed when texture mapping became the big thing.

    "How do you create a modern OS in less than a year?"

    If a design is modular enough, components can be written within secure test harnesses. This allows larger groups of people to get more work done individually despite working on a group project. Don't discount how well a piece of software will work just through development time - This is where experience in programming really counts.

    "And what about software? There have hardly been released anything for the Amiga the last 8-10 years."

    It has always been true that software sells hardware. Without killer applications or a very secure niche market, the hardware vendors will not get enough money to continue development. Drivers are also going to be a problem. A lot of people are lazy and will go out and purchase any old modem or any old GF2 MX. I don't want to go and have to look for a *special* PCI/AGP card to work with the system but I also don't want generic drivers which make my hardware look and fell crap.

    If they could find a large sector of industry to sell components to then they may have a fighting chance. If a company requires a specific piece of software to a job, they will buy the hardware to run it, irrespective of cost and availability, the majority are only interested in support and uptime.

    I will buy one when they become available which may make my opinion bias. Nostalga drives sales. Bugger, bought some Lego Technic yesterday, drove 50 miles to go and get it to, first time in 8 years. Girlfriend was pleased, she wanted a new dining table! Can't wait to replace the front door with a new Amiga One.

    I am not an Anonymous Coward - I just don't have a login I can remember.

    Chris Allen.

  57. 9 fingers demo in the screen shots! by ripaway · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one here that remembers the 9 fingers demo? That was awesome when it came out! Hell, it still is considering what it did with the hardware available, mot 68000, and 3 custom chips, and 1 meg of ram. I downloaded the demo way back when on a Supra 2400 modem, wrote the image on 2 floppies. Put the two floppies in my A500 internal drive, and the other in my A1010 external drive, and booted it up. My jaw was literally on the floor during the whole demo. It looked like a music video on MTV. Granted, it wasn't really video, but it looked damn like it, with music! Ahhh, the nostalgia. Too bad my Nec 3D monitor died, otherwise, I'd hook up the old A500 to watch the demo...wonder if the floppies are still good. Guess its time to search the net for an emulator and the demo disc images.

    1. Re:9 fingers demo in the screen shots! by Mike+Bouma · · Score: 1

      Try WinUAE for Windows or UAE for Linux. And for demos Back2Roots is a good source.

  58. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by benjymous · · Score: 1

    Recently? Already at the time Commodore went belly up Amiga was starting to show its age. Doom was the game to show that Amigas "superior" chipsets wasn't so superior.

    No, Doom just showed that companies were beginning to not want their games to run on the Amiga, or be bothered to port them. It took less than a week from the Doom sourcecode being released for playable ports of Doom to be released on the Amiga. (Running on the native chipset - something that many had said was impossible) It took about a month for these to be nicely optimised and fast running

    --
    Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
  59. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i remember clearly how amiga lacked the
    chunky pixel modes (all amiga gfx were in planar. the software converted ate cpu power
    and the gfx ram (chip ram) was dead slow. so
    all texturemapped etc 3d-games were very slow
    (and yes, the chunky-copper mode looked ugly).

    gfx cards for tower amigas fixed this thing,
    but all the amiga gfx cards were something like
    one to two generations behind pc gfx cards.

    i never saw a fast version of doom on my 68030/50. it was always slow. for jesus' sake,
    let the amiga rest in peace.

  60. Re:AmigaOne isn't a particular machine, it's a SPE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That part of amiga.com is 100% obsoleted, incorrect and irrelevant. It really should've been deleted a LONG time ago. For crying out loud, it dates back to the days AInc thought that they could base AmigaOS on intent, and it would run on the Zico "specification" (LOL!).

    For "AmigaOne" information, look at Eyetech's and Mai's sites."

  61. comments from a former Amiga user by Ilgaz · · Score: 2, Informative

    Will keep it simple...

    I have both Amiga 1200 with 68020 cpu and a Powerbook Duo which has 68030 CPU running Mac OS 7.6.

    What I see is, MacOS 7.6 is really badly coded, can't multitask, essentially WASTES that CPU power.

    On the other hand, in Amiga 500 days, I *sure* remember we had a Mac emulator which has run Mac programs/OS 1.5 times FASTER than Mac itself (same days mac)

    So, thats why story is a pointless thing...

    If you never owned a Amiga or a Mac ,don't even reply, I know those kinds of stuff sounds unbeliavable...

  62. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Phaede0ut · · Score: 1

    For a time there was talk about a 32-bit PCI Amiga board that would plug into your favourite Intel Pentium or AMD Box, however, after reading the bit about Hitachi and their attempts to make a dual boot box, I can kind of see why this never came to pass... Really unfortunate, as this would've been super happening to have the higher bus speeds and a really decent math coprocessor (the Intel Chip). Used to be offered by Siamese Systems in the UK http://www.siamese.co.uk
    Miss my video toaster/flyer system, but such is life...

    Rather amazed that Amiga didn't get together with AMD after DEC went under (the Amiga running the DEC Alpha 433 at one computer show was absolutely unbelievable, think that it was also running the AGA chipset for video, but had gobbs o' RAM, too).

    Have to wonder if these newer PPC machines you're talking about are going to be running modified PPC Processors, much akin to the older offerings of the Amiga line up relative to the Motorola chips... Have any information on this and/or a release date?

    Who knows, maybe Apple might end up saving itself in such a dual boot system... Don't dig their current video editing suites...

    Will that be in PAL or NTSC?

    --
    SPQR
  63. MacOS has run on Amigas for a decade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MacOS has run on Amigas for a decade. During the past year or so, Amigans have been able to run PowerMac OSs and apps as well. (Mac emulators have existed since the 80's)

  64. Re:penis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cock!

  65. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Recently? Already at the time Commodore went belly up Amiga was starting to show its age. Doom was the game to show that Amigas "superior" chipsets wasn't so superior. This wasn't due to the Amiga chipset being inferior. The Amiga simply used a completely different method for storing graphics data which was much more suitable for 2D stuff. Even nowadays the old AGA chipset can do things in 2D which standard pc cards can't do. The disadvantage is that 3D games which use chunky graphics need some aditional Chucky 2 Planar conversion routines to run on the AGA chipset (the CD had a custom chip to do this). In the late 90's asm optimised asm chunky 2 planar conversion routines where written which allowed games like Doom to be very playable on an A1200 with 50mhz 68030 and quake on machines with a 68060 or ppc. How so? There is absolutely nothing interesting about the new Amiga. The most advanced feature of the new OS is... *gasp* .... some sort of memory protection. How do you create a modern OS in less than a year? You don't, OS4 will mostly be a PPC-port of OS3.1 (H sits on 3.5/3.9). There wil actually be 2 new Amiga (compatible) operating systems. OS4 which is indeed based on OS3.1 but with a completely rewritten kernel (exec), slightly updated GUI (ie more flexible/configurable), built in TCP-IP and USB support, it will no longer depend on the custom chipset, enhanced 3D,audio and video API's to support the latest graphics card from both ATI and Matrox. Future updates for OS4 will have a completely new GUI and printing system. Than there is MorphOS which has been in development for a number of years now. It is build around a completely new kenrel (the Quark) kernel and features and A-Box environment which will run a PPC native Amiga compatible OS with most of the features also found in OS4 (kinda like mac OSX). The Quarke kernel also allows usage of multiple G4 CPU's. And what about software? There have hardly been released anything for the Amiga the last 8-10 years. And even less for all those PPC-addons. Granted this is a really big point of concern. If the Amiga wants to survive it will need more support. Having said that I mainly use my Amiga for watching movies in divx/rm/asf/mpeg format, listen to mp3's, chat using irc/icq/yahoo/msn and play games like Shogo, HereticII, Quake2 (the leaked beta). For me this is enough so an AmigaONE/Pegasos that can do this better and faster will more then please me. And then there is the HW... It'l be closed and crippled and "donglelised" as always (just as a Mac)... I'm sure the slashdot-crowd will be more interested in bplan's [bplan-gmbh.de] more open PPC-board. I don't see how the AmigaONE is crippled. Maybe the surface mounted G3 on the AmigaONE-SE is a bad idea but the AmigaONE-XE will feature a CPU slot. The dongelising just seems to be a move to prevent OS4 from running on unlicenced hardware (ie mac's and unfortunately for now also the Pegasos) we can only hope that A Inc. will come to there sences and allow OS4 to be run on other hardware without the need for a licence.

  66. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 0

    I'm sure the slashdot-crowd will be more interested in bplan's [bplan-gmbh.de] more open PPC-board.

    Fuck me, it's a MorphOS troll who's jealous that no one outside the Amiga community even knows that it exists...

  67. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

    I'd love you to justify that claptrap. I WORK in "broadcast video" (we call it T E L E V I S I O N, by the way) and the Amiga - limited use that it had - has been long gone since at least 1995. I haven't seen one in a TV company since 1997 - and that one was sitting in a store cupboard full of defunct equipment. Avid made the Mac the dominant desktop computer in video post, SGi STILL rules the high end, and there are HUNDREDS of NT/2000 based systems covering every conceivable TV application as well. But no Amigas. Not anywhere.

    --
    That was classic intercourse!
  68. For anyone interested in buying an AmigaOne by Xugumad · · Score: 1

    Although the production boards aren't out yet, you can join the "I am Amiga" club for $50, which includes a $50 voucher against the cost of an AmigaOne or AmigaOS 4.0.

    Whether this is a good idea or not, I'm not going to comment on, beyond that I'm intending on buying one, but some people have expressed concerns about whether the production boards will ever be released. However the URL of the promotion is:

    http://www.amiga-anywhere.com/main.php?prod_id=41

    1. Re:For anyone interested in buying an AmigaOne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  69. Mac OS at great value by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back during the early Amiga days, Amiga produced a machine that ran circles around the Macintosh, and the Macintosh cost 3 times as much.

    If there still is such a difference of much greater value at a much lower price, I can't see how Apple is going to let this stand without frivolous lawsuits.

    1. Re:Mac OS at great value by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, for we all know of Apple's frivolous lawsuits against, um...

    2. Re:Mac OS at great value by mtec · · Score: 2, Interesting

      3 times better...
      Then why did Amiga fail?
      And can someone please tell me why this ghost still haunts?

      Really! I'm not being facetious. What is on the minds of the Amiga people besides fond memories? Please educate me (sincerely).

      --
      Cake or Death? Cake Please!
    3. Re:Mac OS at great value by mindstrm · · Score: 2

      Doubtful. The Amiga ran circles around everything in it's heyday.

      I do recall many Desktop-Publishing guys buying Atari-ST machines and using mac emulators, instead of purchasing macs, because it was actually faster than the mac, for less money (and more fun).

      I seem to recall the ST was like a half an amiga ;) Yet another cool computer to remember.

  70. And to see a current counter... by DaDigz · · Score: 0, Troll
    --
    Those who will sacrifice Freedom and Security will get Windows...
    1. Re:And to see a current counter... by DaDigz · · Score: 1

      Can you please tell me how the hell this is a troll? Geezuz, thought people might want to see the current counter and all. Some moderator needs to pull his head deeply from within his ass.

      --
      Those who will sacrifice Freedom and Security will get Windows...
  71. Re:USA - the real rogue state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Name one country that ratified Kyoto. Not signed, but actually ratified.

    I can name several.

    Japan and all EU countries, for instance.

    What authority does the UN have over Israel, a sovereign nation?

    Nation states and concepts like "sovereign nation" are practically gone with the globalised trade, communication and general cultural evolution. Good riddance. Nationalism has caused more suffering than religions and all political idealogues together and needs to be replaced with a world government and world justice.

    Stop living in the past. Nationalism should go into the wastebasket of the history where concepts like empires and world domination already are.

    I guess the fact that the Euro is still failing

    I'm not European, but I'd hardly call a currency that's nearly on parity with the US dollar a failure.

    You limp-wristed fuckers are easy to push around.

    Ah, so you admit that alleged Bush doctrine and even approve it?

    If you Europeans didn't let your governments take your guns, I might have some respect for you.

    "I've got a shotgun, now I'm really someone!"

    Grow up.

  72. Emulators faster than Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I *sure* remember we had a Mac emulator which has run Mac programs/OS 1.5 times FASTER than Mac itself (same days mac)"

    I know the mac emulator for the Atari ST ran somewhat faster than a Mac with the same CPU. This really does point out the problem Mac has: they really can't do hardware.

    If they licensed OS/X for clones, you'd have on the market clones that cost half as much as an Apple Mac, run faster, and have more features.

  73. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *AMIGA* gfx cards were old and slow...
    Nowadays we use PCI and soon AGP slots
    for our GFX cards... Yeap... The Amiga can
    use mainstream GFX cards *NOW*.

  74. Screenshots by DaDigz · · Score: 1
    --
    Those who will sacrifice Freedom and Security will get Windows...
    1. Re:Screenshots by mtec · · Score: 1

      Oh! That does it! Oh me, oh my! Gosh!
      I'm putting my beautiful Titanium Powerbook up on eBay right away! Ohhhh! look at their widgets and dock! Ohhhh! I'm switching now! I hope someone buys this silly old Ti!

      --
      Cake or Death? Cake Please!
    2. Re:Screenshots by DaDigz · · Score: 1

      I'll trade you an Amiga 2000 for it.. ;) But I'm keeping my quicksilver gigabit G4.. :)

      --
      Those who will sacrifice Freedom and Security will get Windows...
  75. It's not OS X though by lightPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Since it's running OS 9, why would apple really care? They're all about OS X now, so I don't see this as some grand victory.

    --
    http://www.somethingpositive.net Funny + bitter = comedy gold
  76. What your not being told about.... by 3seas · · Score: 2, Informative

    To be able to run AmigaOS4, if and when it comes out,
    you'll need to have installed a modified bios. This
    is to insure systems are certified ....bla bla
    bla.... by Amiga....

    Only those system Amiga approves of will be able to
    run AmigaOS4, for the Bois will only be available to
    Amiga approved OEMs.

    What it is in essence is a bios resident dongle.
    The reason for it is to reduce piracy of AmigaOS4.
    In a way you can view it as a form of DRM.

    I'm sure someone will come up with a way around it
    but it then becomes illegal and Amiga inc has been
    agressive on such matters even when it's not there
    Intellectual Property they are agressive about, but
    Amiga based software in general.

    This article is about how an Amiga Spec'd system can
    run what? A Mac Emulator? on top of Linux?

    Yet again, to be able to run AmigaOS4 it will need
    the modified Bios Dongle. The sort of thing I've
    come to call a "pissmark" like a dog marking it
    territory (Dog Released Marking).

    We all know how MS wants to place their DRM system
    on people and for those who don't know, Amiga was a
    participant at some recent show, in the MS booth.
    Amiga was listed as an MS partner.....

    I'd be real skeptical of Buying and AmigaOne system
    with this bios dongle.

    But for those who like the AmigaOS and would like to
    be able to use ...., there is an open source Amiga
    Clone Project that's under a license very similiar to
    the Mazollia License (OSI compatable) It's called
    AROS and can be found on Sourceforge and it's well
    past the halfway mark. Somehow I suspect it might also
    end up making a good smart userspace interface for the
    Hurd somewhere down the road, As Amiga made user
    accessible IPC standard (AREXX "ports") and the Hurd
    uses IPC alot.

    1. Re:What your not being told about.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do a google newsgroup for messages by the author "Timothy Rue" to discover what a nut this person is, I first ran into this nut in the Python newsgroups, he's beligerant and hostile, claiming to have been abducted by aliens who gave him a vision of the "Vic", a software project he's never finished.

      Unbelieveable.

    2. Re:What your not being told about.... by mtec · · Score: 1

      That'd be the mysterious Vic-20 project. I hear it's an all-in-one OS, computer and keyboard that can be attached to a tv!.

      --
      Cake or Death? Cake Please!
    3. Re:What your not being told about.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pet trolls, everyone should have one.

      They can be really easy to feed and
      usually responde to an Anonymous Cowardly name.

    4. Re:What your not being told about.... by Seehund · · Score: 1

      > Yet again, to be able to run AmigaOS4 it will need
      > the modified Bios Dongle. The sort of thing I've
      > come to call a "pissmark" like a dog marking it
      > territory (Dog Released Marking).

      True. For more info on the AmigaOS distribution policies and locking of third party hardware vendors' products by Amiga Inc, check out this site (with links, FAQs, users' and developers' comments and more). Please read this petition to Amiga Inc. and consider signing it! It's for the good of competition, pricing and development in the non-Apple PPC hardware market as well as of the future of AmigaOS.

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
    5. Re:What your not being told about.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you! Now I have hours of fun waiting for me! A true luminary.
      I'm amazed at the number of talented people the Amiga community has, but also at the quality of the nutcases, which blows all others away!

  77. Amiga! Brought to you by..... by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 0

    The same people who are bringing you Duke Nukem sequel!

    Oh the pain....why must we be taunted so?

  78. Did I just wake up in a parallel universe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In which the Emplant didn't exist?

    This was a card that let you emulate a Mac, at the same time as running Amiga software. It was pretty cool, you could slide the different computer's screens over each other.

    If you threw in a Bridgeboard, you could also run PC software at the same time, either on the Amiga's screen as well, or through a VGA card.

    12 years ago, folks.

  79. licensing? by pruss · · Score: 1

    All the Apple OS's I've installed other than 6.x and 7.5.3 have a click-through license that prohibits installation on anything other than an Apple computer. Strangely, 7.5.3 doesn't have such a prohibition, so it's a good thing to install on emulators. Does OS 9 have such a prohibition?

  80. Austin Powers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "This was a card that let you emulate a Mac....If you threw in a Bridgeboard you could also run PC software ...12 years ago, folks"

    Hey Austin Powers. While you were in the freezer tube for 12 years, a few changes happened in both the PC and Macintosh worlds.

    1. Re:Austin Powers by mtec · · Score: 1

      Yeah Baby! Yeah!

      --
      Cake or Death? Cake Please!
    2. Re:Austin Powers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! That was funny, but I prefer being compared to Mel Gibson in his freezer flick though, if you don't mind.

      My point was that this is not news, to me it's like digging up fossils from some subterranean city... I was running Amiga software, PC and Mac software at the same time 12 years ago.

      I'm bitter because being ahead of your time doesn't pay. You get ostracized for being different and then you become bitter when everyone else jumps on "my" bandwagon years later and THEY get the recognition and money...

      sigh...

  81. The OLD Amiga had many points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many a flamewar has begun because someone only saw one strength in the Amiga, to the exclusion of others. Some Amigans didn't give a rat's ass about how amazing the chipset was in the context of the 1980s. Amiga had a very elegant OS as well. So please be careful with statements about "the point of the old Amiga".

  82. Prohibition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does the install actually prohibit non-Mac installation? Or does it just tell you not to, and you can ignore it anyway?

  83. It's like this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OS 9 is dead. Apple could care less if it's being emulated somewhere. That said...

    OSX is simply too resource-intensive to run decently through an emulator.
    As it is, it's "slower than molasses in the winter time" on APPLE G3 hardware.
    Why the hell would someone want to run it through an emulator?!?
    Especially when you could just pick a used iMac on eBay for $150!
    This nothing but FUD, FUD, FUD!
    Apple losing sleep? Yeah right!

  84. You don't get it by christurkel · · Score: 1

    Go ahead, mod me down as a troll if you wish... You people don't get it. Apple is a hardware company, not a software company. That's why charge $129 for Mac OS updates instead of the hundreds M$ does. If Mac OS X were ever ported to intel harware, Apple would vanish. M$ would stop supporting the platform. No one is going to buy Mac OS for hundreds of $$ and not even be able to use Office 9which I hate but many people love). I love Apple; let's be realistic here.

    --

    CDE open sourced! https://sourceforge.net/projects/cdesktopenv/
    1. Re:You don't get it by mtec · · Score: 1

      Apple is a Hardware Company? Have you checked the offerings of late? Final Cut - DVD Studio Pro - All the music software (heh - and dropping the Windows support)- All the special effects and rendering stuff? etc. You are seeing a metamorph.. metamophis... a change.

      --
      Cake or Death? Cake Please!
  85. Off Topic: Where can I get an A4000 cheap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can find them for $800+, but I'd love to get a dead-stock A4000 for about $350-400. Anybody know of one?

    mametrk@hotmail.com

  86. Why did Amiga fail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bad management.

    1. Re:Why did Amiga fail? by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

      More than bad management, bad marketing as well. Also they had "Commodore" as a parent company and it gave the Amiga company a bad rep. Many thought that the Amiga was nothing but a new C64 or C128 with slow disk drives and nothing for it but a bunch of games.

      If Apple, IBM, HP, or one of the other companies that the Amiga company was offered to had bought it out, history would have unfolded differently.

      Plus the Amiga did not keep up with the Mac and PC systems out there. Once they started getting 3D and Accelorated video cards in the early 1990's, the Amiga lost its advantage. Apple had to move to the PPC chips to get more power to compete with the WINTEL systems as the 68000 series had lost steam.

      There also was a lack of developers and dealers for the Amiga after Commodore went belly up. Many thought that the Amiga was dead after that.

      --
      Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  87. Prices lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That's why charge $129 for Mac OS updates instead of the hundreds M$ does.

    Chombo: Win XP upgrade $104.

  88. Apple is a hardware company? HAHAHA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is a hardware company? No, their hardware is overpriced, slow, and rudimentary compared to the average Wintel box. The software is the real reason Mac users love the Mac. No hardware company that had its act together would have the design quirks and limitations of macs.

    But that is where they make their money.

  89. They could get interesting, but they won't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Things could get interesting, but they won't. No matter how much technical excellence they have, you still have a company that is being run like Montgomery Wards was for all those years until it died recently. This has not changed: all PR hype and press releases aside.

    Provided this is not vapor, the most they will be able to pull is sales 1/10th those of Apple's

  90. PPC PCI cards by figa · · Score: 1

    Has anyone ever tried getting one of the
    PCI G3/G4 upgrade cards to work on an x86
    motherboard? I'm talking about the Sonnet
    Crescendo cards, which are reasonably priced,
    and it seems like you could bypass the need for
    PPC hardware emulation if you could get an
    x86 bus to talk to it.

  91. The Age of the Airship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever read "Popular Science", especially over a long period of time?

    For many decades, they have an issue every couple of years that claims that the new Age of the Airship is upon us.

    This, and personal robots, and the helicopter that everyone is going to have that replaces cars.

    Sure, Amiga is coming back.

    Not like it was ever really "there". For a brief time in the early 1980s, it was the hotest buzzword. For a very brief time. Were the sales ever really strong at all?

  92. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Jay+Carlson · · Score: 2
    Apple's current high-quality/low-price hardware strategy

    Ah, this post must come from the alternate history where Apple's decisive leadership in PReP allows them to innovate and fill new niches, leaving MSI and ABit to worry about the low-quality/low-price volume market for MacOS hardware. Sony's Macs, following the high-quality/high-price strategy, still attract many users on brand name appeal, of course. AppleSoft's tiered OS licensing allows the Mac industry to ship low cost machines while making high margins on licenses to run on high-end hardware. (Taligent's OS has been delayed until 2H03, surprise.)

    And about this time, Dell is figuring out that its low-quality/high-price hardware strategy isn't quite working out, and Microsoft is thinking of buying them to get them an efficient supply chain.

    Seriously, I think what you mean is "high-quality/high-value". If you mean anything.

  93. Mac OS lowly indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I am also a little surprised that you consider the Macintosh OS so lowly. Compared to the other GUI's of the time, it was polished and well thought-out"

    Not really. It was crippled due to the lack of a command-line interface to do the things that are easier with a CLI than a GUI. The Amiga and the Atari ST did not have this crippling limitation to make them harder to use.

    Well thought out? The "dump in trash to eject media" option comes to mind. That should mean formatting, if anything. Atari ST and Amiga avoided this GUI blunder by having media ejection buttons on the disk drives.

    "True, multi-tasking didn't come until much later in the game."

    It was part of the Amiga game from the first day; another example of how the Amiga was more "well thought out".

  94. OS X? no way. Linux! by axxackall · · Score: 1
    First of all, it's not free:
    • OS X
    • Office X
    • most of development and productivity software
    It all costs money.

    Then ,there is a little of choice:

    • I cannot change desktop manager
    • I cannot change window manager
    • How about the kernel?
    All those themes change almost nothing - it's not a real customization I want as a user. And it's not a level of customization OEM would like either.

    Finally, it's not scalable down - it requires a lot of hardware resources and cannot work on low-end computer. It cannot be scaled up either - how about network application server? With both *n*x/X11 and M$/VNC it's easy.

    Conclusion: Mac OS X is just a default OS installed on last Mac computers to make them more attractive within the sales process. But we all know that atractive-for-sales features are often different from useful-for-real-work features. Mac OS X is just a sales-toy. The more Linux is improved is the more often Linux will be installed after-sales.

    Mac OS is the reason of low sales of Mac computers. Mac OS X is a pitty attempt to fix it. But only with modern Linux (pre-installed!)the situation with Mac sales can be improved.

    When Steve Jobs will uderstand it, the production cost in Apple Corp wil be dropped and the sales will jump up.

    I heard that Bill Gates payed ~$100M to Apple specially to keep them away from Linux. Isn't it true?

    --

    Less is more !
    1. Re:OS X? no way. Linux! by Mr_Silver · · Score: 2
      First of all, it's not free:

      Good point, but history has shown that if something is worth paying, then people will.

      Then ,there is a little of choice:

      Your three choices would be viable if you're talking about someone who reads slashdot and wants to do those sorts of things. However outside in the Joe Bloggs world they care very little about those points. Most people want one single consistent desktop and user interface. Why do you think Microsoft interface guidelines exist? Why do you think that most Windows based software makes it easy to find things like print, preferences, saving and loading? The whole idea of learn-once-use-anywhere applies here.

      You're assuming that everyone else in the world is as tech savvy as yourself and wants to do the things you consider important. That is not the case.

      In our office, a large number of people consider a new screen saver and desktop picture "customisation". Being able to customise their window managers, desktops and kernels wouldn't rank highly on their list of things to do.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    2. Re:OS X? no way. Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mac OS is the reason of low sales of Mac computers. Mac OS X is a pitty attempt to fix it. But only with modern Linux (pre-installed!)the situation with Mac sales can be improved.

      Bollocks.

      We've all seen how well PCs with Linux pre-installed sell.... if you don't know, here's a clue: the manufacturers that were doing it all stopped.

      Watch how well Lindows does....

      Of course, even if Linux would sell machines - which it demonstrably hasn't - why would anyone pay for more expensive PPC hardware over cheap commodity x86 kit that has better all-round support anyway?

      Most users don't even know what a kernel is. They just want a familiar environment with the apps they expect.

      And that is why Windows has been so successful, and that is why so many existing Mac adherants have complained so bitterly about MacOS X.

      No, Gates didn't pay Apple to avoid Linux. MacOS X is a direct descendant of NeXTStep, which was also BSD Unix. Such rumours abound in the Linux world to keep the rabid advocates happy that's it's all a conspiracy that's keeping Linux down, rather than any of the real-world reasons - and if you can't think of any, you're not in the real-world either.

    3. Re:OS X? no way. Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microshit paying $100 million to Apple to keep them from Linux. That's the funniest thing I've heard all day.

      I guess for you Linux geeks ignorance is bliss.

    4. Re:OS X? no way. Linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      btw, development tools are free.. download them at http://www.apple.com/developer. includes everything needed to write cocoa, carbon, unix, java, etc.

  95. have we not missed the point ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    MOL is running under linux .. not amigaOS.

    maybe wen MOL has been ported to amigaOS it mite be a story .... after all who wants a dual-boot wen you are using the 2nd OS only to boot a 3rd one duh!

    this is speaking as an amiga owner, having used both PPClinux and 68k mac emulators - the thing i loved about them both was i didnt have to dual boot as pc users understand it, i could click an icon and it would reboot the machine to linux or macOS only wen i really needed/wanted to.

    wat i REALLY want for amiga is perhaps much better POSIX compliance and other things that make linux ports to amigaOS easier .. so i can use 1 OS on a single boot.

    that and hyperions games + the amigaDE gives it a fighting chance of surviving.

    ** end rant **

  96. What I'd like to see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about an Amiga running Linux in order to run Mac on Linux, in order to run MacOS 9.x with an emulator that does OS/2 with a Win 3.1 window opened to a Commodore 64 emulator?

  97. I'll sign up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you add one last step: the Sparc emulator for the Vic-20, which is running a calcultor applet, I'm game.

  98. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, please. Let's get back to reality here.

    I owned, with the exception of the games-oriented boxes such as the 600, just about every Amiga box you could own. I had an A1000 from the first month they were available to the public. It was a fantastic machine, probably 10 years ahead of its day.

    It's sheer folly to say that "x86 hardware has (and still does) prohibit the PC from reaching this level". Modern PC hardware _long_ ago surpassed anything even the baddest meanest Amiga ever made could do. The latest PC stuff has _multiple_ orders of magnitude more bandwidth available at almost every point in the system. Yes, the Amiga was a machine that made great use of its available bandwidth, but there are limitations that cannot be overcome. Just from memory:

    Amiga:
    Zorro-II bus: 3.5 Mb/sec
    Zorro-III bus: 12 Mb/sec

    PC:
    PCI: 133 Mb/sec
    AGP 4X: 1 Gb/sec

    That doesn't even tell the whole story, because modern PC graphics cards have bandwidths to local graphics memory up to 20 Gb/sec. This comes into play not only for bitblits but for display listed geometry data, texturing, and so forth.

    Especially in the 3D space, there is _absolutely_ no comparision between the old Amigas and modern PC hardware. PCs passed Amigas by sometime roughly during the 486 years. (Windows sucked at the time, but one didn't have to run it).

    As much as I liked the old Amigas (I still have a working A4000/060), it does them no justice to pretend they were something they clearly were not.

  99. Successful marketing by Seehund · · Score: 1

    WOW! This is one seriously misleading article! It must be pointed out that this is NOT any "New Amiga Hardware". It's a clone of the Mai TeronCX POP motherboard. Nobody is designing, making or selling any "new Amigas", least of all the software company Amiga Inc. The forthcoming AmigaOS4 will run on generic POP/PPC hardware from third party distributors and on old Amigas with PPC accelerators. Eyetech, the distributor of this motherboard has simply licensed the "Amiga" trademark.

    Unfortunately AmigaOS4 is being killed by Amiga Inc. themselves before it has a chance to take off. They have come up with an insane distribution policy for all future versions of AmigaOS. In order to be allowed to run AmigaOS, any third party hardware vendor is supposed to buy a license from Amiga Inc for both himself and his hardware, he must modify his hardware with license verification measures (Amiga Inc. uses a nonsensical "anti-piracy" argument for this), and he must sell AmigaOS bundled with his hardware. AmigaOS will not be available for sale separately to users who wish to choose their own hardware and hardware vendors.

    Please consider signing this petition to Amiga Inc. to make them at least give AmigaOS a fair chance and to wake them upo from their megalomanic dilusions of trying to control an independent hardware market! There's more info about this dirty business here.

    And of course it runs MOL/MacOS - it's a POP board with OpenFirmware and it's running Linux. Is this news?

    --
    Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
    1. Re:Successful marketing by 3seas · · Score: 2

      Why not just let it die and for those interested in the Amiga concept simply go to the open source (Mazollia like Licensed) project called AROS and found on sourceforge.

    2. Re:Successful marketing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seehund Your information is well out of date!

      Try reading the clarification to the latest Executive Update.

      OS4 will be sold seperately and the coupon can be redeemed on just OS4 aswell.

      You are the one who has been misleading people and trolling with your anti-Amiga Inc mission spreading lies on many different sites. Give it a rest will you and go and do something productive instead.

    3. Re:Successful marketing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you just die?

    4. Re:Successful marketing by Seehund · · Score: 1

      FOAD, troll. Go back to amiga.org or something. Got your precious $50 T-shirt/membership yet?

      > OS4 will be sold seperately and the coupon can be
      > redeemed on just OS4 aswell.

      OS4 will only be sold separately in a version for ancient CyberstormPPC accelerators in old 68k Amigas and to those people who bought one of the few "developer version AmigaOnes" from Eyetech (i.e. the normal hardware without any license verification modifications).

      I thought the zealots in the Church of Amiga Inc. at least knew what they were zealous about... Apparently not. Are you having difficulties comprehending the text in the documents you're referring to?

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  100. It would be suicide but... by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    >In order to be allowed to run AmigaOS, any
    >third party hardware vendor is supposed to
    >buy a license from Amiga Inc for both
    >himself and his hardware, he must modify
    >his hardware with license verification
    >measures (Amiga Inc. uses a nonsensical
    >"anti-piracy" argument for this),

    It would be suicide, but the Amiga company is so irrelevant you might as well say it is already dead.

    Didn't Texas Instruments do this with their TI 99 4/A? You had to buy a license to make stuff for it. Such a policy ensured that no one made anything for it.

    What other serious decisions mistakes is Amiga making that will make sure that there is no Amiga renaissance? I wonder if Jack Tramiel and Neil Harass are back at the helm here.

    There is a lesson to be learned: open systems are the ones that survive.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  101. CLI in Mac OS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How long has mac OS had a CLI option? Since the beginning?

  102. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Seehund · · Score: 2, Informative

    No, "The Amiga" is not coming back. There will not be any more Amiga hardware, nobody is designing, making, selling or planning any Amiga hardware. Amiga-the-hardware-platform is dead. I don't blame you cbr372 though, this article is really whacked out.

    This is not "New Amiga hardware", it's a "generic" POP board cloned from the Mai TeronCX, only its new distributor Eyetech has licensed the "AmigaOne" trademark from Amiga Inc.

    Forthcoming versions of AmigaOS running on hardware from third parties like this would be fantastic news if only Amiga Inc. hadn't decided to f*ck things up as usual with some seriously demented distribution policies for new versions of AmigaOS: Any hardware, in order to be allowed to run AmigaOS, must be licensed by Amiga Inc. The hardware vendor must also get a license for himself and his support/financial organisation, he must equip his hardware with a hardware license verification mechanism (although Amiga Inc. affectionally calls it "anti-piracy measures") and he must sell AmigaOS bundled with his hardware. AmigaOS will not be available for sale separated from hardware to us users who wish to choose our hardware and hardware vendors ourselves.

    Of course this is unacceptable for independent hardware vendors, especially those who design Open Hardware like POP which is what AmigaOS will run on, and thus Amiga Inc. are killing AmigaOS in a very effective way. If it's intentional it's probably to redirect resources to their "AmigaDE" project. Unfortunately they're at the same time splitting the "potentially AmigaOS compatible" hardware market into "hardware for AmigaOS" and "the exact same hardware but for everyone else".

    Please consider signing this petition to Amiga Inc. if you wouldn't like this to happen. There's more info about all this available here.

    --
    Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  103. Re:AmigaOne isn't a particular machine, it's a SPE by Seehund · · Score: 1

    MOD THAT UP! Not just because he's quoting me ;) , but because he's right. I can't believe the "Zico" garbage is still allowed to be thrown around and cause confusion like the post this AC replied to. Amiga Inc, clean up your act - and your website!

    --
    Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  104. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1
    That "complete Toy Operating System" known as Mac OS 9 and before is still used by millions of professionals every day in the fields of desktop publishing, video editing, compositing, etc...

    How unlike a certain "GNU/OS" which was designed by a bunch of unemployed hackers and only lives in the professional world when moron zealots or cheap bastards decide to use it in place of more established UNIX OS's.

    --
    (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
  105. This is illegal by anarkhos · · Score: 1

    Sorry to rain on your parade, but this isn't allowed due to the EULA for Mac OS. It's perfectly OK to run MOL on Apple hardware, but it isn't OK to run Mac OS on non-Apple licenced hardware.

    Just like it isn't legal to run AmigaOS4 (if it ever happens) on Apple hardware.

    An old version of MacOS like 7.5 might not have this restriction, I haven't checked.

    --
    >80 column hard wrapped e-mail is not a sign of intelligent
    >life
  106. low cost, fast, off the shelf... in what world? by Suppafly · · Score: 2

    I think that it will be interesting to see the people at Apple lose some sleep now that a low cost, fast, off the shelf solution exists to run Mac OS

    Somehow I dount Amiga hardware will end up being any of those seeing as the Amiga market is an even smaller niche than the mac one.

  107. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doom was out at the time C= went belly up? What drugs are you on? C=
    went out before PSX was a wet dream in Sony's pants. Doom didn't show
    up until AFTER the PSX was well under development. Doom appeared
    after the demise of C= by over two years.

    Also, at the time C= was developing the mysterious 'AAA' chipset, as
    the AA chipset was more of a bridge than anything else.

    While I don't pretend that the current Amigas are anywhere near as
    powerful as modern PC's and Macs, I know that your primary arguement
    is full of it. It wasn't until the 90Mhz Pentium that PC hardware
    began catching up, and it took until the 300Mhz P-II before the
    Amiga's age really started to show.

    On the PC side, it shows how once something develops a real market how
    far technology can be pushed. Conversly, the Amiga community can
    squarely blame Apple and Motorola for abandoning the 68000 series of
    micro-processors.

    As someone who loves the Amiga (even though I have pc's, and had them
    for years), I will rejoice in the day that Apple goes bankrupt.

    Cheers

  108. Why run MacOS 9? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MacOS 9 is a terrible OS. No memory management.
    No preemptive multitasking. No memory protection
    for starters. Who'd want to cripple a perfectly good machine with this garbage?

  109. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by thedbp · · Score: 1

    I'd have to agree. While OS 9 definitely has its shortcomings, it is by no means a "toy" OS. Its functionality and ease of use are legendary (its not like OS X came along and all of a sudden, Macs were easy to use), it is MUCH more stable than Windows (not as stable as Linux or Mac OS X or any other BSD/*nix system, granted) ... and I am including Win2K as well. While Win2K won't have minor crashes as much, it is MUCH more prone to major reinstallation-to-fix type crashes.
    OS 9 is, in my mind, a very incredible accomplishment. An OS than spanned 2 completely different hardware architectures over a course of 16 years that incorporated every major advancement either thru the OS or 3rd party extensions, and, as has been mentioned, IS COMPLETELY RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL THE CONTENT YOU WEENIES WATCH, LISTEN TO, etc. So in 1984 they didn't build it for pre-emptive multitasking or protected memory. Big whoop - it got along fine without it for most users, and now that OS X is here, it has the best implementation of either available.
    People need to stop busting on Mac OS 9. If you look at the development and progression of the Mac OS from '84 to '00, you'd be VERY impressed with all the stuff they crammed in by the end. Was it perfect? No. Was it a toy? Absolutely not. Is was a very useful, very intuitive, very quick, very extensible operating system. For servers? No, but then, that's not what the original Mac OS was written to do. You don't use a screwdriver to stir your coffee, and you don't use a swizzle stick to pound a nail into wood. Judge the OS by its accomplishements in its own field, not by what completely different OS's achieved in completely different avenues of use.

  110. ummm... errr... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need the Mac ROMS to use MOL... as a result if you use or modify the roms on a non mac system... you will soon find the Apples legal team hand so far up your @$$ your going to hurt.

  111. Illegal? HA HA HA HA HA HA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Breaking the "eula" (if it really could be enforced) is not a legal issue.

    Try not to be such a corporate suck-ass all the time, okay?

    1. Re:Illegal? HA HA HA HA HA HA by anarkhos · · Score: 1

      How about this: it's also unfair

      Why do you think Amiga Inc. isn't allowing AmigaOS to run on non-Amiga licensed boards? Because the OS price doesn't support the cost of development. Same situation with Apple.

      Pity nobody is willing to pay the true cost of OS development.

      --
      >80 column hard wrapped e-mail is not a sign of intelligent
      >life
  112. OS X runs like crap on most Apple Hardware by ikekrull · · Score: 2

    First up, MacOS hasn't needed any Apple hardware i.e. Apple ROMs for a long time, probably since 8.x

    MOL runs OS 9.2 directly on the hardware, using the PPC's virtualisation features, something the x86 lacks completely, i believe, so PPC apps that do not rely on proprietary Apple hardware (not OS X, obviously) will run at full-speed in the MOL environment, unlike x86-oriented solutions like VMware, where the software has to jump through hoops to give the hosted apps access to the CPU.

    And, don't kid yourself. On anything but a top-of-the-line G4 machine, OS X is sluggish. I have a G4 TiBook and also used a 700Mhz G4 Tower, and neither of these machines provided acceptable GUI speed for me. A 600Mhz G3 Ibook is a joke (granted this was the 'from the factory' config, so more RAM would be necessary).

    I hear people say they find performance acceptable on these machines.. well, you must enjoy your web browsers not being able to scroll smoothly and waiting minutes for apps to start up, but i sure don't.

    Shit, my IIfx running AU/X offers the same level of integration between MacOS and UNIX as OS/X, Apple have been sitting round with their thumb up their ass for the last ten or fifteen years.

    Maybe it's just a pointless, overengineered GUI layer, but it still feels damn slow watching that little spinning beachball spin all the time.

    Fire up OS 9.2 on the same machine and the speed difference is amazing.

    Things happen in 'realtime' instead of at some point in the future after the annoying 'animation effect' has run.

    What is really frustrating is that you can't turn the extraneous shit off. Even with TinkerTool, you can't disable all the eye-candy, and even when you do turn everything TinkerTool controls off, the GUI isn't much faster.

    My TiBook is pretty much an expensive X-Terminal that continues to run an Apple OS only to support Photoshop.

    One day, Adobe will port Photoshop to UNIX, or someone else will step up to the plate with a decent Linux image editor, and my days running OS X will be over.

    Obviously, some people like OS X and think it is really neat, but for me it just gets in the way and i'm hanging out for a viable alternative to it.

    --
    I gots ta ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long
    1. Re:OS X runs like crap on most Apple Hardware by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 2
      I hear people say they find performance acceptable on these machines.. well, you must enjoy your web browsers not being able to scroll smoothly and waiting minutes for apps to start up, but i sure don't.

      I don't have this problem, and I'm running on a G4/466 with a gig of RAM. You aren't using UFS are you? My web browser (Mozilla and IE 5.2.1) can scroll faster than I can see, and apps launch in a few bounces. Jaguar (10.2) is supposed to be MUCH faster anyway.

      One day, Adobe will port Photoshop to UNIX

      Adobe has had a UNIX version of Photoshop for a long time... well for IRIX anyway. I used to use it on a SGI Indy... It sucked. It was way faster on a 9500

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
  113. It my fault... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought a BMW last month.

  114. ha ha ha ha pussy boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Grow up"

    Coming from a 21 year old, that's so precious that my gin and tonic shot out through my nose from laughing.

    Its hard to remember what it was like to be such a naive moron, but you're doing your best to remind me.

    Do it s'more. Make us all laugh.

  115. Another beautiful troll from Mr Silver! by twitter · · Score: 2
    What a silly thing to say, but it's the kind of thing that a weenie that uses Windows by choice might think. "Linux on the desktop" whatever that is, won't be destroyed by any kind of comercial software. Indeed, I expect some comercial concern to step up and make a fine business out of free software. It may be a Linux distro, BSD, or even the HURD, but it will be free and have a heavy contribution from GNU. Closed comercial software, regardless of short lived hardware advantages, simply can not keep up with the inovation and flexibility of free software, and the company that owns it will always do something stupid in the end to furfill their "duty to the shareholders." If Debian playing movies on an Amiga is not enough to convince you of free software's invincibility, you must be a troll.

    Woops, you are a troll. Visit Mr. Silver saying:
    Linux is a waste of time
    you can't run with an ipod"
    spam is the fault of people who respond to it
    Gator does not interfere with websites
    Linux on the desktop is dead Do we have a theme here? Every fifth post, Mr. Silver says something silly about Linux being hard to use, dead blah blah, some Windows thing is what you should use. Stick it, Mr Silver.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Another beautiful troll from Mr Silver! by Mr_Silver · · Score: 2
      What a silly thing to say, but it's the kind of thing that a weenie that uses Windows by choice [slashdot.org] might think

      Coo, someone who has spent the time looking through my postings. Wow, you're really putting some effort in it. So just to make you look stupid:

      Yes, I use Windows on the desktop. Big deal. I actually rather like Win2k (shock! horror! are people allowed to like Windows and read Slashdot?) apart from when it starts playing silly buggers, of course. All my mail and webspace is solely Linux, I develop using Perl, PHP and C (again under Linux). I do admit to fiddling about with a bit of VB, but thats mainly because I don't want to spend the time learning Visual C++.

      At home I have Windows 2k (general stuff), Mandrake 8.1 (development) and Win 95 (games). Again, no big deal. I pick the OS that serves my purpose best.

      Linux is a waste of time [slashdot.org]

      Score 4, Interesting
      Not quite, try reading the posting again. It talks about how there is a certain cost to software (even free) if you have to spend a large amount of time getting it working.

      you can't run with an ipod" [slashdot.org]

      Score 2
      It's hard drive based. I would be concerned about running with one. Actually on Friday night I was in the pub with a work mate and he let me have a good shake of his iPod and it worked just great. Doesn't stop me being a little worried about an hour and a halves work of bouncing about (I run Marathons) and how it will affect a hard drive. In the end, I think i'm going to wait for the gigabeat and have a think again.

      spam is the fault of people who respond to it [slashdot.org]

      Score 4, Insightful
      It partly is. Let me give you a clue. People send spam because they want your business. If they get your business, then they will consider spam to be effective. As soon as they don't get your business, they won't consider it worthwhile. Why do you think that you get the "enlarge your penis" emails? (apart from that fact that it might be a hint from your girlfriend?). They don't just send those things out if they're not going to get some stupid people actually cough up money.

      Gator does not interfere with websites [slashdot.org]

      Score 4, Interesting
      Read the comment. From the article, it points out that Gater fires up adverts when people visit that page. Gator isn't PHYSICALLY interferring with the HTML, it's just doing something that make people assume its interferring.

      Linux on the desktop is dead [slashdot.org]

      Score 2
      In no place does it say, Linux on the desktop is dead. I just said that it was hyped up rather too much and in the end was bound to fall short. Linux on the desktop will never be dead unless every program for it vanishes off the face of the planet.

      So, in short, you're an idiot and you can't read. And I have moderations of my points and insightful comments to my own comments to back me up. Looking at your last comments they tend to show either stupidity, trolling or blind faith without any facts to back it up. At least I have 50 karma.

      I know what the good, bad, pro's and con's are of free software and commercial software and I pick whatever software is right for my purposes. I don't follow blind faith, I sit down, evaluate and make conclusions.

      I can't believe i've spent 10 minutes pointing out the flaws in a trolling accusing me of trolling. I see the IQ of some posters is definately going down the pan.

      ps. Oh yes and thank you. By showing me Debian playing movies on an Amiga, you have taught me that an Amiga can play movies. I seriously doubt that in a board room meeting that sort of thing would convince CEO's and CTO's to use Linux.

      pps. Stick to the blind faith. You can't produce a reasoned argument for shit.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
  116. really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Nation states and concepts like "sovereign nation" are practically gone "

    Really? Do you understand what sovereignty is?

    The only countries who try to push your obsolete governance are those who are too weak to defend their own sovereignty.

    The reason your "one government" won't work is there's no practical way to represent both "global" interests and "local" interests simultaneously. And unless you represent local interests properly, the global governance has no real authority.

    Let me give you a for-example. Lets say you live in a town that makes its living fishing. But the global government has decided that this is endangering some ecological something or other so they order it closed.

    So how do they enforce this view? Certainly not with local help, because locally, the action is without support. If they have to bring in outside troops, they you have a situation that is ripe for revolution.

    In fact, under a global government you'd have to use regional governors (i.e. feudalism) to maintain order. But as soon as you establish feudalism, then nationalism starts all over again.

    Why is this? Because local interests always override global interests. People are bound together by geography. You can't legislate that away no matter how hard you try.

    Its like trying to abolish war. Its so silly. As long as I can punch you in the nose and compel you to do what I want, then war will exist.

  117. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by lsdino · · Score: 1

    I think you're living in a dream world. The best hardware and software, even when combined, don't always win, and even when they do they generally don't do so because they were the best. I would have thought betamax, os/2 and linux would have told you that. Personally I've always considered Apple to be a far worse company than Bill's - they're just nowhere near as competent from a business pov.

    Betamax lost because the tapes were too short - VHS offered twice the length, and that's what mattered to people.

    I'm not sure what the exact reasons for OS/2 losing, but one probably was the OEMs. What OEM wants to pay IBM for an OS? All of a sudden IBM has a huge competitive advantage: they get their OS for free. No, wait, they make money off of their OS from the other OEMs who have to pay them for it!

    As for Linux, that battle is not over yet.

    I think generally when one product loses that was supposedly better someone's failing to take into account the consumer's definition of better. It's easy to look at just one or only a few metrics of "better", and then decide that one product should win over another, leaving out what the consumer's are really basing their decision on.

    Another common example that comes up of this which you left off is QWERTY vs Dvorak. The studies showing Dvorak are linked to Dvorak. There were many contents when the keyboard first came out about those who could type the fastest - these happened on many different keyboards. Dvorak patented his keyboard. There were no offers of retraining, etc...

  118. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Recently? Already at the time Commodore went belly up Amiga was starting to show its age. Doom was the game to show that Amigas "superior" chipsets wasn't so superior."

    I can't believe how accurate and true this statement is. The shifting from planar format graphics, which made scrolling look great, to the now essential chunky in the games industry was definately the falling point. The ability to plot pixels individually with a colour reference was exactly what you needed when texture mapping became the big thing.
    Yes, and no.

    First off, the big problem wasn't planar/chunky, but rather the screen resolutions and color depths. C= played silly buggers with internal politics and did not keep up in the screen real estate game.

    The planar/chunky distinction was important, but less than commonly ascribed. Even now, the FPS games that so require "chunky" pixels give a great number of people unpleasant reactions (including me!) -- nausea and headaches, for example -- which makes such games completely irrelevent to a segment of the game-playing population.

    But the argument that the Amiga was -- or is -- technically insufficient is bogus. For almost five years the Amiga dominated, technically, and yet failed to displace the IBM PC from the realm of game boxen. The question to ask is "How did such a crappy platform like the IBM PC manage to survive?"

    Simple. Salesmen lie. Marketing works. And with enough suckers, you can finance *anything*. Imagine, if you will, if HALF of the money wasted by people upgrading from CGA to EGA to VGA to SVGA were spent, instead, on improving the Amiga's video systems, back in the late 80's and early 90's. (This is not limited to the Amiga -- imagine if the consumer market had chosen SCSI instead of IDE, and all that money had gone into improving and cost-optimizing SCSI technology. At one time, SCSI disks were only $5 to $10 more than the same capacity IDE disks, without that stupid two-disks-per-controller limitation.)

    Alas, the "new amiga" has almost nothing of the soul of the Amiga. Why bother? The Market Has Spoken, And It Has Said "We will choose cheap and shoddy over innovation and elegance, and if it makes us throw up, great, it's like drinking!"

  119. Nothing to Fear by batquux · · Score: 1

    Apple's got nothing to fear, people buy Macs because they're "cute".

  120. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 2
    Seriously, I think what you mean is "high-quality/high-value". If you mean anything.

    Yeah but if you compare a new $1600 G4 to a $3500 PowerMac 9500 (running at 132 Mhz) I think you can see that Apple's new hardware is low cost.

    --
    -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
  121. Re:Nothing to Fear...uhh.. by batquux · · Score: 1

    Please pardon the comma splice and indefinite pronoun. Long day.

  122. $10 WiFi Cards? by BitGeek · · Score: 2


    You really bought a Cisco WiFi card for $10? From a dot-com auction? Or are you saying you really can get a $10 WiFi card off the market? I haven't seen anything like this at Compusa.

    1/10th of $99, is $9.90. I'm wondering if this wasn't yet another of the exagerations PC people make about Mac hardware being expensive eg "My Xbox has better graphics and was only $200!"

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    1. Re:$10 WiFi Cards? by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 2

      Believe it or not they had a WAP with 4 CISCO cards "taped" to the package...On the closeout rack at the local home center for $99.00. I figured about 60 for the WAP and $10 each for the cards.

      --
      (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
  123. There's NO innovation in Open Source. by BitGeek · · Score: 2


    Unfortunately, other than the idea of Open Source and the Open Source methodology, the market is exclusively about making commodity software.

    Linux is a commodity operating system (Unix) running a commodity UI (windows ripoff). It is not the source of innovation.

    Making software that does what commercial software does and making it free is great-- but the software is all commodity- ideas that have been around for decades. I haven't seen any new applications "killer Apps" or not- that were really innovative starting on Linux.

    Linux *does* encourage innovation, though, because it drives the value of commodity software to zero. If Linux didn't exist, there would still be people charging $1,000 for an x86 Unix install, because they could get away with it. Now if they want to charge $1,000 to their customers, they'd better innovate some value for that money.

    Linux helps a lot on that front. And it also works to let companies like Apple opensource the commodity parts of their OS-- and spend their money working on the areas where they can be innovative.

    By the way-- while I disagree with what this Mr. Silver said, the only troll here is you. You attack him and do so personally, and probably unfairly-- You don't get to decide the position someone is taking and tell them that they don't believe what they are saying. That's the height of offensiveness.

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
  124. Each of your points is false. by BitGeek · · Score: 2

    And factually so.

    The difference in Linux is that you *can't* buy Office for it, but you CAN run OpenOffice on the Mac.

    The developer tools are given away free to everyone-- grandma and grandpa too. Out of the box.

    Your entire post is a list of factually false statements presented as facts.

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
  125. Geeks prefer... by BitGeek · · Score: 2


    Actually, Geeks prefer OSX. Those who actually create code, do engineering- hardware and software- and are technically proficient prefer OS X.

    The linux community is composed of a small group of geeks (many of whom are transitioning to OS X) and a large group of people who can't differentiate between an XBOX and an iMac in hardware value and wanted "free software d00d" to replace windows.

    Oh, and *all* the effing idiots who poll my webserver for outdated IIS exploits seem to be running Linux.

    Geeks like cool, high tech, high performance tools, and the penultimate example of that right now is OS X. And its pulling ahead- as the Unix underpinnings are allowing Apple to innovate faster than they were previously able to.

    I do agree with you in one sense-- those who like to style themselves geeks, but really aren't, *do* perfer Linux. :-P

    Thus endith the "geekier than thou" sermon.

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    1. Re:Geeks prefer... by Jesus+the+Annointed · · Score: 1
      Geeks like cool, high tech, high performance tools, and the penultimate example of that right now is OS X.

      So what's the ultimate if OSX is the penultimate? I'd much rather use the ultimate. :P

      --
      Spreche Deutsche, aber nicht so gut, ja. :)
  126. Don't make shit up. by BitGeek · · Score: 2

    hell, they've already obsolesced my _NEW_ powerbook with their new os x 10.2 release.

    You can't say shit like this without being called on it.

    I run Warcraft 3 on an iMac G4 at 1024x768 with all graphics options turned on and it runs great.

    10.2 HAS NOT BEEN RELEASED. And when it is, ALL titanium powerbooks, even my first generation one, are going to be supported.

    Yes, newer hardware will see fuller use of the graphics chips for greater UI quality-- but thats not "obsoleting" the older hardware-- the OS works fine on older hardware (it also runs fine on my PowerMac 9500 from, what, 1996?)

    I don't see 10.2 taking better use of the graphics card as making your older graphics card obsolete. Sheesh, even the older machines will get a significant graphics boost, in the new OS.

    And, of course, the ultimate proof that you're a lowdown troll who is making this crap up is the claim that Mac hardware costs three times as much-- actually, Mac hardware is consistently cheaper than comparable PC hardware.

    The people who think it costs three times as much are comparing an Xbox to an iMac G3 and claiming they are "comparable".

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
  127. In your dreams. by BitGeek · · Score: 2


    Why do people continue to pretend that Apple isn't providing machines with better performance at lower cost than Intel machines?

    The price myth, like the megahertz myth (which are related) hasn't been true since 1990, if it ever was.

    Yes, you can buy an XBOX for $200 (but ony because its sold for less than it costs to make it) and a G3 iMac costs $800, but that iMac beats most intel PCs on the market up to $2,000.

    Dude! You're getting a dud.

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
  128. Re:The Age Of Bill's Big-Brother act...... by vortexau · · Score: 1

    So ... do you think the PC will come back, or has MS/Intel/AMD killed it off for sure?
    Hmmm?
    You know, the PC, the present Games computer?
    .

    --
    (David Bowman, EVA near HUGE Monolithic Win-PC in orbit around Jupiter) "My God - its full of Malware!"
  129. Re:The Amiga is coming back since before it was .. by vortexau · · Score: 1

    "twenty years"?
    20 years ago it was TRS, Apple II, PCjr, and Vic-20s/C64s! (8Bits)

    Show us some other history you've re-written!
    .

    --
    (David Bowman, EVA near HUGE Monolithic Win-PC in orbit around Jupiter) "My God - its full of Malware!"
  130. Not the first time by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    There was a board that permitted the old Amiga to run as a Mac. It required the Macintosh rom.

    The old Amiga also ran Dos.. and near the end also ran Windows 3.11 but never Windows 95.
    The later trick was done by a bridge board that included an intel processor.. a 8086 or for Windows a 286.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
    1. Re:Not the first time by Jesus+the+Annointed · · Score: 1
      There was a board that permitted the old Amiga to run as a Mac. It required the Macintosh rom. The old Amiga also ran Dos.. and near the end also ran Windows 3.11 but never Windows 95. The later trick was done by a bridge board that included an intel processor.. a 8086 or for Windows a 286.

      This is not completely true.

      The Amiga has a long history of emulation (C64, Atari ST, MAC, x86), and this project is just a continuation of that tradition.

      There were, IIRC, two boards that allowed Mac emulation on the amiga: the AMAX (and AMAX II) and the Emplant. Later there were two software emulators released, Shapeshifter and Fusion. The cards and shapeshifter required roms, (or at least copies of roms in the case of shapeshifter) to run. I am not sure if Fusion required roms or not. I think that there was a software emulator that ran without mac roms. There was also a version of Fusion called iFusion that emulated powermacs (on amigas equipped with ppc accelerators).

      Thanks to the amiga's custom chips all these emulation ran faster than actual macs with the same CPU. In fact these emulations could be multitasked with AmigaOS and resources shared between the OSes.

      In the earlier years PC emulation on the amiga required a bridgeboard (Commodore made 8088, 286 and 286 versions and 3rd parties made 486 and IIRC there was even a '586' ie non intel p5 class). However in the early 90's there were a couple of software emulators released, among them PCTask. In its later versions you could run win95 (but very slowly). Again, PCTask could be multitasked with amigaOS and even with a Mac emulator giving you 3 systems on the one desktop.

      Ofcourse, Linux also runs on the Amiga so there are a variety of options there aswell.

      --
      Spreche Deutsche, aber nicht so gut, ja. :)
  131. Re:got Turner Diaries? I by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    where?

  132. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And then there is the HW... It'l be closed and crippled and "donglelised" as always (just as a Mac)...
    Amiga 1 is PCI ATA Firewire USB, standard PowerPC slot AGP. I wouldn't call that, donglelised! The only other issue is driver support.

  133. The quality/price ratio by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 2

    Well, it all depends on where you stand. Apple has been lowering the price for their equimpment, and a lot of people are (grudgingly) admitting that they are cheaper than a lot of *comparably outfitted* machines. So yes, Apple isn't in the bargain basement, but goes for the "more bang for your buck". (IMO, they have to, especially since Motorola fell behind Moore's Law.)

    Apple does pack a lot of stuff in that you could live without at home (such as fast Ethernet cards *and* 56k modems), and is notoriously unfriendly to the "roll your own" crowd. Then again, the hardware is one of the most important aspects of the Mac, as it was with the Amiga. Without this tight integration of hardware and the OS, the Apple woudn't have survived.

    And that is another reason why I think this bird won't fly: the Amiga was actually a miracle in *hardware*; the OS was what let it shine.

  134. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually AFAIK DoomAttack worked at fine
    speed on a 50 MHz 030. Cannot say for sure,
    though as at the time Doom came out on Amiga
    I had already a PPC System (and did a PPC port of Doom). Actually I do not care for
    the native display, 80% of Amiga users at the time the Doom Source was released used Graphics Boards (having Chunky displays) anyways. Some of the latest games of the company I work for (doing Games for Mac and Amiga) do not even support the "native" display anymore.

    In case of Doom which is only 8 Bit, a c2p conversion algorithm can be written in a few minutes, BTW. Actually you can even download source-code - for both 68k and PPC - from Aminet.

    Doom did not "commercially" appear on the Amiga, simply as ID did not want it to. But luckily they released the source-code later.

    BTW: Right now I am working on a Quake 2 port for Amiga. It is running nicely, as of the speed, already, with more than 40 Game-Mods supported also (ActionQuake2, WeaponsFactory,...). (3D Hardware highly recommended for your Amiga to run it - though not required).

    Steffen Haeuser
    SteffenH@hyperion-software.de

  135. Re:The Amiga is coming back. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >CPU slot. The dongelising just seems to be a >move to prevent OS4 from running on >unlicenced hardware (ie mac's and >unfortunately for now also the Pegasos) we >can only hope that A Inc. will

    To support these Boards would require Hardware documentation for them. It's not just "yes, we support a certain Board", but Drivers and such would need to be adapted.

    Anyways, I think most people who'd like to run AmigaOS on a G3 system will get an AmigaOne anyways.

    Steffen Haeuser
    SteffenH@hyperion-software.de

  136. To make Amiga systems run MacOS by Cable · · Score: 0

    you would need to emulate the Mac ROM or find a way to translate the Mac code into Amiga code.

    I assume that MacOSX can be ported to the Amiga hardware, but why would Apple want to? They have locked it into the Mac hardware so Apple can control both the software and hardware. The best the AmigaONE can hope to run is Darwin, has anyone started on an Amiga based Darwin port yet?

    Oh well, with the Amiga Anywhere project, maybe AmigaOS 4.0 will get ported to PowerMacs? :)

  137. It really doesn't matter by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    since AmigaOS can be run on almost any platform now. AmigaOS XL allows it to run on WINTEL systems, and they have AmigaDE players for Linux and Windows. Soon, I expect, they will have an OSX player? Shouldn't be too hard to make since they already have a Linux version.

    With some changes, they can get AmigaOS 4.0 to boot on a Mac if they wanted to. Really quite a nice OS as well, much smoother running than MacOS 9.2 and OSX.

    Since the Amiga transcends the Amiga hardware and is multi-platform, it is much more valuable and viable than MacOS or OSX anyway. So who cares?

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  138. It wouldn't work by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    if someone wrote a Mac compatable ROM, Apple would sue them before they could make any decent money off of it.

    The best bet would be to have college students disassemble a PowerMac G3/G4 ROM and write the interrupts and APIs that it supports and then have a second group design a ROM to those specs. Might as well release it to the open source, so that even if Apple sues, someone will have a copy of it out there.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.