Timberwolf (Firefox) Beta For AmigaOS
An anonymous reader writes "News from the world of AmigaOS that the Beta version of Timberwolf (a.k.a. Firefox) was made available last month."
Timberwolf is a port of Firefox to the AmigaOS (the name change is for similar reasons to Debian's use of Iceweasel name) and has been under development for quite some time. The AmigaBounty project page has screenshots and even more info for those interested. There's a video of the browser in action, but beware of the cheesy soundtrack.
Great, now I'll have that Timberwolf tune stuck in my head for the next couple of days.
For all who don't know what I'm talking about:
http://frededison.free.fr/
or Thomas Timberwolf on youtube...
Firefart releases like every week now, right?
have any inherent advantage over other modern OS?
I get people like to do this stuff for fun and nostalgia. That's fine. It's just been so long since I have used an Amiga I can't think of anything today that it does better then Win7/OSX/Linux
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Do newer Amiga systems even have enough memory to handle the memory leaks in Firefox' add-on system?
I do hope its the D variant with all the SRM's on it.
Honestly, Does anyone care about AmigaOS anymore? Hardly front page news worthy
"The source code of the port will be made available only as far as the MPL requires it, i.e. all modified source code files will be available for interested parties, but new files will not. This is in accordance with the requirements of the Mozilla Public License. "
that's the true amiga spirit when it comes to source releases. Release as little as possible. Got to make sure no-one else running any machines "similar" to the AmigaOS could possibly benefit from their work.
Does the Amiga OS have any inherent advantage over other modern OS?
This tends- justifiably- to be asked every time there's been a bit of Amiga "news" in the past few years (including that of the final release of Amiga OS 4, delayed for around 15 years).
If there *is* any major advantage, then no-one came up with one during any of those discussions.
Really, the Amiga OS nowadays is just a plaything for a few very hardcore hobbyists willing to pay for overpriced, underpowered custom hardware that isn't even directly compatible with the original Amiga anyway. Amiga OS (and the original hardware) was fantastic in its day, and beat the living heck out of MS-DOS and early Windows, but that was a long time ago. Anyone for whom Amiga OS/hardware compatibility was essential or even useful would have been forced to give up and migrate elsewhere by the late-90s at most. For that reason, even if one *could* upgrade it to a modern OS, it'd make more sense just to write a new OS from scratch- the "classic" core would just end up being legacy baggage that would please the Amiga obsessives because they could call it Amiga OS, but have little real world use beyond muddying the design.
(Sorry, didn't want that to sound like a dismissal of the genuinely innovative Amiga OS, but things have moved on too far now).
The Amiga IP seems to be a bit confusing, having been sold on several times, split and licensed (and the rights disputed), as well as the names having been used on things having apparently nothing to do with the Amiga (some mobile phone OS layer called "Amiga Anywhere" and even worse slapped onto some generic HTPC cases that reused the numbers of classic Amigas). F****** horrid, just let it go.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
which requires a power pc accelerator, so if I take my 3000, spend a pile of money for a obsolete power pc card, and a pile of money for obsolete ram, I can run firefox on something I already know it sucks balls on?
I have a powermac 9600/300 with a pile of ram in it, a much better motherboard and chipset, faster video and disk I/O and guess what? Iceweasel is painfully slow in debian, classzilla is painfully slow in mac OS9, and if you want anywhere reasonable speed you have to drop down to a very basic geko engine browser, and then its like 45 seconds to load slashdot with no javabloat ... or just use a text browser, maybe one with image support like links2.
AmigaOS today is for people that are obsessed with it. Either you are, and enjoy it, or you are not, and don't care. It can be a useful platform, though yes it does have some limitations today. I don't know why people post Amiga stuff to the non-caring Slashdot etc. sites. Move along and let us enjoy our hobby, we obsessors don't need your counseling and it won't bring us to our senses anyway.
'You see, even ARGUED BY ERIC of the waaring And Easy - only Out of bed in the A super-organised which don't use the
Steer him clear of a Karaoke machine but as an actor he wasn't too bad in In Time. :-)
Fuck weeklies, Nightly FTW.
AROS is AmigaOS 3.1+, with extra bits, re-implemented as a portable OS (not just x86, but ARM, 68k, PPC). AROS is/was for users, by users, without (scant!) profits getting in the way of rational decision-making.
The reason the various zombie shells of Amiga, Inc. and its contractors/IP licensees never did an x86 port is because by the time the AROS guys were actually doing it, the Amiga market was so small that monetizing such an effort would have been impossible without proprietary hardware in the first place.
I'm glossing over the fact that PPC was technically also a much easier challenge than going x86, but I think that's the reality: there always seemed to be more money in what was left of the retail/reseller network for hardware, than software.
I'd also like to point out that AmigaOS had virtual memory, even in the classic 3.x OS with add-ons, and many popular software packages were written to be "VM friendly". Also, AmigaOS 4.x has protected memory, but the implementation has some interesting twist which I forget the details of (but seemed a good compromise to transition AmigaOS 3.x apps into the new protected-memory world).
Even with protected memory enabled, it sure as hell boots faster and starts apps quicker than the shiny new Asus laptop I bought last year...
While Friedens (the authors of the port) they "don't care about other (Amiga-like) platforms", they in fact care about them very much, so far, they do everything they can (license-wise) to prevent it from being ported to ANY other platform, by keeping as much of it closed source as possible.
Of course there's WebKit-based OWB / Odyssey, which, unlike TimberWolf, uses native GUI toolkit (Of course on OS4 the "official" one is reaction, but many apps use MUI as it's simply so much better)
I ROFL'd when watching the video. Totally reminds me of playing Outrun on the classic Amiga. Thumbs up!!
Timberwolf on the X1000 can't compare (yet) with Firefox on Wintel, but it's fun (and other browsers are available on the Amiga, including those running under AmiCygnix [YouTube]). And this is a work in development. The more alternatives there are to the mainstream OSes, the better!
Yes, the blatant attempts at profiteering were the final nail in the coffin for the Amiga...
Back when i had a (relatively highend) Amiga, in order to connect it to the internet i would have needed to buy a tcp stack, and then buy a browser, even things like ftp, irc and telnet clients had a price tag attached! Even MS and Apple don't charge extra for basic things like that.
At time time (due to Commodore's bankruptcy) there was no first party networking stack, browser etc. so all these had to be provided by third parties, hence most of these things being commercial or shareware. Don't you remember when you had to pay for Netscape or IE on PC? And the big fuss everyone made of Microsoft bundling their browser with Windows?
Of course it's fast, programs are virtually running on the bare metal with minimal OS features/interference to slow things down.
Fun to mess around with but these days hardware has caught up with features expected of a modern (complex) OS.
I doubt people will use Timberwolf long enough for memory leaks to be a significant issue if this user's experience is common: http://amigaworld.net/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=35175&forum=32&start=20&viewmode=flat&order=0#653060
Sorry, but it's totally insane to blame the lack of free/open software on the 'profiteering' behaviour of the very few developers who were left.
You say that that these developers drove users away - what nonsense! What drove them (and by 'them' I now mean: potential freeware/open source developers) away was a total lack of leadership and utter neglect of the userbase by the various zombie shells which owned Amiga, including Commodore in its final years.
Under Commodore, Amiga missed many opportunities; not that competent management would necessarily have saved it, but C= didn't exactly give it a head start.
The lack of free software was a reflection of the health of the overall Amiga market: specatacular stagnation, deterioration and fragmentation (5 years between AmigaOS 3.1 -> 3.5?! WarpOS vs PowerUP? MorphOS? AROS?) of the tiny userbase and tinier still developer community, you must blame those that squandered their time in control of Amiga
Nobody forced freeware/open source developers to pay for their TCP stack or web browser. Nobody stood there and actively prevented them from creating free/open equivalents.
The simple fact is that if the Amiga platform had enough motivated developers to create free or even open software, it would have happened. But it didn't. You can't simply wish said developers into existence. They simply weren't there - the Amiga never really had a chance to develop an open source culture.
P.S. I seem to recall that AWeb was open-sourced, although probably still too many years after it would have had an impact.