17.Sep.1999
Czech Amiga News
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Protest against Gateway
Deniz Turkmen expresses his protest in a cartoon :-).
(ps)
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17.Sep.1999
Czech Amiga News
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Motorola CPU roadmap up to G6 released
Motorola CPU roadmap up to G6 released.
(ps)
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17.Sep.1999
Linux.de
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Happy Birthday, Linux
This very day eight years ago, Linus Torvalds has released his first Linux
kernel version 0.01.
(ps)
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17.Sep.1999
Trogladite Software
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Gateway Petition
Trogladite has initiated a protest petition against the latest descissions
at Gateway. Everyone who thinks Gateway should reconsider their descissions
can join the petition.
(ps)
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16.Sep.1999
Hyperion
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HereticII: 1st progress report online
HereticII: 1st progress report online.
(ps)
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16.Sep.1999
Torsten Dudai
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New Cartoon: Gateway Tours

(td) (Translation: td)
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14.Sep.1999
Carsten Schröder by eMail
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AMIGA-CTO Dr. Rick LeFaivre: AMIGA stays on course
+++ AMIGA-aktuell-Special +++
Our co-worker Martin Henke, who translates AMIGA aktuell to English every month,
has just called Dr. Rick LeFaivre, Chief Technology Officer of AMIGA, and talked
with him about the current situation and future of Amiga, which he summarizes as
follows:
"The Executive Update by Tom Schmidt has agitated many. This agitation
is unnecessary, however. As Dr. Rick LeFaivre assured me in a phone call today,
plans have not been changed. AMIGA continues development of the new AmigaOE.
However, AMIGA will not build own hardware, but there are contacts to companies
on this topic. Details about which companies there are have not been given,
however."
Personal summary: By this time, I am under the impression AMIGA
President Tom Schmidt does hardly know the plans and work of the development
department. If you believe Dr. Rick LeFaivre, there are hardly any changes at
all apart from the Amiga MCC not being produced by AMIGA themselves, but by
partner companies. Another Executive Update clarifying the obvious misunderstandings
seems to be necessary.
Also see the Open Letter to Tom Schmidt.
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Michael Pfeiffer by eMail
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VIRTUAL News
Since the latest Executive Update clearly shows that Gateway has no interest
anymore in a decent computer platform, and the Amiga is absolutely dead, it
is time for VWP to make decissions. All software projects are put on hold.
There has been no final decission about further usage / giving away the source
codes.
An exception to this is WaveTracerDS, there will probably be another
update for this. Virtual Worlds Productions says a warm thank-you to all
Amiga users and loyal customers.
PS: BTW, I will write a nice mail to the President of A**** Inc.
about their politics - who else?
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Newsmaster
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Open Letter to Tom Schmidt
The latest Executive Update leaves open questions, as always. :-(
Therefore, I wrote an Open Letter, that asks the one basic question
I think most of us would ask if they had the chance...
From: Martin Baute solar@baud.de
To: team@amiga-news.de
Date: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 20:12:43 +0200
Subject: Open Letter to Tom Schmidt
Voller Name: Martin Baute
Homepage: http://www.baud.de/public/members/solar.html
Dear Sir,
we are the Amiga community. We are a community of people brought together
by a very different kind of computing, which survived despite the gravest
of circumstances, beyond bancrupty, beyond despair, beyond obsoletion.
The community survived because there was hope, and little alternative.
We look at the market of home, personal, and office computing, and we see
bloated, inefficient, unreliable systems that offer little "feeling" to
the power user, and much irritation to the beginner.
So we dared to hope, that one day there would be a computing alternative
available again to the masses, one that made computing fun again for
everyone, not only for the elusive few who actually like to modify arcane
registry entries or .rc lines.
And our hopes, for long, and sometimes very dark years, were on the brand
named "Amiga", because this brand - rather, the philosophy and spirit it
stood for - embodied what we liked in computing.
We have seen many changes at the helm, even more changes in direction.
And every time again, ever since EsCom times up to the latest ongoings at
Amiga Inc., whenever there was a change at helm or a change in direction,
we feared.
Our fear always was the same. Will there be an Amiga computer we can
buy, to sit on our desks at home or in the office?
There has always been talk about Set-Top-Boxes. In more recent times,
there is talk about "information appliances".
But what the community anxiously waits for, always has waited for when
the winds of change were blowing, is not about Set-Top-Boxes, not about
"information appliances". I do not want to critizise, to the contrary.
There are evolving markets out there waiting to be explored, and it is
a good feeling that Amiga might be among the spearhead of explorers to
this market.
However, for us, the existing, living, starving community scattered all
around the world, for the distributors, developers, vendors, users, for
us, it is the desktop we most anxiously wait for.
Yes, there certainly is a mass market for Set-Top-Boxes and information
appliances, and the Amiga Inc. concept for a pervasive home network is
a nice one for sure. But all this is not what the brand "Amiga" promises
to us.
To make a long story short, to ask the question so vital for motivation,
faith, and hope for many of us, I ask you:
- Do the plans at Amiga Inc., which you told us will be followed
through, still include a home/personal computer product range similar
or at least alike to the "Multimedia Convergence Computer" previously
presented by Amiga Inc.?
Manufactured by Amiga Inc. itself, or by third party manufacturers?
(Means, will we see hardware as revolutionary as your software
technology, or will we share the fate of BeOS, fine OS without
own plattform?)
- And will it be presented anywhere near to the original time scale
(1st quarter 2000)?
A question so simple, but of utmost importance for those who look at
Amiga Inc. today. Those looking at Amiga tomorrow might be satisfied
by Set-Top-Boxes and "information appliances".
We are not. Scatter our fears.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
With kindest regards,
--
Martin Baute /// Amiga A1200 Towerhawk - PowerPC 603e / MC68060
=> solar@baud.de <= /// Newsmaster - English: http://www.amiga-news.de
Member of Team AMIGA \\\/// Member of the Bielefeld Amiga Users & Developers
100% Microsoft free! \XX/ Maintainer of Version Watch: http://www.vwatch.de
Amiga - The Last Line of Defense.
-- www.baud.de
Permission granted (and readers encouraged) to spread and copy
Erlaubnis erteilt (und Leser ermutigt) zum Kopieren und Verbreiten (ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Amiga
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Amiga Executive Update from Thomas J. Schmidt
The new CEO, Tom Schmidt, speaks about the future plans:
TO: THE AMIGA COMMUNITY
Thanks for your notes and comments about our plans for Amiga. In the past couple weeks, we've received hundreds -- if not thousands -- of emails and messages from loyal Amigans worldwide, many of you expressing a concern about Amiga's future based on recent reports in the media and in numerous chat rooms. I am so impressed with the spirit and passion of this great community and I wanted to make sure I told you that.
The fact is... to borrow from Mark Twain... the reports of Amiga's death have been greatly exaggerated. To that end, I wanted to provide a little more detail about our plans for Amiga... both as a product and as a company, and hopefully clear up any confusion that exists.
First, I hope you'd agree that Amiga was never about a box. It was never about an operating system either. Sure those things were part of what made the original Amiga great, but at its heart, Amiga was simply about a better way. Amiga was ahead of its time. Amiga promised to change the world. It ran against conventional wisdom and was better than anything out there at the time. In fact, we could all argue that it's still better than anything out there.
The ideals and spirit of that original Amiga are alive and well today. But to limit Amiga to just one box, one product, one OS, is to keep Amiga from ever seeing its full potential. Think about it.... The original Amiga never did really reach its full potential despite its technical advantages and its cost and ease of use advantages. Why? Because it never became ubiquitous. The company's early vision was probably too limited for the vast potential that Amiga offered.
The original Amiga was all about multi-media, so why not have Amiga running on every type of device imaginable, on top of every other OS out there? That's the beauty of Amiga and where we are as an industry. We're in the midst of a revolution unlike anything the world has seen, and Amiga has never been better positioned to change that world and make a bigger impact. Limiting Amiga to just one box and one OS at this point would be like offering the world a better horse and carriage at the dawn of the automotive age. Amiga and its revolutionary spirit deserve better than that. Amiga is going to produce software technology that will enable Internet services on an emerging category of products commonly referred to as "Information Appliances". It is an exciting new mega trend in the industry and we are excited about being at the forefront of this next great wave in computing history. In addition, we have decided to work with business partners who will deliver our software technology on their systems, rather than enter the hardware business directly.
So long live Amiga, but if you think that Amiga was just a box, you've missed the point. Amiga is about a better way. In the coming weeks and months, we promise to keep you posted on progress against our plans for Amiga, and we thank you for your continued support. Let's work together to enable Amiga to revolutionize the industry and change the world!
Long live Amiga,
Thomas J. Schmidt
President & C.E.O.
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
B. van der Meer by eMail
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OS3.5 presentation in Benelux
From: "B. van der Meer" b.vd.meer@worldonline.nl
To: team@amiga-news.de
Date: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 16:55:11 +0100
OS3.5 demonstration in the Benelux.
On saturday the 18th of september Dirk Harlaar of Haage & Partner
will give a demonstration of the new OS3.5 in Leeuwarden, located
in the Netherlands. Propably this will be the final salesversion.
This day will be organized by the AGGF and ComputerCity, the OS3.5
distributer in the Benelux.
Contact us at: amiga@worldonline.nl
The AGGF is the Amiga User Groep Friesland found in 1993.
Since january 1999 we publish a bimonthly paper-magazine called AmigaScene in
the dutch language.
AGGF webpage: http://www.fris.nl/~dkraus/AGGFINDEX.HTML
AmigaScene webpage: http://home.worldonline.nl/~amiga/
******
Os3.5 demonstratie bij the AGGF.
Zaterdag 18 september zal Dirk Harlaar van het Duitse Haage&Partner bij de
Amiga Gebruikers Groep Friesland
het nieuwe besturingssysteem OS3.5 komen demonstreren. Het is zelf
waarschijnlijk dat het hier om de
definitieve versie gaat, zoals dit op de markt gaat komen.
Deze dag wordt door de AGGF in samenwerking met ComputerCiy, de officiële
importeur, van OS3.5 georganiseerd.
De locatie is Clubhuis 'Welgelegen', W.Loréstraat 36 te Leeuwarden. Open
10:30-16:30.
Neem rustig je Amiga mee, maar bel ons dan wel even van te voren. tel.
0519-562288 (tussen 19:00 - 21:00 uur)
of email: amiga@worldonline.nl
De AGGF is de Amiga Gebruikers Groep Friesland en bestaat sinds 1993.
Vanaf januari 1999 geven wij de AmigaScene uit. Dit is een tweemaandelijkse
Amigablad met
artikelen over software en hardware en laatste nieuws.
AGGF internet adres: http://www.fris.nl/~dkraus/AGGFINDEX.HTML
AmigaScene internet adres: http://home.worldonline.nl/~amiga/
******
Thanks in advance.
Berend van der Meer.
AGGF/AmigaScene. (ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Rainer Benda by eMail
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Contents of BlackZone mailbox now completely online on Internet
Restructuring has been finished. The C= stuff from the box is now available
on Internet. Details at the title link (at the bottom left).
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Marc Albrecht by eMail
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PHOENIX PLATFORM CONSORTIUM
Today, I phoned Marc Albrecht and asked for clarification about the idea behind
the founding of the Consortium. He kindly summarised his thoughts and suggestions
for us as follows:
Phoenix is not a miracle cure. The market power destroyed by Amiga Inc. in years
gone by cannot be reestablished by Phoenix in any short time.
But the assembly of developers and marketing people under the "Phoenix"
banner has a clear goal as well as hard results to offer - other than Amiga Inc,
which jumped from one virtual goal to another.
a) Phoenix will create a system that integrates the "Classic" Amiga
from the start. There will be a viable path to new platforms, the "compatibility"
for existing hardware is not implemented afterwards, but is the seed.
b) Phoenix will create a system which will be portable from the start
thanks to the Neutrino core. So, PPC platforms can be served as well as Intel
platforms. A wedding with some MCC is not necessary - but possible nevertheless.
c) After just some days of official existence, Phoenix has already
gathered all important Amiga application developers as well as some leading
hardware developers. This way, there is know-how of the "Amiga Spirit" (whatever
that may be) that can hardly be surpassed. If there is talk about an Amiga rebirth,
it is by people who shaped today's Amiga - not managers that have to do reading
about the matter.
d) Phoenix is home for enough high-ranking software developers to
make real applications available on a completely new system in a meaningful
timespan. By embracing the "Classic", the number of applications can and will
be maximised.
e) Phoenix is no weird idea with all components yet to be developed -
since the basic components like QNX (Neutrino), Rebol and others already exist,
and are successful. This is not describing fantasy but reality.
f) Phoenix already made contact to leading hard- and software manufacturers
to present results in the shortest possible time. The names of companies involved
are not "top secret" like elsewhere, but can be fount in the supporters list.
I am a very sceptical man myself, and usually wouldn't have my name added to the
Consortium. The following points convinced me to put energy in this project:
- no wedding with some limited platform (like Amiga Classic), but using
the existing, expanding, and promising kernel from QNX
- I prefer a real-time system from one manufacturer over the compilation of
thousands of developers worldwide
- extremly tight schedules for realization of results (announcements are made
true in weeks, not years)
- no fantasy products, but using existing technology like QNX, Rebol, probably ARTAS
- realistic plans "behind the scenes", means: real plans building upon Phoenix'
results
Please understand I am unable to answer private mail on this topic - reasons for
this are solely due to schedules, I have too many projects running to write mails
right now.
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Paul Nolan by eMail
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Paul Nolan releases Photogenics 4.2
With version 4.2, Paul Nolan releases another free update for registered users of
Photogenics 4.x.
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Steffen Haeuser in c.s.a.q
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WarpSNES V4.0 released
Steffen Haeuser has released version 4.0 of the SNES emulator WarpSNES for PPC Amigas
with WarpUp. This version is based on the latest SNES9x 1.23 source, while WarpSNES
V3.5a still used version 1.10. The original Unix version comes from Jeremy Koot
and Gary Henderson.
Download - Aminet:
misc/emu/warpsnes.lha (350K)
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Holger Kruse
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Possible downtime of nordicglobal.com
Due to the Florida weather forecast for the next days, caused by the Hurricane
"Floyd", power and phone could be temporarily down from Tuesday 14th to Saturday
18th in Central Florida, which could affect the Internet connectivity of the
Nordicglobal server (mailinglists, registering / update and website).
If eMails go unanswered or do not appear on mailinglists during this
time, it is therefore not necessary to send them again. They are automatically
collected and processed later.
If access to the website or the registering / update server fails
during this time, please try again a little later.
(ps)
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14.Sep.1999
Czech Amiga News
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Amiga Info/AI Echo discontinued
on September 10th, the only Swedish print magazine "Amiga Info/AI Echo" has
announced it is discontinued. So, the March issue 19 was the last issue of
the magazine, which has been founded 1996 by Thomas Svensson. With the March
issue, the name of the magazine was changed from "Amiga Info" to "AI/Echo",
and articles about Linux added, however the additional sales couldn't save
the magazine. The website is however continued at www.xfiles.se.
(ps)
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13.Sep.1999
AROS
|
AROS now completely online again
After troubles with the server hardware, AROS is now completely online again.
You can subscribe to the user mailinglist at
www.aros.org/mailman/listinfo/aros-user.
AROS is an Open Source project implementing a portable, reverse engineered
AmigaOS, and is in an advanced state.
(ps)
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13.Sep.1999
Amiga.org
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The Phoenix Platform Consortium
A number of well known persons has assembled in this consortium, to give
help and suggestions for the development of a reference platform for the
Amiga users wanting to upgrade their Amiga. The goal of this group is
taking the responsibility for this platform.
The Phoenix Platform Consortium will therefore take over the
responsibility to give Amiga users and developers help and recommendations
for reference platforms.
This will not bring about a "new" Amiga, but the road is set
for a platform honoring the Amiga feeling. The member list is truly
impressive and promising.
(ps)
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13.Sep.1999
Suite101.com
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UAE - The Amiga Emulator
Every month, John Chandler writes an article in Suite101.com. This month, he
looks behind the scenes of UAE - The Amiga Emulator.
(ps)
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13.Sep.1999
AmiDog
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AmiDog's Movie Player PPC-Version 1.21 released
This version for the first time enables QT playback, right now as video only.
The program is still beta. Download:
AMP121.lha.
(ps)
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