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<strong>Amiga</strong> Workbench<br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

November–December 1998<br />

Number 140<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>Fest ’98 Report.<br />

For those <strong>of</strong> you who couldn’t make it <strong>to</strong><br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>Fest ’98 at Albert Park, Melbourne<br />

on Saturday 24 Oc<strong>to</strong>ber you didn’t miss<br />

much! I don’t want <strong>to</strong> denigrate the <strong>Amiga</strong> and<br />

it’s supporters but the show (a glorified user<br />

group meeting actually) was poorly organised<br />

and a great disappointment from that which<br />

was advertised. Now that I have that <strong>of</strong>f my<br />

chest let’s get on with the show report.<br />

<strong>The</strong> original show which was <strong>to</strong> be held over<br />

two days only managed a Saturday showing. <strong>The</strong><br />

venue was one <strong>of</strong> the corporate boxes above the<br />

Grand Prix pit complex at Albert Park. <strong>The</strong> large<br />

room still seemed empty even after all the<br />

exhibi<strong>to</strong>rs had arrived and set up their displays<br />

and wares. Entry was reduced <strong>to</strong> $5.00 dollars <strong>to</strong><br />

compensate for the lower quality <strong>of</strong> the event<br />

than that which was advertised.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Venue: Pit Straight at Albert Park Lake<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

<strong>The</strong> exibi<strong>to</strong>rs included the Melbourne <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> (formally the North Western <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong>) which set up an internet cafe site<br />

right in the building using <strong>Amiga</strong> 3000’s and<br />

4000’s. You could surf the web using a familiar<br />

interface and computer at the same time. <strong>The</strong><br />

service was really fast and the group were<br />

charging $1.00 per hour for the privilege. <strong>The</strong><br />

group also had a User <strong>Group</strong> stand set up and<br />

were recruiting new members at the meeting.<br />

What <strong>to</strong> buy?: Computa-Magic shows its<br />

wares <strong>to</strong> s<strong>of</strong>tware starved enthusiasts<br />

Computa-Magic had a large stand and had<br />

many items for sale including all the latest <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

titles on CDROM. Whilst the vast majority <strong>of</strong><br />

titles were hideously expensive there were some<br />

bargains <strong>to</strong> be had and many people handed over<br />

their hard earned cash for some <strong>of</strong> the hottest<br />

Continued: Page 9<br />

1


<strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

Edi<strong>to</strong>r<br />

Tom Heeren<br />

(03) 9583 6259<br />

edi<strong>to</strong>r@members.aug.org.au<br />

Contributions<br />

Contributions can be s<strong>of</strong>t<br />

copy (on 3½” disk) or<br />

hard copy. It will be<br />

returned if requested and<br />

accompanied with a selfaddressed<br />

envelope.<br />

<strong>The</strong> edi<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>. newsletter<br />

Workbench retains<br />

the right <strong>to</strong> edit contributions<br />

for clarity and<br />

length.<br />

Send contributions <strong>to</strong>:<br />

Tom Heeren<br />

24 Herald Street<br />

Cheltenham Vic 3192<br />

edi<strong>to</strong>r@members.aug.org.au<br />

Advertising<br />

Advertising space is free<br />

for members <strong>to</strong> sell<br />

private items or services.<br />

For information on commercial<br />

rates, contact:<br />

James Gardiner<br />

(03) 9553 3826<br />

treasurer@members.aug.org.au<br />

Deadlines<br />

Workbench is published<br />

each month. <strong>The</strong> deadline<br />

for each issue is the 2nd<br />

Sunday <strong>of</strong> the month <strong>of</strong><br />

publication.<br />

Reprints<br />

All articles in Workbench<br />

are Copyright ©1998 the<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

unless otherwise indicated.<br />

Articles may be<br />

reproduced for noncommercial<br />

purposes if<br />

accompanied by a credit<br />

line including the original<br />

author’s name and the<br />

words “Reprinted from<br />

Workbench the newsletter<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong><br />

<strong>Group</strong>, PO Box 198,<br />

Moorabbin, Vic<strong>to</strong>ria<br />

3189”.<br />

Disclaimer<br />

<strong>The</strong> views expressed in the<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

newsletter Workbench are<br />

those <strong>of</strong> the authors and do<br />

not necessarily represent the<br />

views <strong>of</strong> the edi<strong>to</strong>r or the<br />

committee.<br />

Newsletter produced by<br />

Doggone Productions ©<br />

Edi<strong>to</strong>rial<br />

Well this is the last edition <strong>of</strong> Workbench for 1998 (see below). I think this year has gone quite well for<br />

the club. Although membership has decreased we still have many enthusiastic members in the club.<br />

Some <strong>of</strong> the events that affected the club this year was the closure <strong>of</strong> Crazy Diamond BBS. This<br />

was unexpected but has since been remedied by Craig Hutchison’s BBS – <strong>The</strong> Dead Letter<br />

Department. This service is free <strong>to</strong> all members and fills the gap left by Crazy Diamond. I’m sure I<br />

speak for everyone in the club when I say thanks <strong>to</strong> Craig for this service.<br />

I would like <strong>to</strong> say thanks <strong>to</strong> all those members who have donated their time <strong>to</strong> write articles for this<br />

newsletter. Your efforts have not gone unnoticed and I’m sure the members appreciate reading s<strong>to</strong>ries<br />

from their peers about the <strong>Amiga</strong>. <strong>The</strong> club has a vast experience base and I encourage any one<br />

wanting <strong>to</strong> pen <strong>to</strong> paper <strong>to</strong> do so and send your contributions <strong>to</strong> me.<br />

1999 is shaping up <strong>to</strong> bring some advances <strong>to</strong> our beloved computer. <strong>Amiga</strong> OS 3.5 is scheduled <strong>to</strong><br />

released in the first quarter <strong>of</strong> next year. For those <strong>of</strong> you that have the 3.1 chipset this will be a must<br />

have – hopefully it won’t be <strong>to</strong>o expensive and will be <strong>to</strong>tally compatible with our existing s<strong>of</strong>tware.<br />

<strong>The</strong> PC based <strong>Amiga</strong> operating/developer system will also be released sometime next year. This<br />

should set the cat amongst the pigeons whilst we wait for the new miracle chipset that will herald<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> OS 5.0.<br />

From everyone on the committee I want <strong>to</strong> wish you a Merry Christmas and a Safe and Happy New<br />

Year. We all hope <strong>to</strong> see you in the next year.<br />

Tom Heeren<br />

News<br />

Meeting<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

November 15: It’s that time <strong>of</strong> year again when<br />

all members can bring in their unwanted <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

stuff and try <strong>to</strong> sell or swap <strong>to</strong> other members.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se events have proved very successful in the<br />

past and will no doubt be again this time around.<br />

As usual at the end <strong>of</strong> the day items not sold will<br />

be auctioned for the members’ or clubs’ benefit.<br />

Come along and get rid <strong>of</strong> your unwanted stuff or<br />

buy some really great bargains.<br />

Please note that the meeting will take place in<br />

a different meeting room.. <strong>The</strong> new venue is is in<br />

the brick building beside our usual meeting room.<br />

Forthcoming Meetings<br />

If you can help with ideas for our monthy<br />

meetings please contact a committee member.<br />

December 13: <strong>The</strong> meeting before the Christmas<br />

break will take place one week earlier than usual.<br />

At this stage no meeting theme has been devised<br />

but rest assured that something interesting will<br />

turn up.<br />

Club Donation<br />

During the <strong>Amiga</strong>Fest ’98 Show Greg Perry, the<br />

crea<strong>to</strong>r <strong>of</strong> DOpus, donated a T-Shirt <strong>to</strong> the club.<br />

This will be auctioned at the November meeting<br />

with all proceeds going <strong>to</strong> the club. It is sized XL<br />

and should fit anyone who buys it. This item is<br />

not available in shops so bid for something that’s<br />

a little different and <strong>Amiga</strong>!<br />

Bumper Sized Issue<br />

Workbench will be taking a holiday during the<br />

month <strong>of</strong> December hence this larger issue. As<br />

the edi<strong>to</strong>r is moving house, in early December, it<br />

was felt that rather than compromise on the<br />

December issue on newsletter would be<br />

produced. Your next edition will delivered in<br />

early January 1999. This may also be a bumper<br />

issue <strong>to</strong> make amends for not having anything <strong>to</strong><br />

read during the Christmas break.<br />

Please remember that you can <strong>download</strong> the<br />

.pdf version <strong>of</strong> the newsletter on our website.<br />

This edition is in colour and is optimised for on<br />

screen viewing. You can also see the special<br />

edition newsletter that was handed out during the<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>Fest ’98 show.<br />

Tom Heeren<br />

In This Issue<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>Fest ’98 ......................................... 1<br />

Edi<strong>to</strong>rial & Club News ............................ 2<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Blasts Off..................................... 3<br />

A4000TX................................................... 4<br />

DOpus Magellan II................................... 5<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Tech Talk ...................................... 6<br />

Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> Proposal......................... 7<br />

CyberGfx 4 / PFS2................................... 8<br />

Genetic Species Cheat Codes............. 10<br />

Fleecy Moss Speaks..............................11<br />

BoXeR Update....................................... 12<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Direc<strong>to</strong>ry .................................... 13<br />

In Brief.................................................... 13<br />

MVB News.............................................. 14<br />

Reader Classifieds................................ 15<br />

About the <strong>Group</strong> ................................... 16<br />

2 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


<strong>Amiga</strong>s at<br />

Cape Canaveral<br />

Y es, there is an elaborate system <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>s used by NASA at Cape<br />

Canaveral, Hangar AE since 1987. I<br />

wrote an article for the August 1996<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Computing which details how the<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>s are used, and was a member <strong>of</strong><br />

the team that built this system. I acted as<br />

the Commercial Developer for our<br />

group, and did a lot <strong>of</strong> the evaluating<br />

and buying <strong>of</strong> equipment. I was always<br />

looking for the latest s<strong>to</strong>rage, speedenhancing<br />

and other devices <strong>to</strong> increase<br />

system capabilities.<br />

This system was primarily built <strong>to</strong> support two<br />

unmanned launch programs, Atlas-Centaur and<br />

Delta. It processes vehicle (and sometimes<br />

spacecraft) data for presentation on stripcharts,<br />

moni<strong>to</strong>rs and prin<strong>to</strong>uts. Hangar AE has served as<br />

a facility for both NASA and contrac<strong>to</strong>r<br />

personnel <strong>to</strong> moni<strong>to</strong>r all major pad tests and<br />

launches. It has been important <strong>to</strong> the vehicle<br />

contrac<strong>to</strong>rs because their own facilities <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

were not roomy enough or<br />

flexible enough for all<br />

necessary personnel <strong>to</strong><br />

moni<strong>to</strong>r<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

tests. Data is also sent around the Cape, and <strong>to</strong><br />

contrac<strong>to</strong>r facilities in other parts <strong>of</strong> the country,<br />

where we set up small versions <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

systems. Engineers who could not travel <strong>to</strong> the<br />

Cape can use these remote systems <strong>to</strong> look at<br />

their own selection <strong>of</strong> data channels in real time<br />

during pad tests.<br />

<strong>The</strong> CARDS program data presentation within<br />

the AE hangar includes up <strong>to</strong> 700 stripchart<br />

channels, several hundred video moni<strong>to</strong>rs, and a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> high- speed line printers. An engineer<br />

sitting at a moni<strong>to</strong>r console can, at any time, set<br />

up cus<strong>to</strong>m video pages showing any combination<br />

<strong>of</strong> measurements desired, or have select prin<strong>to</strong>uts<br />

made at one <strong>of</strong> the printers.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first systems were <strong>Amiga</strong> 1000's with<br />

Byte-by-Byte PAL boxes and Ronin Hurricane<br />

14.32 MHz 020 accelera<strong>to</strong>r cards, plus our own<br />

design Zorro I cards <strong>to</strong> input and output data. <strong>The</strong><br />

second generation were <strong>Amiga</strong> 2500's with CSA<br />

Rocket Launchers (030/882 50 MHz), and I/O<br />

cards re-designed <strong>to</strong> the Zorro II shape. <strong>The</strong><br />

present generation are 4000's in Micronik <strong>to</strong>wer<br />

kits with Warp Engine 040-40's and improved I/O<br />

cards.<br />

AE does have two 060 cards and one 060/PPC;<br />

not much work has been done with the PPC yet,<br />

as the programmers have been <strong>to</strong>o busy trying <strong>to</strong><br />

keep up with day-<strong>to</strong>-day tests and s<strong>of</strong>tware,<br />

especially since Dave Brown retired at the<br />

beginning <strong>of</strong> the year.<br />

<strong>The</strong> multitasking OS has made it possible <strong>to</strong><br />

do many things in the CARDS program that<br />

would be a nightmare or impossible with<br />

Windows or a Mac. Measurements can be added<br />

or modified while the system is running. If<br />

Centaur powers up while a Delta test is in<br />

progress, it can also be handled without<br />

rebooting anything. <strong>The</strong> remote systems<br />

can be re-programmed and tested from<br />

the Cape.<br />

People bash Commodore, but we had<br />

good working relations with them,<br />

and were usually able <strong>to</strong> get help<br />

when we needed it. <strong>The</strong> engineering<br />

troops were fine; management was a<br />

mixed bag.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong>s should be on the job at<br />

Hangar AE for several more years,<br />

even if no new <strong>Amiga</strong>s appear.<br />

Hal Greenlee, NASA-retired<br />

HardDrivers Co.<br />

hrgreen@worldnet.att.net<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Blasts Off<br />

3


Power UpNow<br />

power up A4000TX Tower Case<br />

desk<strong>to</strong>ps <strong>to</strong> the new A4000TX case.<br />

Finished in a chrome and powder-coated internal surface, its stylish look and robust<br />

case gives the <strong>Amiga</strong> 4000 an unique look.<br />

With greater expandability than ever before, you can now add many more<br />

peripherals with ease.<br />

<strong>The</strong> floppy drive sits at the <strong>to</strong>p, with 5 x 5¼” drive bays below it and 5x3½” HD<br />

drive bays inside. With an 8 cm cooling fan at the <strong>to</strong>p and an optional cooling fan at<br />

the bot<strong>to</strong>m, this will solve any overheating problems. the A4000 motherboard is<br />

mounted on a removable slide-out tray and makes servicing, upgrading or repairing a<br />

breeze. With plenty <strong>of</strong> space on either side <strong>of</strong> the motherboard, this makes accelera<strong>to</strong>r<br />

$395.00<br />

or <strong>Amiga</strong> Technology Australia can install for just $495.00<br />

including postage and handling within Australia<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> 4000 owners <strong>of</strong> Rev. A, B and D boards can upgrade from their<br />

SPECIFICATIONS<br />

Call for orders on<br />

(03) 9436 5555<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Technology Australia<br />

Fax: (03) 9436 9935<br />

Web address: www.amigatech.com.au<br />

• Cus<strong>to</strong>m designed for A4000 desk<strong>to</strong>p<br />

computer<br />

• 1x3½” dedicated floppy drive bay<br />

• Drive bay best used with Super Drive<br />

LS120<br />

• 5x5¼” universal drive bays<br />

• 5x3½” hard disk drive bays<br />

• Super quiet 8 cm cooling fan<br />

• Optional cooling fan for expansion cards<br />

• Removable slide-out tray for motherboard<br />

• Ideal for service and upgrading<br />

• Individual removable external panels<br />

• Solid 1.2–2.0 mm steel construction<br />

• Fully powder-coated for extra protection<br />

• Fully chromed backing panel<br />

• 230 Watt ATX power supply<br />

• Power LED, HDD LED and Reset switch<br />

• Allows fitting <strong>of</strong> all accelera<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

• Provision for CyberVision PPC connec<strong>to</strong>r<br />

• Provision for Centronics 50 pin connec<strong>to</strong>r<br />

for external SCSI devices<br />

• Provision for 2xD25 and 1xD9 for future<br />

expansion<br />

• Additional cus<strong>to</strong>m slotted vents for extra<br />

cooling<br />

• Easy upgrade from desk<strong>to</strong>p <strong>to</strong> <strong>to</strong>wer<br />

• Simple <strong>to</strong> fit – Instructions included<br />

• Supplied with mounting feet<br />

• Full 1 year warranty<br />

• Manufactured and designed in Australia<br />

• Available Now!<br />

• Price $395.00<br />

4 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


Direc<strong>to</strong>ry Opus has become<br />

firmly established as the<br />

premier Workbench<br />

replacement and file management<br />

solution for the <strong>Amiga</strong>. With the<br />

arrival <strong>of</strong> DOpus Magellan II the<br />

tradition continues. Over 500<br />

changes in the internal code, this<br />

new version harnesses the power<br />

<strong>of</strong> object orientated multitasking<br />

like never before giving the <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

a modern context-sensitive GUI<br />

combined with a very powerful<br />

built-in file management functions.<br />

DOpus Magellan II not only upgrades many <strong>of</strong><br />

the earlier functions but also involves and<br />

extensive re-development <strong>of</strong> many components <strong>of</strong><br />

the Opus 5 system. Amongst other features, we<br />

have concentrated on providing greater<br />

user control over your cus<strong>to</strong>m<br />

Environment with a more powerful<br />

but easier <strong>to</strong> use configuration<br />

section, plus many new features<br />

such as cus<strong>to</strong>m <strong>The</strong>mes, cus<strong>to</strong>m<br />

sounds and scripts, improved<br />

User and Start Menus, greater<br />

Lister functionality, and a<br />

dramatically enhanced OpusFTP<br />

system where you can now tailor<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>m setting for individual remote<br />

sites and even leave out the site or<br />

remote files on your Opus desk<strong>to</strong>p for instant<br />

access.<br />

Some <strong>of</strong> the new features <strong>of</strong> DOpus Magellan<br />

II include:<br />

❐ Cus<strong>to</strong>m <strong>The</strong>mes – cus<strong>to</strong>mise your system with<br />

your favourite images, sounds, fonts and colours.<br />

❐ Enhanced Lister layouts feature proportional<br />

fonts; resizable fields; sort indica<strong>to</strong>r; full In-line<br />

editing; new popup menus; optional Space Gauge<br />

on drives; ad the ability <strong>to</strong> drag and drop files<br />

directly in<strong>to</strong> sub-direc<strong>to</strong>ries. Supports long file<br />

names up <strong>to</strong> 107 characters.<br />

❐ An Amalgamated Options and Environment<br />

edi<strong>to</strong>r gives you more intuitive layout and better<br />

management <strong>of</strong> the display and program<br />

operations including:<br />

• New Outline and Shadow Font options<br />

• Fully user configurable screen title for display<br />

<strong>of</strong> used and available memory, OS version,<br />

processes etc…<br />

• New Sound events for Opus and system events<br />

• New Opus Path List settings allowing you <strong>to</strong><br />

easily set the system paths for commands etc…<br />

• Enhanced Scripts system with more events and<br />

linking <strong>to</strong> internal commands and OpusFTP.<br />

Internal commands are now replaceable by user<br />

defined scripts and functions.<br />

❐ Improved But<strong>to</strong>n Banks and Start Menus:<br />

new graphical layout and better configurability;<br />

background pictures including random images;<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

new open under mouse, au<strong>to</strong>-close, au<strong>to</strong>-iconify<br />

functions plus new active popups – each but<strong>to</strong>n<br />

can act as a start menu. New multilevel start<br />

menus are now always sticky.<br />

❐ Improved filetype identification system and<br />

new filetype-matching functions for foreign disk<br />

types.<br />

❐ Better Icon support with faster displays plus<br />

new and extended icon, Lister and <strong>Group</strong> popup<br />

menus plus improved Snapshot ability.<br />

❐ New Icon Information requester with more<br />

detailed display, new functionality including the<br />

ability <strong>to</strong> change icon type and the icon image.<br />

❐ Improved Drag and Drop functions.<br />

❐ Many New ARexx Commands<br />

To coincide with the release <strong>of</strong> Opus Magellan<br />

II, GPS<strong>of</strong>tware has commissioned a new CD<br />

specially for Opus <strong>Users</strong>. It gives you cus<strong>to</strong>m<br />

written tu<strong>to</strong>rials <strong>to</strong> complement Opus Magellan<br />

and collects hundreds <strong>of</strong> megabytes <strong>of</strong> images,<br />

sounds, icons, scripts and other utilities <strong>to</strong><br />

enhance your Opus installation.<br />

❐ Specially commissioned tu<strong>to</strong>rials in<br />

HTML and <strong>Amiga</strong>Guide format from<br />

some <strong>of</strong> the leading DOpus experts<br />

in the world covering such diverse<br />

<strong>to</strong>pics as:<br />

• Definitive Opus Magellan tu<strong>to</strong>rial<br />

covering much more than the<br />

manual ever could!<br />

• How <strong>to</strong> cus<strong>to</strong>mise DOpus using<br />

the new features that Magellan II<br />

introduces.<br />

• Coding – the ins and outs <strong>of</strong> the<br />

extensive DOpus ARexx port and SDK<br />

by the best programmers around.<br />

• Filetypes – how <strong>to</strong> really get the most from<br />

the internal power <strong>of</strong> Opus.<br />

• FAQ – all the questions you ever wanted answered<br />

about DOpus.<br />

❐ <strong>The</strong>mes galore! Special DOpus themes can be<br />

immediately installed on your <strong>Amiga</strong>.<br />

❐ Lots and lots <strong>of</strong> icons for StartMenus, But<strong>to</strong>n<br />

banks and <strong>Amiga</strong> files and folders.<br />

❐ Lots <strong>of</strong> predefined Filetypes <strong>to</strong> support almost<br />

any <strong>Amiga</strong> program or file.<br />

❐ Complete collection <strong>of</strong> all DOpus files from<br />

Aminet and other sources.<br />

❐ <strong>The</strong> list goes on and on…<br />

<strong>The</strong> Wait Is Over!<br />

Direc<strong>to</strong>ry Opus Magellan II<br />

available from November 15th.<br />

www.gps<strong>of</strong>t.com.au<br />

GP S<strong>of</strong>tware<br />

DOpus Magellan II<br />

5


<strong>Amiga</strong> Tech Talk<br />

OxyRon 040/060 Patcher Review<br />

Are you the owner <strong>of</strong> a nice 040/060<br />

accelera<strong>to</strong>r? Are you happy with the<br />

speed increase that goes with it? Have<br />

you found a few programs that run dog slow<br />

with your 040/060 that actually ran much faster<br />

on your 020/030 etc…? Welcome <strong>to</strong> the world <strong>of</strong><br />

Mo<strong>to</strong>rola’s instruction streamlined 68060 and<br />

<strong>to</strong> a lesser extent, the 040. Mo<strong>to</strong>rola in their<br />

infinite wisdom decided <strong>to</strong> streamline the 060's<br />

instruction set, meaning they dropped quite a<br />

few little used instructions. Most <strong>of</strong> these<br />

instructions were in the area <strong>of</strong> floating point<br />

maths, so only programs that use a maths coprocessor<br />

are usually affected, usually that is.<br />

Programmers managed <strong>to</strong> use a lot <strong>of</strong> those<br />

little used instructions, <strong>of</strong>ten in ways Mo<strong>to</strong>rola<br />

never dreamed and these missing instructions<br />

require the 040/060.library <strong>to</strong> emulate them,<br />

drastically slowing processor speed.<br />

Enter OXYRON Patcher, this little program<br />

installs itself using a second initial boot and<br />

patches the system <strong>to</strong> use replacement<br />

instructions generated by OXYRON instead <strong>of</strong><br />

using the 040/060 libraries. This results in a huge<br />

speed increase for the program in use (see<br />

benchmarks listing) and is <strong>of</strong> great benefit<br />

especially if you run Fusion the Macin<strong>to</strong>sh<br />

emula<strong>to</strong>r as many Macin<strong>to</strong>sh programs tend make<br />

heavy use <strong>of</strong> the unimplemented instructions in<br />

an 060.<br />

<strong>The</strong> program has a GUI that allows you <strong>to</strong> set<br />

the buffer limit for patched instructions, also <strong>to</strong><br />

Program Unpatched Patched<br />

MaxonC4D V4.0<br />

Scene1 00:10:58 00:01:13<br />

Scene2<br />

Scene3<br />

01:14:32<br />

05:56:03<br />

00:04:38<br />

00:16:58<br />

Lightwave V5.0<br />

Scene1<br />

Scene2<br />

00:17:57<br />

01:24:06<br />

00:06:03<br />

00:26:31<br />

SceneryAnima<strong>to</strong>r V4.0<br />

Scene1 00:19:24 00:01:23<br />

Scene2<br />

Real3D V3<br />

00:13:26 00:01:07<br />

Scene1 00:34:14 00:14:51<br />

flush and view the buffer, switch on a visual<br />

screen flash for patched/unpatched instructions<br />

(AGA only) and <strong>to</strong> switch certain instructions <strong>to</strong><br />

library emulation or <strong>to</strong> let OXYRON <strong>to</strong> patch<br />

them. <strong>The</strong> documentation it came with left a lot<br />

<strong>to</strong> be desired. A short note in the package (in<br />

German) that tells you how <strong>to</strong> install and use<br />

OXYRON. Fortunately there is a guide file on the<br />

disk in English but it’s obvious the authors native<br />

language is not English. Luckily installation is<br />

not that difficult.<br />

What programs actually use it? Almost any<br />

program that uses a math co-processor eg. ray<br />

tracers, image manipulation programs. Fusion<br />

and Mac programs hit it heavily and even the 3d<br />

game Breathless uses it. Fusion users have an<br />

extra with OXYRON in that virtual memory in<br />

the emulated Mac will work although some<br />

programs will quit because <strong>of</strong> a type 3 error (an<br />

FPU error). Test your program before using both<br />

MacVM and OXYRON <strong>to</strong>gether. I’ve also found<br />

that having the GUI open seems <strong>to</strong> cause quite a<br />

dramatic slowdown especially in disk access<br />

times and that the GUI seems <strong>to</strong> throw a wobbly<br />

occasionally, as though it’s being redrawn again<br />

and again. ADoom1.2 crashes on exit if the<br />

MMU <strong>to</strong>oltype is set. Normally though usage is<br />

transparent and all you will notice is some screen<br />

flashing (if you have it set <strong>to</strong> flash) and some<br />

programs running much faster.<br />

Currently OXYRON Patcher is up <strong>to</strong> version<br />

3.13 and is available from Vince at<br />

ComputaMagic for $35.00 plus $3.00 post and<br />

package. Tested on an EscomA1200 with a<br />

Blizzard060.<br />

Above: <strong>The</strong> OxyRon–Patcher GUI allows the<br />

user <strong>to</strong> configure their system <strong>to</strong> use the<br />

OxyRon–Patcher. It also displays the number<br />

<strong>of</strong> patched instructions and what they were.<br />

Left: Benchmarks taken from the OxyRon<br />

documentation guide comparing before and<br />

after results with the use <strong>of</strong> the<br />

OxyRon–Patcher. <strong>The</strong>se results apply <strong>to</strong> the<br />

68060 processor. As can be seen some<br />

dramatic speed increases have been<br />

recorded.<br />

Tony Mulvihill<br />

6 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


After the World <strong>of</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

announcement by <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Inc</strong>., on 16th May 1998 it<br />

was obvious that something had<br />

been missed out - how do users<br />

and developers move forward over<br />

the next few years?<br />

After some discussions on Saturday night in<br />

the bar I went home and wrote up some notes.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y may not be written in a very coherent style<br />

as they were produced between 4-6am on Sunday<br />

morning 17th May 1998 so that they could be<br />

presented <strong>to</strong> Jeff Schindler later that day. I also<br />

pass on apologies <strong>to</strong> those who attended my<br />

presentation later that day as I had lost my<br />

preparation time and was pretty tired, however I<br />

made it up as I went along and it seemed <strong>to</strong> go<br />

ok!<br />

When reading these notes please take in<strong>to</strong><br />

consideration that these were some suggestions<br />

put forward, they do not necessarily represent the<br />

way that anything is being implemented. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

notes were well received and appear <strong>to</strong> have set<br />

in motion various behind the scenes initiatives,<br />

and while the credit is not down <strong>to</strong> just this note,<br />

we have seen many <strong>of</strong> the points being addressed,<br />

namely:<br />

• OS4 is now renamed <strong>to</strong> OS5Dev<br />

• <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>., have shown support for the<br />

Classic <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

• OS3.5 will be developed and released in early<br />

1999<br />

<strong>The</strong> following document is presented here for<br />

his<strong>to</strong>rical interest only.<br />

<strong>The</strong> problem<br />

<strong>The</strong> current announcement has effectively killed<br />

the <strong>Amiga</strong> s<strong>of</strong>tware developer, hardware<br />

developer and dealer market by removing the<br />

future for existing <strong>Amiga</strong> users. This will leave<br />

no support for the new machine.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is no support for the original publicly<br />

stated progression <strong>to</strong> PPC/68k systems.<br />

<strong>The</strong> interim (OS4) solution is largely a<br />

developer platform and has <strong>to</strong>o short a life for<br />

many retail cus<strong>to</strong>mers. <strong>The</strong> important sales are <strong>to</strong><br />

developers and the wider public domain<br />

developers and <strong>to</strong> the technology fans that are<br />

looking <strong>to</strong> have the latest product. Of course there<br />

will be good sales because it is supplied by<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong> and has a direct link with the future,<br />

however for the market will not survive on those<br />

sales alone (1-10k units against 100k Classic<br />

owner/buyers).<br />

<strong>The</strong>re will be no more s<strong>of</strong>tware development<br />

so in 18 months time the <strong>Amiga</strong> applications will<br />

be <strong>to</strong>o far behind the required standard.<br />

Developers will have no funds <strong>to</strong> finance the<br />

porting and new developments required <strong>to</strong><br />

support the new platform.<br />

No matter what any <strong>of</strong> us think about the<br />

announcement, we cannot turn the clock back and<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

therefore will have <strong>to</strong> find a solution that rebuilds<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>mer confidence.<br />

A way has <strong>to</strong> be found <strong>to</strong> bring along the<br />

whole developer and dealer community.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Solution<br />

Access, Phase 5 and H&P held a long discussion<br />

session in the bar and are well on the way <strong>to</strong><br />

agreeing an interim solution. <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>., have<br />

said that they agree with the points that had been<br />

discussed and would agree subject <strong>to</strong>:<br />

• Publicly backing their plans for OS5<br />

• A signed agreement <strong>of</strong> how the plan will be<br />

put in<strong>to</strong> action.<br />

• A joint press release.<br />

<strong>The</strong> plan<br />

Access, P5, H&P and <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>., make a press<br />

release stating that we intend <strong>to</strong> continue the<br />

development <strong>of</strong> the Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> platform,<br />

independently <strong>of</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>. [note: this should be<br />

extended <strong>to</strong> include other developers, dealers,<br />

etc…., who are behind the plan]<br />

P5 & H&P have agreed a unified way <strong>of</strong><br />

implementing PPC in the future - P5 will produce<br />

the hardware and H&P will supply WarpUP and<br />

developer <strong>to</strong>ols <strong>to</strong> make the transition <strong>to</strong> PPC<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>’s quicker, easier and <strong>to</strong> the new unified<br />

architecture.<br />

<strong>The</strong> dealer, developer and user community will<br />

be encouraged <strong>to</strong> back the plan as a “community<br />

lead” initiative.<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong> state that OS4 is a developer<br />

platform for the new generation machine (with<br />

interim Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> compatibility - Siamese<br />

PCI), not a replacement for the Classic <strong>Amiga</strong>.<br />

<strong>The</strong> OS5 machine is not a migration path but a<br />

new generation machine, which will have a<br />

strong support route for moving <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

applications over <strong>to</strong> it. <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong> strongly<br />

support the Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> and will release OS3.1<br />

<strong>to</strong> H&P <strong>to</strong> carry out the development <strong>of</strong> OS3.5<br />

and future generations <strong>of</strong> the OS.<br />

Access Innovation look at adding support for a<br />

32-bit PPC interface on the Siamese PCI<br />

(InsideOut) so that a single machine supports<br />

development for 68k, PPC & OS5. Ideally the<br />

basic connec<strong>to</strong>r and pin out should be compatible<br />

with the BoXeR (except the BoXeR supports 64 -<br />

bit data) so that the number <strong>of</strong> different PPC<br />

boards doesn’t have <strong>to</strong> be <strong>to</strong>o great.<br />

<strong>The</strong> specification for <strong>Amiga</strong> OS 3.5 will have<br />

<strong>to</strong> be basically agreed. I would suggest that this<br />

includes bug fixes, support for things like large<br />

HD’s, internet support and improvements <strong>to</strong> the<br />

user interface [perhaps Magellan for the frontend<br />

as the latest version has ‘personality’<br />

modules that allow things like a kids interface, a<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional interface, etc…]. This must be ready<br />

<strong>to</strong> ship by November 1998. [we will have <strong>to</strong><br />

discuss if future versions are viable]<br />

Dealers will support the initiative because it<br />

helps <strong>to</strong> maintain sales, perhaps increasing them<br />

because <strong>of</strong> the clear development strategy and the<br />

invigorated cooperation in the community.<br />

Continued: Page 10<br />

Access Innovation -<br />

Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> Proposal<br />

7


Pr<strong>of</strong>essional File System 2<br />

<strong>The</strong> Successor To Ami-FileSafe<br />

CyberGraphX Version 4 Retargetable Graphics<br />

System by Vision Fac<strong>to</strong>ry Development.<br />

Overview<br />

• This is Pre-Release information. Everything is subject <strong>to</strong> change.<br />

• CGX V3 was near the end <strong>of</strong> its life with phase5. CGX V3 will not be supported by phase5<br />

anymore, so we decided <strong>to</strong> expand its features and make it commercial.<br />

• Schatztruhe will sell a CGX V4 CDROM<br />

• Planned price is 49DM for new owners and 29.90DM for updates (price subject <strong>to</strong> change)<br />

• Should be shown at the Cologne show 1998<br />

A few <strong>of</strong> the new CGX V4 features (over V3)<br />

• German/English documentation/online help for CGXMode<br />

• CGXMode moni<strong>to</strong>r database<br />

• CGXCommodity (cgx config program) for control <strong>of</strong><br />

envs and <strong>to</strong>oltypes and some superlayers features<br />

like hide/show windows<br />

• Fully compatible with CGX V3<br />

• Bitmapcache support added for all drivers<br />

(supported cards)<br />

• Latest V43 24Bit DT, picture.datatype will come with it.<br />

Distributed by: Stefan Ossowski’s Schatztruhe<br />

Gesellschaft for S<strong>of</strong>tware mbH<br />

After the failing support and all the<br />

complaints about former AFS distribu<strong>to</strong>r<br />

Fourth Level Developments, the author,<br />

Michiel Pelt, reclaimed copyright and will<br />

republish PFS2 under the label <strong>of</strong> Great Effects<br />

Development.<br />

Improvements over Ami-FileSafe:<br />

• Special price for registered AFS users.<br />

• 68000, 68020, 68040 and 68060 versions.<br />

• Built-in interface for live optimiser. <strong>The</strong>re is no<br />

optimiser yet, but this interface makes it<br />

possible <strong>to</strong> optimise the disk without taking it<br />

<strong>of</strong>f-line. When the disk is accessed during<br />

optimisation, PFS2 will s<strong>to</strong>p the optimiser,<br />

which can continue afterwards. A dormant<br />

optimiser can even be au<strong>to</strong>matically notified<br />

when the system is idle, making optimisation<br />

completely transparent.<br />

• Improved testing procedures making PFS2<br />

more stable and reliable then ever before.<br />

• Enhanced documentation including<br />

programming docs (disk structure and special<br />

packets).<br />

• New versions <strong>of</strong> all supplied <strong>to</strong>ols (bug-fixes<br />

mostly), pfsls, diskvalid etc…<br />

• Full support plus disk repair service.<br />

• Fully Ami-FileSafe compatible.<br />

• Early problem detection mechanism. This<br />

mechanism detects problems with your disk<br />

before it is <strong>to</strong>o late, ensuring optimal<br />

protection <strong>of</strong> your data.<br />

• Extended disk structure <strong>to</strong> make disk-repair<br />

easier.<br />

• Comes on CD.<br />

• FREE Bonus: the award-winning game Kang<br />

Fu, now with extra levels!<br />

New in version 4.2:<br />

• Partitions up<strong>to</strong> 104GB and harddisks up <strong>to</strong><br />

2TB utilizing TD64 and Direct SCSI<br />

support. A free update for PFS2<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>mers will be available on Aminet<br />

soon.<br />

Plus all that Ami-FileSafe already had...<br />

• Superior performance. Up <strong>to</strong> a 500%<br />

improvement over FFS.<br />

• Disk are always valid. No more validation disk<br />

errors!<br />

• Reliability<br />

• Concurrent access without performance loss.<br />

PFS2 handles simultaneous accesses very<br />

well!<br />

• Easy file-recovery with the delete direc<strong>to</strong>ry.<br />

Getting a deleted file back never was so easy.<br />

• Au<strong>to</strong>matically truncated logfiles. Get rid <strong>of</strong><br />

those ever growing logfiles.<br />

Only DM 99,-<br />

Update from AFS only DM 59,-<br />

8 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


From: Page 1<br />

titles available on the <strong>Amiga</strong> – though $109.00<br />

for the <strong>Amiga</strong> version <strong>of</strong> Quake seemed a little<br />

steep for PC conversion!<br />

Beside Computa-Magic <strong>Amiga</strong> Technology<br />

Australia constructed a very large display <strong>of</strong> all<br />

the latest hardware available including a locally<br />

designed and built <strong>Amiga</strong> 4000 Tower<br />

conversion. This <strong>to</strong>wer was very impressive<br />

indeed, its all metal construction was a change<br />

from the mainly plastic <strong>to</strong>wer conversions seen in<br />

the past. <strong>The</strong> company also showed what a<br />

souped-up A4000 can do. With a PPC board and<br />

CyberVision PPC graphics card this machine was<br />

a sight <strong>to</strong> behold. <strong>Amiga</strong> Technology also<br />

supplied a catalogue <strong>of</strong> the hardware and<br />

s<strong>of</strong>tware that they can supply <strong>to</strong> the public at<br />

what seemed like very competitive prices indeed.<br />

Internet Cafe <strong>Amiga</strong> Style: <strong>The</strong> MAUG<br />

shows how it’s done.<br />

Draco was present with their linear video<br />

editing machines. <strong>The</strong>se boxes are apparently the<br />

bees knees when it comes <strong>to</strong> economical<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essional video editing. Based on <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

technology and using OS 3.1 these computers<br />

showed what can be done with an <strong>Amiga</strong>.<br />

<strong>The</strong> BAEUG was also present and had a<br />

display <strong>of</strong> the Siamese system in which you can<br />

connect an <strong>Amiga</strong> and a PC <strong>to</strong>gether and have<br />

both functioning in parallel. This is useful for<br />

manipulating files across platforms and using the<br />

hardware in the the PC for use by the <strong>Amiga</strong> like<br />

the graphics card or sound card. Once connected<br />

only one keyboard and mouse need <strong>to</strong> be used for<br />

both computers.<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

<strong>The</strong> organisers AAG were present and had a<br />

small display in which you could subscribe <strong>to</strong><br />

their magazine and purchase back issues. <strong>The</strong>ir<br />

stand also included four A1200 which were<br />

raffled <strong>of</strong>f during the day. <strong>The</strong>se were donated by<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> International. Other items which were<br />

given away as prizes included MasterISO, the CD<br />

authoring s<strong>of</strong>tware from Asimware,<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>Forever, the <strong>Amiga</strong> emula<strong>to</strong>r from Cloan<strong>to</strong><br />

and copies <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>The</strong>me on CD.<br />

Video Editing: <strong>The</strong> Melbourne distribu<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>of</strong><br />

the Draco system explain some <strong>of</strong> the finer<br />

points <strong>to</strong> keen listeners.<br />

Our own club members were present as<br />

volunteers manning the entrance desk, handing<br />

out a special edition newsletter and other jobs<br />

that needed throughout the day. Many new faces<br />

were canvassed which may mean some new<br />

members in the not <strong>to</strong> distant future.<br />

<strong>The</strong> shows’ success was a result <strong>of</strong> the<br />

enthusiasm showed by participating members and<br />

vendors associated with the <strong>Amiga</strong>. <strong>The</strong> shows’<br />

organiser, whilst having booked the venue,<br />

played a smaller role in the overall event. In the<br />

future if a show like this is <strong>to</strong> be held a different<br />

approach is required and a venue selected that<br />

may make it possible for more people <strong>to</strong> attend.<br />

Text: Tom Heeren<br />

Pho<strong>to</strong>s: Alexander McCooke<br />

Watch this space for<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Show Reports<br />

in the New Year!<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>Fest ’98 Report.<br />

9


Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> Proposal<br />

Cheats & Level Codes<br />

From: Page 7<br />

<strong>The</strong> new processor company produce and<br />

release the source code for a compiler (code<br />

genera<strong>to</strong>r), this is supplied <strong>to</strong> H&P who will<br />

integrate the compiler in their S<strong>to</strong>rm<br />

development environment. Siamese Systems will<br />

develop and supply an <strong>Amiga</strong> compatibility API<br />

(Siamese PCI implements much <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

API on the host and will be able <strong>to</strong> supply this<br />

element quicker and with less overall<br />

development effort). <strong>The</strong> S<strong>to</strong>rm IDE will allow<br />

quick and simple movement <strong>of</strong> applications<br />

between 68k, PPC and new CPU. [note: the<br />

releasing <strong>of</strong> this compiler code is the one part that<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>., were uncertain about]<br />

Dealers supporting the new movement will<br />

help <strong>to</strong> pull along s<strong>of</strong>tware and hardware<br />

products from developers and help <strong>to</strong> continue<br />

the development <strong>of</strong> s<strong>of</strong>tware products, ensuring<br />

that upgraded products keep pace with<br />

developments and will provide a good pool <strong>of</strong><br />

applications for the new machines.<br />

<strong>The</strong> H&P IDE will allow late movement <strong>of</strong><br />

applications from Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>to</strong> the new<br />

machine (there may be some performance loss<br />

because <strong>of</strong> the portability API, however this will<br />

be relatively minor because <strong>of</strong> the substantial<br />

performance improvement <strong>of</strong> the CPU), allowing<br />

virtually a single source code version <strong>to</strong> compile<br />

for the 3 processors.<br />

While supporting and pr<strong>of</strong>iting from their<br />

current products developers will be encouraged<br />

<strong>to</strong> develop new, next generation, applications<br />

using the developer machines.<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>. drop the reference <strong>to</strong> OS4 and call<br />

it development machines. OS5 is renamed <strong>to</strong><br />

something else. <strong>The</strong> apparent progression from<br />

OS3.1->OS4->OS5 is confusing <strong>to</strong> the current<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> owner because it suggests that their<br />

This list shows all areas where a cheat code<br />

can be used in Genetic Species.<br />

FrameCount - Enable FrameCounter.<br />

DangerZone - Maximum Weapon Ammo.<br />

FoxMulder - Maximum Weapon KillPower.<br />

Caffeine - Immortality<br />

FullCircle - Remove Player Shot Collision.<br />

Goldbeer - Disable Artificial Intelligence.<br />

Sober - Enable Artificial Intelligence.<br />

SatanClaus - Remove All Weapon NoiseFac<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

Scorpions - Disable Puzzle Board.<br />

AlienRace - Make <strong>The</strong> Player Invisible To All<br />

Enemies.<br />

Chainsaw - Change <strong>The</strong> Death Sequence A Bit.<br />

JumpingJack - Enable Jumping Bunny Function.<br />

HellRaiser - Reset Weapon Reload Time.<br />

MindFields - Unlock All Doors.<br />

Sissies - Able To Carry Everything.<br />

Fuck You - Surprise!<br />

RushHour - Extreme Enemy Movement Velocity.<br />

Astronomical - Enemies Will Never Retreat.<br />

Elite - Extreme Enemy Shot Rate.<br />

Muppet Show - Set Shade Fac<strong>to</strong>r To $D000<br />

Retribution - LevelCode For Stage0<br />

Dysfunctional - LevelCode For Stage1<br />

Antimatter - LevelCode For Stage2<br />

EyeOf<strong>The</strong>S<strong>to</strong>rm - LevelCode For Stage3<br />

migration path is <strong>to</strong> an incompatible hardware<br />

and s<strong>of</strong>tware upgrade, rather than <strong>to</strong> a <strong>to</strong>tally new<br />

mega performance machine. <strong>The</strong>y are different<br />

platforms... [using the OS4 title for that future<br />

Classic <strong>Amiga</strong> OS version would be desirable -<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong> may release the interface code for<br />

their new OS which may be useful <strong>to</strong> give a<br />

common appearance, while targeting the future<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>’s as media creation <strong>to</strong>ols]<br />

This plan is designed <strong>to</strong> keep active<br />

development going for 2 years with a 1 year<br />

overlap with the new machine, leaving<br />

developers and users happy that they have a safe<br />

platform from which they can sit back and assess<br />

the new machine rather than having <strong>to</strong> jump over<br />

the edge committing <strong>to</strong> a machine that they have<br />

not seen (and therefore moving <strong>to</strong> other platforms<br />

in the interim).<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>., will supply design information on<br />

the new processor as soon as possible and<br />

perhaps sample boards so that we can look at<br />

developing our own motherboards for OS5. [we<br />

are for example interested in developing a future<br />

replacement for our Access kiosk board]<br />

Conclusion<br />

Hardware developer, s<strong>of</strong>tware developers and<br />

dealers have an active market.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re will be active developers and<br />

applications will be current versions when they<br />

are moved <strong>to</strong> the new machine.<br />

Developers will have cashflow <strong>to</strong> allow them<br />

<strong>to</strong> develop their next generation applications<br />

directly for the new machine.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re will be a larger active <strong>Amiga</strong> cus<strong>to</strong>mer<br />

base available <strong>to</strong> move <strong>to</strong> the new machine, rather<br />

than trying <strong>to</strong> claw them back.<br />

Mick Tinker 6 Oc<strong>to</strong>ber 1998<br />

Ambrosia - LevelCode For Rocket Launcher<br />

Cncd - LevelCode For Plasma Gun<br />

Iris - LevelCode For Flechette<br />

Polka B. - LevelCode For Assault Rifle<br />

Parallax - LevelCode For Mini Gun<br />

SpaceBalls - LevelCode For Flame Thrower<br />

3LE - LevelCode For Tazer<br />

Stellar - LevelCode For Ind. Drill<br />

Puzzle - LevelCode For Stun G. Launcher<br />

Kefrens - LevelCode For Pis<strong>to</strong>l<br />

Impact - LevelCode For Sil. Pis<strong>to</strong>l<br />

Silents - LevelCode For Fire Axe<br />

Scoopex - LevelCode For Aut. Pis<strong>to</strong>l<br />

Deathrow - LevelCode For Hugger Acid<br />

Loonies - LevelCode For Laser Mine<br />

Impulse - LevelCode For Mantis Beam<br />

Depth - LevelCode For Laser Rifle<br />

Floppy - LevelCode For Hand Grenade<br />

Budbrain - LevelCode For Zombie Hands<br />

Gods - LevelCode For Poopie<br />

Artwork - LevelCode For Data Disc<br />

Rage - LevelCode For Violet Keycard<br />

C-Lous - LevelCode For Red Keycard<br />

Subacid - LevelCode For Green Keycard<br />

Balance - LevelCode For Blue Keycard<br />

Efreet - LevelCode For Bio Toxin<br />

TBL - LevelCode For Save Game<br />

VirtualDreams - LevelCode For Orange Keycard<br />

10 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


Fleecy Moss, <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

Clarifies Company<br />

Strategy<br />

Gary Peake <strong>of</strong> Team <strong>Amiga</strong> posted this email<br />

from <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.’s Fleecy Moss in a recent<br />

newsgroup thread. In it, Mr. Moss states that an<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> desk<strong>to</strong>p is not the primary focus <strong>of</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Inc</strong>. and that they do not “need” the existing<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> community <strong>to</strong> be successful, but that it<br />

does give them an edge.<br />

From: “Gary Peake”<br />

Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc<br />

Subject: Re: Sober Analysis <strong>of</strong> “<strong>The</strong> Plan”<br />

Date: 27 Oct 98 23:13:04 -0600<br />

fleecy@netreach.net scribed <strong>to</strong> us about Re:<br />

Sober Analysis <strong>of</strong> “<strong>The</strong> Plan” (fwd) in EMail<br />

This is a response from Fleecy Moss, <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Inc</strong> regarding my post <strong>to</strong><br />

comp.sys.amiga.misc ... reposted here with<br />

permission from Fleecy.<br />

For <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong> we don’t “need” the existing<br />

community. Our market is much bigger than<br />

just desk<strong>to</strong>ps and, in another sense, it won’t<br />

be us that concentrates on the desk<strong>to</strong>p and<br />

high end, it will be our licencees. Our OS<br />

and HW references will scale.<br />

So technically the <strong>Amiga</strong> community could<br />

die and we would be ok. However, this is a<br />

limited way <strong>of</strong> looking at the situation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> existing <strong>Amiga</strong> gives us<br />

a) a good name and reputation -many ppl<br />

remember it very fondly,<br />

b) a worldwide seed community for the new<br />

machines - not many companies can<br />

work on a product with an almost<br />

guaranteed first sale <strong>of</strong> 100,00 units.<br />

c) a worldwide evangelical force<br />

d) a very talented pool <strong>of</strong> developers<br />

e) a philosophy and attitude that is just<br />

waiting <strong>to</strong> be promoted and will be so<br />

much more effective than the stale<br />

Apple “think Differently”<br />

<strong>The</strong> problem is that many in the existing<br />

community are only looking at their existing<br />

1980's definition <strong>of</strong> computing, and <strong>of</strong> how<br />

the <strong>Amiga</strong> fits in<strong>to</strong> that, so because we are<br />

not building PPC A5000s with PPCOS4, they<br />

feel betrayed. It requires a whole new<br />

mindset -computers are no longer just geek<br />

<strong>to</strong>ys - they are the conduits for digital<br />

information.<br />

Feel free <strong>to</strong> repost this.<br />

Thanks for watching the newsgroups and<br />

correcting us where we need it<br />

Fleecy!<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

Fleecy Moss Clarifies<br />

Earlier Statements<br />

In response <strong>to</strong> his earlier posting, Mr Moss now<br />

again clarifies <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>s’s position on the<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>. Sometimes it’s better <strong>to</strong> say nothing!<br />

From: “Fleecy Moss”<br />

Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc<br />

Subject: Clarification on Desk<strong>to</strong>ps<br />

Date: 2 Nov 98 11:10:17 -0500<br />

Hey there 8-)<br />

I just went over <strong>to</strong> Aminew on CUCUG and<br />

became steaming mad - that bastard from<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>, Mr Moss says that desk<strong>to</strong>ps don’t<br />

matter anymore, and that <strong>Amiga</strong> doesn’t<br />

need us anymore....well f**k him!!!!<br />

...eeerrrr, oh, that was me........<br />

To clarify (and <strong>to</strong> demonstrate once again<br />

that sarcasm and innuendo is hard <strong>to</strong> do with<br />

a colon and some brackets), the letter I<br />

wrote <strong>to</strong> Gary was in response <strong>to</strong> a particular<br />

letter expressing concern that <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>. is<br />

abandoning the current market.<br />

If you look, you will see that “need” is in<br />

quotes - the reason, because technically, we<br />

don’t “need” desk<strong>to</strong>ps <strong>to</strong> succeed, precisely<br />

because we are not concentrating solely on<br />

desk<strong>to</strong>ps.<br />

This I feel is an important point that the<br />

community needs <strong>to</strong> understand. I have said<br />

many times that we are not just about<br />

bringing an up <strong>to</strong> date <strong>Amiga</strong> desk<strong>to</strong>p back<br />

<strong>to</strong> the existing market. To do that would<br />

probably spell our doom.<br />

We are about defining a new market, a<br />

market in which desk<strong>to</strong>ps are at home with<br />

intelligent TVs, games consoles, servers and<br />

workstations - where it isn’t the size <strong>of</strong> your<br />

hardware that counts but its ability <strong>to</strong> do the<br />

work you need it <strong>to</strong> do.<br />

Rest assured that there will be desk<strong>to</strong>p<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong>s, workstations and servers - you lot<br />

out there are living pro<strong>of</strong> that a market exists<br />

for them. I am in constant contact with HW<br />

companies who are looking at the logistics <strong>of</strong><br />

producing their own NG medium and high<br />

end <strong>Amiga</strong>s.<br />

As for not needing the community, again the<br />

comment made was a technical metaphor -<br />

<strong>of</strong> course we don’t “need” it, in the same way<br />

that France doesn’t need its world cup<br />

players <strong>to</strong> play in the world cup in 2002 -<br />

they would just be idiots not <strong>to</strong> use them.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong> community is the heart and soul<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong>.<br />

A Word From Fleecy<br />

11


BoXeR - <strong>The</strong> New <strong>Amiga</strong> Motherboard!<br />

BoXeR Update - 3rd November 1998:<br />

Blitters<strong>of</strong>t are very aware <strong>of</strong> the interest<br />

the new BoXeR motherboard has<br />

generated world wide since it’s<br />

announcement. Unfortunately, for a number <strong>of</strong><br />

reasons we cannot go in<strong>to</strong>, there has been<br />

several unexpected delays that have prevented<br />

it’s release.<br />

We would therefore like <strong>to</strong> make a statement <strong>to</strong><br />

clarify the current situation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> BoXeR motherboard is being developed<br />

by Access Innovation Ltd. Access are also<br />

involved in several other important projects,<br />

including the Inside-Out board and therefore<br />

development time has been spread accordingly.<br />

<strong>The</strong> delays have, however, allowed some further<br />

improvements <strong>to</strong> the original BoXeR<br />

specification. <strong>The</strong>se changes (subject <strong>to</strong> change)<br />

are detailed below.<br />

Changes <strong>to</strong> Original Specifications<br />

• 64-bit design for maximum performance with<br />

PPC/G3 processor boards<br />

• Twin independent IDE ports supporting Modes<br />

PIO 0-4, DMA Modes 0-2 and upgradable (via<br />

Flash) <strong>to</strong> UDMA, giving high transfer rates<br />

with low processor overhead<br />

• Replacement <strong>of</strong> the Buster chip<br />

• Full Parallel port implementation (allowing use<br />

<strong>of</strong> more parallel port peripherals<br />

• Board layout change <strong>to</strong> accommodate Video<br />

Toaster<br />

• Implementation <strong>of</strong> enhancements <strong>to</strong> increase<br />

CHIP RAM access times<br />

A new pro<strong>to</strong>type board is about <strong>to</strong> go in<strong>to</strong><br />

production allowing all the latest design features<br />

<strong>to</strong> be tested and also prove earlier changes. Once<br />

the pro<strong>to</strong>type has been built and on completion <strong>of</strong><br />

preliminary testing we will have a better idea <strong>of</strong><br />

production schedules and will keep everyone<br />

informed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> BoXeR motherboard delivers a medium<br />

cost home/semi-pr<strong>of</strong>essional Multi-Media<br />

computing motherboard based on the <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

Chip Set and Operating System. This will allow<br />

complete machines <strong>to</strong> be priced between the<br />

A1200 and A4000, providing low purchase price<br />

and expansion options, while delivering a<br />

performance in excess <strong>of</strong> the A4000.<br />

<strong>The</strong> expected release date for the BoXeR<br />

motherboard is in the first quarter <strong>of</strong> 1999.<br />

<strong>The</strong> BoXeR will be sold in 3 ways<br />

• As the heart <strong>of</strong> the new Blitters<strong>of</strong>t range <strong>of</strong><br />

Black Box <strong>Amiga</strong> systems.<br />

• As a single motherboard solution <strong>to</strong> the<br />

cus<strong>to</strong>mer, <strong>to</strong> build their own unique system.<br />

• Through OEM dealers who may cus<strong>to</strong>mise the<br />

unit <strong>to</strong> their own particular markets.<br />

Technical Information List<br />

• 100% <strong>Amiga</strong> compatible.<br />

• Baby-AT motherboard based on <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

technology - fits in ANY standard PC<br />

Desk<strong>to</strong>p/Tower case.<br />

• Mo<strong>to</strong>rola 68040 or 68060 at 25-75MHz<br />

supported in a single processor socket.<br />

• On board 2Mb CHIP RAM.<br />

• 4 x 72 pin standard SIMM sockets allowing up<br />

<strong>to</strong> 2Gb FAST RAM.<br />

• Dual IDE Hard disk interface, with standard<br />

pitch 40 pin header.<br />

• Flash ROM 2Mb, 32 bit wide. Used <strong>to</strong> provide<br />

kickstart ROM’s and resident modules.<br />

• Floppy disk drive interface, operating as DF0:,<br />

including 0.5sec delay on RDY.<br />

• CD-ROM audio input connec<strong>to</strong>r and mixer.<br />

• Real Time Clock, using NiCad.<br />

• Keyboard port is a standard DIN connec<strong>to</strong>r for<br />

PC compatible keyboard.<br />

• 2 x 16 bit Active ISA slots, in-line with 4xZorro<br />

3 slots.<br />

• <strong>Amiga</strong> Video slot<br />

Connec<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

• Printer port, 26 pin header.<br />

• AV slot - provides audio, composite and RGB<br />

signals.<br />

• RGB video (on rear AV board).<br />

• Serial port 10 pin header<br />

• Joystick and mouse port, 10 pin headers.<br />

• Audio header, 4x1.<br />

• Power In - standard PC 12 pin connec<strong>to</strong>r<br />

• IDE - 40 pin (Dual)<br />

• Floppy drive DF0:/DF1: header.<br />

Key Design Points<br />

• <strong>The</strong> all-new leading-edge design uses the<br />

AGA chip set for compatibility but has<br />

completely redesigned logic <strong>to</strong> achieve the<br />

highest performance and most flexible design.<br />

• Supports 68040 or 68060 from 25MHz –<br />

75MHz.<br />

• Designed <strong>to</strong> achieve low system cost.<br />

• Supports 4x standard 72 pin SIMM’s for <strong>to</strong>tal<br />

FAST memory <strong>of</strong> 2Gb.<br />

• High-speed CHIP memory read/write<br />

technology which can boost access by up <strong>to</strong><br />

30%.<br />

• Mounts in standard PC baby-AT case. (Huge<br />

selection <strong>of</strong> cases available from a wide range<br />

<strong>of</strong> suppliers at the lowest price points)<br />

• Processor connec<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> support a low cost<br />

PowerPC upgrade (in development). This<br />

expansion allows the on-board 680x0 <strong>to</strong><br />

remain in place so that the upgrade is little<br />

more than a PowerPC on a card.<br />

• MPEG/Genlock module with high quality<br />

output and broadcast quality genlocking is in<br />

development.<br />

• Has live working 16-bit ISA slots <strong>to</strong> support<br />

low cost peripherals such as Modems,<br />

Ethernet and Sound cards.<br />

• FlashROM allows s<strong>of</strong>tware and hardware<br />

updates.<br />

• CD-ROM File System in ROM allows booting<br />

from CD’s.<br />

Product Pricing<br />

• BoXeR £TBA<br />

12 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


<strong>Amiga</strong> Direc<strong>to</strong>ry<br />

In Brief<br />

Vic<strong>to</strong>ria<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Technology Australia<br />

17 Thompson Circuit, Mill Park, 3082 Phone: (03) 9436 5555<br />

Byte One Computers<br />

24 Silver<strong>to</strong>n Drive, Ferntree Gully, 3156 Phone: (03) 9752 3991 or<br />

015 316 147<br />

Computa Magic Pty. Ltd.<br />

44 Pascoe Vale Road, Moonee Ponds, 3039 Phone: (03) 9326 0133<br />

Megatron<br />

156-160 New Street, Ringwood, 3134 Phone: (03) 9870 4017<br />

MVB Computer Supplies Pty. Ltd.<br />

508 Dorset Road, Croydon, 3136 Phone: (03) 9725 6255<br />

S<strong>of</strong>tware Buyers Service<br />

Arnie Robbins<br />

PO Box 290, Bannockburn, 3331 E-mail: arnie@ne.com.au<br />

South Australia<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> ‘n PC Centre Pty. Ltd.<br />

644 South Road, Glandore, Adelaide, 5037 Phone: (08) 8293 8752<br />

G-S<strong>of</strong>t Computers Pty. Ltd.<br />

Shop 4/2 Anderson Wlk, Smithfield, 5114 Phone: (08) 8284-1266<br />

New South Wales & Canberra<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Genius<br />

826 Hunter St, Newcastle West, 2302 Phone: (049) 623-222<br />

Computer Affair<br />

337 Penshurst Street, Willoughby, 2068 Phone: (02) 9417 5155<br />

Desk<strong>to</strong>p Utilities<br />

PO BOX 3053, Manuka, 2603 Phone: (06) 239 6658<br />

December Meeting<br />

This is just a reminder <strong>to</strong> all members that the<br />

December AUG meeting will take place on the<br />

second Sunday <strong>of</strong> the month (December 13th).<br />

This will ensure that the meeting will not<br />

interfere with the Christmas break. All members<br />

with a current Email address will be notified<br />

before the meeting.<br />

Email Addresses<br />

This is a request from the Secretary <strong>of</strong> the AUG<br />

<strong>to</strong> all members. Could everyone with access <strong>to</strong><br />

Email please send your Email <strong>to</strong> the following<br />

address so it can be recorded.<br />

doggone@blaze.net.au<br />

Please state your name and membership number<br />

(you’ll find this on the address label in the <strong>to</strong>p<br />

right hand corner <strong>of</strong> the Workbench envelope).<br />

This information will be considered confidential<br />

and be used for club announcements only. It will<br />

not be given <strong>to</strong> any other outside party<br />

whatsoever and only be used for <strong>of</strong>ficial club<br />

matters.<br />

PageStream 3.4 Beta Testing Now<br />

<strong>The</strong> latest version <strong>of</strong> the premier desk<strong>to</strong>p<br />

publishing program by S<strong>of</strong>tLogik is now under<br />

going beta testing. <strong>The</strong> first two beta versions<br />

were very buggy but version 3 has fixed a serious<br />

text entry bug. This newsletter was produced<br />

using the latest beta version. As you can see it<br />

works. Hopefully by the New Year the final<br />

version will be released.<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> OS 3.5 Update<br />

As <strong>of</strong> November 8th the <strong>Amiga</strong> OS 3.5 project<br />

has completed 11% <strong>of</strong> the new operating system.<br />

Only 89% <strong>to</strong> go! Workbench will keep you<br />

updated on further developments.<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

Exclusive Computer Systems<br />

34 Wes<strong>to</strong>n Street, Wes<strong>to</strong>n, 2326 Phone: (049) 361213<br />

MotherBoard Computers<br />

Suite 19 9-11 Abel St, Penrith 2750 Phone: (047) 222-893<br />

SigmaCom<br />

Suite 17 20-24 Gibbs Street, Miranda, 2228 Phone: (02) 9524 9848<br />

S<strong>of</strong>tware Circus<br />

27 Darling Street, Kensing<strong>to</strong>n, 2033 Phone: (02) 9313 8484<br />

Unitech Electronics Pty. Ltd.<br />

8B Tummul Place, St Andrews, 2566 Phone: (02) 9820 3555<br />

Vince Schubert Computers<br />

24 Belgrave St, Kempsey, 2440 Phone: (065) 62 1455 or 014 971399<br />

Commodore <strong>Amiga</strong> Centre<br />

96 Bentinck St, Bathurst, Phone: (063) 322 611<br />

Western Australia<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> Innovations<br />

111 Cambridge Street, West Leederville, 6007 Phone: (08) 9388 1665<br />

Computer Man<br />

611 Beaufort Street, Mt. Lawley, 6050 Phone: (08) 9328 9062<br />

Queensland<br />

Don Quixote S<strong>of</strong>tware<br />

PO BOX 786, Toowoomba, 4350 Phone: (076) 391 578<br />

Image Domain<br />

92 Bridge St, Fortitude Valley, 4006 Phone: (07) 3216-1240<br />

Synapse Computers<br />

190 Riding Road, Hawthorne, 4171 Phone: (07) 389 9098<br />

Genetic Species Goes 24Bit<br />

Marble-Eyes Development is proud <strong>to</strong> announce<br />

the release <strong>of</strong> a new Genetic Species Add-On.<br />

And what an add-on: 24 bit finally hits an <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

game! So we’re writing his<strong>to</strong>ry. In other words<br />

the <strong>Amiga</strong> and Genetic Species goes true colour,<br />

that means 16 million colours per pixel. <strong>The</strong><br />

human eye recognizes about 14 million colours<br />

but you’ll get 2 million extra! In order <strong>to</strong> support<br />

the 24bit screen modes in Genetic Species we had<br />

<strong>to</strong> re-write all the functions which access the<br />

display screen. It has been a lot <strong>of</strong> work but<br />

looking at the result, the time has certainly paid<br />

<strong>of</strong>f. <strong>The</strong> improvement is simply amazing. Not a<br />

single pixel is rendered in Genetic Species<br />

without putting it through an alpha channel - and<br />

the result will blast you away!<br />

<strong>The</strong> Future for Genetic Species<br />

We were extremely excited about finally releasing<br />

Genetic Species but the sales have been minimal<br />

while at the same time, the future <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong> is<br />

looking more and more bleak. Because <strong>of</strong> this,<br />

during these last months our excitement has<br />

gradually dissipated. Since the financial rewards<br />

for the game are all but pocket money, and we no<br />

longer feel the old excitement and commitment,<br />

we’ve decided <strong>to</strong> move on, and thus we’ve started<br />

looking at new projects which point <strong>to</strong> the future,<br />

not the past..<br />

All current development <strong>of</strong> GS has been<br />

halted, and further add-ons are not likely <strong>to</strong><br />

appear. We’re sorry about this. But keep the faith;<br />

we’ll be looking forward <strong>to</strong> giving you another<br />

mind-blowing game sometime in the future.<br />

Stay tuned for further information!<br />

Marble Eyes Development<br />

13


CyberS<strong>to</strong>rm<br />

Accelera<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

BlizzardPPC<br />

Accelera<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

CyberVisionPPC<br />

Graphic<br />

Cards<br />

BVisionPPC<br />

Graphic Cards<br />

Apollo<br />

Accelera<strong>to</strong>rs<br />

Buddha,<br />

Catweasel,<br />

and other<br />

strange<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> things.<br />

CyberS<strong>to</strong>rmPPC cards (A3000 and<br />

A4000) including UW SCSI interface.<br />

Choose from:<br />

PPC 604e 180, 200, 233MHz with<br />

either an 040 25MHz or an 060<br />

50MHz.<br />

Call for the BEST PRICES in <strong>to</strong>wn!<br />

Choose from:<br />

PPC 603e 160, 200, 240MHz with<br />

either an 040 25MHz or an 060<br />

50MHz.<br />

(With or without Fast SCSI-2<br />

interface).<br />

Very fast graphics accelera<strong>to</strong>r card<br />

which plugs directly in<strong>to</strong> the<br />

CyberS<strong>to</strong>rm Mk. III & PPC series<br />

boards.<br />

Permedia II Glint 3D Graphics<br />

Engine with 8Mb Video RAM.<br />

(Features 1600x1200 True-colour<br />

mode)<br />

Very fast graphics accelera<strong>to</strong>r card<br />

which plugs directly in<strong>to</strong> the<br />

BlizzardPPC series boards.<br />

Permedia II Glint 3D Graphics<br />

Engine with 8Mb Video RAM.<br />

A1240 cards are available with either<br />

an 040 25MHz or an 040 40MHz<br />

CPU. For those who require more<br />

speed, the A1260 includes an 060<br />

50MHz CPU.<br />

Both cards accomodate a Fast<br />

SCSI-2 module, available seperately.<br />

A2000 cards are also available.<br />

Now you can use a standard PC<br />

high density 3½" floppy drive on your<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> using the Catweasel.<br />

Also take advantage <strong>of</strong> inexpensive<br />

EIDE drives with the Flash-ROM<br />

upgradeable all-singing, all-dancing<br />

Buddha Enhanced-IDE interface.<br />

Repairs<br />

Trade-Ins<br />

Upgrades<br />

Games<br />

Add-Ons<br />

Joysticks<br />

Mouses<br />

Paper<br />

Printers<br />

Ribbons<br />

Ink<br />

Video<br />

CD-ROM<br />

Internet<br />

Remember we will be having a Grand Sale from<br />

November 16th through <strong>to</strong> December 12th<br />

Be there <strong>to</strong> grab yourself a bargain!<br />

MVB Computers 506 Dorset Road Phone (03) 9725 6255<br />

Croydon Vic<strong>to</strong>ria 3136 Fax (03) 9725 6766<br />

incoporating Byte One Computers<br />

14 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998


<strong>Amiga</strong> 4000<br />

68030 with 68882 co-pro.<br />

18 meg RAM, 120 + 850<br />

meg internal IDE hard<br />

drives. 1960 multisync<br />

moni<strong>to</strong>r, mouse, joystick,<br />

midi-interface.<br />

$900 ONO<br />

Chris Zwar<br />

Phone (03) 9510 4726<br />

emedia@bigpond.com<br />

S<strong>of</strong>tware<br />

Games<br />

• Campaign II $10 • Big Red Adventure $20<br />

Educational<br />

• World Atlas CDROM $10<br />

Utilities + Productivity<br />

• Ami-Back + Tools $10 • Vista Pro V3.0 $15<br />

Hardware<br />

• IBM Analog Joystick Interface $20<br />

• Vidi<strong>Amiga</strong>12 Image Capture V2 $40<br />

Tom Heeren, 9583 6259<br />

For Sale<br />

Programs:<br />

DMCS, M1, Dr T.s Studio & MT32 library,<br />

Flipside, Pro Page, PC Task, VIP Pr<strong>of</strong>essional,<br />

DeLuxe Pho<strong>to</strong>-Lab, DeLuxe Productions, Kind<br />

Words, Fantavision, Flow, Info File & Hunter,<br />

Textcraft Plus, Page Flipper, TV Text, Bars &<br />

Pipes 1.0, 1.0c & Demo.<br />

Manuals Only:<br />

Maxiplan, <strong>Amiga</strong> Basic, Advanced Basic, DOS<br />

manual, Programmer’s Guide, Audiomaster II<br />

November–December 1998 Workbench<br />

Pro-Grab video digitizer<br />

Digitize at up <strong>to</strong> 736x512 resolutions<br />

in 24bit. Comes complete with<br />

manual, s<strong>of</strong>tware, parallel cable and<br />

PCMCIA adap<strong>to</strong>r. EC, unit has had<br />

little use. Will suit all <strong>Amiga</strong>s but<br />

especially those with a PCMCIA<br />

interface. eg A1200's and A600's<br />

Min req: KS 2.04 and 1.5meg ram<br />

(2meg for AGA machines)<br />

Rec: AGA 4meg ram and a hard<br />

drive. $280<br />

Tony Mulvihill Ph. (BH) 9773 1288<br />

Email: <strong>to</strong>nym@net2000.com.au<br />

Come and see lots <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> related goods<br />

at the Sale and<br />

Auction <strong>to</strong> be held at<br />

the November<br />

meeting <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong>.<br />

Hardware:<br />

Multi-sync Moni<strong>to</strong>r (Commodore 1960) -<br />

accept 1084S as part payment. Yamaha PSR-<br />

510 keyboard, General MIDI, going cheap, ideal<br />

for computer use, also a MIDI interface. Will<br />

throw in free lessons.<br />

Any reasonable <strong>of</strong>fers accepted<br />

Contact Norm Christian<br />

9798 6552<br />

Reader Classifieds<br />

15


About the <strong>Group</strong><br />

AUG Contact Information<br />

Coordina<strong>to</strong>r Michael Green 9576 2291 co-ord@membersaug.org.au<br />

Assistant Coord. Jim Lewis 0412 392 099 assistantco-ord@members.aug.org.au<br />

Treasurer James Gardiner 9553 3826 treasurer@members.aug.org.au<br />

Secretary Tom Heeren 9583 6259 edi<strong>to</strong>r@members.aug.org.au<br />

Membership Alexander McCooke 9898 5236 membership@members.aug.org.au<br />

Meeting Chair David Myers 9417 7750 meetingchair@members.aug.org.au<br />

Newsletter Edi<strong>to</strong>r Tom Heeren 9583 6259 doggone@blaze.net.au<br />

Web Master David Allen 9846 4506 webmaster@members.aug.org.au<br />

General Committee Kevin Futter 9304 3439 kfutter@members.aug.org.au<br />

George Ganakas 9432 3897 gganakas@members.aug.org.au<br />

John Hopkins 5996 2124 jhopkins@members.aug.org.au<br />

Peter Mill 9770 0192 pmill@members.aug.org.au<br />

Mail To Committee All Committee Members committee@members.aug.org.au<br />

Disk/Book Librarian Colin Roberts<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>. is a non-pr<strong>of</strong>it association <strong>of</strong><br />

people interested in the <strong>Amiga</strong> family <strong>of</strong> computers and<br />

related <strong>to</strong>pics. We do not support or condone s<strong>of</strong>tware piracy.<br />

To contact us call our Secretary; or visit our home page at:<br />

http://www.aug.org.au<br />

<strong>The</strong> Melbourne <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> was formerly a<br />

special interest group <strong>of</strong> AUG but is now a seperate entity.<br />

Membership<br />

<strong>The</strong> AUG <strong>Inc</strong>. membership year runs from September <strong>to</strong><br />

August. If you are joining in:<br />

August–September..............................................................$25<br />

Oc<strong>to</strong>ber–November ............................................................$21<br />

December–January .............................................................$17<br />

February–March .................................................................$13<br />

April–May.................................................................$9 or $33<br />

June–July ..................................................................$5 or $29<br />

Disk and Book Library<br />

South Road<br />

Nepean Highway<br />

AUG<br />

<strong>Amiga</strong><br />

<strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> <strong>Inc</strong>.<br />

First Name: …………………………………… Surname: ……………………………………………<br />

Address: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………<br />

Post Code: …………………………………………… E-mail: …………………………………………<br />

Phone (AH): Phone (BH): Fax:<br />

I have enclosed a cheque or money order as outlined in the table above. Once admitted as a member <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong><br />

(Vic.) <strong>Inc</strong>. I agree <strong>to</strong> abide by the rules <strong>of</strong> the association for as long as I continue <strong>to</strong> be a member.<br />

Signed: Date: / /1998<br />

Membership Form<br />

If joining by mail please allow 2-3 weeks for your membership <strong>to</strong> be processed.<br />

(<strong>The</strong> following is optional)<br />

Year <strong>of</strong> Birth: <strong>Amiga</strong> model(s): Occupation:<br />

Interests:<br />

Where did you hear about AUG?:<br />

What services would you like AUG <strong>to</strong> provide?:<br />

16 Workbench<br />

November–December 1998<br />

Moorabbin<br />

Station<br />

AUG has a collection <strong>of</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong> books and magazines. Members<br />

can borrow for a period <strong>of</strong> one month. <strong>The</strong> library is available at<br />

most meetings. Programs from the public domain library are<br />

available at many meetings.<br />

World Wide Web Access<br />

Chris Quonoey can provide a very competitive Internet<br />

connection <strong>to</strong> all AUG members at reduced rates from<br />

BlazeNet. Connection costs are as low as $0.95/hr. <strong>The</strong>re are<br />

no joining or monthly fees and your access time is paid for in<br />

advance. For details contact Chris (0418 377 975).<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dead Letter Department<br />

<strong>The</strong> AUG’s new BBS run by Craig Hutchison has access <strong>to</strong><br />

all the latest AmiNet files as well as other goodies.<br />

Registration is free <strong>to</strong> all members. Phone: (03) 9571 7194<br />

Meetings<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Amiga</strong> <strong>Users</strong> <strong>Group</strong> meets at the Moorabbin Arts Centre<br />

Complex, 979 Nepean Hwy, Moorabbin (see map) on the 3rd<br />

Sunday <strong>of</strong> each month at 2:00pm. <strong>The</strong>re is ample parking at<br />

the rear <strong>of</strong> the complex <strong>of</strong>f South Road. Meetings are held in<br />

the “Sun Room” or on the 2nd floor (up the stairs then turn<br />

left). Ask at reception if you get lost. Cost: $2.00 members;<br />

$4.00 non-members. This is <strong>to</strong> cover rental costs.

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