T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1383.1 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Wed Apr 27 1988 16:54 | 43 |
| Sales are extremely regionally sensitive. Around here, the Amiga
seems to be doing pretty well. I was in a local dealer when 75
Amigae arrived. They were all gone within two weeks.
According to INFO magazine, there are now over 1000 commercial titles
available. Just checking the Mac, ST, and Amiga notes should pretty
clearly point out how popular the Amiga is within DEC.
In the UK, the Atari ST seems to be the best seller. CBM started
selling Amigas there a year too late, and at outrageous prices.
Ditto for West Germany, but the Amiga may catch up. They supposedly
sold 110,000 A500s there in a few months.
Anyway, CBM claims that over 500,000 machines have been sold. Compare
that to 1.5-2.0 Meg Macintoshes, and 11-15 Meg Pee Cees, and you
can conclude that the Amiga really won't extinct either of those
brands.
The history of the Amiga is pretty interesting. The A1000, while
praised as a hardware marvel, didn't catch on with business due to it's
lack of slots and IBM compatibility, and it was too expensive for a
home machine. The only people who bought it were hackers and wierdos,
myself included. The operating system was still evolving, as were the
expansion specs. This frustrated developers and gave the machine an
early reputation as being very unstable and a beast to program.
Despite this, they managed to sell all of them (around 150,000).
Now that the OS is pretty robust, and the expansion specs are solid,
more developers are signing up to support it. I took it as a good
sign that Antic Software, makers of most of some of the best stuff for
the Atari, will be converting their best stuff for the Amiga.
The A500 is the best ray of hope. For the money, it is surely the most
incredible amount of computing power ever offered. Whether or not the
rest of the world knows that is unclear. I think it compares very
favorably to the Atari 1040 ST and the Apple IIGS, it's chief
competitors.
I don't think the Amiga should be compared to the Mac. Despite
the similarities, they are targeted at two drastically different
audiences.
Ed
|
1383.2 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Wed Apr 27 1988 19:01 | 29 |
| re: .0
The Mac's success in breaking into the business market is exactly
why the ST and Amiga are able to get into that market. The Mac
broke the "if it isn't ibmpc compatible..." mentality. They don't
have to wait as long for the software either, thanks to the Mac
(68000 programming for a windowing environment)
The problem is that they have a long way to go to catch up in size
of installed base and software maturity. But remember, most of
the titles are new, not old and crufty stuff from 5 years ago.
CBM is trying to migrate the 6 million C64 owners to the Amiga 500.
And is also going after the high end with the Amiga 2000. Two very
distinct markets, with 100% software compatibility. So any business
package that is ported to the 2000, can also run on the 500 or even
1000. And any game that runs on the 500 can run on the 2000 or 1000.
Not that any business types would use a 2000 to play games :-)
I don't think your friends should worry about the Amiga becoming
an orphan, those days are over. CBM finally figured out how to
sell Amigas.
re: .1
Antic Software is going to port software to the Amiga? Why?
I thought they were firmly in the ST world and anti-Amiga.
-dave
|
1383.3 | Good here in Washington D.C. | MAADIS::WICKERT | MAA DIS Consultant | Wed Apr 27 1988 19:28 | 15 |
|
I was just in a shop here in Washington D.C. (actually midway between
D.C. and Annapolis - not the hotbed of computer stores that northern
VA is!) and they had sold 5 A500s last Saturday alone! They said
they can't keep them in stock!
I figure I've been through this before. I bought a LaserDisk player
within 6 months of their release about 5-6 years ago. It's taken
over 4 years for them to catch on and now there's no shortage of
titles on disk. They'll never replace VCRs just as Amigas will never
replace PCs but they all have their strengths and weeknesses.
-Ray
|
1383.4 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Apr 28 1988 01:28 | 37 |
| Re: .0 and preferences for IBMs
You should remind your PC oriented friends that if they get an Amiga
2000, they can install a fully functional PC/XT on a board into
a slot on the A2000. There is a '286 board in Europe and there will
soon be a '386 board.
The XT card is not vapor. It exists, is shipping in quantities
(< $500), and it works like a charm. You can even multitask MS-Dos under
AmigaDOS on a separate screen or window. If the whole Amiga thing
turns to dust, he can still play killer games on the Amiga side
and do boring stuff on the PC side.
Re: .2 (Antic Software)
Antic may or may not be anti-Amiga, but I bet they're pro-money.
Really. I can see rabid users carrying the banner for a particular
brand name (except me, of course :^)), but software publishers have
to pay attention to where the money is.
CAD 3D and the Cyber system for the ST are really fantastic packages,
in many ways surpassing what's available for the Amiga. But until the
ST gets 1) genlock, 2) real NTSC output, 3) a larger pallette, and 4) a
hi-resolution color mode, I can't see it making headway into the
desktop video market. The Amiga owns that market right now. The
MacII may take it away in a few years, but right now, the Amiga
kicks butt in that area.
According to INFO magazine, Tom Hudson and Antic were snooping
about at AmiExpo LA. John Foust has spoken with them and although
they won't commit, there are strong hints that they will enter the
Amiga market. There's certainly no need to abandon the ST market
to do that.
Ed.
|
1383.5 | I wonder about the bridge card | MERIDN::GERMAIN | Down to the Sea in Ships | Thu Apr 28 1988 09:27 | 34 |
| re: .3 IBM compatibility
If you hook up the bridge card, I can run an Amiga window and a
PC window simultaneously?
Can they share Amiga memory? Or do they have their own distinct
memory?
I read, in a few notes back, where the disk operations are slow,
if you are sharing the Amiga disk. Is this still true?
One of my buddies has a Targa Graphics board, which plugs into a
PC bus. He would like to know if you can:
1) plug it into the Amiga's PC bus,
2) Run a graphics CALCULATION program on the 68000 ( Amiga), and
put pixel info into the Amiga's memory, which the PC can read and
insert into the graphics memory (i.e. shared memory).
In this way, he can utilize the high speed Amiga for calculations,
and off load the PC CPU.
Another question concerning whether the Amiga is picking up -
one of the benchmarks you can use is software available (which you
have all responded to). Another is the range of peripherals. Are
third party vendors building nifty devices for the Amiga at an ever
increasing rate?
Thanks for the responses,
Gregg
|
1383.6 | Comments from the ST world. | BOLT::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Thu Apr 28 1988 11:28 | 27 |
| re: ST people doing Amiga software.
This doesn't surprise me in the least.
The US ST market seems to have practically ground to a standstill in
every area except music applications. The availability of the hardware
is not very good (all the systems are going to europe, they claim) and
the extant owner base seems to be a bit disillusioned about the future
of the machine.
Many ST owners are waiting for a sign, ANYTHING from Atari (Sunnyvale,
that is) to re-stimulate interest in the machines. The amount of
pending vaporware is awesome--a LAN, a new version of ROM, a blitter,
an '020 add-on, an '030 add-on, and a transputer add-on are some of
the notable items ``under development''.
With people this unexcited about the machine, the software is not
selling well, and many developers find it difficult to write software
for boring machines. (PC software developers don't seem suffer from this
hangup :-))
Therefore, I have heard of a resonable number of ST developers
migrating to the Amiga.
But just wait 'til they release the new version of TOS.
Steph
|
1383.7 | some PC answers | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Apr 28 1988 11:29 | 23 |
| re: .5--I can answer some of your PC questions. I have an Amiga
2000 with the BridgeBoard installed.
a) Yes, you can run an Amiga window and a PC window simultaneously.
b) No, they can't share Amiga memory. The PC has its own 512K of
memory. There is also a 64K memory that is accessible to both,
but I don't have any information on how to use that, from either
side. The Amiga BridgeBoard software uses it to emulate the PC's
monitor and additional floppies, plus give the PC access to the
Amiga's parallel port.
c1) I don't see why not. I got an IBM PC interface for my Roland
MPU-401 and plugged it into the PC bus with no trouble. I verified
that it worked first by typing in a Basic program from a magazine
and more recently by running the demo version of CakeWalk.
c2) You can do this somewhat clumsily by writing a file on the 68000
side, and copying the file to the PC side, then having the PC
program read the file. Supposedly it is possible to do direct
task-to-task communication, but I haven't been able to find any
documentation about how to do this.
John Sauter
|
1383.8 | Hack for shared memory | TOOTER::RIES | Frank W. Ries Jr. | Thu Apr 28 1988 13:28 | 10 |
| There may be a tricky way of sharing some memory using the
bridgeboard. I haven't tried it, but sounds like it might
work. You could create a virtual disk on the pc side, that is
a file in RAM: (works great as a PC ramdisk). Then you could
open the file on the amiga side and read/write it. Its a bit
messy I admit, and I don't know what the performance would
be like. Just a thought.
Frank
|
1383.9 | More answers... | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Apr 28 1988 13:40 | 35 |
| Re: All these previous replys...
I'm not so sure about using an EGA card in an A2000 slot. Doesn't the
BridgeBoard use the Amiga display hardware to display PC graphics? If
so, then there would be a problem, since EGA uses a higher horizontal
scan rate than the Amiga. Also, EGA uses 350 horizontal lines,
something the Amiga doesn't understand.
As far as peripherals for the Amiga go, there are lots of anouncements,
but it's all VAPOR until you can actually hold one in your hand.
C Ltd has announced a CD-ROM reader that runs under their SCSI host.
Laser printers can easily be attached to any Amiga today. All you
need is a printer driver.
As far as networking goes, AmeriStar has an Ethernet board, but
I don't know if its actually shipping. I've never seen one myself.
Amiga hard drives are finally coming down in price. I recently got a
65 MB Seagate and SCSI controller for $800.
One of the more interesting Amiga peripherals is NewTek's Video
Toaster. NewTek sort of got put on the map with their excellent
color digitizer hardware/software package. The Video Toaster is
supposed to be a complete professional video special effects generator.
It is a combination broadcast quality Genlock, frame grabber, and
just about anything else you can think of. See the latest INFO
for more details.
Steph, I didn't see a smiley after your remark about a new version
of TOS, so I assume you were serious. What are the new features?
Is it bug fixes or a major upgrade? Support for 68020, larger
displays, etc?
Ed.
|
1383.10 | Lots of Hardware Add-ons | NAC::PLOUFF | Beautiful downtown Littleton | Thu Apr 28 1988 14:07 | 36 |
| re: .5 hardware question
> Another question concerning whether the Amiga is picking up -
> one of the benchmarks you can use is software available (which you
> have all responded to). Another is the range of peripherals. Are
> third party vendors building nifty devices for the Amiga at an ever
> increasing rate?
The "May" issue of _Amazing Computing_, vol. 3 no. 5 (blue cover with
helicopter drawing), has a hardware product guide featuring about 250
products from about 60 manufacturers. A lot of the products are
variations on one another, and a lot of companies are barely past the
garage shop stage, but the Amiga hardware market has been growing. The
quality and features of many hardware products have been getting
better, too.
Categories in the hardware guide are: accelerators/coprocessors,
clocks, memory expansion, hard drives, other [kinds of] drives,
expansion chassis, SCSI controllers, interfaces, networking, printer
drivers, audio, MIDI interfaces, video, graphics, modems, floppy disk
drives, hardware modifications and miscellaneous. Clocks and hardware
modifications apply to the A1000 (no longer in production) and
expansion chassis to the A500 and A1000.
You can pick up _Amazing_ at most B. Dalton and Crown bookstores.
ELF says you are in Hartford, CT. You might try local dealers...
the magazine lists Aetna Life Club Store in Hartford, Computer Outlet
in Vernon, Personal Computer Center in Norwich or Software Kingdom
in E. Windsor, all listed in the magazine.
Some answers about the viability of the Amiga line might come from
Max Toy, president of Commodore. He is appearing on "The Computer
Show," carried on channel 27, Worcester, at 10:30 PM this Sunday.
Don't know if any Connecticut station carries the show.
Wes
|
1383.11 | EGA on BridgeBoard | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:07 | 11 |
| re: .9, EGA card
If I remember the BridgeBoard documentation correctly, you can add
an EGA board if you also tell the 68000 side _not_ to emulate a
monitor. You then attach your EGA monitor to the EGA card. This
means that you need two monitors, of course: one for AmigaDOS and
one for the PC.
I haven't tried this, you understand. Emulated CGA is good enough
for me.
John Sauter
|
1383.12 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Thu Apr 28 1988 15:39 | 10 |
|
the interface (the janus library) between the amiga and ibmpc
sides is documented in the Amiga 500/2000 Technical Reference
Manual (available from Commodore for $40).
Has anybody tried a VGA board? It does analog RGB, I wonder if
it could be hooked to the 1080? Then just have an RGB switch box
to decide who gets the monitor.
-dave
|
1383.13 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Apr 28 1988 17:56 | 9 |
| Naw, the 1080 is a 15.75 KHz horizontal scan monitor. VGA is 31.5
KHz.
This is why I now encourage new buyers to get a multiscan type monitor.
It will work just fine with a stock Amiga or any other machine that
you may migrate to.
Ed.
|
1383.14 | Do it in two months--then do it again, correctly. | BOLT::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Fri Apr 29 1988 12:56 | 17 |
| Re: new version of TOS.
The major rumored feature is a complete rewrite of GEMDOS. This
means fixes of the 40 folder bug, and removal of the molasses from
the file handling (specifically, the FAT) code. I think it is also
reputed to fix the file selector.
Alan Pratt mentioned several weeks ago that he was getting pretty
close, and I think he is a trustworth type--good light to heat ratio
in his messages.
What Atari does with his work, however, I'm afraid to even contemplate.
They have a new PR man, who is enthusiastic about the products,
but I'm not sure he really understand the current, disgruntled state
of the user base. Neil Harris is gone.
Steph
|
1383.15 | what about service? | MERIDN::GERMAIN | Down to the Sea in Ships | Fri Apr 29 1988 15:13 | 9 |
| What about service?
I have read where Commodore is impossible to get on the phone (busy
line). And if you do, the techies know nothing. Has this been your
experience?
What do you do when your machine breaks?
Gregg
|
1383.16 | deal with local dealer | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Apr 29 1988 15:50 | 13 |
| re: .15
I haven't had much experience with my machine breaking, but on the
few occasions when it has I send the broken part back to the store
where I bought the system and they replace it.
So far I've replaced one mouse and one modem. The mouse was within
the warranty, the modem isn't. I am now using a loaner modem; I
expect to get my own modem back, after its fixed, and I expect to
pay for the repair.
I've never called Commodore, or wanted to.
John Sauter
|
1383.17 | Choose a good dealer | NAC::PLOUFF | Beautiful downtown Littleton | Fri Apr 29 1988 16:04 | 20 |
| re: .15
Many dealers do their own warranty repairs or contract them out.
Usenet has carried a few horror stories, but warranty repairs seem
to depend on the quality of the dealer. Machines out of warranty
can be sent off to repair companies which advertise their rates.
For instance, D-Five in the Boston area is well known and has had
no complaints in this notesfile that I know of.
Commodore is really not set up to talk to us users. Getting spare
parts ("I know the parallel chip is burned out, why do I have to
put the machine in the shop for two weeks?") is a real nightmare.
Some people have waited 2-3 months for single chips to arrive.
Strangely enough, Commodore-Amiga Technical Support, which supports
hardware and software developers, is very responsive to inquiries,
and will ship out developers documentation and hardware manuals
in under two weeks, even if paid for by personal check.
So the best advice is to choose a good dealer.
|
1383.18 | Some comparison. | 25701::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Fri Apr 29 1988 17:38 | 11 |
| Since the title of this note is ``Are Amiga's catching on?'', I take
that as an invitation for comparision with other system.
Atari still has a $90 motherboard swap offer for their ST systems.
You send them your system and $90 and they will fix it for you by
swapping boards. I don't know how responsive they are now, but
six months ago I heard about some 2 week turn-arounds.
I, fortunately, haven't personally had to exercise this privelege.
Steph
|
1383.19 | OK, so I've had a few... so what? | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Sat Apr 30 1988 02:21 | 34 |
| I don't know how reliable my new A2000 will be, but my Oct. '85
A1000 ran for 2.6 years w/o a single glitch. I even (accidently)
left it on through a hurricane, where the power hiccupped repeatedly.
The darn thing never even re-booted itself!
There have been reports of chips working loose in the A500s. The
solution is usually to push them back in. Oddly, Atari has the
same problem. Possiby these non-detachable keyboard machines take
a bit more abuse than a PC-type box.
The A500 is a marvel of cost-reduction. CBM integrated many discreet
components on the A1000 into big VLSI mothers on the 50. With so few
parts, one would expect the reliability to be good.
Depending on how deeply you become involved in the Amiga community,
it's actually easy to get on a first name basis with the engineers
who designed the machines. CBM is officially present on BIX, but
Dave Haynie, Andy Finkel, RJ Mical, and others all have accounts
on PLINK. They show up for conferences to answer technical/programming
questions, and to start or stop rumors. They are all incredibly
friendly and helpful.
In fact, the Amiga community as a whole seems to be a pretty
enlightened bunch. The enthusiasm that people have for the machine and
it's future is remarkable. I could care less that there are
umpty-bazillion Plingsnart model 5000 PCs out there.
Anyway, this note and it's replys could go on forever... whoever
it is that is considering buying a computer should not base their
decision on personality cults, religious enthusiasm, or whether
or not they know the designers by name. You should decide what
on earth you want a computer for. Then, determine whether or not
the software to do what you want is available. If the software
and hardware meet your requirements and budget, just go buy it.
|
1383.20 | la Machine | DICKNS::MACDONALD | WA1OMM Listening 52.525 | Sat Apr 30 1988 18:01 | 16 |
| Another nice feature of the Amiga which Ed didn't elaborate on is
the tremendous third party vendor support that the machines already
have - particularly the A2000. Sure, you can buy one with all the
Commodore options, or you can play the field and come up with floppy
drives from NEC, hard drives from Seagate, extra memory from Micron,
etc. Its not just a one company machine that you invest in. The
big plus I see is that the folks supporting this machine (Software
Shop, Memory Location, LCA, etc) are all regular sorts who use the
wares they sell. They all go out of the way to keep their clientele
happy to boot. I never did trust someone in a blue suit and tie
trying to sell me a box of floppy disks!
I started off with a C64, then a C128, an Amiga 1000, and now and
Amiga 2000. I'll stick with this machine for awhile!
Paul
|
1383.21 | Videokey provides NTSC on ST | LDP::WEAVER | Laboratory Data Products | Sun May 01 1988 14:44 | 12 |
| Re: .4
Videokey is shipping in limited quantities now, production next
Videokey is an RGB->NTSC converter for the ST. Teamed with Cyber
Studio and a Beta machine with flying erase heads, you can supposedly
do some fantastic things, it is supposedly how Antic's Cyber demo tape
was produced.
I agree, Antic would be more likely to be pro-money, and it would
make a lot of sense for them to do some ports to the Amiga.
-Dave
|