T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3265.1 | My 2� | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ BXB1 | Wed Dec 27 1989 14:21 | 56 |
| Re .0:
> My brother is considering the purchase of a system to develop software
> for school use. He is considering an Apple IIGS (at the school
> discount) and the Amiga (model flexible).
The sad fact is that various versions of the Apple II are FIRMLY
entrenched in elementary education. The IIgs is the final entry in the
family and provides the kind of graphics and sound support that
educators SHOULD HAVE had years ago. Somehow both the Atari 800 and
C=64/128 missed the education boat in the U.S., though Commodore has
made reasonable inroads in Canada and elsewhere.
The "rising star" in elementary education seems to be the IBM PC and
clones. IBM has decided to become a major player in this market and
has the resources to make it happen. The Macintosh has become quite
popular in the secondary education arena, but the huge additional cost
for COLOR and stereo sound prices the Mac II out of the elementary market.
Commodore is attempting to place the Amiga (which is cheaper than a
IIgs and FAR more capable, but must overcome the sheer volume of
existing Apple II software to gain credibility) in the market, also.
The Amiga's audio and video capablities HAVE made it the system of
choice for the few multi-media programs in secondary schools.
> I would like to get information for him concerning what different
> systems the Amiga can emulate (IBM PC, Apple MAC, Apple IIGS, etc.).
> What hardware is required for each and how good is the emulation. I am
> guessing (as I don't know much about either machine) that the Apple
> IIGS cannot emulate other hardware.
NOBODY emulates the Apple IIgs, so that's not an issue. The Amiga (all
models) can emulate the Apple Macintosh using a product called AMAX
with the 128K Macintosh ROMs installed and using a Macintosh diskette
drive. The Amiga 2000 can accept one of two "BridgeBoard" options to
allow full emulation of an IBM PC-XT or AT.
> Darwin is considering the Apple IIGS because of the number of Apples in
> use in the school systems. Any recommendations or alternatives would
> be much appreciated.
If he wants to have some fun while hedging his bets, an Amiga 2000 with
a BridgeBoard would let him make one investment and produce software
for both the IBM PC and the Amiga. (You HAVE to see an Amiga with a
window open for an MS-DOS application while it's doing Amiga things in
its other windows!) Addition of AMAX would let him do Macintosh
software also, for less than $500 more.
The only stone left uncovered is the Apple IIgs market, which I believe
will dry up in the next few years. This is one of those rare cases
where it's actually good that IBM is in the market. With the cost of
"PC clones" plummeting, schools can no longer overlook them. That
provides an opening for REAL competition that has been absent for
several years now. The Apple II is obsolete. As it dies off, it will
be replaced by more cost-effective systems, of which the three most
likely candidates are covered by the configuration above.
|
3265.2 | Oh goody!! | DWOMV2::CAMPBELL | | Thu Dec 28 1989 00:43 | 23 |
|
One of my favorite pastimes is to quickly end "my personal favorite
PC" discussions by describing an Amiga 2000, with the following:
Bridgeboard - IBM PC compatible
Trackstar - A IBM PC option, marketed by Radio Shack (others?)
that provides Aplle II compatability (don't know
how good it is....anyone have one?)
C64 emulator- for your favorite C64 applications
AMAX - emulates a MAC with addition of 128 ROMS
Transputers - for some pretty incredible horsepower and/or graphics
And, of course, the wealth of software available for the Amiga
itself.
I also point out, that with the exception of the AMAX, which takes
over the Amiga, and possibly others, most of these can run
AT THE SAME TIME!!
Funny, no one has ever had anything to say after that.
Dennis
|
3265.3 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Dec 28 1989 08:11 | 4 |
|
I think we left out X-Windows and Amix.
Ed.
|
3265.4 | CP/M, too | LEVERS::PLOUFF | can't memorize Zen... | Thu Dec 28 1989 21:33 | 4 |
| What short memories people have :-). There are at least two CP/M
emulators on the Fred Fish public domain disks. Both emulate the
8080, and one also emulates the more common Z80 instructions, as
well as the H-19 terminal.
|
3265.5 | | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Fri Dec 29 1989 00:20 | 5 |
|
Ah, and lets not forget the venerable Acorn BBC micro that was the
Apple II of the UK.
Ed.
|
3265.6 | | NOTIBM::MCGHIE | Thank Heaven for small Murphys ! | Fri Dec 29 1989 03:57 | 13 |
| re: -.2
They sort of work, I never managed to get Turbo PASCAL or Wordstar to
work under either emulator successfully, still the source is supplied.
re: -.1
I believe the Beeb (i.e. BBC) is still alive and well in some areas of
the world.
Regards
Mike
|
3265.7 | ATARI ST | FASDER::AHERB | | Sat Feb 17 1990 23:22 | 7 |
| the amiga will soon be able to emulate the atari ST...a friend of my
(that i consider one of the best C and assembly programmers i the world
maybe?) is working on one....he claims will run all ST programs and
support the sound...interesting eh?
matt
Z
|
3265.8 | Midi support too? | WILARD::ROSCETTI | A Spurious Char@cter | Sun Feb 18 1990 00:23 | 6 |
|
If it can handle MIDI I will truly be impressed. Even the Mac
emulators couldn't do that.
brien
|
3265.9 | I/O and real time - bane. | ULTRA::BURGESS | Abject oriented poverty | Mon Feb 19 1990 08:47 | 12 |
| re <<< Note 3265.8 by WILARD::ROSCETTI "A Spurious Char@cter" >>>
> -< Midi support too? >-
> If it can handle MIDI I will truly be impressed. Even the Mac
> emulators couldn't do that.
Me too - and probably ready to let go of some $$$s for it.
R
|