Amiga.org
Amiga News and Community Announcements => Amiga News and Community Announcements => Topic started by: SysAdmin on October 22, 2011, 08:19:59 AM
-
News from Petah via amigaworld.net
In a surprising yet often requested plead for action, Hyperion Entertainment (http://hyperion-entertainment.biz/) has officially launched an AmigaOS website (http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amigaos.net%2F&charset=%28detect+automatically%29&doctype=Inline&group=0) found at www.amigaos.net (http://www.amigaos.net/). The site, which currently promotes the operating system and some of its many features (http://www.amigaos.net/content/1/features), also sports screen shots (http://www.amigaos.net/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/grab.000.jpg), information about the Amiga range of computers (http://www.amigaos.net/content/72/supported-hardware), key AmigaOS applications (http://www.amigaos.net/applications) and the AmigaOS community (http://www.amigaos.net/content/5/community) at large.
-
Quite a big site! Very informative, especially for people outside the 'scene'.
-
Very informative, especially for people outside the 'scene'.
How? I tried to look for ANY information about localization and input methods, which code pages are used, etc., and couldn't find anything at all. That includes the forum. There's pretty much no technical information.
-
How? I tried to look for ANY information about localization and input methods, which code pages are used, etc., and couldn't find anything at all. That includes the forum. There's pretty much no technical information.
I would say you are missing the point of what the site is all about. You don't go to the site for indepth technical details for coding purposes. The site is basically to market the product, give people an over view of the product and it supplies links and ways to get to the different specialised areas to do what you are talking about.
As an example, you don't go to http://www.microsoft.com and expect to get coding or sysadmin tipsdirectly from it, Microsoft provides links to technet.microsoft.com for that purpose. The main purpose of the http://www.microsoft.com site is to show case and talk about their products as a marketing and sales exercise and as a door way to the rest of the information and that is what the http://www.amigaos.net is for as well.
-
I would say you are missing the point of what the site is all about. You don't go to the site for indepth technical details for coding purposes. The site is basically to market the product, give people an over view of the product and it supplies links and ways to get to the different specialised areas to do what you are talking about.
As an example, you don't go to http://www.microsoft.com and expect to get coding or sysadmin tipsdirectly from it, Microsoft provides links to technet.microsoft.com for that purpose. The main purpose of the http://www.microsoft.com site is to show case and talk about their products as a marketing and sales exercise and as a door way to the rest of the information and that is what the http://www.amigaos.net is for as well.
in other words, its useless to people who know what Amiga is and how much their x1000 thingy costs.
-
in other words, its useless to people who know what Amiga is and how much their x1000 thingy costs.
exactly. so its clear for what audience the site was created.
-
wow,the site looks amazing! exactly what i ever wanted to show to my friends and workmates! this site blows me away, elegant and very well done! thank you very much!
-
A little generous with the abilities of these machines, but a nice site nonetheless. I find Timberwolf and OWB in their current states (admittedly alpha/beta) to be no more functional than Aweb. Can't use Google products reliably for the most part on any OS 4 web browser, so I end up doing it on my iphone/ipad...
"Powerful browsers are available for everyday website surfing. Timberwolf is the AmigaOS port of Firefox, while OWB is a lighter but still powerful browser."
-
exactly. so its clear for what audience the site was created.
It is?
-
A good website. Much needed for people like me who do not know much about OS4. I was able to quickly learn many things and link to various other places for hardware and software info. I am most surprised by software availability for this OS. Seems like there is quite a bit available. My Amiga experience is mostly 68K still; on Commodore hardware and also via emulation. I have experimented a little with the other 2 main AmigaNG operating systems as well but never w/ OS4. So the new website served its purpose by sparking my curiosity it seems.
So is it good enough for simple home computing tasks? I would mainly need web browser, email, ability to deal with digital camera pictures, I see abiword, gnumeric, pagestream, and Hollywood look good for office type tasks. Is there a good pdf viewer like 68K Ghostscript for it? That is about the extent of what is needed for a family computer.
The 460ex looks like ok hardware. If I did that route then the PCI slot would be consumed with a SATA adapter. It looks like some modern PCIe video cards are supported too. Thus not the worst hardware package in the world for general home computing.
Again, pretty nice website. And I am not even a follower of this OS.
-
It is very nice.
I am curious why they don't have any SAM pictures on their scrolly-thingamajig tho.
-
It is?
yes.
-
It's a nice site. It's slick and informative, which may attract some non-Amiga customers.
The only real technical information there was the download link for the AmigaOS SDK, it would be nice to see some pricing information or some type of "configurator" for the A1-500, which I assume is available now. (??)
In fairness though, they provide links in the "Where to Buy" section.
-
It's a nice site. It's slick and informative, which may attract some non-Amiga customers.
I think most non-Amiga customers are going to wonder why they should spend several hundred dollars on something that doesn't appear to do anything they can't do on a $300 PC.
-
I think most non-Amiga customers are going to wonder why they should spend several hundred dollars on something that doesn't appear to do anything they can't do on a $300 PC.
AFAIK there is nothing you can't do on a 300$ PC etc. pp. Who cares? Let them buy their PC.
-
WOW!! Very very nice!!! :D :D :afro: :afro:
:pint: :pint: :pint: :pint: :pint:
-
wow,the site looks amazing! exactly what i ever wanted to show to my friends and workmates! this site blows me away, elegant and very well done! thank you very much!
Thank you all. Actually I've drew a Amiga website I was dreaming on in past. George implemented it fully as I imagined and the rest of the team put excellent texts :) Finally AmigaOS has a good starting website. Now it is up to system admin to implement as much good software and games [to attract outter-world users] and implement as much as possible "What Amiga OS can do what other OSes can't" images.
One of the best things I still miss in other OSes are following:
- DOpusMagellan as system replacement with lister opened when you doubleclick anywhere on the desktop
- Renaming the way you rename text words [also DopusMagellan]
- Drag'n'Drop on KingKong's Shell
- Shell's history
- TAB key gives you available commands / programs in directory you are currently in
- Copy & Paste AS
- Move AS [rename after moving file]
- separate resolutions
- ...
What I like most on PCs [and miss on Amiga] is:
XNView Shell extension [ex ACDSee's PicaView] - right click on image [will open you small thumbnail of the image in Explorer lister showing you basic infos, pixels, size below the small image], mp3 [plays mp3 file with small player], avi [plays video in smaller window]... Excellent tool for quick view & work.
...
-
I like the new site. :)
-
Good and beauty site!
-
One of the best things I still miss in other OSes are following:
- Drag'n'Drop on KingKong's Shell
- Shell's history
- TAB key gives you available commands / programs in directory you are currently in
Erm, gnome's built in terminal emulation has all the above (and more, though rendering URLs as hyperlinks that can be opened sort of annoys me).
-
Looking Good . . .
Impressive, but that Jedi hardware isn't available yet . . .
-
very nice site anyone looking at this is hit with a comfortable feeling. The site makes the AMIGA os look like a cool os to tinker around with on a Netbook or tablet device or deskop os.
Congrats to all involved it looks pro and does what it needs to. FINALLY....
-
Their plan must be to start with that netbook then push on other devices (mobile or static). Hyperion is a software only company afaik... The best strategy is to find existing hardware to sell OS4, I just wonder why they took so long to do it.