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Author Topic: A new Amiga Classic ?? Discuss!  (Read 7778 times)

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Offline macto

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Re: A new Amiga Classic ?? Discuss!
« on: May 29, 2004, 11:05:25 PM »
I guess it depends upon your perspective, and I'm not terribly fond of emulators.  There's something distinctly unsatisfying about turning a reasonably fast computer into a pitifully slow one, which is what happens to a PowerPC running UAE.  A number of you are claiming fantastic performance.  I can only assume that is because of optimisations unique to WinUAE.  I have seen worse examples, such as a 1 GHz G4 barely emulating a Macintosh Plus (8 MHz 68000) with Mini vMac.  While most of the emulators I've run into do a great job with video, audio support is disappointing.  Problems range from emulator X not supporting audio, at all, on Unix implementation Y to timing problems distorting the audio.

The other issue is hardware upgrades.  If I want a faster Amiga, I can throw an add-on board into my A2000.  If I want ethernet, presumably I can find something which suits my needs.  If I want faster emulation, I have to buy a new computer.  If I want to add ethernet support in emulation, I have to wait for somebody to add that feature to the emulator.  (While I know how to program, I'm not much of a programmer.)

Needless to say, in my books a hardware Amiga is much more interesting -- even if it is based on the 680x0.  As for PowerPC based Amigas: I will look at the AmigaOne and Pegasos when the opportunity avails itself.  But I want to see one in the flesh.  Most of the descriptions and screenshots are woefully inadequeate.
 

Offline macto

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Re: A new Amiga Classic ?? Discuss!
« Reply #1 on: May 31, 2004, 03:43:30 AM »
AROS developers are probably using Linux code, either verbatim or as reference.  They would be foolish not to, as it seems awfully difficult to track down proper documentation for a lot of hardware.

I tried the AROS boot floppy.  It looked like a fine start.  Of course, it may have looked a lot better if I had a CD burner to try out a more complete distribution. ;-)  Alas, I'm away from my machine -- which is why I had access to an i386 in the first place!