To all those that say the Amiga is "dead", this is just one more bit of proof that the Amiga goes on (and on, and on, and on). As long as there is new software being developed for the Amiga and users still continue to turn their old Amiga computers on and enjoy them all over the World, how can anyone say that the Amiga is "Dead"?
Thanks for sharing this info with us, though I don't think I will be joining the "Twitter Generation", it is still a great addition to the thousands of Amiga programs/utilities/tools and games that have been developed before it. It is always great when a new technology or protocol becomes supported on the Amiga (and MorphOS too, since I am a user of that as well).