Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: What was the Best and "not so good" Amiga Models?  (Read 13115 times)

Description:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Matt_H

Re: thanks odin your right
« Reply #74 from previous page: October 15, 2003, 08:45:44 PM »
Re: narrator.device

Hee hee. I used that to record voicemail greetings. Good times. :-)

Re: Amigas

As for the different Amiga models... (Did I already respond to this thread?)

I think every Amiga has its place somewhere.

The A600 and A1000 are aesthetically pleasing. The 600 has a nice compact design and the 1000 has the Keyboard garage. Plus the 600 is luggable.

The 500 made the Amiga available to mass markets.

The 1200 is insanely expandable. It's a machine you can grow with and upgrade as your needs require.

The 2000 is the only desktop machine with a huge case for expansion cards/drives. Helped bring in the Toaster, establishing the professional video market.

The 3000(T) has onboard FF and SCSI with a small desktop footprint.

The 4000 introduced AGA.

The 4000T is the pentultimate productivity machine.
 

Offline that_punk_guy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2002
  • Posts: 4526
    • Show only replies by that_punk_guy
Re: What was the Best and "not so good" Amiga Models?
« Reply #75 on: October 16, 2003, 02:12:18 AM »
Quote

jdiffend wrote:

CDTV... the CD caddy was a very bad idea and the machine was too limited as a computer.


OT: What ever was the point in CD Caddys? I remember the Macs at school about 10 years ago had them too. But what was the big idea?