[News] Show report: AAA 2003, Commodore Billboard back online | ANN.lu |
Posted on 07-Jul-2003 19:46 GMT by Jens Schönfeld | 217 comments View flat View list |
This is a show report from individual Computers about the Amiga Alpe Adria that took place in Udine, Italy this weekend, and some good news about the Commodore Billboard!
This weekend, the Amiga Alpe Adria 2003 took place in Udine, Italy - another station of Amiga OS4 on tour. The show was organized by Cloanto, well-known for a lot of Amiga programs and the emulator "Amiga Forever". Jürgen Schober of Point Design had to make two OS4 presentations, because the room was totally overcrowded with more than 100 Amiga fans and journalists of daily press and computer magazines. We also had the chance to show our products in a 30-minute presentation. Best-seller of the present retailers Soft 3 and Virtual Works was the Catweasel MK3, that became the first choice accessory for many Amiga One owners because of it's high degree of integration into the hard- and software of the new Amiga.
A small Retro-computing museum right at the entrance of the showroom brought back joyful memories in the visitors. Rare items like an SX-64 in best shape, a VIC-20 rev.1, and even a C65 prototype were shown. One of the first multi-computer games (today's networking games) was shown on two
PET computers that were connected through the serial ports. The home computer pioneer Altair 8800 from 1975 was the only none-Commodore computer.
The "Video Microwave", a Pegasos-board that was built in the case of a Sharp Microwave oven, was - at best - good for a laugh. The keyboard did not work at all, and it only took a few mouseclicks to make the computer with the MorphOS operating system crash. The reason for this could not be found in the short time of the show.
Commodore Billboard back online
Our good news for the fans of Commodore nostalgia almost got lost in the excitement surrounding Amiga OS4: The Commodore Billboard is back online! The initiator of the project, Søren Ladegaard (Denmark) had to drop the project due to lack of time in January 2003, and transferred the website to individual Computers. We're now sponsoring the website that can cause a lot of traffic with it's several hundred megabytes in size. During the past half year, the new webmaster Stefan Zelazny has converted the audio and video files to mpeg and mp3, so the website can be viewed on most platforms. For example, the Realplayer is not necessary any more.
Currently, the website is available under the address www.commodorebillboard.de. The .com domain will be made available in the coming weeks.
If you're interested in a local copy of the website, you can support us in paying for the high cost of the website by ordering the CD. It will be available in august this year from all our retail partners for about 15,- EUR. The double-CD package also contains some surprises for Commodore-fans!
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Show report: AAA 2003, Commodore Billboard back online : Comment 192 of 217 | ANN.lu |
Posted by takemehomegrandma on 08-Jul-2003 21:49 GMT | In reply to Comment 160 (Jens Schönfeld): @ Jens Schönfeld
Thank you for your post.
Regarding the translation issues - my German is quite poor. I can read most of it and make a context out of it, but babelfish.altavista.com does a better job (which says a lot :-) ). But I'm prepeared to take your word for it.
I'm happy to see that you have not abandoned us Pegasos users.
> Testing might take a little longer, because I've sold my Pegasos to limit
> the losses that I made with the system (thanks to KDH for taking it back at
> the current dealer price). A very good decision, as another drop in price
> that came shortly after would have cost me even more money.
I hope that you and Genesi can come to some kind of an agreement on your issues. And I hope that it will come in a civilized manner. Individual Computers and Genesi could gain much from each other in the future (if the both of you are mature enough to not let your business grow "personal" and if you both are capable to forget "old grudge"). Both of you have a track record of delivering (and supporting) great products; products that does not compete, but supplement each other.
> Maybe if the price drops to 50 EUR I'll be tempted to buy one again.
Perhaps the Phoenix Developer Consortium still have one or more Betatester Pegasos available for free?
;-)
The Pegasos II will probably be better though, but you should really have both of them. I have a solution! I will trade one of my Pegasos (it is used but in perfect condition and has the April 1 fix) for a Commodore One! My mail address can be found on the top of this message!
;-)
> However, it'll never be possible to give the same support for the Pegasos as
> for the Amiga One for technical reasons: Amiga One has it's own Bios, which
> now contains some Catweasel code. Since the Pegasos has no custom Bios,
> certain functions (especially the Amiga keyboard) are only available after
> the driver has been loaded from HD.
Well I am not as "geeky" as you (in a positive meaning), but I believe that the current Pegasos 1 Open Firmware has code in it to understand the FFS filesystem (among others). So the question is how much "no custom BIOS" this really is? I am obviously no Open Firmware expert, but to me it seems like it's possible to include some kind of custom code in the Open Firmware framework in some way, if you really want to. |
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