ditzel@ssc-bee.UUCP (Charles L Ditzel) (10/16/85)
*** REPLACE THIS LINE WITH YOUR MESSAGE *** Re : all the net horror stories on the amiga and atari ... A couple of weeks ago there was a Computer Fair (Compufair)held in Seattle. One of the big features was that the AMIGA would be there. The ads were plastered all over all the Compufair advertising : Come to CompuFair and see the AMIGA!! (pant) Over a three day span of time ... the machine never made its appearance. Officially the information booth was told that no Amiga was available(!) and that the US mails had done in the Commodore(??) dealer ...rumors had it that actually two or three Amigas were readily available but that none seem capable of staying up. the Amiga booth incidentally was taken over by a local dealer of Atari STs which sold out their ST inventory and people supposedly were asking to buy the demonstrators. (Later I also found out that likewise at a San Francisco computer fair the AMIGA made an appearance but kept crashing so the it was pulled... this was the week prior to the Seattle fair) I now own an Atari ST and am pretty happy with its performance so the question is : Are all the Amiga and Atari horror stories just isolated incidents or is there a trend ??? Are we talking about intrinsically bad hardware design or just loose chips???
steve@wlbr.UUCP (Steve Childress) (10/29/85)
In article <401@ssc-bee.UUCP>, ditzel@ssc-bee.UUCP (Charles L Ditzel) writes: > Are all the Amiga and Atari horror stories just isolated > incidents or is there a trend ??? > > Are we talking about intrinsically bad hardware design or > just loose chips??? In my years of experience, crashes are usually the fault of software, not hardware. The exception is when a VERY immature hardware design is in use. Regards, Steve Childress {trwrb, scgvaxd, ihnp4, voder, vortex} !wlbr!steve or ...wlbr!wlbreng1!steve