bpv9073@sjfc.UUCP (Brett VanSprewenburg) (12/05/90)
[I shot the Line Eater] My good friend attended this show. He just sent me a report on it. It sounds great. Further questions can be addressed to him at JRO91@GENESEO.BITNET or me since I have had an extensive conversation with him and may just have the info your looking for. Anyways, I won't babble anymore...enjoy. ==Brett From cci632!uupsi!GENESEO.bitnet!JRO91 Mon Dec 3 17:39:37 1990 Received: by sjfc.UUCP (5.51/4.7) id AA12155; Mon, 3 Dec 90 17:39:32 EST Received: by cci632.cci.com (5.54/5.17) id AA10934; Mon, 3 Dec 90 16:44:46 EST Received: from CORNELLC.CIT.CORNELL.EDU by uu.psi.com (5.61/3.1.090690-Performance Systems International) id AA17714; Mon, 3 Dec 90 16:15:46 -0500 Message-Id: <9012032115.AA17714@uu.psi.com> Received: from GENESEO.BITNET by CORNELLC.cit.cornell.edu (IBM VM SMTP R1.2.2MX) with BSMTP id 9658; Mon, 03 Dec 90 16:19:37 EST Date: Mon, 3 Dec 90 16:21 EST From: "AMIGA COMPUTERS...THE REST ARE JUST ROTTEN APPLES" <cci632!uupsi!GENESEO.BITNET!JRO91> Subject: World of Amiga Show To: cci.com!sjfc!bpv9073@cci632 X-Vms-To: IN%"sjfc!bpv9073@cci632.cci.com" Status: R Hi there, you missed one kick ass show. Let me give you some of the great highlights: 1. Video Toaster: def'n: the most incredible piece of machinery ever to be created, even rivals the Amiga computer. The toaster was there and a video tape demo reel of it that was partially done by Penn & Teller. Penn was narating while Teller was doing REAL-TIME special effects. They went on to show some of the toys that come with the Toaster, and the software. The picture quality of the device is beyond wows. The crowd surrounding this booth was huge, all day. They showed some 24bit 3-d animations done on an A2000, absolutely out of this world! The walker demos are just walks in the park in comparison. This is the tool we need to do just about everything in Video, quickly and easily! Super-Drool item! 2. ATonce AT/286 emulator board: Was seem running IBM lotus 123 while Amiga dos was still active. In 286 emulation, the board opens a custom screen of its own, that can be blinked to the front or back to allow Amiga applications to run. Seemed quite stable, and fairly quick. It even was displaying IBM graohics created by the plotting functions in lotus. Very nice! 3. ICD's internal HD for the A500: Incredible! This is a controller that fits inside of your A500, attaches to a HD via ribbon cable. Harddrives are about the size of thick credit cards. (put three floppies on top of each other to see how thick the drives are.) ICD will provide you with the drive if you desire, but will also give you names and addresses of the manufacturors of these drives. Sizes range 10,20,25,30,40 meg HD's today. These drives are being made more often now, to be put in laptops and portables, there will not be a shortage of them, and they are widely supported. It will autoboot if the controller detects 1.3 or higher ROMS. Demo system: A500 with AdSpeed, ICD 4 meg internal board, 2 meg daughter board, (Both fully populated), ICD internal HD. This system was incredible! What you get: one very fast 500 that runs off of an internal HD, "Almost portable". 4. A3000UX: The hottest Amiga yet developed! The system I saw was running the OpenLook graphical environment. Under the GUI (our blank WB usually that ugly blue unless changed) was displayed an incredible photograph that would rival HD TV. I asked about the graphics abilities of the Machine, and the REP replied "It uses the University of Lowell 24 bit card" I then wiped the drool away from my mouth and asked about prices on the system: A3000UX: 25 MHz 200 Meg HD (75 meg used by UNIX, 125 for the user) 1950 monitor ULowell Card 2 Meg Chip Ram 7 Meg Fast Ram (kinda an odd number) Unix operating system OpenLook GUI (as an option) $4999 Can we say dirt cheap system, especially for a UNIX box? 5. CDTV : there were about 6 CDTV's set up so that people could come up and play with them. They have a really neat remote control that replaces the mouse. Information access time was generally quite fast, but in some spots the wait caused me to loose interest. 6. XETEC : These guys were demonstrating the controllers that they make, and were showing off the CD-ROM devicce they sell. The access time on it was like lightening! I could pull up and load animations fast, and could pop up fred fish disks like they were in ram! 7. GVP : these guys had a huge booth, and were showing off everything they made, I want their drive more than ever now! 8. Just about every booth was running 3000's, the vendors and displayers were talking about how stable the newest 2.0 is, not a word on any incompatibles. 4.5 A3000UX: the system also comes with an Ethernet card. Well, thats a really quick summary of the show. It was about a million times better than the Penn. show. 9. Pulsar: they have introduced a color printing method on the DESKJET! It creates color pics at 300 dpi, by using a color separation method and blending the colors one at a time, just like a printing press. Works with any program that will output 4 color separated sheets (ie.Pro-Page). They are also writing a program that will output 4 color separations from programs that do not support color separations, DPaint, and other paint programs, penpal, etc. 10. ICD : Adspeed, 14 MHz accelerator gave a very noticeable speed differance. Also sold out the first day of the show! Jason R. Oliver JRO91@geneseo.bitnet