passaret@copernicus.crd.ge.com ("Mr. Mike" Passaretti) (04/24/91)
In article <20892@cbmvax.commodore.com> daveh@cbmvax.commodore.com (Dave Haynie) writes: # #In article <7985@jhunix.HCF.JHU.EDU> barrett@jhunix.HCF.JHU.EDU #(Dan Barrett) writes: #> #> Have you read the article "UNIX and the Amiga: An Introduction to #>UNIX, for the Amiga Programmer, Part I" in Amazing Computing's Tech magazine, #>issue #2? # #> IMHO, this article is terrible. It is riddled with errors and #>misconceptions about UNIX. # # I was under the impression that both Tech Journals, the Amazing and the # AmigaWorld versions, would subject any submissions to some kind of expert # review committee. Sounds like they screwed the pooch on that one, at least. # I was persuaded to write an article for the AmigaWorld version, and it made # me wonder if the original premise of these magazines would really last long, # especially with two of them launched at basically the same time. A good # portion of the people capable of writing really hard core technical articles # are also generally overextended as it is. # # In any case, any article full of errors would be inexcusable in Amazing or # AmigaWorld proper. In these new tech journals, it's worse. I haven't seen # either of them yet, but if such an article made me annoyed, I would probably # write a colorfully angry letter back to them. I'm doing just that for the AmigaWorld version. I don't remember the exact name of the article, but it was something about going to the metal for better joystick response, and how it didn't have to make things less "friendly" or "portable". They supplied two example executables, one "correct" and the other "to the metal". They do NOT behave the same on my 3000. The "correct" one gives appropriate responses, and the other is just terribly confused. Maybe I've missed something, but it seems to me that somebody ought to have at least checked.... followups from this message are redirected to .programmer as this has nothing to do with unix per se. # #>| Dan Barrett, Department of Computer Science Johns Hopkins University | # -- # Dave Haynie Commodore-Amiga (Amiga 3000) "The Crew That Never Rests" - MM P.S. Incidentally, Dave... Thanks for the 3000. I don't work at that level of design and implementation most of the time, but I can tell good design and appreciate it, and I do. I can't wait 'till the developer specs show up so I can read about things more directly instead of using a loupe on the schematics in my manual and scratching my head a lot :-). -- passaretti@crd.ge.com {whatever}!crdgw1!brahe!passaret