Commercial games would run on NTSC because of the underscanned video but I liked free software just as well. PAL emulation was required for most of that.
Type: Posts; User: SamuraiCrow
Commercial games would run on NTSC because of the underscanned video but I liked free software just as well. PAL emulation was required for most of that.
Amigas aren't multithreaded at the OS level. This includes the next gen systems. An i3 could keep up with an i7 and my RasPi B2 would not be much better than a RasPi B+ for running any AmigaOS or...
I agree, Harrison. :(
No. (Answer to the question originally posted.)
Agreed!
I agree! What language is it programmed in?
They own the name and the source code. Personally, I'm more of an AROS developer nowadays anyway... AROS has new source code with chipset independent Graphics.library that is backward compatible to...
Commodore USA has a poll started on Blogspot about what a new Amiga should have. Here is the link.
I'm on Google+ but I'm not going to waste my time on Facebook. Google+ lets you filter out which inputs are in your stream according to which social circles you are looking at. It also lets you...
@Menace
How do you defeat a carrier that plows across land? The computer cheats so much in that game that I quit playing it!
Total Chaos AGA is one of my all time favorites for the Amiga even if it does require 24 megs of fast RAM and an '030+. I'm kind of biased because I know the guy that wrote most of it. It runs a...
I keep Xubuntu on my dad's systems and he likes them just fine. As for me? I have a Mac and am pretty happy with it.
Hello,
I'm trying to create an AROS bounty for implementing AGA features on shader-equipped graphics cards using the Gallium3D drivers that AROS already has. Since most games banged the hardware...
I've got an A1200, a Mac Mini running MacOSX, an old PowerMac G4 running MorphOS, and my dad has some Linux PC's that I use from time to time. No Windows PC's though.
Commodore's advertisement of the Amiga always stunk in the US and especially in the later stages. There was nothing outside their own Commodore Magazine. The big-box Amigas only caught on because...
I was 19 and just starting college. The year was 1993. My first Amiga was an A1200HD40.