Thirty years ago, on July 23, 1985, Commodore took to the stage in New York to reveal the Amiga 1000, a personal computer with unprecedented multimedia capabilities and an intuitive interface that ...
If you had an Amiga during the 16-bit home computer era it’s possible that alongside the games and a bit of audio sampling you had selected it because of its impressive video capabilities. In its ...
The new native 68K AmigaOS web browser leans on the machines' underlying emulation system to offer modern facilities on a retro OS.… Amibrowser [PDF] from Amigakit tackles one of the requirements to ...
If our 11-part series on the history of the Amiga and our (in-progress) seven-part series on the history of the Apollo program don’t give it away, we happen to be unabashed fans of a certain computing ...
If you were lucky enough to have a Commodore Amiga or one of its competitor 16-bit home computers around the end of the 1980s, it’s probable that you were doing all the computing tasks that most other ...
Amiga computers may have been popular in the late 1980s and early 1990s, especially in media production, but their filesystems are not directly compatible with modern computers. The new 'amifuse' ...
The Commodore Amiga is one of the most revered personal computing platforms ever. When the original Amiga first hit the scene back in the mid-80s, it was light-years ahead of any other personal ...