AmigaOS 4.0 Developer Pre-Release
Hyperion Entertainment and the Amiga OS 4.0 development team are extremely pleased and relieved to announce that after nearly 30 months of painstaking development the Amiga OS 4.0 Developer Pre-release has gone gold and will be sent to the duplication plant on Monday, April 19, 2004.
Source: AmigaWorldThe Amiga OS 4.0 Developer Pre-release consists of a current snapshot of AmigaOS 4.0 for the AmigaOne platform with a straightforward HTML installation guide in English, German, French and Italian as well as the Amiga OS 4.0 SDK.
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Comments
-drasnor
The cheap A1 motherboards will set you back about $800 or more and that is only for the motherboard and processor, so they aren't exactly the easiest thing on the wallet, on the other hand there are now the other alternate OSs such as MorphOS (PPC) or even AROS (x86) which people could use instead, but none of them are binary compatable with each other, which doesn't exactly help the dwindling situation.
The new Amiga systems are very much different, they are basically iMacs and use either a G3 or G4 processor ranging from 600Mhz to 1300MHz currently. So for raw performance purposes, you can compare the hardware directly to an iMac, but on the other hand, the OS itself is very different. OS4 is PPC native, even on the older Amigas, which means it has to use certain bootstrapping to get in to the OS as the 68k is the CPU on the original Amigas. Once in OS4, 68k emulation is done via JIT compiling. Problem is though, one of the reasons the original Amigas were so good is that most things were done in Assembler with excessive amounts of direct hardware hitting, conseqently there is a lot of software (and all but the newest games) won't work on AmigaOnes.
I still play about with my original Amiga which is actually a towered A4000 with 50MHz 68060 and a 233MHz 604e PPC dual processors. Even though the 68k is the main processor it is still very snappy due to the OS.
Going from reports, the A1 systems are very fast messing about in the OS, but games and other software will still be limited by the hardware itself.
The latest OS for the classic machines isn't actually that old. It was released in 2000 and the latest BoingBag (AOS service packs) was March 2002.
It's another one of those not really stright comparisons, different archetectures and OS'.
-drasnor
All different companies now. Everything has changed hands multiple times. The original companies are all involved in lawsuits now.
AmigaOS now belongs to a company named KMOS with Hyperion developing the OS (3.9 was made by Hauuge & Partner). The boards are beingmade by a company called Eyetech (one of the original companies).