Amiga Hardware Reference Manual
Author: Commodore-Amiga, Inc
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Published: 1989
Total Pages: 404
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Commodore-Amiga, Inc
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Published: 1989
Total Pages: 404
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Commodore-Amiga, Inc
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Published: 1991
Total Pages: 1016
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →The books in this series cover the newest Amiga computer, the Amiga 3000, as well as the most recent version of the system software, Release 2. This manual is a complete reference to all the functions and data structures in the Amiga system software.
Author: Commodore-Amiga, Inc
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Published: 1992
Total Pages: 984
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →The books in this series cover the newest Amiga computer, the Amiga 3000, as well as the most recent version of the system software, Release 2. In Release 2, the system libraries have doubled. This comprehensive tutorial provides detailed examples of how to use the Amiga system libraries, including hundreds of new functions.
Author: Jimmy Maher
Publisher: MIT Press
Published: 2018-01-26
Total Pages: 342
ISBN-13: 0262535696
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Exploring the often-overlooked history and technological innovations of the world's first true multimedia computer. Long ago, in 1985, personal computers came in two general categories: the friendly, childish game machine used for fun (exemplified by Atari and Commodore products); and the boring, beige adult box used for business (exemplified by products from IBM). The game machines became fascinating technical and artistic platforms that were of limited real-world utility. The IBM products were all utility, with little emphasis on aesthetics and no emphasis on fun. Into this bifurcated computing environment came the Commodore Amiga 1000. This personal computer featured a palette of 4,096 colors, unprecedented animation capabilities, four-channel stereo sound, the capacity to run multiple applications simultaneously, a graphical user interface, and powerful processing potential. It was, Jimmy Maher writes in The Future Was Here, the world's first true multimedia personal computer. Maher argues that the Amiga's capacity to store and display color photographs, manipulate video (giving amateurs access to professional tools), and use recordings of real-world sound were the seeds of the digital media future: digital cameras, Photoshop, MP3 players, and even YouTube, Flickr, and the blogosphere. He examines different facets of the platform—from Deluxe Paint to AmigaOS to Cinemaware—in each chapter, creating a portrait of the platform and the communities of practice that surrounded it. Of course, Maher acknowledges, the Amiga was not perfect: the DOS component of the operating systems was clunky and ill-matched, for example, and crashes often accompanied multitasking attempts. And Commodore went bankrupt in 1994. But for a few years, the Amiga's technical qualities were harnessed by engineers, programmers, artists, and others to push back boundaries and transform the culture of computing.
Author: Commodore-Amiga, Inc
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Published: 1989
Total Pages: 776
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Revised and updated, this volume in the Amiga Technical Reference Series provides essential programming materials. It contains Amiga C and Assembly language include files, function Autodocs, and IFF documents.
Author: Susan Deyl
Publisher: Addison Wesley Publishing Company
Published: 1986-01-01
Total Pages: 231
ISBN-13: 9780201110760
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Describes the features of Intuition, the Amiga home computer's user interface
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1986
Total Pages: 320
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →A user's manual, a technical reference manual and a developer's manual, this is the only book that shows Amiga owners how to use the machine's disk operating system. All the available DOS commands and ways to utilize them on this new computer are covered in this book.
Author: Paul Andreas Overaa
Publisher:
Published: 1995
Total Pages: 512
ISBN-13: 9781873308578
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Author: Margaret Gorts Morabito
Publisher: Independently Published
Published: 2021-07-28
Total Pages: 304
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK →Back into the Storm: A Design Engineer's Story of Commodore Computers in the 1980s brings you on a journey recounting the experiences of working at Commodore Business Machines from 1983 to 1986, as seen through the eyes of a young hardware engineer, Bil Herd. Herd was the lead design engineer for the TED series of home computers which included the Plus/4 and C16. He was also the lead designer for the versatile C128 that sold in the millions and was known fondly as the last of the 8-bit computers. In this book, Bil tells the inside stories that he and his extraordinary team, called "the Animals," lived through at Commodore. These were years when the home computer wars were at their height, technology moved ahead at a fast pace, and Commodore was at its pinnacle. The best-selling computer of all time, the Commodore C64, was in full swing and had blown past the sales numbers of its competitors, such as Apple, Tandy, Atari, and Sinclair, to name a few, in the home computer market. Commodore's founder, Jack Tramiel, was the head of the company when Bil began working there. This book describes with intricate detail how Herd and his team designed and built the computers that they were charged with creating for Commodore. It brings you through the design cycles of the computers that Herd headed up, categorized in the book in three stages--early, middle, and late--starting with the TED series of computers that he inherited in his first week at Commodore. The TEDs are known mostly as the Plus/4 and C16 computers, but there were other models that were designed, such as the C364 with a first-of-its-kind desktop interface that actually spoke, but which never made it into production. The TED series was followed by the Commodore C128, which was Herd and the Animals' invention from start to finish, and amazingly had an unheard of three operating systems. This was a high pressure time, a unique time in computer history, when a handful of (mostly) young individuals could craft a computer using the resources of one of the largest computer manufacturers at the time at their disposal, and yet there were no design committees nor management oversight groups to get in the way of true progress. As corny as it sounds (and it does sound corny), they designed from their hearts and for the five-month period that it took to get a computer from paper to the Consumer Electronics Show (the Super Bowl for the computer industry), they lived, breathed, and ate everything dealing with how to get their computers done. They added features that they thought were good ideas and did their best to dodge the bad ideas from middle management that were thrust in their direction. They had that cockiness that came from knowing that they would outlive these bosses in the Commodore corporate culture, if they were successful, and providing they survived the highwire, design cycle themselves. They worked hard, they played hard. Come for an insider's ride with Bil Herd and the Animals in this fun adventure!