Magnetic Scrolls adventures for Windows CE HPCs
Welcome, weary traveller You find yourself in what appears to be a construction site. Pieces of dangerous HTML lurk to your left and right, waiting to trip up the unwary. Not that you fall...
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Welcome, weary traveller You find yourself in what appears to be a construction site. Pieces of dangerous HTML lurk to your left and right, waiting to trip up the unwary. Not that you fall...
Summer 1995 saw the launch of Phase 5’s CyberStorm and CyberVision. Were they any good? Read on, brave reader…
(Editor’s note: this article appeared in the December 1994 issue of CU Amiga, and ran over 4 pages) Cast your mind back to late 1986. In computer shops around the country, an incredible plague...
64 bit graphic chips, 24 bit colour and a 32 bit bus. For the first time on an Amiga. Clear?
So… You’ve got an IC that you’ve been working on, and you’ve managed to snap a leg off. At this point, you can: Fly into a rage because you’ve just broken something that is...
Hard drives. For the Amiga. In 1989. What was the state of the Art? Read on…
The Amiga 1000 holds a special place in my affections for reasons explored before; it is what kicked the computer industry to deliver more innovation more often. It was, understandably, replaced by Commodore with...
The ST-506 from Shugart Associates, later Seagate, was the first de facto standard for hard drive interfacing. It was crude by modern standards, but showed that manufacturers could choose to ride on the wave of standard interfaces…