Amiga Emerges Ambitious
That is the message Amiga International is delivering today as it announces a new licensing agreement and prepares for Amiga '98,…
That is the message Amiga International is delivering today as it announces a new licensing agreement and prepares for Amiga '98, an Amiga user and developer conference in Missouri.
The Amiga, an operating system (OS) and computer which gained a devoted following in the 1980s because of its groundbreaking multimedia technology, has been squeezed into an ever-smaller niche market by the dominance of Microsoft's Windows and Apple's Macintosh platforms in the '90s.
Amiga eventually declared bankruptcy and was subsequently acquired by Gateway 2000 last year.
Amiga has announced a licensing agreement with phase 5, a German manufacturer of digital products, to develop a new PowerPC-based computer using the Amiga 3.1 operating system.
The new machines, called "preboxes," will target the high-end market with multi-processing systems. In a statement to the press, phase 5 general manager Wolf Dietrich said that Amiga and phase 5 will bypass single-processor machines to avoid price competition with Intel and its mass production of lower-end chips.
The machines will be able to use up to four processors at once. A prebox with four 200-MHz PowerPC processors will have a suggested retail price of $1,995. On the higher end, a prebox with four 300-MHz PowerPC processors will go for $4,495. The preboxes are scheduled to be released sometime in late 1998. (c) Wired News