An Amiga vendor, with the obligatory boing ball.
Joe Palumbo's table is visible in the back of
the picture; I got the Oxford Pascal compiler from him!
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The TPUG table. Got the Datatronic Forth cartridge there; ultra-obscure!
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What would a Commodore expo be without a little on-the-fly demo coding?
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Somebody's Treo has learned a new trick...
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This is the room where the demos were held. Burt Bochenek's AmigaOne is on the
table to the right.
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The inimitable Jim Butterfield, with a little help from TPUG member Ian
McIntosh, conducts the bag raffle (I won a Commodore LCD watch!). Jim later
gave a hilarious talk entitled "How Not to Code".
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Peter Schepers demonstrates some of the latest features in his program
64Copy, including a sophisticated disassembler
that can see inside archive files. Peter tried to convince us that he isn't
really a programmer, but no one would believe him.
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Burt Bochenek gave a very thorough talk on the state of Amiga OS4 and the
hardware that can run it. His machine would boot Amiga OS or Debian Linux, from
where he could start versions 9 or 10 of the Mac OS. And Amiga OS4 will run
binaries from earlier versions! Yow.
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Just when you thought you'd heard everything the SID chip can do, along comes
Prophet64, a program that emulates the old
Roland synthesizers that have come back into fashion. Rob Adlers demoed this
amazing piece of software.
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Another of the Prophet64 binaries in action. Rob also had recordings of output
from this program made with both the old (6581) and new (8580) versions of the
SID chip. The differences (especially in the filters) were obvious.
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Leif Bloomquist gave two demos, starting with the
CD player
he wrote for the IDE64. If you don't
know yet, this is a cartridge with an IDE interface.
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And this is how easy is it to use. Yes, folks, 95% of the program is written in
BASIC (the UI is done with a charset, but there's an ML screen clear routine).
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Leif's second demo was of the
RR-Net, an Ethernet
adapter built onto the RetroReplay board. This
is the Contiki
operating system in action, running in 64 kilobytes of RAM.
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This is a close-up of Leif's rig for the demos. The RR-Net sticks up out of the
top of the RetroReplay; the IDE64 is on the table behind. The 1581 is really a
hard drive in a 1581 case. Beneath it is an IDE CD drive.
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