options random home http://www.wam.umd.edu/~walrus/Amiga-Intro.html (Amiga Plus Extra No. 5, 08/1997)

World Wide Walrus
Amiga Page
Frame-Free Zone

Made With Amiga

An Introduction to the
AMIGA
Computer

The Amiga was first introduced in 1984. It earned rave reviews. It did what no other computer at the time could do. None came even close to the Amiga for nigh a decade after its introduction.
The Walrus' Pages
Amiga News
Amiga History
Under the Hood
Amiga Multimedia
WebLord, the Page Construction Power Tool
Development
Amiga Java
Babylon 5
3D Graphics

Amiga Related
Amiga Intl.
Gateway 2000

Amiga Web Sites
Amiga Web Directory
Aminet: Global Amiga Software Archive

Think back to 1984

The most powerful microcomputer in the world in 1984 was IBM's AT, based on a new, powerful, 8MHz 80286 CPU running MS-DOS and usually equipped with 512K of memory, sometimes expanded to 640K. Graphics were rarely more than 640 × 200 in two colors, but EGA (640 × 350 with 16 colors from a fixed 64 color palette) made in-roads then. All this was rather slow, though.

The Macintosh had been introduced at the 1984 Summer Olympics, featuring a black & white graphic user interface, hitherto found only on larger workstations, an icon-driven interface, 3.5 inch floppy drives, and the ability to address many megabytes of RAM all at once.

And into this world came the Amiga

The Amiga could multitask in 256K RAM, and multitask so well that not even today's Pentiums with Windows 95 manage the same instant responsiveness as a 1984 Amiga.

Graphics? From a palette of 4096 colors, the Amiga could display 16 at once on high resolution (720 × 596) screens, up to 64 colors on smaller screens, and with a special display mode (HAM, Hold-And-Modify, mostly suitable for images) it could display all 4096 colors at once!

And then it could animate its displays, using color cycling for stunning effects, or produce full-screen animations at speeds that are still difficult to match on today's fastest Pentium processor machines.

But wait, there is more!

All the Amiga's graphics displays could go directly to a television set, a VCR, or a projection screen. Ideal for creating or augmenting home video!

And then there is stereo sound! Upon startup, and as part of the power-on self test, the Amiga would play a short piece of music (7K), a piece derived from Wagner's Ring der Niebelungen.

In fact, the Amiga supported 4 independent sound channels, arranged to provide true stereo separation and digital sound. Programs could play digitized sounds or generate sound waves algorithmically. The widely distributed MOD format for songs was born on the Amiga.

And what does stereo sound, high speed graphics, and video compatibility add up to?

Multimedia in 1985 !

Years before the word multimedia was coined, the Amiga offered more multimedia power than most computers that are today sold under that depreciated label multimedia.

So, why has the Amiga not conquered the world?

In a word: Malice. Malice and stupidity. Well, in two words: Malice and stupidity. And greed. Ok, three words: Malice, stupidity, and greed. And a bit of bad luck. Oh, heck. Just read the Amiga's history!

About the Images
This page was created and is maintained by Udo K Schuermann; it has last been updated on Sunday August 03, 1997. If you find something amiss or you have comments, please email me.