Miami - and Multicasting
This is not exactly an announcement, but rather a reminder :-).
Miami supports full IP multicasting since version 2.1, in a way that
is source-level compatible to Unix, allowing relatively easy ports of
Unix multicasting software to AmigaOS/Miami.
Multicasting is the transport mechanism used by real-time applications
(audio/video conferencing etc.) on the Internet, and by the "MBone"
multicasting backbone embedded into the Internet.
With an MBone tunnel connection at your provider, a multicasting-
capable protocol stack like Miami and some conferencing software based
on multicasting, you can participate in the MBone, e.g. watch Space
Shuttle launches live, watch conference meetings, run your only live
audio/video conferences etc.
Up until earlier this year the MBone has been "experimental" and was
not considered a real Internet service. This has changed recently
though. There is a very strong movement on the Internet towards
delivering MBone to end users right now, and several Internet
providers (most of them small regional providers) have officially
added "MBone access" to their list of services recently. The MBone is
gradually becoming an "official Internet service", just like W3 and
e-mail. Ask your provider for more information on this.
What the Amiga needs at this point are good, clean ports of the
available multicasting application software, and maybe a few
Amiga-native multicasting applications. I don't have the time to do
this myself, but there are probably many programmers reading, and
some of them might be looking for an interesting project. The MBone is
likely to become the next "hot issue" after email and www, so we
should try to get a quick start on this, and all the Amiga needs is
application software.
If you are looking for a way to generate some income from your Amiga:
Good video/audio conferencing tools could become real money makers -
probably more interesting than yet another e-mail/news program or web
browser, where you first have to invest many months of work to just
get to the point that the competition has already reached. Besides you
can implement straight from the specs and from Unix examples - no
need to add workarounds for broken M*cr*s*ft implementations for a
change...
If you are interested in porting or writing multicasting applications
please check the following links for more information on the MBone:
Holger Kruse: kruse@nordicglobal.com
www.nordicglobal.com/
Give OS a Chance
Windows 95
is the best, you can install it three times, taking 20 minutes a shot, and still have a
totally unbootable machine, much better than the crappy old Workbench which works every time and is
infinitely faster. - Ross Wood, PC User/ex Amiga user (after trying to get a CD-ROM to work,
re-installing windows and finally formatting drive C:)
The currently available operating systems for the Amiga are increadibly powerful; more so
than most people imagine - after using my Amiga for several years I'm still finding features that
I've never used; the "Alias" command was, until recently an alien concept to me, now I find no end of
uses for it. I have added a progress bar to the shell copy command for example by just making an
"alias" to the "SCopy" command ("alias copy scopy window" in my "s:user-startup"); although not the most
exciting thing a computer can do, it's little touches like that which makes a system more enjoyable to
use (depending on what you're touching of course :-) ). If the Amiga's characteristic easy-to-use-but-
powerful design is to be carried into the next millenium then it needs carefully updating;
maintaining compatibility but giving a slightly slicker appearance - most people's perception of the
Amiga is still the yellow text and windows on a blue background that the A500 so horrifically burnt
onto our brains; carefull advertising and restructuring is required by who ever now owns Amiga, (slow
readers may find it has changed ownership again before reaching the end of this paragraph) if support
for the Amiga is to continue, so someone needs to get their act together pretty sharpish, personally
I'd give better odds of finding intelligent life behind the keyboard of an Apple Mac than that
happening within the next 2 years - A new Power Amiga may prove me wrong, lets hope so.
Copyright retained © 1997, Priority One Developments
/X\ojo - Simon "Mojo" Knock
Private mail: knock@globalnet.co.uk, or knock@thepentagon.com
Private pages: www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~knock
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