May 1992 LISA. $3.95 Canada $4.95 UK £2.80 ACCENT ON OUTPUT! AMIGA ART 5 Techniques For Gallery-Quality Results PRINTERS Essential Buyirrtf Tips PUBLISHING Multi-rtatform DTP PLUS! /Hidden Power In Workbench 2 /"Trekking" w/DPai /Post-Production Tricks For Video Special Effects Imagine 2.0 vs. Real3D Pro ll 74470 ll 65948 An IDC, Cmnmunicutunis Publication mm E?©E 'DTXB NEW: SupraFax Software! • Auto/ manual FAX transmission r Easy-to-use phonebook entries " Convert faxes to/from IFF files H Custom cover sheets ■ Fax printer driver :: Group broadcast a and more! ..■l|yB 83£ ■ "=>. --=- . • ■ ■ " ■■ Supra Prices, 5 ■ 1 Modems Introducing three great new fax/data modems from Supra — the 2400 bps SupraPAX- Modem™ Plus, the 9600 bpsSupraFAX- Modem VJ2, & the 14,400 bps SupraFAXModem V32bi$! All three modems feature V.42bis & MNP (2-5, 1.0) data compression & error correction, pins they work with nearly all popular telecommunications programs, including BaudBandit ™, JRComtn, A-Talk III™, & many others. With telecom software & your Supra FAXModem V.32bis $399.95 Retail 14,400 S/R FAX 14,400 DATA SupraFAXModem V.32 $299.95 Retail 9600 S/R FAX 9600 DATA ^mm ^Sttgg SupraPAXModem, you can access computers close to home & around the world, where you'll find everything from airline schedules & stock quotes to technical help & free software. Computer-based faxes are just as easy Ail SupraFAXModems are compatible with SupraFAXModem Plus $199.95 Retail 9600 S/R FAX 2400 DATA ?V -**5fi Group 3 fax machines & Class I & 2 fax commands. Just add our versatile new SupraFax soj choice)! -* . y Sufiro Corporation 1 -800-727-8772 SUPRA CORPORATION • 7101 Supra Drive SW, Albany, Oregon 97321 • 1-800-727-8772 • 503-967-2410 • 503-967-2401 Fax 5UPKA CUKKUKAI IUIn * / IUI 5upra Drive iW, Albany, Uregon V/JZI • I -BUU-/iI/-oY/Z • 0UJ-V6/-/4IU • 3U SUPRA GmbH • Rodderweg 8, 5040 Briihl, Germany • (49) 02232/22002 * 02232/22003 Fax rvO •• 1 -BR . vV" -■■■ ■ j - •'--""■■" "^. ••■ i •■ Gold Disk Authorized Software Centers Gold Disk products are available ct most Amiga dealers, Ihe following dealers hate qualified as Gold Qisk Avihoriied Software Centers and carry a complete raage of Gold Bhk products. See one today! Ahuka: Best Electronics, Anchorage (W7i 278-2378 Alabama Alabama Computers, HuntwUle QM) 837*9324 California: Century Cumpmcr Syncmn. UHibr» (310) 697-6977; Computet Guild, Mission Viejo (714) 951-1355: Computer Showciw, Sin Ffancfoco (415) 563-1953; Creative Computers, Uwiwiflle (3L0) 542-2292; Ctciiivc Computers, Sma Moniu (310) 394- 7779; Dataphile. Wauonville (408) 724- 3322: HT Electronics, Sunnyvale (408) 737-0900: KJ Computet*. Gnuudi Hill* (818) 366-9120; Tramnariorul Electronic*, Anaheim (714) &30-871 h Winners Circle, Berkeley (415) 845- 48 14 FtoricUi Amazing Computers, TampJ (8 1 3) 977-65 1 1 ; Commh North CWifl* SBS. Durham (919) 469-3391 Oregon: CI a. ka mat Computer*. Clackamas (503) 650-0701 South Carolina: Computer Port, Spartanburg (803) 574-9679 Tcm*j Computer- Ease, Corpus Chrivti (512) 882-2275; Metropolitan Computers. Dallas (2 Mi 702-9119; Mitrosearch, Houston (713) 988-2818: The Edge Computers & Video. Dallas (2(4) 392- 7447: The Edge Computers ct Video 11, Irving (2 1 4) 570- 1 300: The Station. Austin (512) 459-5440 Washington! Nvhblcs & Bytes, Tarama (206) 475- 5938; Omni International Trading* Seattle (206) 620-2925 CANADA- Albert*,* A Plus Computers, Edmonton. (403) 448-0632; Computer Works, Edmonton (403) 424-0011; Desktop Computing, Red Deer (403) 342-4444; Software Superman, Edmonton (403) 425-0691; The Computer Shop of Calgary (403) 243-4356 British Columbia: Co mi Computers, Vancouver (604) 734-0606; M.L.C. Computet!, Ketowna (604) 861-5520; No -I ek Computers, Vancouver (604) 435-0113 Manitoba: Advcmure Software, Winnepeg (204) 942-4752 Ontario: Computer Variables, Ricbmond Hill (416) 771-6807; Comspct. Toronto (416) 633-5605: Electronics 2001, Willowdale (416) 223* 8400; Lcpperr Business Systems, Hamilton (416} 522-9029; Lynx Tech rial Services, Orleans (613) 830- 8396; Lyra Technical Service*, Ottawa (613) 237-4701; Neutron Computers. Kitchener (519) 742-9821; Obys Amiga Computing. Sudbury (705) 673-8520; Software Zone, Brampton (416) 79) 6500; Thornhill Computers, Thomhill (4)6) 886-2494; Wrathborne Software. London (5L9) 457-3714 Quebec Software House, Montreal (514) 374- 3614; Soft Wares, Montreal (5 14) 737- 5865 Saskatchewani Memory 1 -hk' Computers. SatkttOOfl {306) 242-4000 SO ADVANCED IT EVEN CREATES YOUR PAGES FOR YOU! If Press Our N^M Select Page Gero From The Menu 7: n Simply Choose From a Variety of tomated Layouts or Other Furu Like Envelope i m... i .-i * *. « i b «j mj Addressing and More... PROFESSO d In No Time You Have a Quick Sessional Layout Designed to Your Specifications , or an Automatic Table From Your Spreadsheet , or a Mail Merge From Your Database , or an Addressed and Printed Envelope,' or... PAGE ssional Page 3*0* Genie option and ustom professional \lly address and print Introducing GENIE, more thakv ^ggg t reasons* With Genie you don't haveJ^h^j pro to design like one. Ju Professional Page will ask you some simple questions, then automatically design layout for you. Press the Function Genie button and Professional Page will auton your envelopes, create beautiful tables from your spreadsheet data, perhi ^pmnplex mail merges for you [a FIRST for any DTP program on any platform), and much more! You can even create your own Genies using our 300 ARexx functions. But the new features don't stop there, you get 7 high quality scalable typefaces, type sizes in . 125 point increments, support for Adobe Type 1 fonts, o new UnDo button, new text import filters, improved color separation and much much more, So if you want to be the best, it's time to buy the best. Step up to Professional Page 3. 0, it couldn 't be easier. New Features: ■ Page Genies: 6 different styles of Automatic Page Genera- don, including newsletters* ads, flyers , brochures, more.* * Function Genies: over 25 time saver Genies like Automatic Envelope Addressing, Automatic Table Creation, Automatic Mail Merge, Drop Caps, Small Caps & Super/Sub Script, Automatic Grid Creation, Pop Up Units Converter, HotLink to Art Department Pro, and many more/ • Total Programmabiliry: Using over 300 ARexx com- mands you can take complete control of Professional Page,* • Type 1 font support for access to thousands of high quality fonts • Undo for correcting mistakes • New Color Separation Algorithms with improved undercolor removal ' 5 New AGFA Compugraphic Scalable Typefaces ' Type sizes in ,125 point increments ■ Professional Draw Hot link so you can instantly link to Professional Draw, edit your drawings or clip art, and send them right backi"** ■ New text impott filters for Pro- Write, QuickWritc, Excellence k Auto-tiling for printing large pages Now's the time! Even if you've never done desktop publishing before, you can with Professional Page 3.0 and our exclusive Page Genies. And power users will delight in the sophisticated array of Function Genies that speed your work like never before. Plus you get the benefits of 5 new typefaces, improved color separations, Type 1 font support, and more. So what are you waiting for? Step up to the most advanced desktop publish- ing package for the Amiga. See your dealer today or call us at: 1 -41 6-602-4000 And you get Purchase Protection: If you purchase Professional Page 2.1 between January 1 and March 31, 1992, you'll receive version 3.0 free.** UPGRADES: Registered owners, call for information on upgrading to 3,0. GOLD DISK It Couldn't Be Easier. Circle 154 on Reader Service card. 'Gerties require ARexx. ARexx (ornes wrrfi Workbench 2.0 or con be purchased separately. "Jufl send in your deled sol« reteipf with your regbtraticn cord. * "Hoi link requires Professional Draw 3.0 {available soon], ftofwsionol Pogt is l r egrslered irooWtwrk of GoV Ohk Int. All ether produth mentioned* ore frodemorks of Their rwpedtw owner*, Spedfiratiore ore subject to change without rwrke. HINKALL'040 ACCELERATORS ARE THE SAME? THINK AGAIN! As a high power Amiga 3000/3000T user you need a 68040 accelerator board for one reason . . . and one reason only. ..SPEED! And once you know what makes one 68040 accelerator better than another, the only board you'll want is the G-FORCE 040 from GVP. WATCH OUT FOR SLOW DRAM BOTTLENECKS Yes } all 68040 CPU's are created equal hut this doesn't mean that all accelerator boards allow your A3000 to make the [lost of the 68040 CPU's incredible performance. The A3000 was designed to work with low-cost, 80ns DRAM (memory) tech- nology. As a result, anytime the '040 CPU accesses the A3000 motherboard, memory lots of CPU wait-states are introduced and all the reasons you bought your accelerator literally come to a screeching halt! Not true for the G-FORCE 040... SOLUTION: THE G FORCE 040s FAST, 40ns, ON BOARD DRAM To eliminate this memory access bottle- neck, we designed a special 1MB, 32-bit wide, non-multiplexed, SIMM module using 40ns DRAMs (yes, forty nano- seconds!]. This revolutionary memory module allows the G-FORCE 040 to be populated with up to 8MB of state-of-the- art, high performance, orvboard DRAM. Think of this as a giant 8MB cache which lets the '040 CPU race along at the top performance speeds you paid for. SHOP SMART: COMPARE THESE G-FORCE 040 SPECS TO ANY OTHER U40 ACCELERATOR ^ 68040 CPU running at 28Mhz provid- ing 22 MIPS and 375 MFLOPS! NOTE: The 68040 incorporates a CPU, MMU, FPU and separate 4KB data and instruction caches on a single chip. ^ to 8MB of onboard, 40ns, non-multiplexed, DRAM. Fully auto-configured, user-install- able SIMM modules lets you expand your A3000 to 24MB! ► DRAM controller design fully supports the 68040 CPU's burst memory access mode, ^ Full DMA (Direct Memory Access) to/from the on-board DRAM by any A3000 peripheral |e.g: the A3000's built- in hard disk controller). ► Asynchronous design allows the 68040 to run at clock speeds independent of the A3000 motherboard speed. Allows easy upgrade to 33Mhz 68040 (over 25.3 MIPS!) when available from Motorola. ^ Hardware support for allowing V2.0 Kickstart ROM to be copied into and mirrored by the high performance on- board DRAM. Its like caching the entire operating system! ^ Software switchable 68030 "fallback" mode for full backward compatibility with the A3000's native 68030 CPU. ► Incorporates GVP's proven quality, experience and leadership in Amiga accelerator products. TRY A RAM DISK PERFORMANCE TEST AM) SS FOR Y0URSBJ HOW THE G-FORCE 040 OUT PERFORMS THE COMPETITION Ask your dealer to run any ''RAM disk" per- formance test and see the G-FORCE 040's amazing powers in action. So now that you know the facts, order your G-FORCE 040 today. After all, the only reason why you need an '040 accel- erator is SPEED 1 . G-FORCE / Up to 8MB of high speed (40ns) DRAM Motorola 68048 CPU running at 28 Mhz A300O "CPU slot connector SEE US AT Dealers Circle 1 69 on Reader Service card, world of. commodore AMIGA HEW YORK CITY • APRIL 24-26, 1992 Consumer* Circle 170 on Reader Service card GREAT VALLEY PRODUCTS INC. 600 Clark Avenue, King of Prussia, PA 1 9406 For more information or your nearest GVP dealer, call today. Dealer inquiries welcome. Tel. (215) 337-8770 • FAX (215) 337-9922 G -Force 040 rs a registered trademark of Great Vafiey Products inc. Amiga Is a rog, isle rod trademark of Commodore- Amiga, [no. 6 1991 Great Valley Products Inc, CONTENTS VOLUME 8, NUMBER 5, MAY 1992 FEATURES Amiga Output as Art By Joel Hagen. . 2 8 How you translate your computer im- ages into finished artwork can be the crucial difference between mundane re- productions and gallery-quality works. Here are several creative techniques to help make your physical output suitable for exhibition. Dusting for "Prints" By Dave Johnson jJ Don't let your search Tor the right printer wind up in the "unsolved mysteries" file. Use this guide to take the investigative legwork out of finding what different kinds of printer technologies have to offer in terms of capability, performance, and value. DTP-ING WITH THE ENEMY? By Eyo Sama . , 37 Relax: Neither von nor Julia Roberts will suffer murder or mayhem by engaging in a little cross-platform cooperation in die area of DTP. Learn to incorporate the best elements of Ami gas, Macs and PCs, and you may just wind up with a compet- itive, full-service publishing operation. ARTICLES A Brand-New Bench: Part II By Sheldon Leemon . • • • 42 New feamies of the 2.0 operating system are making some applications programs more powerful, flexible, and easy to use — as you will see in Fart II of our series on "Getting the Most from Workbench 2.0." COLUMNS Chief Concerns By Doug Barney ... 6 Using a computer to monitor Wall St. trading from a cell may not be good rehab for Michael Milken, but the editor shows that some "insiders" are putting Amigas to constructive use all the same. Accent on Graphics By Joel Hagen 48 Joel takes you "trekking' 1 in outer space this month with some paint-program tricks for whipping tip animated star- fields and spinning asteroids faster than you can say "Star ship Enterprise." Getting what you do on your computer out oj your computer in quality fashion is paramount, Thais why our features this month stress tech- tuques far obtaining top-notch output, tips on buying printers, and practical advice on setting up desktop-publishing operations. Whether youfo preparing artwork for exhibition or producing a job for a client, you 11 find our ''Amiga Output" special will help you get the best results possible. Video Suite By Mark Swain 50 One of the simpler— and less expen- sive — ways to achieve a crispy luminance clip in your video post-production work is to create a "traveling matte." DEPARTMENTS Overscan 8 News, new products, and more — from all over the Amiga community. Help Key 80 Memberships are free and service is available here at Lou's "Triple A" — where you get Advice, Assistance, and Action whenever your .Amiga hits the breakdown lane, AW Product Information 84 lb contact the developer of any product mentioned in this issue of AmigaWorld, consult our all-in-one "Manufacturers*/ Distributors' Addresses" list. The Last Word . . The readers write back. 112 REVIEWS Imagine (impulse) and RealSD Professional Turbo 1.41 (Acttva / Programs Plus & Video) ..18 Major facelifts for two multipurpose 3-D graphics packages pay off with highly successful results, DSS8; Digital Sound Studio (GVP) 20 High-quality audio digitizer/sample- editor combo with some sequencing capability thrown in. MegaChip 2000/500, Multi- Start II, and SecureKey (DKB Software) . . 74 Three nifty boards that offer sensible solutions to increasing chip RAM, pro- viding multiple Kickstart ROMs, and ensuring data security, respectively. MEDIAShOW (Gold Disk) 7 5 Low-cost multimedia system for video production work. Voyager (Carina) 76 "The Dynamic Sky Simulator' makes your Amiga a mini-planetarium. Notebook (Black Belt) 90 Free-form text/graphics idea organizer GAMES CRIB NOTES By Peter Olafson ... 3 6 Slick tricks from the top tipster in the gaming game. Red Baron (Dynamix/ Sierra) 56 Highly realistic, authentically detailed flight simulator from the Great War. . . BIRDS OF PREY (Electronic Arts) 56 ...But ifWWl biplanes are too slow For you, try this fast-paced Cold War model BATTLE ISLE (UB1 Soft /Electronic Arts) and FlRETEAM 2200 (Sim Systems/ RAW Entertainment) 38 Two sci-H war games, one winner. THUNDERHAWK (Virgin Games) 60 Hi-tech helicopter hijinks with arcade, strategy, and role-playing elements. Corporation (Virgin Games) 62 Challenging role-playing adventure. COVER PHOTOGRAPH BY ED JUDICE AMIGA II. LUSTRATION BY CELESTE LAZAROU WA1 S \ I AmigaWorld 3 THE FINAL WORD IN MM EXPANSION FOR THEA2000 The best things come in small packages! The smallest and j most compact 8MB RAM Expansion board for the A2000. Once again GVP proves to be the technology leader. mi MB of r factory installed ► memory. SIMM sockets for up to 6MB user installed memory modules. (Shown here ► fully populated) GVP's VLSI custom chip allows dramatic decrease in number of parts required. Features: t/ 2MB of factory installed RAM, expandable to 8MB, V All memory is fully Auto-Configured. V Also supports a 6MB configuration for maximum memory utilization for Commodore's A2088/2286 "bridgeboard" users. V Uses easy-to-install, industry standard, SIMM memory modules. No more bent pins or incorrectly inserted DRAM chips! V GVP's state-of-the-art VLSI technology has reduced an 8MB RAM expansion board to a "half-card"! Lower parts count also means highest possible reliability and life expectancy. GREAT VALLEY PRODUCTS INC 600 Clark Avenue, King of Prussia, PA 19406 For more information or your nearest GVP dealer, call today. Dealer inquiries welcome. Tel. (215) 337-8770 • FAX (215) 337-9922 Amiga is a registered trace mark of Commodore-Amiga, Inc. Dealers Circle 21 on Reader Service card. Consumers Circle 22 on Reader Service card. AmigaWorld Dale Strang, Publisher Douglas Barney, Editor-in-Chief Daniel Sullivan, Executive Editor Swain Pratt, Managing Editor BARBARA GEFVERT, Senior Editor LOUIS R. WALLACE, Senior Editor, Technology Linda Barrett Laflamme, Review Editor Gene Brawn, Joel Hagen, David X McClellan, PETER OlAFSON, Contributing Editors HOWARD G. HAPP, Art Director LAURA Johnson, Assistant Art Director Ann Dillon, Designer Debra A. Davies, Production Supervisor ALANA KORDA, Manufacturing Manager MICHAEL McGoldriCK, Advertising Director BARBARA Hoy, Sates Representative HEATHER GuLNARD, Sales Representative, Partial pages if InfnMarket, 1-800-441-4403, 1-603-924-0100 MEREDITH BickfoRD, Advertising Coordinator MARGOT L. SWANSON, Customer Service Representative; Advertising Assista nt GIORGIO Saltjti, Associate Publisher, [Vest Coast Sales 533 Airport Blvd., Eourth Eloor, Burlingame, CA 94010 1-415-375-7018: EAX: 1-415-375-7019 Wendie Haines Marro, Marketing Director Laura Livingston, Marketing Coordinator LISA JaHXET, Desktop Publishing Manager DEBORAH M. WALSH, Circulation Manager TechMedia Publishing Dale Strang, President SUSAN M. HaNSHAW, Director of Operations LISA LaFLEUR, Business & Operations Manager MARY McCOLE, Presidents Assistant KENNETH BlAKEMAN, Associate Publisher, Ancillary Products LYNN Lagasse, Video Products Manager CHRIS CoNROY, Technical Director, Video Products TlM WALSH, Ancillary Products Manager LlNDA RUTH, Single Copy Sales Director W T 1LL1AM M. BOYER, Director of Credit Sales tf Collections AmignWurltl (ISSN 0835-2390) is an independent journal not connected with Commodore Business Machines. Inc. A miga It hrldis published monthly by TechMedia Publishing, Inc.. an [DG Company. NO him St,. IVu-ilximugh. Ml o:i4:>s I v Militcrjptioo rale i* 129.97, one year; $46.00, two years $64.00, three years, f ianada $38.97 (US. funds), one year only, Mexico $38.97. foreign Surface $49*97, foreign Airmail $8-197 (piepaviiunt is n.-quire Soars the tare My*. yiotf/l 00 WHO ZONE \tts With the most powerful, comprehensive 8-bit , J t ^wjVjthhU*' I Digital Sound Package to ever orchestrate an Amiga it H&*' £ofiff°g?.i «/ i Digital Sound Studio The Affordable Answer to Your Audio Dreams Record, Edit, Compose . . . With a high-quality stereo sound sampler, A fast, powerful, easy-to-use sound editor, And a self-contained 44rack sequencer. For all the sound effects and music you could ever imagine. ► Record sound samples from any source, including voices, noise, and pre-recorded instruments, to create your own instruments and effects. ► Edit sounds quickly in real time. Add effects like reverb and echo, run sounds backward, alter wave forms, cut and paste sound segments, create loops, eliminate pops and scratches. ► Compose easily using the DSS 4- track sequencer and your Amiga or MIDI keyboard. Draw from up to 31 instruments at a time, in up to four octaves with 8 different variable effects. Mix and modify sounds in real time as you compose, through direct interface with the sound editor. DSS Stretches the outer limits of 8-bit sound • Create your own 4- track, self- play- ing musical compositions, • Make soundtracks for home video, animation or visual presentations complete with voice-over, sound effects and music. • Analyze voice patterns and stereo separation. • Analyze graphic equalization of real-time sound. • Remove "pops" from old phonograph recordings. • Create custom instruments and sound effects by collecting and/or modifying pre-recorded instruments, voice, or sounds from any source, and use them in your own compositions. • Save your sound and music to disk or send it out via modem for replay on any Amiga. Check out these unparalleled features V Amiga DOS 2.0 compatible; written in assembly language. V Multi- tasking operation. V 68020 and 68030 compatible. V Comprehensive tutorial manual helps even beginners get started right away V Intuit ion- based graphic interface makes operation easy. V MDDI-in capability. V Direct interface between sequencer and editor. V Hold 31 sound samples in memory at once — all shown on screen so they are easy to manipulate. V Effects and processing capabilities include echo, mix, filter, re-sample, sound data inversion, playing sounds backwards, loops, fade-in/fade-out and more. V Manipulate sound samples in real time, as you listen. V Create sampled instruments with 1, 3 and 5 octaves. V HIFI recording for highest quality playback. */ Controls for faster/slower playback and filtering high frequencies during playback. V Load and save samples, songs and instruments in multiple formats. V Multiple effects for each note, • Stereo and monophonic operation. Also convert mono to stereo or separate stereo. V Auto-piaying music modules. V Real-time oscilloscope and spectrum analysis. V Real-time reverberation. 1/ Graphic editing of wave forms through easy-to-use functions, including zoom in/out and precision controls for position, frequency and amplitude. V Draw sound waves freehand using the mouse. V Direct editing of individual sample numeric values. V Maximum recording speed of 51,000 samples/second in stereo. V Savable Preference settings. V Saves in IFF, SONIX or RAW formats. V Compatible with SoundTracker, NoiseTraeker and SoundFX modules. GREAT VALLEY PRODUCTS INC. 600 Clark Avenue, King Off Prussia, PA 19406 For more information or your nearest GVP dealer, call today. Dealer inquiries welcome. Tel. (215) 337-8770 • FAX (215) 337-9922 Consumers Circle 29 on Reader Service card Dealers Circle 30 on Reader Service card. Amiga is a registered trademark of Commodore-Aniiga, inc. V E R S C A N AmiEXPO, from p. 8. is also planning a series of Amiga CD- ROM products, including a public-do- main software collection, clip art, and a picture disc. Each disc is expected to sell for S79.95. (RS# 127.) Going back to the future, the GEnie telecommunications service is planning to introduce an on-line interactive Ami- ga "magazine** thai will eventually in- clude sound, graphics, and animation. (RS# 128.) Mach Universe entered the 3-D object fray with the $49.95 Big Rig, a tractor- trailer object set that's compatible with LightWave 3D. The truck can be easily animated, with headlights, blinkers, rear view mirror, and 18 moving wheels. (RS# 129.) Besides wowing us with its Resolver graphics board, Digital Micronics of- fered a 20MB, 3.5-inch floppy drive. Yes, floppy! The firm claims an average access time of 65MB per second, which equals the performance of many hard drives sold only a few years ago. Prices range from S549 for an internal unit to 3749 for an A500 version that includes a SCSI controller. (RS# 130.) In the Can, a European titling-and-ef- fects product, has crossed the Atlantic and is selling for S99 from Visual FX. (RS# 131.) Finally, promoior AmiEXPO (RS# 132) announced its move into the desk- top-video market with its first such show, Desktop Video '92, scheduled for May 21-23 at the Hyatt Regency, San Francis- co Airport. It has also scheduled another AmiEXPO fur October 2-4 at the Mar- riott Marquis in New York City. — Doug Barney PC Connection, from p. 8. from the Bridgeboard if you use Consul- tron-style PC virtual hard-drive parti- tions. In addition, with the Ambassador you can access Bridgeboard -created vir- tual partitions and most real MS-DOS hard-drive partitions connected to the Amiga. (RS# 113.) A Bridgeboard alternative for the A500, ATonce-Plus (Vortex/MicroPace, $448) features a 16-MHz CMOS 80286 processor and 5 1 2K of RAM, plus a sock- et for an optional 80C287-12 math co- processor. Tested under MS-DOS ver- sions 3.2 to 5.0 and DR-DOS 5.0 and 6.0, the board runs unrestrictedly in Protect- ed mode (Windows 3.0 and Lotus 123 are supported, however) and offers 640K of memory for DOS functions. In machines with one meg or more of RAM, ATonce Plus lets you either install additional program memory or a RAM disk. For its display, the board emulates 16-color CGA mode, one EGA/VGA monochrome graphics mode, and the Hercules, Olivetti, and Toshiba T3 1 00 graphics cards. While you can use the .Amiga's serial port as COM1 or COM2 with the card, the parallel port maps to LPT1. Sound and a real-time clock round out the features list. (RS# 1 14.) For PC-XT emulation without hard- ware, Consultron's CrossPC is the an- swer. This software emulator is bundled with an upgrade of Cross DOS in Cross- DOS version 5.0 Plus. Requiring one megabyte of RAM and version 3.0 or higher of MS-DOS, CrossPC emulates CGA or monochrome video modes and can access standard Amiga floppy drives, an MS-DOS partition on an Amiga hard disk, and the Amiga's parallel, serial, and mouse ports. The other half of the team, CrossDOS 5.0 now supports L44MB high-density disks and the 20MB MS- DOS floptical disk format Associated utilities, error-recovery techniques, and the user interface were revamped, as well. For example, the for- mat and disk-copv commands now oper- ate on both MS-DOS and AmigaDOS disks. .As a new product, CrossDOS ver- sion 5.0 Plus is available for S59.95; as an upgrade, the cost is $20 and an original CrossDOS disk. Consul tron also sells MS-DOS 5.0 for $90. c k ol CammoOari-AiiiBa I r-c AW Shucks! We correct our errors. Item: Due to problems in the fact- checking process, our Special Issue on Video & Animation contained several errors regarding Impulse's Firecracker board and Imagine soft- ware. In the chart on p. 82, the fol- lowing corrections regarding Fire- cracker 24 apply: The list price is SI 000: its maximum resolution is 1024 by 482. not 708 by 480, as stat- ed: and it is not available in PAL. With regard to Imagine 2.0, a number of errors were made in our 3-D software features chart on pages 1 10-1 1 1. First ofalk Imagine sup- ports solid spheres, has full 3-D spline control, handles full 3-D re- mapping and conformation, and includes full extrusion and spin capabilities. Regarding the category of Polygon Divides, Imagine has triangle frac- ture, and, under Slice Operation, it has full Slicing. The program also has full grouping of Hierarchical Objects Sets and includes a full im- plementation of Key Positions. With respect to Time Envelopes, Imagine directly equates this to frame numbers and time notation in its Stage and Action editors. Imagine can render in a variety of ways not covered in the chart, includ- ing Wireframe, color and black and white, solid color and black and white, Sean line, and Full Trace. The program's maximum resolu- tion is 32,000 by 32,000, it fully supports Diffuse Map and Phong Shading, and it supports Full Glass and Index of Refraction. The product does not map Arums to objects, nor does it directly sup- port Single-Frame Controllers. It also does not support Foreground Pics or Autialias Maps. Item: The Amiga Profile on p. (58 of our Special Issue incorrectly implied that Derek Grime was the creator of the show "Clarissa Explains It All." "Clarissa" is, in fact, the creation of Mitchell Rriegman. Derek, along with his fellow animator/writer, Tim Burns, was involved only to the ex- tent of providing the Amiga anima- tions for last season's episodes. Kern: Gene Brawn's February tutorial article on D Paint IV (p. 24) contained an error that made his project #1 impossible to reproduce, two of the three picture files were misnamed. The images identified in the article as Godz.ah and LoohingUp.ab are, in fact, Codz&flerLah anil LookingUpMiwiu respectively. Gene regrets to say that he used the former names in his work files and then neglected to correct the discrepancy in the final version of the article. Hem: In the March issue, our Manu- facturers' Addresses list (p. 89) con- tained errors in the entry for IM- AGETECTS, Not only should the firm's name be all uppercase, but the correct street address is 7200 Bol- linger RcL Suite 802. ■ The TBCard/TR-7 combination offers a hardware alternative to software control, allowing you to stay in your primary desk- top video software and have full control of the TBCard Time Base Corrector. CORPORATION I. DEN Videotronics Corporation 9620 Chesapeake Drive ■ San Diego, C A 92123 Eastern Regional Office (203) 827-8900 1-800-374-IDEN ■ TBCard plugs into any desktop video system — Amiga or PC based ■ Convenient hardware control on your desktop — freeze, video level, chroma level, setup, hue and system timing ■ Component processing that provides high resolution Circle 195 on Reader Service card 16 May 1992 Experience The Rwver Of PrcAVrite 3.2 (Racing Attire Optional) Test Drive The Best- Selling Amiga® Word Processor. Feel the power A at your fingertips. ProWrite 3.2 has all the features you need to speed through your . documents in record ' time. Unique function- ality, direct PostScript capability and a long list of features are the driving forces behind ProWrite's ability to outperform other word processing programs. Features such as jaggie-free printing, improved picture handling, timed saves and automatic backups. Maneuver through documents with multiple columns, snaking and side-by-side text and manual text wraps around graphics Cruise effortlessly with ProWrite's 100,000-word spell checker that can check as you type, and the reserve power of a 300,000-word thesaurus, ProWrite 3,2 means high performance in printing as well. Options include multiple fonts and sizes in PostScript or high-quality dot-matrix printing k and options for 8, 64 or 4096 colors in your graphics. Register To Win An Odyssey- The CDTV Personal Workstation! Race to your nearest Amiga dealer to test drive ProWrite 3-2 today. You'll qualify to win the exciting Odyssey, a CD'IV Personal Workstation? complete with CDW unit, keyboard, external floppy drive, mouse, stereo color monitor, modem and printer, with a CD-ROM containing ProWrite 3*2, Design Works™ 1.0, Flow™ 3-0, ProFonts™ I and extensive public domain software. CTTY. STATE. ZiP iMJDraSON { Entry form must be countersigned to be valid) No purchase necessary, need net be present to win. Offer may- be vcwJ in some stale?. Ask your dealer for details. NEW HORIZONS First in Personal Productivity and Creativity New Horizons Software, Inc. 206 Wild Basin Road, Suite 109, Austin, Texas 78746 (512) 328-6650 ProVE'rite is a registered trademark and Flow. Design \\ «>rks and ProFonLs are trademarks of New Horizons Software. Inc. Auriga is a registered trademark of Commodore-Amiga, liu PostScript is a registered trademark til Adobe Systems, Inc Orde 38 on Reader Service card. Imagine 2.0 Impulse Real3D Professional Turbo 1.4.1 Activa International/ Programs Plus & Video A pair of professionals. By Steven Blaize SOPHISTICATED COMPUTER ART and animation arc becoming more popular with the release of movies such as Terminator 2 and music videos like Michael Jackson's "Black or White." As the awareness and demand rises, so do the expectations. This trend is very apparent in the Amiga market, where the quality levels expected and tech- niques used by artists are growing daily New versions of two 3-D programs have definitely kept pace with this demand for higher quality and more techniques. Imagine 2.0 ($450, Im- pulse) and Real3D Professional Turbo 1.4.1 ($499, Activa International/Pro- grams Plus & Video) are two top con- tenders in the 3-D arena. Because both these fine programs are updates of earlier versions, I will concentrate on highlighting the new additions and significant functions of each, rather than cataloging every feature. Mature Productivity; Imagine 2.0 Released at the end of last year, Imag- ine 2.0 is a maturing 3-D graphics package. Thanks to its reasonable cost, excellent functionality, and top-notch renderings, Imagine (originally the follow-up to the popular Turbo Silver) lias built a large following. You won't be disappointed by version 2.0, with its additional features, new manual, and easier ways to be productive within your 3-D world. Imagine is one program divided into seven editor areas. New in 2.0, the Preferences Editor lets you directly edit and customize your preferences. With it, you can add to the bottom of the other editors user-customized gadgets (buttons) that control frequently used functions. This speeds up productivity. With the Forms Editor, you create organic or symmetrical objects, while with the Detail Editor, you build new objects, modify Forms objects, and assign all stir (ace characteristics to objects. Flie Stage Editor lets you set object and camera placement, lighting, and viewing perspective. In the Action Edi- tor, you specify movements, global pa- rameters, and, if you are animating, key eels and special effects over time. A potential time-saver, the Cycle Editor lets you create repeating or hierarchical movements for objects. The classic ex- ample is walking: If you create the Cycle movement for one full step, you can then repeat this cycle in the Action Edi- tor over an assigned time period. Finally, the Project Editor generates animations and controls rendering selections, such as resolution and format. In the Forms Editor, you begin with a sphere that is cut into slices, the shapes of which you then alter to create your object. The 2.0 addition of key slices was critical in making this editor useful. Instead of shaping every single slice, you can specify one or more key- slices, alter' their shapes, and let Imag- ine provide smooth interpolation be- tween them. Consider an automobile body with a ridge that runs only from the front door to die back fender: If you cut the body into cross-sections from front to back, the first section (grill area) would be a rectangle, and the section that starts at To locate the vendors of products reviewed, see the "Man uf a cturersV Distributors' Add resses" list on p. 84. the door would be a rectangle with ridges on either side. Designate this section a key slice, and Imagine will produce a smooth ridge down the length of the car. Want to check the results? The Forms, Detail, Cycle, and Stage Editors now have Quick Render options that let you render directly in the editors without having to set up all of the staging and lights — another welcome productivity enhancement. The Detail Editor's improvements will make many people happy. Now, when you convert an IFF file to an object, you are asked whether or not you want faces on the object. You can also type in text using standard Amiga fonts and have it converted to a 3-D object. This alone will save a great deal of time, although the conversion is not as powerful and flexible as that offered by dedicated programs such as Pixel 3D 2.0 (Axiom Software). In the past, getting brush (IFF pic- ture) wraps and texture wraps in exact- ly the right place was possible, but difficult. Now, Imagine automatically gives yoti a default position and texture parameters. You can still customize these, but you will at least be assured of a good starting point. Version 2.0 of- fers several new textures to wrap, as well. Checks2, Pattella, and Waves bring the number of textures to 14. Another important attribute-en- hancement addition is Fog Length. Now, any object can have fog proper- ties (in any of the 16.7 million colors), and global fog has been added to the Action Editor. Spline paths have also been included for object extrusions, and Conform to Path has been added. Also new to the Detail Editor is the ability to define subobjects — -a group of faces within an object. Now you can selectively apply any of the Brush or Texture Maps (four each) to just a subobject, making decals very easy to produce. You can also use subobjects to selectively control Phong shading. Objects in Imagine are composed of 18 May 1992 triangles, and the program uses Phong shading to help smooth the surfaces of rounded areas. Prior to 2.0, achieving sharp edges on one part of the object and smooth ones on another was al- most impossible. Now you can define the points that will not have Phong shading, while the rest of the object is smoothed out. New to Imagine 1.1's Detail Editor was Quick Draw, which changes the objects in your display to simple bounding boxes. Phis is very helpful when you have complex objects, be- cause Imagine can update you!" display much more quickly if it draws only a bounding box in place of a point-filled object. In version 2.0, Quick Draw was added to the Stage Editor, as well. Now you can load your complex objects, and then turn on Quick Draw for faster manipulations. Your Perspective View is always updated with the proper display. In 2.0, the Action Editor is basically the same as in earlier versions, with the addition of a Sort function from the menu for your objects and a second F/X action line. F/X, one of my favorite features in this program, now includes Boing, Explode, Fireworks, Flash, Grow, Ripple, Rotate, and Tumble, You can even apply two different effects on an object at the same time. You can also have a global backdrop picture, as I did with the clouds in Figure 1 . The Cycle Editor is relatively un- changed, as is the Projects Editor. From the latter, however, you can now output directly to DC! A 7 format. The last area to cover is the docu- mentation. The reputation for produc- ing inadequate manuals has always haunted Impulse. The company has developed outstanding products, but has accompanied them with lackluster documentation, The manual for Imag- ine 2.0 is definitely a complete rewrite. It takes a different and unusual ap- proach, in that you arc expected to read it from start to finish. It reads like a story about creating with Imagine. The sparse index — locat- Flgure 1. Imagine 2.0 lets you use global backdrop pictures, such as these clouds. ed before the single tutorial — and other appendices do not really direct you to specific subjects, however, but rather send you to pages where the phrases are mentioned. The misspell- ings and comments such as "Ask Zack For More Here" indicate that the man- ual was a little rushed. However, the program is more thoroughly covered than in previous versions. Should you need it, technical support is available free of charge. Powerful Flexibility: Reajl3D Professional Turbo 1.4.1 Real3D Professional Turbo, while not the new kid on the block, is one of the newest professional-level 3-D programs for the Amiga. Version 1.4.1 makes it a definite contender for your considera- tion. Real 3D takes a very different approach with its interface and object creation, but, once mastered, the tech- niques produce outstanding results, with options not always found in other 3-D programs. "Hie program has three basic working areas' the Editor, Wire, and Solid. The Editor is your object-creation and stag- ing area for a specific frame. The Wire area lets you move about your space and Figure 2. Real3D's free-form modeling mode gives you commands for bending, joining, and twisting objects in 24 ways. record animation movements for your objects. Finally, the Solid (or Render) area controls the quality, format, and resolution of your rendered images. When I looked at the first release of this program, I was impressed with both the speed and quality of the ren- derings, but found object creation and animation seriously hampered. Version 1.4.1 has improved both immensely. It employs a hierarchical structure for object creation. For example, a chair is made of the legs, the seat, and the back. In turn, it is part of the dining- table set, which is part of the room, and so on. By selecting any group level, you can alter it and all of its related parts. A unique feature is the ability to identify a cost with a specific object. At any time, you can see the cumulative cost at any stage in the construction of your object. When it first appeared, RealSD pro- vided object creation only by means of a few primitives and tools to modify them. Now the program provides a wealth of primitives, along with excel- lent tools such as Lathe, Polygon, Poly- hedron, and Conical Tube. An unusual one is the Pixel tool, which replaces pixels in an IFF picture with a specified i AmigaWorld 19 REVIEWS " YOUR TURN: Imagine 2.0 is a big improvement over previous incarnations, especially in the documentation and interface. Still, the documentation is more of a tutorial than a reference, and, as always, the edit screens are limited to 640x400 resolution, which is frustrating for those of us who typically use overscan screens. Kent Kalnasy Seattle, Washington object. For example, if you drew a title in a paint program, you could replace each pixel with a sphere and build a title composed of balloons. Another tool, Pixel2, creates a mesh over an IFF picture to generate a topo- graphical landscape, with increasing brightness of color indicating increas- ing elevation. This type of object cre- ation is fine for some things; however, many of us want point editing to de- sign custom objects. Version 1.4.1 gives us that, too. Real3D also has some of the most powerful Boolean operators in any 3-D program. You can use these to cut away sections of objects, using any object as the tool for cutting or adding. Best of all, you can use the tool to apply its attributes to the new object. With a gold cylinder, for in- stance, you could drill a gold hole through a wooden ball and even ani- mate the process. The problem with this method of creation is that the two objects are still completely displayed in the Editor and the wireframe view. This can become very confusing with complex objects. A new feature helps: Yoti can now have Real3D "rethink" to provide you with a better wireframe representation. You also have the abili- ty to attach and modify a different wireframe to the object if it will assist your work. The free-form modeling is very powerful, offering 24 ways to bend, join, and twist objects. Tools and primi- tives are available from menus, key- board commands, and icons (see Figure 2). Lights and refractive properties in Real 3D react exactly as they do in the universe; for example, you can create an actual glass lens. Real30 also per- mits you to create custom materials libraries for controlling the surface properties of your objects. A very use- ful feature is the ability to select objects based on color, properties, or name. These can then be altered in one glob- al change. The program now supports 24-bit brush maps, which is very im- portant to many of us. The Solid (render) screen provides many methods for rendering your image, and it gives you controls for automatic lighting, shadow inclusion, refractive depth, and so on. The full ray-traced output takes about the same length of time to render as in other programs, but the results are outstand- ing, You can output your work as an Amiga, 24-bit IFF, or Targa image. Real 3D also supports some full-color display boards, with libraries (such as DCTV) that will be added through the public domain; current libraries in- clude the Harlequin and VD2001 boards. Animation is still a little awkward iti Real3D 1 .4. 1 . The program does support key frames, and it allows movement along a spline path. Adding acceleration and deceleration of objects, however, takes a bit of work. In addition, the method used for key frames is to "Expose" a frame to certain positions. If you want to change an object in that frame, you must first "De- Expose' 1 it. The manual is well written; the in- formation, however, is sparse, and a lot about the program is presumed to be intuitive. For example, adding primi- tives requires different steps to define the starting points, diameters, and so on, but these are never explained. Furthermore, the reference section is far from a thorough explanation of each of the commands. Overall, though, I feel the manual provides coverage that's adequate to get you started. While it was developed by The Netherlands' Activa International, ReaI3 D Professional Turbo is support- ed by Programs Plus 8c Video in North America via telephone or BBS, if you need technical help. The Best Fit for the Job If you are a 3-D artist, you should consider adding one or both of these programs to your toolbox. Neither is a clear winner over the other, as each offers features the other does not. While Imagine excels at point editing and is a much better animator, Real 3D offers unique Boolean functions, more output options, and somewhat better- looking output quality. Both Imagine 2.0 and Real 3D Professional Turbo 1 .4. 1 are very well suited to produce professional results, so you can't very well go wrong. DSS8: Digital Sound Studio Great Valley Products Edit sounds or capture your own. By Steve Quinzi A COMBINATION SOFTWARE and hardware package, DSS8: Digital Sound Studio (Great Valley Products, SI 25) utilizes the Amiga's internal audio capabilities to provide an envi- ronment for stereo sampling, sample editing, and sequencing .Amiga- specif- ic sounds. When DSS boots, it opens with a system- in form at ion screen that displays details about your current system, such as the version of DSS that you're run- ning, the microprocessor that you have, and the amount of available chip and fast RAM. Click twice, and this screen becomes the DSS samples list, although you can summon the system informa- tion display at any time by selecting Info from the Project menu. Try a Sample The samples list consists of SI slots into which samples can be loaded. Digital Sound Studio's sample editor gives you precise control over your sound. Obviously, the number of samples you can actually have at one time is limited by the amount of available RAM. To the left of each sample in the list is a small box indicating if the sample is stereo, less than 128K, and currently residing in chip or fast RAM (more about this later). Arrows at the bottom of the screen let you move tip and down the sample list. To work with a sample, you must first select it with a mouse click, The box at the base of the screen displays the name of the selected sample, its cur- rent frequency (in bytes per second), +- 20 May 1992 BRAG, IUST FACTS! 1WWP jgSJg: 2E Soft Wood, b\c PjO. Box 50173 Fhoenix, ArUono S5076 Dear I'eopie; Hello' I recently punch and your new 1.3 verd on of final Copp end wait to congratulate you on a {lnepB- $ram. E-™- o nee o friend of mine bought Rnol Copy a few months ago, I ha vis been snvlsuj of th* areoi pint- outs he wes getting. One thing 1 noticed about your pro- gram , hpwe?**", was that taat on the screen wot often diffi- cult toroo,! Thecther day! sow yournew Li vwdan fcrthe \i fir* time end was amazed ho w good the screen display now lock*. It it uncanracn to find a coltwn company that ii oj Intent upon Improving and supporMn g thetr products a* your company seems to be. From what 1 under- stand, tlnce th* day Hnol Copy started selling there were few, if any, problem* with it. Nowtht: >-ouh.ive I mprovTdihe screen di Apia y, pu "1 have overcome the cnl y ocj scticn to your program lhat J hod, m _ Nowroy printouts look as good as any I ha vBsefln a-eoted on J^ n£ anycornputerl My only* complaint is that Final Copy woj not ^^^J» available before. Amiga users have been waiting for a proyam ■■■■Nt like this for a long time. <^:^ Version 1.3's new screen display is easy to read! o be a winner you've got to be a whole lot better than the rest. Final Copy is the first and only word processor for the Amiga that gives high-quality printing on any 1.3 or 2.0 Workbench supported printer. It comes with a 1 1 6,000 word spelling detector and corrector, 470.000 synonym thesaurus with definitions, 35 outline typefaces, multiple newspaper style final «G % Final Copy iVpriPw^ foriJKAjni.w ■sfir"jn-i CG Bodoni Book Microstyle Bold yir}-]'j'M CG Buduni Bold Agfa Nadiavme Medium Lctra$ct University Qcman CG Poster Bodoni Aafa fJadianne %old uUattog ^BoM Clarendon Book Condensed Stymie Medium <§lb English Until now, Amiga® users were stuck with the typefaces unique to their applications. But now, with AmigaDos !M Release 2, all your software will use Agfa's high quality Intellifont® scalable fonts so you can use your fonts in any size you want. We've made it easy to get started by creating more than a dozen Amiga font packs from the Agfa Compugraphic library of more than 250 typefaces. Prices start at just $69. For more information, see your software dealer, or call U8Q0-424-TYPE. Imellifoni i J trademark of Miles, Inc. AGFA and the Agfa Rhombus are refti trademarks ,il. *nfl Rol.nd C»«1 fi*. *H9 been kn proved: c SJtler* "llit 1 "" t" en For II Mordrertect , 1fjM, n n,'(-j,.nt. PCX iH r.tor fornit ten PageLiner HotLinks Soft-Logik Publishing Corporation £__\ We give you the tools to dream. 800-829-8608 PageStream, BME and PageLiner are registered trademarks or trademarks of Soft-Logik Publishing Corporation. The HotLmks name is reserved for use on the Amiga for software compatible with the HotLinks standard set by Soft-Logik Publishing. Compugraphte is a registered trademark of AGFA Compugraphic, Amiga is a registered trademark of Commodore Business Machines. Professional Page. Professional Draw and Article Editor are registered trademarks of Gold Disk Inc. Circle 46 on Reader Service card. REVIEWS loop markers with the mouse, and then fine-tune them with the position- adjustment arrows. One readout below the lower-left corner of the waveform display gives the loop marker's posi- tion (expressed in time or by address), while another indicates the instanta- neous amplitude at each position (useful for searching for points of zero crossing). If you need to tweak a waveform, switch to maximum magnification and activate Draw mode. Here vou can use the mouse to make repairs. There are three drawing options: free drawing (hold down the left mouse button), straight -line drawing (hold down both buttons), and value entry (use the two arrows by the amplitude readout to enter a precise amplitude value at every position). You can capture fresh samples, as well. First, plug the supplied audio digitizer into the parallel port (after turning off the Amiga), and then click the Sampler button to activate sample 'OURAMIGA COULD DREAM IT WOULD DREAM INVISTAPRO2.0. FOR PROFESSIONAL QUALITY LANDSCAPE ARTISTRY VISTAPRO 2.0 IS UNPARALLELED VI STAPRO 2.0 FEATURES Roads and buildings! • Most complete final image control of any landscape simulator, • Most advanced color pallette • Virtual trees, stars, rivers, lakes, snow • Basic animator, Direct 24-bit output • Parts of Mars, Yosemite, Mt St, Helens, Crater Lake, fractal scapes, and more! VISTAPRO 2,0 INCLUDES SPECIAL COUPONS FOR MAKE PATH AND TERRAFORM MAKE PATH Advanced Animation Utility which allows complex animation with VistaproZO! TERRAFORM Landscape Editor which allows users to modify an existing Vistapro 20 landscape or create new ones! $25 EACH WITH COUPONS Circle 58 on Reader Service card. capture mode. (The DSS digitizer is a well-made, attractive black box with two RCA audio-input jacks, each one equipped with an attenuator knob and an overload light.) The first screen to open lets you set various parameters. Here, you select the input (right, left, or stereo), choose one of three scales of oscilloscope displays or the spectral analyzer (an animated bar graph showing frequency ranges) to monitor incoming signals, set the sample length, rate, period, and root note, and you're ready to record- Click the monitor button, and the incoming waveform is displayed ac- cording to your choice. You can also adjust the display's resolution to take advantage of the power of accelerated Amigas. Once the digitizer levels are properly set, click the record button to digitize the waveform. While the pro- gram offers a real-time reverb function that can be encoded upon the sample on input, I don't see the point in it. In my opinion, reverb is much more useful as an after-the-fact processing function. Make Tracks The sequencer portion of DSS, the Tracker, works exclusively with Amiga sounds, specifically those that are load- ed into the DSS samples list. For the Tracker to use a sound, it must be mono, less than 128K (256E if it con- tains a loop), and resident in chip RAM. The Edit menu's Transfer to Chip command moves sounds for you, but you need to keep track of vour available RAM. The Trackers four tracks correspond to the Amiga's four audio channels. Above each is an on/olT switch, or you can use two switches in the control panel at the right of the screen to toggle the left and right audio outputs independently (the outer tracks are assigned to the left side and the inner to the right). Two small readouts with adjustment arrows can set the volume of each individual sound, as well as that of the entire mix. To enter data into the Tracker, high- light the track onto which you want to record, select the appropriate sound, and type notes from the Amiga's QW- ERTY keyboard, A small keyboard icon on the left toggles the range of the keyboard from the upper two octaves to the lower two octaves to accommodate a four-octave range. You can also enter notes from a MIDI keyboard — the program's only MIDI aspect, by the way. This setup was apparently designed for moderate- i 24 May 1992 ■ The world's best modeler us- ing virtual reality technology for direct real time manipulation of 3D objects in full perspective ■ Single Point Editor, full hierar- chies, Primitives, Extruder, Mir- ror, Slice and Sweep tools ■ Photorealistic full color tenderer with texture mapping, en- vironment mapping, shadows, transparency, Gouraud, Phong, Metal and Environmental shaders ■ Four levels of antialiasing, with separate antialiasing of textures, unlimited number of lights, in- cluding Global, Local and Direc- tional lights ■ 20 to 50 times faster than ray tracing programs ■ Full color output to HAM, HAME and DCTV frame buffers ■ Interactive spline based ani- mation with real time preview ■ Fully compatible with Videoscape, LightWave and Sculpt 4D object formats ■ Runs on all Amiga models (2Mb memory required) ■ Support for 68030/040 accel- erators ■ Full implementation of Caligari Broadcast 2.0 technology. REALITY i i v OCTREE SOFTWARE 311 W 43 St. Suite 901 New York, NY 10036 Tel . 212. 262 3116 F a x 2 12.2624081 The products mentioned above are registered trademarks of the following companies: Caligari 2/Octree Software, Inc.; Amiga/Commodore Business Machines; DCTV/Di«ital Creations; HAM-E/Black Belt Systems, Inc.; Videoscape/Aegis; LightWave/Newtek; Sculpt 4D/Byte by Byte. Circle 52 on Reader Service card. R E V I E \Y S ly slow (step time) note entry, evi- denced by the fact that rapid noodling from a MIDI keyboard will produce some crazy, but not permanent, results. The Tracker takes the building-block approach to song construction; You have a maximum of 1 28 "blocks" to work with, each consisting of 64 events. Then* is no provision for measures or time signatures; in fact, there is little reference to musical fundamentals at all. [f this disturbs you, you could make up a chart mapping event numbers to measure and beat numbers. Given an eighth-note subdivision for example, a block would be eight measures in length (at 4/4 time), and the downbeats would tail on event numbers 1, 9, 17, and so on, while in a sixteenth-note subdivi- sion, a block would be four measures in length, with downbeats on event num- bers 1,17, 33, and 49. Of course, you have to adjust the tempo accordingly. Not surprisingly, the Tracker has a very nonstandard means of setting tempo — a scale from 1 to 15, with 15 AMIGA NOW FLYING OVER LATIN AMERICA Vommodore International has awarded Creative Equipment International, "CEI", rights to distribute all Amigas to Latin American and Caribbean countries. CEI has established an initial dealer network and is now signing up additional dealers in this lucrative market. Other products included in this network are GVP, SUPRA, PROGRESSIVE PERIPHERALS, RGB and others. Many PAL versions of video boards and genlocks are available through the CEI dealer network. Interested computer and video dealers in these countries can call Creative Equipment International at the number below. V/VA AMIGA/ Se habla espanoi CREATIVE EQUIPMENT INTERNATIONAL Falamos portugues 6864 West Fiagler Street * Miami, Florida 33144 (305) 266-2800 FAX (305) 261-2544 Circle 8 on Reader Service card. being the slowest. You assemble blocks into a song by arranging a sequence of positions, assigning a block to each position. For example, assigning block 1 to positions 1 and 2, and block 2 to position 3 would result in block 1 play- ing twice, followed by block 2. If you need a block that is shorter than 64 events, there is a provision to jump out of a block at any point. As far as global editing goes, you can cut, copy, and paste either tracks or blocks. Microscopic editing is limited to using the delete key to erase individ- ual notes, while the Fill Track com- mand places single notes at specified intervals in a track. Two transpose functions, called Note Up and Note Down, move a track, a block, or the entire song up or down a half step. The Tracker also oilers a few "effects" such as Pitch up, Pitch Down, and Shazam (a rapid up-and-down pitch change). These are applied to individu- al notes with the degree of effectiveness expressed in hex. When a song is complete, you can save it as a song (solely note data), a module (both notes and instruments), or a run module (a stand-alone module that plays, without DSS, from an icon or the CLI). You can also save your instru- ment setup independently from the song. While the sample editor can save sounds in either IFF, Sonix, or Raw format, the Tracker is limited to IFF. Applause, but Not a Standing Ovation With respect to its strength as a pro- gram, DSS gets high marks. It is smooth, easy to use, and intelligently laid out. The sampler and sample editor portions get the job done nicely, and I got some excellent results using GVP's audio digitizer. The Tracker, however, is a different story. I would have been impressed by it seven or eight years ago, but today, with so many good music products on the Amiga market, it's hard to believe that a commercial program includes such a primitive sequencer. Ii basic musical parameters and MIDI imple- mentation are not important to you, the Tracker should suit you fine; other- wise use DSS for sampling and get a real sequencer. (Editor's note: Just before press time, GVP informal us that if has upgraded DSS8. Software sliders have replaced the digitizer's gain ad just me tit knobs, hut the package has acquired a low- pass filler, and you can nozv make a software choice be- tween line and microphone impedance,) Continued on p. 74. 26 May 1992 ORK Beamed down to the planet Ixion from the Legion Ship, Cisskei, aspiringCaptain Ku-Kabul has to face the dangers and tests i< .illy placed on this planet in order to provehimselfworthyofLeadership. Failing any of the tests will end his career as a Legion-Command Officer. , . permanently! Togivehimafightingchance, Ku-Kabul is fitted with twi n laser ca n nons and ref uelable jet boosters. Usinghrainsand brawn he must find, collect and use objects to solve the many perplexing puzzles and defeat the hordes ot mighty enemiesthat infest thisdeadlyarena. 3 -layer pa ral lax scroll i ng, arcade-speed action and powerful FXcombine with total -gameplay add ict ion to br i ngyou the experience that is Ork! Areyou Ork enough? Screen Shots from the Amiga version. HNhTSi, ■ I ■HI AGONY Pit your magical powers against an equal but opposite mystical force. Use your sorcery and fighting skills to battle through six graph ically - excellent levels, each infested with nordes of beaut ifully-ani mated conjured-up creatures. Pick up potions and spells to help your valiant struggle to find the secret of Cosmic Strength. Experience four layers of incredibly-smooth parallax scrolling, animated backdrops, a massive play area, hundreds of on-screen colours, unbelievable gameplay and an exorbitant sound track all expertly mixed together and skilfully cast to bring you a spellbinding brew of computer gaming action. Experience Agony with no pain! Screen Shots from the Amiga version. i 49 §yy*S3^l : $ ^*±*£S& . W-- v)^l Pp 1 ^, ■^\ / rt»3fc ^ PWl ^^' ! % %HS&- j m |t' • " p^ j ^m cr - 1 PSYGNOSIS P^ wr «*% 29 Saint Mary's Court, Brookline, MA 02146 |F l ttllEE3.t3 m . Telephone: (617) 731-3553 A*- ^ - i 1 Fax: (617)731-8379 ^^"jtfS it ^l^ t - '*rJ^H MkfT.S* F ^ Circle 62 on Reader Service card. '•■.'.":-'•'.' ■ .- ~ ■■'■ = ■■ : .... : 28 Mm 1992 II II STRATEDBYJOELHAGEN Paying careful attention to the physical output of your Amiga images — through creative photography, printing, and mixed- media techniques — can reward you handsomely with results that are gallery -quality and suitable for exhibition. By Joel Hagen One of the most frustrating challenges facing the computer artist is that of translating electronic images into some form suitable for exhibition. While I feel that both the computer and video are strong new media to create and exhibit artwork, for the purpose of this discussion let us dispense with elec- tronic media and focus on "hard" display for exhibition purposes. Unfortunately, ordinary printer output has a mechanical quality to it, typically lacking the richness that characterizes the "feel" of traditional media, the "quality of surface" that vi ewers perceive at a conscious or unconscious level, For computer art to succeed in a com- petitive gallery setting, that quality must somehow be brought to the physical image that is framed and hung. This article will discuss a variety of methods toward that end- Let me say at the outset that I have no idea whether or not some of the printing proce- dures 1 will discuss here violate manufacturers' recommendations. Before trying any of these ideas, you might be well advised to check on such matters for yourself. Three main output problems confront the computer artist. The first is die quality and appearance of the material. Does the ink and paper, for example, have a physical character diat is as interesting as that of traditional media? The second is scale. How can the artist break the constraints of HV-xI 1 printouts? The third problem is quality' of image translation. How effectively can the original colors, nuances, and resolution of die computet image be trans- lated into a "hard" medium? (To locate vendors of the products mentioned, see the list on p. 84.) Photography Because the computer image is composed of dots of colored light, photography can be one of the most accurate means of reproducing that image. You can get fairly good results by shooting the screen with a 35mm camera. Use a long lens, if possible, to eliminate dis- tortion. Shoot exposures of a quarter-second or more to reduce the effect of video scan. For better results, send your disk to an image service for slides or prints of your artwork. Photographic prints can be blown up to any practical size, and they have an established history and legitimacy as a medium. For photographic prints of Amiga images, the best solution is probably the Polaroid CI3000 61m recorder (S4495), which uses^4rf Department Professional as its interface (AD Pro 2, S299; CI3000 Driver, $200; ASDG). This device cables directly to the parallel port ►■ Amiga World 29 ACCENT \ I T P L T T I - A R T of your Amiga, A variety of camera backs can be at- tached to it for capturing slides, negatives, Polaroid prints, and so on. The CI 3 000 is capable of imaging on 35mm film at a resolution of up to 2048x1366 in a color space of 16 million colors. Images are produced on film by digitally controlling a light beam through an internal CRT. The film is ex- posed through red, green, and blue filters. The AD Pro interface includes controls for calibration, exposure, and color balance. Even if your Amiga is not equipped to display large 24-bit images, they can be rendered by a variety of software or created by compositing in AD Pro's 24 -bit color space. These images can be directly exposed to film in the CI 3000 with excellent results. Large photographic prints made from 2048x1366 24- bit images are exhibition quality. Multiple-Pass Printing The most widely available method of getting a comput- er image onto hard media is via a printer. There are Figure 1. A full-page, multiple-pass print. Repeated passes through an HP PaintJet build up the final image. HL-$Z9. Figure 2. You should print a series of test strips— like these of astro- naut John Glenn — before committing to a final PaintJet printout. high -end color printers such as the Iris that can do a remarkable job of duplicating high-resolution 24-bit screen images onto poster-size glossy paper at about $60 per print. While these printers are beyond the reach of most artists as far as experimentation goes, they also have, to my mind, the limitation of being loo slick. The print looks like a commercial poster Such re- sults can be rather sterile in the realm of fine art. For color prints, I prefer the look and feel of ink-jet output. Creatively handled, an HP PaintJet (SI 395, Hewlett- Packard) can produce a more interesting surface, in my opinion, than printers costing ten times as much. Most of the trick in imparting a good look to the ink- jet surface is to do multiple passes (see Figure 1 for an example). The ink becomes dense and fills in any faint lines left by the print head. To print multiple-pass im- ages, make a mark in the tractor-feed margin with which you can later reregister the paper. Use the u set top of form" button and print the image once; then roll it back to the mark and print it a second time. You will see a beautiful velvet quality emerge thai is lacking in a single pass. Black, violet, red, yellow, teal blue, and all the "peacock" colors render well in this technique. A favorite trick of mine is to do a couple of passes as described, and then use a yellow extraction of the image as a final pass to warm the print up. Similarly, you can experiment with using more than one screen image to build up a hard print. Try laying down a base of vivid color and then overlaying a darker, more de- tailed image. Earthy colors emerge that are impossible to achieve in a single-step print. If you find the image getting too dark after multiple passes, lighten it first in AD Pro, PIXmate ($69.95, Pro- gressive Peripherals), or some other image-processing software. I i'md that A I) Pro gives me the most powerful control over preprint image adjustment. Experiment with brightness, contrast, and gamma adjustment to produce a light version of your image. Save this and build up a hard print in the PaintJet, layer by layer. Perhaps the most important concept in working with a printer is to think of the machine itself as your artistic tool. If you focus your thinking on the screen, you are likely to fall short of a quality hard image. The printer is the tool laying down the ink, so think of it as your brush. Use the screen only to adjust the image toward an effective printout. That screen image may ultimately bear little resemblance to the final print. Prior to committing to a full printout, print a test strip, adjust the screen image, and then print another test. Figure 2 shows such a series of image tests from a PaintJet. There is no need to waste an entire sheet of paper and a lot of ink for a test; simply repeat a rep- resentative strip until you arrive at a pleasing result. Before starting any print, run a diagnostic on the printer to ensure the best quality. With the HP PaintJet, turn the printer off, hold down the form-feed button, turn the printer on, and then release the button. The printer will produce a black bar followed by yellow, cyan, and magenta bars as shown in Figure 3. If these bars are perfectly solid, a good print will re- sult. Often, as in Figure 3, certain jets will be clogged, leaving a white line in the print. Beneath the solid col- or bars in the diagnostic are rows of black and colored lines. Failed jets show up clearly here because each line represents one jet. In Figure 3, for example, one black and one cyan jet are not printing. The effect of this fail- 30 May 1992 ACCENT N OUTPUT I - A R T lire is seen as white lines in the image strip above the diagnostic Follow the printer guidelines to reprime and clean each cartridge. PostScript Laser Options If you have access to a laser printer, PostScript printing is a powerful opportunity, I have used 300-dpi Post- Script images straight out of the Amiga for the illus- trations to the Dr. Bones series of paperback science-fic- tion books. Higher-resolution I Jnotronic printouts aie even better Even so, for exhibition purposes, straight laser output is a bit sterile. What 1 enjoy doing, how- eve i*, is layering a PostScript printout over a built-up PaintJet print (see Figure 4 for an example). The warm, solid "graphite black" of laser ink is a smooth comple- ment to the velvet colors of the PaintJet. I use AD Pro, PageStream (v2.2, S299.95, Soft-Logik), Professional Page (v2.1, $395, Gold Disk), or Saxon Publisher (vl .2, $395, Saxon Industries) as my interfaces to PostScript printing. These programs allow you to si/.e and position a PostScript image on the page so that it matches the position of the underlying image. Don't rely nil a sheet-fed printer, however, lo give you legist tat ion as tight as you would expect from tractor feed. I like the laser printer s ability to create halftones via PostScript. For my work. I use a Silentwriter 2 Model 90 PostScript laser printer ($2495, NEC Techriologies). If I layer a halftone of an image over a PaintJet color field, the underlying colors show through the dot pat- terns, creating subtle effects and details- The dot pat- terns of the color print and the halftone can, however, interfere with each other to cause a "moire" effect. This is sometimes interesting, but can be objectionable. Experimenting with ordered and F-S dithering in Printer Preferences at the color stage can affect the moire interference. Also. AD Pro 2 has a new Saver fea- ture called Prefp rimer that can enhance the output of a printer like the PaintJet. Printing via Prerprinter not only produces better ink coverage and more subtle dithering, but allows effective printout of 24-bit color images. The dithering from a 24-bit Prefprinter image is so tight and diffuse that I can overlay a PostScript halftone with no moire effect. You can also tiy Prefprinter to lay black over a color image. Experiment with the Density settings to get the best results from your printer Floyd dithering at den- sity 1 has fairly large dots, widely and diffusely spaced. Density 4 or 5 produces small dots in a tight pattern. On my laser printer in HP emulation mode, I get fine results from density 4 with the Gamma raised to 36, Gamma adjustment can make or break a high-density Prefprinter image. I get heller grayscale fidelity with the laser in Prefprinter density 4, Gamma 36, than with a PostScript printout. With desktop-publishing software, you can take ad- vantage of the high resolution of object-oriented shapes and drawings. You can create these directly in the publishing software or in a drawing package. Di- agonal or curved lines print without "j aggies" at the resolution of the printer. Ibis has a much better look than does a printed bitmap line with its blocky pixels. Interesting combinations can thus be created by building up a color field with an HP PaintJet and then overlaying linework with a laser printer driven by a program like PageStream, Professional Page, or Saxon Publisher. In fact, publishing software can do a fine job of printing object-oriented lines and shapes with ink- jet or even dot -matrix printers. Different papers can produce more interesting print. I find that gray char- coal paper looks very good with laser ink. Printing Multiple-Page Images The ideas discussed thus far are pretty much limited to single-page prints. It is possible, however; to print an Amiga image at virtually any size by spreading that image over multiple pages. ADPro's Prefprinter and Deluxe PhotoLab's Posters program arc good tools with which to explore this process. (PhotoLab is no longer sold separately but is available as part of Elec- tronic Arts' DeluxeVideo III, $149.95.) I am very impressed with Prefprinter s interface and controls. You can experiment with size, style, print density, and other factors with ease. Each printed im- age section must be trimmed and the group mounted to another surface for display. Unfortunately, the dis- play looks like a lot of sheets of typewriter paper glued together. The multiple-page technique, however, really comes into its own for exhibition when the scale of the fin- ished mosaic is quite large. A cleanly mounted ten-foot M £ RAM/RCK OK ::mxx;.:c ; G33342 Figure 3. Before starting to print your image, run a diagnostic test on the PaintJet to ensure that all jets are functioning properly* Figure 4. This composite is the result of layering a PostScript laser printout over a built-up PaintJet print. AmigaWorld 31 A C G E N T \ U T P I T : 1 - A R T image is impressive, no matter what the material lim- itations. A few large mosaics can set a mood, or act to pull viewers through an exhibition hall. AD Pro version 2. 1.0 adds eight new dithering methods to Prefprinier for some interesting options. There are two new halftone dithers that optimize color mixing, plus four line dithers and a "brick' 1 dither. These are particularly suited to doing very large mosaics. For greater image clarity, try using one of AD Pro's sharpening convolu- Figure 5. The author next to his Shepherd/Glenn mixed-media cre- ations at the Yuri Gagarin exhibition in Yalta. Photo by Beth Avary. lions on the image prior to printing the mosaic. You may find thai Prefprinier with Floyd dither at den- sity I is a good choice lor medium-scale mosaics of 10 to 20 sheets. Forveiy laige mosaics, I lalftone A or 11 at a low density may give die best results. It is possible to create more polished works using the same technique by emphasizing rather than concealing the individual mosaic: elements. For example, if each tile is carefully trimmed, then affixed to an interesting surface with attention paid to leaving visible gaps, the arrangement and value composition of the tiles and gaps takes on an esthetic significance beyond that of the image alone. In a 1991 collaboration with British artist Arthur Gilbert, we reduced an image of Cosmonaut Gagarin to three gray levels and then printed it as a 99-sheet mosaic. The printout, using Posters with its "smooth- ing" option, took about -10 hours on my Kpson dot-ma- trix printer. Those 99 sheets were sent to 99 astronom- ical artists all over the world. Each artist used his or her repealed signature as texture to completely fill the gray areas of their chunk of the image. Each artist then mailed the finished sheet to the .All Artist's Union in Moscow so that the huge installation could be assem- bled at the opening of the exhibition celebrating the 30th anniversary of Gagarin's space flight. In this case, the concept outweighed the limitations of the material. Additionally, the personalization of each tile by the artists took the finished piece beyond the realm of a simple printout. Mixed-Media Experiments The signatures of the artists on the Gagarin mosaic brings us to my favorite realm as a computer artist, that of mixed media, lb an extent, we have touched on the idea in discussing laser ink over color, but the Amiga artist can explore even greater opportunities by adding paint, graphite, and collage to the output of the com- puter printer. Two of my paintings in the Gagarin exhibition be- gan life on the Amiga. Wanting to create stark, docu- mentary paintings to contrast with the more expres- sionistic Soviet styles, I began with two scenes from our early space program. I reworked images of Alan Shep- ard and John Glenn in Deluxe Paint (DPaint IV, SI 79.95, Electronic Arts), simplifying composition, us- ing fiery colors, and breaking up forms into solid shapes. When the painting was finished, the images were printed as multiple pages on an HP PaintJet. The test strip already mentioned (Figure 2) shows some of the color experiments that were tried on the Glenn image prior to final output. The printouts were planned to lit masouite panels cut to the maximum size allowed by the airlines that look us into the former Soviet Union. White glue diluted in water was brushed over the entire surface of the untem- pered masonite. Each trimmed strip of PaintJet tractor paper was dipped in water, then carefully positioned. Failure to wet the prints first causes them to buckle on contact with the glue. Wet paper is also easy to slide around for accurate positioning. Diluted acrylic gel medium was brushed over the entire surface. When each panel dried, the paper had shrunk slight- ly, leaving small gaps between the strips. These gaps were filled with patching plaster. When dry, the entire surface was sanded and sponged flat One more coat of gel medium sealed and smoothed the surface. When that was dry, each panel was painted in acrylics, using the PaintJet mosaic as a sketch. A final coal of matte var- nish completed ihe paintings. Figure o shows the fin- ished paintings hanging at the show's premiere in Yalta. To experiment with enhancing a printout, try attack- ing it with your favorite medium such as pencil, conte, or ink. A good first project might be touching up a col- or print with a soft pencil. You can enhance the subtlety of shading, autialias lines, and add new elements to the image. The touch of the human hand immediately elevates the perception of the piece. Another technique I like is collage. Use the com- puter and printer to create image elements that arc- cut, torn, and reassembled to create a final image. I use spray mount on torn pieces of printout to mount them on illustration board. I like to go into this with oils or acrylics to pull together a composition such as the Mercury collage that is the opening illustration of this article. The wonderful thing about mixed media is that it fully integrates the computer and printer into the stu- dio. The artist must then maintain enough common sense to know when to use a $2500 computer and when to use a 25-cent pencil Having the mental flex- ibility to mix these tools freely can produce some pow- erful work. ■ Joel Hagen is the author o/"AW'u 'Accent on Graphics" col- umn and a contributing editor to the magazine. His credits include work in art, astronomy, science fiction, and software development. Write to him cfo Amiga World Editorial, 80 Elm SL f Peterborough, NH 03458, 32 May 1992 Dusting for Prints Need some clues on how to track down the right printer to suit your needs ? Our hands-on guide reveals the different kinds of printers available, the up-front and hidden costs involved, and the performance you can expect SKARCHING FOR THE right printer am be mysterious business. Finding evi- dence is not so hard, but can you be sure you have the whole story? A friend tes- tifies that the model he bought is the perfect solution- — but are his needs the same as yours? Some prints you Vc examined point to a particular model — but can you get acceptable quality for substantially less money? Or will you give up options yon need by spending less? As if the situation were not complicated enough, much of what you knew about printers three years ago is now obsolete. That's because today you can afford printers that you could dien only dream about. Lets do a little sleuthing to define i By Dave Johnson ILLUSTRATE) BY KATIIERINF MAHONKY Amiga World 33 A C C E N T \ Li T I 1 I T 2 — PRINTERS the cost and performance differences and determine your best bet. For information on fingering the right printer driver to work with your chosen output device. TheN CO] America's c r NOTES fROM TI1C LITTER BOX. itiuiiitiiii CDITOBIAL by Newt This month like to talk about a pre that my older cousins ] been having, Pmtalki TheN CO! America's < r NOTES fieOfi Tltt LITTER BOX- tittifimii EDITORIAL by Newt This month like to talk about a pre that my older cousins J been having, Fmtalki The same PageStream file output using a Hewlett-Packard LaserJet IIP ($1295 retail) at 300 dpi (top], an HP DeskJet ($995) at 300 dpi (bottom), and a Star NX- 1000 color dot-matrix ($379) at 240 x 72 (opposite page). see the sidebar "Riper Drive." (To locate vendors of the products mentioned sec the ik ManufactnrersVDistrihutors' Ad- dresses" list on p, 84,) Very Fine Print Perhaps the biggest news of last year was the plunge in black-and-white laser printer prices to a floor of $700. (Color laser printers are still very expensive, starting at about $6000.) The main advantage of a laser printer is its 300-dpi (dots per inch) output, an essential feature for professional appearance of copy. Another benefit is its deep, rich, black output — much darker and more uniform than you can gel with either ink-jet or dot-matrix printers. A laser is both quick and quiet (you can print while listening to Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here" and never hear it running). The slowest lasers start at four ppm {pages per minute) in letter-quality mode and lake only a few minutes to print a graphics-laden sheet. A laser printer uses inosi of thai time to build a picture of the page in its own memory, however, and tints can kick out additional copies nearly instantaneously. Because a laser (sometimes called a page printer) must build the entire page in memory before printing any of it, the printer needs enough RAM of its own. That means about 1.5MB to generate a page of graphics — such as a full sheet of Deluxe Runt graphics or a Page- Stream document. Although most laser printers come with only 512K, thai is changing; you can now find bar- gain machines with 1.5 or 2MB standard. Be sure you know what you are buying and that you consider the cost of necessary additional memory. Don't be frightened by list prices for RAM, though; while it may list for $400 per megabyte, street prices are closer to SI 00. All laser printers use some sort of page-description language to control output. While most lower-price lasers use a version of Hewlett-Packard's Printer Con- trol Language (PCL), ;* more flexible control method is Adobe Systems* PostScript. (For details on the pre- cision PostScript allows, see the "Why PostScript?" sidebar to the article "Power to the People," Sep. '91, p. 23.) Many Amiga programs, PageStream and Pro- fessional Page included, make it easy to avoid Post- Script, as they output excellent quality to nonPost- Script printers, (See the sidebar "Amiga Software and Lasers." Sep. '91, p. 26.) If the software you use supports PostScript and you want to use it, you should expect to spend a few hun- dred dollars more for your printer. (A software-based PostScript interpreter allows you to print PostScript- defined output to an ordinary printer, but it is slow and memory-intensive.) If you think you will eventu- ally need PostScript, but not right away, you might consider a laser (such as Hewlett-Packard s LaserJet IIP or LaserJet III) that is upgradable to PostScript via an expansion cartridge. Then, you can wait to pur- chase the expansion cartridges, which are available from the printer's manufacturer or a third-party de- veloper such as Pacific Page. The additional memory thai you installed for printing graphics will be essential lor driving that PostScript cartridge, as well. Resist die temptation to buy the cheapest laser you can find without testing it. Some (such as Okidatas OL-400-series machines) generate unsightly banding when printing graphics, although they are perfectly good for other tasks. You can encounter significant ?■/ Mm 1992 A i) c i; \ T \ OUTPUT: 2- PRINTERS quality differences in sending the same iile to different printers. The Jet Set If you want laser-like output but do not want to pay laser prices, a black-and-white ink-jet printer may be just what you need. For $">()() or less, the ink-jet pro- duces wonderful output as high as :Vu() dpi. Unlike the laser printer's toner cartridge, which ren- ders pages by allowing the laser to "burn" the ink off the roller and onto the paper, ink- jet printers feed from a vial of ink that fires at the paper through several dozen tiny nozzles. The ink is designed to dry almost instantly on contact with paper, though some printers rely on special clay-based paper to aid ink adhesion. It is a good idea to find out what kind of paper works best with the ink-jet you are considering before you buy. Some paper stock is costly. Paper type is also im- portant for obtaining the highest quality of output. Primers (and inks) designed for clay paper will invari- ably generate binned hardcopy on ordinary paper, so use the best paper you can afford if you want to get sharp, laser-like output. Printing time is one more consideration for ink-jets: 15 to 30 minutes or more per page is average. And because ink- jets are not "page primers," even copy lakes the same amount of time to print. Ink jets are pleasantly quiet, however. As long as you can find color can ridges for the black- and-white ink-jet you choose, you can tise a color-sep- aration process (as most desktop-publishing software allows) to print in full color by making numerous passes on the same page with inks of different colors. It is a time-consuming process that's susceptible to pa- per-alignment errors, but the results are often breath- taking. You can get color cartridges for various ink-jets from Such companies as InkMat, Jet Technology, and Software Sensations. For moie convenient but still affordable color output, ink- jets are still your best choice. Hewlett-Packard's PaintJet ($995) is the best-known of these low-cost color printers. It can offer very rich color saturation (depend- ing on exactly what you are printing) with all the tradi- tional characteristics of its black-and-white counterparts. Color printing involves some special considerations because, while "printing" to your Amiga's monitor is a subtract ive process, printing to paper is additive. On screen, a pixel with red, green, and blue elements all pegged at 15 appears white. Now imagine mixing equal quantities of those colors on paper. Quite the opposite of white, no? That incongruity often makes it tricky for a printer to accurate!) render on paper what you see on the screen. Because of the special problems involved in color printing, I recommend you try a color printer before you buy — or at least purchase it front a store with a reasonable return policy. Do not settle for the demo prints that the sales people are all loo happy to show you in the store. Those demos are optimized to show off the machine's best color-rendition abilities, and they rarely involve the colorful and detailed graphics the Amiga can output. Matty of the sales people who demonstrate these printers think eight-color exploded pie charts are pretty amazing, and they may have no concept of how you plan to use the machine. Until recently, if you wanted a color ink-jet, you were pretty much limited to 180 dpi. While that resolution may be acceptable, it forced many people who were weighing color at 1 80 dpi versus black and white at 300 dpi to stay away from ink-jets. With the recent intro- duction of the Hewlett-Packard DeskJet 500 Color, 300-dpi color now retails for $995. This is a printer to be reckoned with, hut it is not per- fect. Instead of four colors, the DeskJet Color uses three, which results in less-ihan-ideal color accuracy in some images. Because there is no black ink when print- ing in the color mode, the printer uses all of the other inks to reproduce black tones. This means that black does not saturate well, and the DeskJet goes through ink even more quickly than other ink-jets. Although Commodore has not yet released a driver for this print- er, Creative Focus sells one called Super_DJC, Dots the Way It Is The "Old Faithfuls" of the industry, dot-matrix print- ers have been around forever and are best sellers be- cause of their versatility, low price tags, and negligible maintenance costs. These clavs. the battle lines are drawn firmly between the 9- and 24-pin varieties. The i The IS COj America's < r NOTES EROM THE UTTER BOX- EDITORIAL by Newt This month like to talk about a pre that my older cousins! been having. I'm talki AmigaWorld 35 A C C K \ T N I! T P D T 2-PRINTERS 9-pin type is probably the cheapest printer you can buy (starting at approximately $150 for black-and- white and SI 90 (or color), but you pay in terms of lim- ited resolution. Though 9-pin printers can provide densities up to about 240 dpi, there are two serious limitations to driv- ing dot-matrix al resolutions that high. First, there oc- curs a phenomenon called banding: very noticeable stripes of ink appear across the page. Also, the image can become very muddy and indistinct, particularly when priming in color. Happily, dot-matrix printers generally support enough densities so that von can find a useful one for every type of printing task. With 24-pin printers, you can usually print in high resolution (around 300 dpi) without resorting to mul- tiple passes — at a still-reasonable cost (S200 and up). The result is pages that are reasonably free of smearing and banding. Both 9- and 24-pin printers come in color and black- and-white versions. II* you do have a color printer, you can conserve the somewhat more expensive color rib- bons by buying black ribbons to use for black-and- white-only tasks. Paper Drive The issue of printer drivers is of- ten a source of confusion, it's an important topic, too, because without a driver you cannot send output from your computer to a printer. It is a good idea to settle on a driver before actually purchasing a printer, and find- ing the right one is not as com- plicated as it may seem. Your Workbench Extras disk contains drivers for nearly every popular printer. These are named for easy Identification. For example, the driver labeled HP DeskJet is optimized to work with Hewlett-Packard's line of DeskJet printers. Be- ware, though: if you choose a printer that has just come out on the market, an older driver may not get top performance out of it — or even be able to run it. HP's new DeskJet 500 Color printer is an example. Although, as mentioned in the article, Commodore has not yet released a driver for the color DeskJet, Creative Focus sells one called SuperDJC. There are several other such develop- ers — including Glass Canvas Productions, ACDA, Micro Pro> grams, and T yen on Technolo- gies — that sell custom drivers. You can also find drivers on BBSs and networks, as well as in the Fred Fish collection of public-domain software. (Add any driver to the Printers drawer in your Devs directory.) If you do not find a custom- built driver for a printer you want, be sure to check your printer's manual for a list of em- ulation modes. Many manuals list alternatives in the order in which they work best. As a last resort, you can use the Generic printer driver that's found on the Extras disk, although it will probably not be able to output styles (such as bold and italics) or graphics. — DJ Printing speed is one of the most hotly advertised features of dot-matrix primers. The fastest can kick out about 200 characters per second (cps) in draft mode and around 7'> in near-letler-cjuality (NTQ) mode. The slowest ones drag along at about 25 cps. Dot -matrix primers have been around Cor so long that it is hard to find a truly bad one. Because they are so inherently noisy, however keep an ear out for those that have good sound insulation. Dot -matrix are the only printers that come in wide-carriage configurations for handling special printing tasks like large spread- sheets. While a wide-carriage unit might make life eas- ier lor you, there's no sense paying extra for such a fea- ture if you never need to print wide stock. Hidden Costs When you shop for a primer, remember that the three- digit figure on your charge card is not the end of it. Maintenance costs tend to add up, particularly if you print in volume. Laser printers require replacement toner cartridges, which cost between $50 and $150 dol- lars and are usually good for a few thousand copies. Ink-jet cartridges run about $30 or less, but they are good for only a few hundred sheets. Dot-matrix print- ers require only ribbons, which cost less than S10 and provide acceptable saturation for a hundred pages or so. (Once a ribbon is too worn to tise for official corre- spondence, it can have a long and fruitful life printing draft and in-house copies.) Do not underestimate the long-term cost of special paper, either. Clay-based stock for some ink-jets is rather costly, and using plain paper diminishes the quality of your output. Laser paper is more expensive than ordinary stock, but it comes in many grades, and you can experiment on your own to find a happy medium. Using poor grades of paper in a laser can seriously shorten its life- span, so choose carefully. Some laser paper lias a de- cidedly evil finish, ecologically speaking. If you are so inclined, their are several sources for recycled laser stock, including Earth Care Paper, which will be happy to send you samples. Though paper capacity is not a concern for dot- ma- trix printers, which run with tractor-feed paper or print one loose sheet at a time, keep in mind that both laser and ink-jet printers vary widely in the size of the paper tray. You may not need 250-sheet capac- ity now, but think ahead to be sure that a 50-slieet tray won't drive you insane later on. Many printers are de- signed to optionally accommodate one or more large- capacity trays. Also, while most printers accept envelopes one at a time, some can handle multiple envelopes. And if you wish to produce overhead transparencies, make sure the printer is capable of producing them. This is not a given by any means, particularly with color printers. A printer is a long-term investment. If a laser is what you really need, do not settle for an ink-jet. If a dot- matrix is sufficient for your needs, think seriously about buying a 24-pin machine instead of a 9-pin, Whatever your output goals, buy the best printer you can afford and keep the future in mind. ■ Dave Johnson authored the booh The Desktop Studio: Multimedia with the Amiga, in addition to several reviews and articles for Amiga magazines. ?6 May 1992 DTP-ing WITH THE ENEMYQ Providing competitive, full-service desktop publishing to your clients requires cross-platform cooperation. Here's how to incorporate Amiga, Mac, and PCfoimats into one DTP setup. s Amiga users, we want to do every- thing on our machines just because others try to tell us we can't. Unfor- tunately, Amiga desktop publishers find themselves in a world dominat- ed by Macs and PCs. Although I will always bran- dish my Amiga sword, I think it may be lime to use a different strategy to further die Amiga crusade. A mulliplatform desktop-publishing settip allows selective use of the best features of the Amiga, the Macintosh, and the PC. The Macintosh leads the field with its excellent 24 -I) it image enhancement and painting pack- ages. Other strengths of the Mac are its well-fea- tured illustration programs and its multitude of printer-control and calibration utilities. (Macin- tosh utilities can calibrate the density and color ac- curacy of imagesetters, as well as manage memory and hard-disk-resident printer fonts.) Because the PC is so widely used for word pro- cessing, most text files you receive from clients are apt to be in MS-DOS format. Also, Windows 3.0 has greatly increased the ease of use over DOS- based systems, and there are now some excellent > BY EYO SAMA ILLUSTRATED BY BARTON STABLER Amiga World 37 ACCENT \ OUTPUT: 3 — D T P 24-bit painting programs (such as .Aldus' PhotoStyler) that are good alternatives to Mac-based software cost- ing twice as much. The Amiga, on the other hand, is perfect for jobs re- quiring 3-D ray-traced imagery, fast layout and design work, and the integrating of data from multiple plat- forms into one project. So, given the different strengths and varying capa- bilities of the three platforms, how can you incorporate the best elements of each into your DTP setup? I will start by outlining what you can do with a limited bud- get and take you through to an explanation of how you can set up the ultimate networked desktop-publishing operation, (lb locate vendors of the products mentioned, see the "Manufacturers) 'Distributors' Addresses" 'list on p. 84.) Fitting In While good desktop-publishing software enables Ami- ga users to produce professional-quality typesetting and color-separated design and output, the Amiga is relatively unknown in the DTP world. Therefore, most output bureaus that supply printing, scanning, and im- age setting do not offer those services directly to Amiga users. How can you cope in this environment? First, make even' effort to introduce your local ser- vice bureau to the .Amiga. Show them the machine's ca- pabilities and how, through networking and other methods, they can integrate it into their present setup. Perhaps you can demonstrate that many m the area re- quire the service, or that the bureau's purchase of an .Amiga is a prerequisite for obtaining your business. If you cannot get direct Amiga services, then you must be able to read and write the formats these service centers do support. 'Hiere are several programs that en- able the .Amiga to read and write both PC- and Mac- format disks. Consul Iron's CrossDOS (S3 9. 95), for in- stance, allows your Amiga to read 7 2 OK and 5. 2 5- inch 360K MS-DOS disks. ReadySofts AMax II (S249.95), plus a Mac disk drive and Macintosh ROMs, not only lets you read and write 800 K Macintosh-format disks, but also lets you run some Macintosh software. Unfortunately. AMax II does not work in color, so you cannot benefit from the displays of 8- or 24-bit soft- ware. Central Coast/New Horizons 9 Mac-2-Dos ($349.95, including a Mac-compatible floppy drive) simply lets you read/write 800K Mac floppies. (See *' Royal Opportunities," Sep. '91, p. 40, and "Forging the PC Link/* Dec. '91 . p. 51 , for more information on these packages.) The program 1 often tise to read and write MS-DOS disks is Kjell H. Didriksen's MultiDOS. Unlike Cross- DOS, MuitiDOS allows you to access MS-DOS disks with the same drive names you use for your Amiga disks. Whether you have an Amiga or MS-DOS disk in any drive, any programs you use on your Amiga will auto- matically recognise the disk. Incredibly, this commer- cial-quality program is in the public domain. You can find it in the Fred Fish library as well as on BBSs. Unfortunately, because Commodore has not added higher-capacity floppy-disk drives to all Amigas, there seems generally to be no way to take advantage of the 1.44MB floppies that are standard on both the Mac THE ULTIMATE SETUP Mission: To set up a desktop system that would be capable of handling entire publishing projects (from the design stage through sending the files to print) and accepting designs, images, and text files from clients using various comput- er systems- Thanks to networking — and to excel- lent new Amiga networking software — I accomplished this mission. At the core of the system I devised were three Ami- ga 3000s, three IBM PS/2s, a Macintosh Ilci, a Mac SE, and a 33-MHz 386 PC- compatible file server running Novell Netware in dedicated mode. Attached to the file server was a 600MB SCSI hard drive, accessible by all the computers on the network. Be- cause Novell Netware does not allow partitions larger than 256MBs, I divid- ed the drive into three partitions. On the A3000s, all running Oxxi's ACS, the partitions show up as three drive icons on the Workbench screen. The Mac SE hosted a 9600-baud mo- dem, which we employed to receive clients' PostScript, image, and text files, whether Amiga, Mac, or PC based. When stored on the network hard drive, these files were accessible from all the computers. I attached a Sharp JX-450 300-dpi 24-bit color scanner to an A3000 run- ning ASDG's Art Department Profes- sional ($299) to handle most of the scanning. To the file server, I attached a 300-dpi QMS PostScript laser printer (used primarily for proofing), and a 2400-dpi Compugraphic 9800 image- setter (used to produce final films and high-resolution paper work). All the computers on the network can simultaneously send files to be printed on either printer. The way the Netware queues work is yen 1 useful for schedul- ing print jobs of different priorities. You can set up Novell's Netware to have sev- eral printing queues; files sent to be printed are spooled to the file server's hard disk and output to the appropriate printers in the order received. You can even have multiple queues serving one printer. We have express and slow queues; files in the slow queue are sent to the laser printer only if the express queue is emptv. Netware has several safety and se- curity options that protect your data, including full control over file and di- rectory access and support for disk mirroring and duplexing. With the help of an uninterruptible power supply, the file server can, upon detecting any pow- er loss, automatically log off users and safely power down the network. Ready, Set Setting up the Novell Netware file serv- er was an adventure; Novell's software conies on more than 30 disks, and the manuals are encyclopedic. The first chore was to get the 386 PC to run with- out any interrupt, DMA, or memory conflicts. Unlike the advanced bus de- sign of the Amiga, PC boards do not auto-configure; you must configure them separately by juggling several jumpers. We had to install a SCSI con- troller in addition to Arcnet, Ethernet, I/O, and VGA cards. Thankfully, setting up the PC client software was easy. hS May 1992 ACCENT N U T P I T : 3 - D T P and PC. (With Cross DOS and a high -density Com- modore floppy — now shipping with the A3 000 — you can read 1.44 MB PC disks.) Both MultiDOS and Cross DOS, however claim to be able to read and write to MS-DOS-formatted hard-disk drives. (I have not tried this feature, but it surely is intriguing.) This brings me to the best method of integrating Amigas, Macs, and PCs: networking. Net Gain Just a year ago, networking was a foreign concept to most Amiga users. Although it is still in its infancy for the Amiga, we now have a few options for constructing networks. By the time you read this, Oxxts Amiga Client Soft- ware (ACS) for Novell Netware (starting at $199) should be available. Novell Netware, one of the most widely used networking systems on the PC, is the only one I know of that allows networking between Amiga, PC, Macintosh, NeXT, and Unix systems. To use ACS, you must connect your Amiga — via an Arcnet or Eth- ernet card— to a PC running the Novell server software. Oxxi's software allows your Amiga to print to any de- vice that is attached to the file server (the PC), which automatically spools printing requests from any com- puter on the network. Any fixed or removable hard disk attached to the file server appears on the Amiga Workbench as if it were a local drive, and it is accessible through all Amiga software. Such drives also appear on the Macintosh desktop and on other computers at- tached to the network. Commodore recently released it NFS (Network File System) Client Software ($199), which allows you to add Amigas equipped with Ethernet cards to a network served by a Unix NFS file server, (NFS is the network- ing system used by Sun Microsystems 1 computers and many other Unix-based systems.) According to Com- modore, it is possible to use the NFS software to attach Amigas to a PC server running Novell Netware 386 with an NFS module, although I suspect that an NFS server must also be involved. Progressive Peripherals' DoubleTalk (S450-S500) AppleTalk board allows Amigas to network between each other using the peer-to-peer networking software provided. It also lets the Amigas link into an existing AppleTalk network, enabling them to share files with Macs and print to the AppleTalk ports of laser printers connected to the network. While AppleTalk is slow compared to Ethernet- or even Arcnet-based systems, it is also much less costly, because you do not need a separate file server to run the DoubleTalk network. Net Sets In the sidebar "The Ulumate Setup," I describe the op- timum system for a desktop-publishing venture. Al- though I think it is the ideal solution for working effi- ciently to handle whatever your client gives you, the setup is also quite expensive. If you do not have the budget to install and maintain such a system — or if you want to begin on a smaller scale — then you can use just parts of the system. *- The installation of the Macintosh Netware software was also simple. One annoying limitation of the Macintosh. however, is its inability to run both Ap- pleTalk and EtherTalk at the same time. This meant that we could not bridge the network between Netware and Ap- pleTalk unless we installed an Ap- pleTalk card on the file server, which would increase the server's work load. The Amiga client software is not only easy to set up, but also offers the most elegant and complete interface of the three systems. Oxxi's very thorough ACS includes most of the utilities you need to manage and control the net- work. These have the same functional- ity as the PC-version utilities, but the ease of use of Amiga software. You can set director)' and file restrictions for in- dividuals, groups, or all users, and you can even restrict access times, You can view and modify the printing queues and use the included hard-disk back- up program to back up the network drive — including both the resource and data forks of Macintosh files. (I often use this feature to transfer resource forks from the Mac to the Amiga; it lets me avoid first having to convert the Mac files to macbinary format.) A mes- sage facility lets Amiga users send mes- sages to other network users. Access to the network drive from the Amiga is very fast, even using Arcnet cards. In fact, I found it faster than some .Amiga peer-to-peer networks op- erating with Ethernet. How It Works To demonstrate how the system works, 1 will describe the execution of a typical project — creating a full -color brochure for a client. We received the WordPerfect-format text by modem on the Mac SE, which automatically saved it to the network drive. We edited and formatted the text on one of the PS/2 machines using WordPerfect. We scanned the color pictures into an Amiga 3000 and saved them to the net- work drive in either TIFF or TGA for- mat. From there, we loaded the pictures into die Macintosh Ilci (equipped with a 24-bit graphics card) running Adobe's PhotoShop. We used PhotoShop to modify* and color-correct the images and to do photo montage and other special effects (which I would like to be able to do on the Amiga!). We saved the finished images to the network drive, and from there loaded them into Gold Disk's Professional Page on an A3 000. After color separating the images on the Amiga, we sent them to the printing queue serving the imagesetter. Mean- while, we downloaded extra Adobe Type 1 fonts (which the brochure re- quired) to the imagesetter using the Macintosh. Finally, we shipped the im- agesetter-produced film to the printer. With the network, we were able to use components created on any of the three machines with layout and illustration software on any of the other machines. For example, we converted fonts and Adobe Illustrator files from the Mac for use on the Amiga, and we typeset Ami- ga-generated text with PageMaker run- ning Windows 3.0 on the PCs. — ES □ AmigaWorld 39 A c c i: \ T X L T P L T I) T P If, for example, you do not have an in-house image- setter, you can save your huge, color-separated PostScript (lies to removable hard disks and send them to an output service. Another option is to compress your files with such public-domain utilities as ARC, ZIP, and LHARC, some of which have counterparts on the Mac and PC. You may be surprised how large a compression factor you can obtain with PostScript files. Faster than compressing is backing up files with something like QuarterBack ($69.95, Central Coast/New Horizons) and restoring them to the hard disk of your service bureau's Amiga. If you have Amigas, Macs, and PCs, but cannot af- ford a network, you can connect the computers via se- rial cables and use terminal software to transfer files. Set the machines to the highest baud rate available and use a protocol such as ZModem to transfer the files. With ZModem, you do not have to bother naming die files at your destination, but keep in mind when send- ing PC files lhal ihe file-naming conventions of that system demand a name of not more than eight char- acters, plus a three-character extension. Serial connec- tion is a slow transfer method and should be used only if you cannot fit the compressed files onto a floppy disk (which happens often if you deal with color separations and 24 -bit images). Using one DoubleTalk card, an Amiga, a Macintosh, and an Apple lalk laser printer, you can set up the be- ginnings of a larger system. This setup lets you use the Amiga for layout and design work, and for creating 24- bit ray- traced images that you can then transfer to the Mac, taking advantage of its 24-bit image-editing fa- cilities and printer control. Von can construct a similar system with an Amiga and a PC. You could attach a high-capacity removable drive to each machine and use MuldDOS or CrossDOS to read and write files direcdy from your Amiga applications onto MS-DOS-formatted cartridges. By using Aldus Photo- Styler on the PC for your 24-bit editing needs, and Pro- fessional Page, PageStream, or Saxon Publisher on the Amiga, you'd have a fairly capable system. If possible, try to purchase a color scanner that you can tise on your Amiga, Mac, or PC, depending on your software preferences. With the Mac and PC, you can edit the files immediately after you scan them. With the Amiga, on the other hand, you have the ad- vantage of scanning much faster than on the other systems. If you need to scan numerous pictures with- out major editing, the Amiga will save you time. Then, yoti can transfer to other machines any files that need editing. As you can see, it is possible to successfully integrate the .Amiga into an environment involving other com- puter platforms. It's not a question of "fight or switch"; it's simply a matter of joining forces to best serve the customer... and to make things easier for yourself. ■ Aye; Sama was editor and publisher of the former Ami go Times, a full-color magazitte created entirely on the Amiga. He currently works as a consultant , author, and developer. And the Winner Is. . . The SAS/C Development System SAS and SAS/C arc registered trade murks or trademarks of SAS Institute Inc. in the USA and other countries. $ indicates USA registration. Other brand and product names are trademarks and registered trademarks of their respective holders Selected as the best professional productivity software at the 1991 North American Amiga Developers' Conference, no other C compiler delivers more powerful or efficient programs for the Amiga 1 than the SAS/C Development System from SAS Institute Inc. — one of the world's largest independent software companies. The SAS/C Development System offers a host of impressive features for Release 5.10: *"A workbench environment "•"Release 2,0 support ^improved code generation •"Additional library functions *"Point-and-click program to set project options '"Automated utility to set up new projects '"Source-level debugger '"Integrated editor r Global optimizer. Run with the SAS/C Development System! You'll come out a winner too. To order or for more information, call SAS Institute at 919-677-8000, extension 5042. M SAS Institute Inc. SAS Campus Drive Cary, NC 27513 Circle 40 on Reader Service card. 40 May 1992 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ A v^ FAST SCSI-2 DMA HARD DRIVE CONTROLLER + 28MHz or 33M Hz 68040 ACCELERATOR \ \ \ + 64MB HIGH-SPEED 32-bit RAM EXPANSION THE ULTIMATE AMIGA 2000 POWER PERIPHERAL! '■-'9 -J y ■ sk? : FAST SCSI-2 DMA HARD DRIVE CONTROLLER ADVANCED HARD DRIVE SOFTWARE for easily iQLIinpJironpus date transfer speeds of up to 1 installation, partitioning and formatting o] nearly a|_ _ megabytes per second with fast SCSI-2 drives. ..up SCSI and SCSI-2 hard drives- Use the easy ) 10 times the speed of many Amiga hard drive "automatic" mode, or set up FFS, old file system, or controllers! Autobooting with full DMA access to custom system configurations. Zeus's onboard 32-bit RAM. Zeus supports "onous AND Asynchronous SCSI-2 drives, - -Synchri and standard SCSI drives on the same SCSI chain! ~ 28MHZ 68040 CW with" buiitfh iterating point processor for lightning-fast acceleration. Zeus is over 23 times the speed of a standard Amiga 2000, and 3 to five times the speed of 25MHz Amiga 3000 systems! Easily upgradeable to 33MHz CPU \ when available from Motorola. 64MB HIGHSPEED 32-bit RAM expansion using standard 1 MBx8 or 4MBx8 80ns, 60ns f or 40ns fast page or static column SIMM modules (faster per* \ formance with faster RAM). Add RAM easily for contiguous configurations of 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, 36, 40, 48, 52 or 64MB. IMPROVED PERFORMANCE W\\h many standard SCSI hard drives. Supports "Rigid Disk Block" standard - just move your existing drive over and ~ ybu r re up and "running"-' no reformatting necessary! Zeus supports full DMA from standard SCSI drives. \ S8040 SOFTWARE UTILITIES included for optimization and full control of the 040 1 s unique cache modes and high-speed floating-point software library. FULL UYEAR WARRAHTY backed by PP&S's commitment to service and customer satisfaction. HO MORE WAITING for hard drive loads and saves Zeus reads and writes data with super-fast "RAM disk" speed! FOR 3-D, "TOASTER", ANIMATION, VIDEO, DESKTOP PUBLISHING and countless other applications, Zeus gets the job done in a fra< the time. Zeus is the ultimate productivity workhorse! Zeus* From Progressive Peripherals & Software, world leader in the fastest, most reliable Amiga accelerator technology. FAST and COMPATIBLE with AmigaDOS 1 .3, ArnigaDOS 2.0, the Video Toaster & Lightwave, Imagine, PageStream, Professional Page, ASDG's ADPro, genlocks, video peripherals, and a wide --vanetytif other-Amiga hardware & software products. tiware & software products. Kifcatons s-b^c; :: ranp ,v fowl no! ce Attention Progressive 040/2000 Accelerator Users: Call for upgrade information. \ \ Al rrsd£rr.art^_ad0iow!edcjed. P'oducj specifications Progressive Peripherals & Software • 464 Kalamath St. • Denver, CO 80204 « Phone (303) 825-4144 • Fax (303) 893-6938 \ Crrcte 150 on Reader Service card. rn A Brand-New GETTING THE MOST FROM WORKBENCH 2.0-PART II THE VISIBLE DIFFERENCES between Kickstart 2.0 and 1.3 are like the very large tip of an even more gigantic iceberg: While just a cursory look reveals that much has changed, even greater, more significant differences lie hidden beneath the surface- These hidden changes in 2.0 take the form of new programming tools and operating-system routines that give programmers more flexibility than ever in creating powerful and easy-to-use programs. And while the visible changes in the operating envi- ronment are easy to spot, the effect of the new programming tools is apparent only when they result in new features in applications software . Until recently, 2.0 was available only on the A3000, so few commercial pro- grams have added such "2.0-only" features. Now that 2,0 is an option for all Amigas, and will soon become standard equipment, more and more programs will be adding these ad- vanced features. Let's take a look, then, at what the new programming features mean to the current 2.0 own- er, and also what we can expect in the near future. (To locate vendors of the prod- ucts mentioned, see the "Manufacturers' /Dis- tributors' Addresses" list on p t 84.) Emphasis on "Applications" Among the more widely- used programming en- hancements to 2.0 are the calls that provide appli- cations with access to the Workbench and its icons. These calls let programs create new objects known as Applcons, AppWindows, and App- Menus, Applcons are icons that appear in the Workbench window. Although they look like normal icons, they don't necessarily act like them. The program that creates an Applcon is notified whenever the user double-clicks on the icon or drags another More than simply enhancing Workbench operations alone, new 2,0 features will also make many applications programs more powerful, flexible and easy to use. By Sheldon Leemon ILLUSTRATED BY KENNETH McMILLAN AmigaWortd 43 WORKBENCH - P A R T ] I icon on top of it; it is then up to the program to decide what to do next. Version 3.2 of Pro Write ($175, New Horizons), for example, opens an Applcon that's called "Pro Write Deposit." When yon double-click on this icon, it brings the ProWrite screen or window to the front and activates it. When you drop the icon for a text file on it, however, it loads that text file into ProWrite. oj ToolManager: HotKey-rcommand help |i& Active Tools: 16 Shell SuperDuper Quarterback NewZap QED Print Files GraphicDump Kew Tool 1 A V Top | UP 1 Ddvh | Bottom | ! |Kev Tool fl«i I Edit | Remove 1 SriabLe | KotKeys | t*:ck On | Dock H/v| Save | Hide j Disable) Dock Off| Quit | a>1 Figure 1. Stephan Becker's Tool Manager lets you take advantage of 2.0 f s new "App" features. AppMenu support allows you to add your own applications to the Workbench Tools menu. Applcon support allows you to put your own icons on the Workbench window. From the screen above, you can print a file or show a graphic by dragging its Icon to the appropriate Workbench icon. The dock window at the bot- tom of the screen (which lets you launch a program by clicking on its icon) is also an AppWindow, so you can load a data file into a program by dtagging its icon to the picture of the program. n|PSK Public Screen Tool 1 *& Open New Screen Workbench P r oWr ite PSK_S or een Close Soreen Move To Screen Make Default Refresh X*±st C\ Shanghai On CI PopPubScreen Off Quit |PSK_Screen |PSK relocated. * ''riiw* t 1 . 4 r*T o t vn . 4 nW o 1 1 ' - » lit 1 t it »«--.. info fc a r- * u f» - tnf o _ :•: i *» o t si . 4 nf o 5CU * i lit i «■ * „ * n <= *» D|Calc |P|g j » o 1 G 1 9 1 cnl cei si & 1 * i /I s i 3 i - i - i ummsuxB Figure 2. With Steve Tlbbett's PublicScreenX, you can create public screens and "shanghai" Workbench applications to them. Here, the PSX Screen Manager, a Shell window, and the Calculator have all been opened on a low-res, interlaced public screen. The third way in which a program can make its mark on the Workbench is through the use of AppMenus. Phis new facility allows a program to insert one or more menu items on the Workbench Tools menu. AppMenus have spawned a large number of freely-distributable tool-menu man- agers, including AddTools, ToolsX, and Tool- Menu, all of which allow you to list your favorite programs as menu items and to start them right from the Workbench menu. My favorite, though, is Stefan Becker's Tool- Manager (Fred Fish #551), which uses all three of the "App" features (see Figure 1). Its configuration window uses an AppWindow, so you can add pro- grams to the menu bar simply by dragging their icons onto the list. It also lets you create an App- lcon for any program. This means, for instance, that you can make an Applcon out of the Print- Files program and print an}- text by dragging its icon over the picture of the printer. Using Recolor, you can change the colors of mul- tiple icons by shift-selecting them and choosing a menu item, instead of dragging them all to the App- Window, When you run ProWrite 3.2, for example, n adds an item to the menu bar that lets you Rip di- rect ly to the ProWrite screen. Going Public One new 2.0 feature that you will probably hear a lot more about in the future is the "public screen." Kick- start 1 .3 allows for only two types of screens, the Work- bench screen and custom screens. Many different pro- grams can open their windows on the Workbench screen at the same lime, but they all have to accepi the graphics mode, resolution, and number of colors of that screen. Custom screens let the program choose the mode, resolution, and number of colors — but only one program can open its windows on that screen. Kickstarl 2*0 introduces a new type of screen, the public screen, that extends the usefulness of custom screens beyond such limitations. You can use public screens like custom screens that allow other applica- tions to open "visitor" windows on them. Visitor win- dows might include such utilities as color-palette ad- 44 May 1992 W R K B K IV C II 2 . - P A R T 1 I justers, magnifier windows, clipboard managers, or any one of a dozen other "parasite" programs. You can also use public screens to create multiple Workbench screens. By setting a special "Shanghai" Hag, you can force Workbench applications to open instead on your public screen (hence the term "shanghai," as in "force or trick into captivity"). Not many applications use public screens as yet. Pro Write 3.2 does open a public screen named "PrbWrite," and you can also get the program to open on a named public screen by adding a ToolType to the program icon. The best way to experiment with public screens is to pick up a copy of Steve Tibbett's Public- ScreenX program (Fred Fish #483). It allows you to open new public screens of varying modes and resolu- tions, and then to "shanghai" Workbench applications to those screens (see Figure 2). Kickstart 2.0 also provides some new shared pro- grain libraries that make it easier for developers to follow the recommended Amiga style guidelines. Al- (hough these libraries may not result in many new applications-program features, they should make some of the standard features more common and their implementation more uniform. For example, the ASL library makes it easier to use the standard file and font requesters. 'The result is that nearly all of the Workbench programs — includ- ing the Preference editors, IconEdit, the More L'til- ity, and even Ed, the CLI text editor — present file re- questers that allow the user to select the file to save or load. Some programs, such as Pro Write 3.2, even allow you to substitute the standard AS I. file re- quester for their own. Another new shared library, the Gad'IboIs libra jy, makes it simple to create sophisticated gadgets and menus that respond appropriately when the user changes the default system font to something other than Topaz 8, Art Department Professional 2 ($299, ASDG) uses these tools to create a chooser window thai allows 2.0 users to select multiple-choice options from a list, rather than toggling through them one at a time (see Figure 3). Devices for Your Desires Some of the familiar AmigaDOS devices have been en- hanced for the 2.0 release. The console device is now font -independent. This means you can employ just about any font with applications that use a console window for text display, such as the Shell and the sys- tem text editors. New console windows wait for a click on the close gadget, which makes them much more useful for displaying the output of CLI-only programs that you can now run from the new Workbench. The clipboard device, which was designed so you could exchange IFF text and graphics data between ap- plications, has been enhanced to be more suitable for that purpose. Console windows now use the clipboard for copy-and-paste operations, which makes it possible to copy text from a Shell window into an Ed edit win- dow (see Figure 4, top) or into the window of any other application — such as Final Copy (S99.95, Softwood) or the freely distributable TurboText and VLT — that uses the clipboard for cut-and-paste procedures. I hope oth- er programs will follow suit, thus helping to expand the clipboard into an exchange medium that supports dy- namic updating. I Save j npply_Map Blur Colorize ! Convolve Crop„Inage Crop_V isua I ] DCTV Def ine_Px i_flspect IDelnterlace ! Dynanic_ftange Co lor_To_Gray Connands Save Replc ReDisplay Separate about Exit MRU F^? Screen Controls Hi Res 'Overscan NTSC I Lace lOscan Figure 3. When you run ASDG's Art Department Professional 2 from Kickstart 2.0, the program presents you with a chooser window In- stead of making you toggle through multiple-choice options. Another AmigaDOS device receiving a facelift in 2.0 is the narrator feature, which you use to produce synthesized speech. The new narrator speech model is more complex than the old one, providing many more controls thai allow you to produce more inter- esting and natural-sounding speech. These include an enthusiasm control that makes the voice sound more or less "excited," a perturb control that can make the voice i4 shaky/ ! and an articulation control that lets you adjust the speech from sharp ami de- liberate to slurred. Other controls allow you to make the speech sound th roa tier or more nasal, or even to change the way vow- els are pronounced in order to create regional accents. The only program that currently allows you to experi- ment with these narrative improvements, however, is the freely-distributable SpeechToy2 by Chris Dcmiris (see Figure 4, bottom). ^ Amiga World 45 W R R B E X C H P \ R T I I The Compugraphic outline-font technology 7 in- troduced in Workbench 2.0 mainly provides support lor screen fonts, bin the technology will certainly produce soil ware thai provides smooth-looking text of almost any size. ProWrite 8.2 is the first program to use the Corapu- graphic system- 1 out support for printing, but others are sure to follow suit — particularly as Com- modore enhances its program- ming support. Another font change users will be happy to see is thai the system now recognizes Col- orFonts, such as the popular Kara Fonts (Kara Computer Graphics), which provide tex- tured or metallic-looking char- acters. DeluxePaint IV ($ 1 79.95, Electronic Art a) users will no longer have to run the ColorFonls support program in order to make use of these fonts. Hardware Helpers Finally, 2.0 provides software support for a wide variety of optional hardware. Programs can open custom screens in Productivity or SuperHires modes on ma- chines thai have K(,S (Enhanced Chip Set) Agnus and Denise chips. So far, Pro Write 3.2 is the only piece of productivity software to take advantage of this option. On the video side — which is what SuperHires was de- signed for — Broadcast Titler 2 ($389.95, InnoVision Technology) is the first program we are aware of to sup- port that mode's 1472x480 display. The ECS chip set also oilers new genlock modes that allow you to replace color registers other than zero with video, but so far we have not seen any soft- ware developed to control this nvw capability. Even ML. _ f *i Figure 4. Enhanced 2.0 support for the clipboard device makes it possible to copy a directory listing from a Shell window and paste it to the Ed text editor (top). Similarly, additional support for the narrator device will allow you to use such programs as Chris D em iris' Speech - toy 2.0 to try out new synthesized speech options (bottom). if you do not have the ECS Denise chip, the ECS Ag- nus allows you to switch from NTSC (the I'S display standard) to PAL (the European standard) under software control; most 1084 or multiscan mon- itors can be adjusted to display cither for- mat correctly. It is possible to control the Work- bench screen from the Screen Mode Preference editor, but it is up to the individual applications to control their custom screens. AD Pro 2 will open a PAL screen if you request that dis- play mode, and the freely-dis- tributable AmigaToPAL and AmigaToNTSC programs by Nico Francois {Fred Fish #57:")) will "trick" any application into opening its custom screen in the desired mode. This makes it much easier to use European software in the US, and vice versa. Kicksiart 2.0 also provides support for the 68040 processor, the fastest chip in the Motorola 68000 family. As this processor becomes more common, 2.0 will help Amiga users to run their programs faster than ever before. Much More To Come While we have already begun to see the appear- ance of software with features that would not be pos- sible without 2.(rs programming support, there are manv new, powerful functions that are still untapped. For example, Intuition now pros ides support for Menu Help, a feature by which the user can receive an explanation of a program option by holding down the Help key while selecting the menu item for that option. While there are not many programs using Menu Help yet, it is likely to become a widespread feature in the future. Another relatively unexplored attribute is 2.0's support for scrolling screens that are larger than the display. Such screens would let desktop-publishing applications update a whole page at a time, rather than building a small pari of the display based on which portion is currently showing. This feature re- quires a lot of chip memory; but makes it quite easy to build and display large bitmaps such as those re- quired for a fax program. A further "hidden" capability of 2A) is support for co- operative record locking, which prevents (wo users from changing the same portion of a database simul- taneously This should inspire the llrst true networking applications for the .Amiga. So, although 2.0 has been a long time coining for most of us, it will still be some time before its full im- pact is felt. Only in the weeks and months ahead will Amiga users really discover all of the ways in which it can improve both our operating environment and our applications. ■ Sheldon Lt>e man. a well-respected authority on virtually even aspect of the Amiga, is currently writing a hook on Workbench 2 for Compute! Books. When he is not writing for computer magazines, you can find him working at Slipped Disk, a Michigan-based Amiga dealer. 46 May 1992 AOureForThe Colorblind Toaster. ?*^ *=*■'* ', "■ - ; -*" a W» It's the new TSG Software with more than 30 industry stan- <^ E: 1 DPS PERSONAL dard test signals for display with your Video *? -13= V-SCOPE^eard. Toaster, Buffered video - f ^oiv«3*' *■*•'■ (fit § The world's output. Dedicated full-time first waveform output and superimpose monitor and vectorseope for desktop video. A output. Hardware rastcrizer perfect companion for your Video Toaster;' 1 our with electronically generated PERSONAL V-SCOPE lets graticule scales. And more. you superimpose a digitally All compatible with AMIGA* I synthesized waveform and IBM PC® Use the DPS monitor and vectorseope on PERSONAL V-SGOPE by any video signal. So now itself or combine with our PERSONAL TBC II you can precisely measure . . mm ^ card for a fully integrated video processing, video levels and test for ;ii;S!§|i manipulating and monitoring system. Best of true colors. We even all, it shows your true colors just for a little include PERSONAL ' : : :•■■'' green. Only g995. Actual Monitor Photos DIGITAL PROCESSING SYSTEMS INC. Circle 171 on Reader Service card. if you want to look your best 55 Nugget Avenue, Unit 10 • Scarborough, Ontario MIS L31 Canada • (416) 754-8090 Fax: (416) 754-7046 11 Spiral Drive • Florence, Kentucky 41042 * (606)371-5533 Fax: (606)371 3729 Video Toiler * is a registered trademark of NewTek Incorporated. PC' is a registered trademark of IBM Corp. AMIGA' is a registered trademark of Commodore-Am ilia Inc DPS PhttSC )SAL V-SCOPE'" is a trademark of Digital Processing Systems. Inc. DPS PERSONAL TBC * is a registered trademark of Digital Processing Systems. Inc. ACCENT ON MTlJilW #39 ♦ A continuing series of tips, techniques, and tricks for creating more imaginative Amiga graphics. By Joel Hagen Starfields and Asteroids THE ANIMATED STARFIELDS wc see as tlie "Enterprise" plies the spaceways may not be astronomically plausible, but they sure look great, This month's "Accent" outlines sonic easy tricks to get you up \o warp 7 without busting your asteroid. Seeing Stars To try the animated star field, work in DeluxePaint (Electronic Arts) in a 32-color mode. Set up a palette with a smooth sequence comprising all 16 gray levels from black to white. Establish thai as range I. If you arc- using D Paint IV, make sure thai the range begins on the first position of the Range bar and that each succes- sive position is filled with the next gray value in the sequence as shown in the illustration accompanying this column. On screen, sci up the black sky — which can be anything from a full overscan black screen to a black win- dow in an imaginary control panel. Next, select the straight-line tool with the right mouse button. This brings up the Spacing requester. If you are new to DPaint, this is one of (he most under- used features of the program, and the starfield is a greal first exercise in which to try it out. The Spacing requester has four options: N Total, Every Nth Dot, Air- brush, and Continuous. The last of these is the default selection, and it simply draws in a continuous unbroken line with the current brush. Remember that the Spacing requester aliens all the line tools except dotted and free- hand. Vour settings will apply to straight or cuived lines, unfilled circles, rectangles, ellipses, and polygons. Of the other options. Airbrush draws the line with the current brush, using the airbrush at its current spray dia- meter. Every Nth Dot draws a line by placing one copy of die current brush at regular intervals along the path of the line. You define the interval by entering a number in the requester. N Total places a defined number of copies of' the brush along the path of the line. If you enter 8 and draw a line, eight brushes will be evenly spaced along that line no matter how long or short it is. For this exercise, select N Total and enter 1 f>, the number of colors from our range. As a test, select white from the range as a foreground color and draw a straight line with a single-pixel brush. You should see a line of 16 dots. Now select Cycle from the Mode menu, and draw a straight line again. This time you should see a sequence of evenly spaced dots ranging from black to white as shown in the illustration. Undo or erase the test lines and select Frames Set # from the Anim menu. For reasons that will become apparent, I find it most effective to create a num- ber of frames greater than N Total that has no divisor in common with N lb- tal. Try 25 frames. On frame 1, position the single- pixel brush roughly in the center of the sky, hold down the Animpainting key, drag a line to the edge of the sky, and release the mouse button. You should see stars painted one by one on 16 successive frames, black in the "distant" center and growing bright at the edge. If the stars start white and grow darker, return to the Range tool and reverse the range. Hit the 4 key to loop the animation, and you will see a convincing anima- tion of a star zooming out of the distance past your screen. Now build up multiple stars by re- pealing the line from the center toward different points at the edge of the screen. Do not return to frame 1 for each line; simply begin on any frame you end up on. Because you made the frame count an odd number greater than N Total, each slat begins moving on a different frame, adding to the 48 May 1992 Create your own "Star Trek" special effects with these simple DPaint animation techniques. natural feci of the animation. After making ten or twenty star paths, hit the 4 key to see the result. The feeling of motion is quite convincing, en- hanced by til e growing brilliance of the stars as they near the viewing plane. And Now for a Different Spin . . . This animation can stand alone or provide a backdrop for other objects, titles, or animbrushes. It serves as a great background for a ray-traced spacecraft or rotating planet. One of my favorite things to add to a starfield is an asteroid with compound rotation. The illustration shows the stages in- volved in creating such an object, for more detail on making a spinning planet, consult my planet-building article ("Around the World in 80 Frames," Oct. '91, p. 39) or read the tutorial on page 177 of the DPaint IV manual. This project is a more complex ex- tension of that idea. Bi icily, create a map of the surface of the asteroid that is two squares wide, 100x200, 80x160, or whatever, lb paint craters, I use the airbrush in Shade mode, with a range like the one shown in the illustration. Set up 25 blank frames to match the frame count of the starfield animation. Use the Move requester to move the map across the screen an x-axis dis- tance equal to the map width. Repeat that move with the map following itself to make a smooth, seamless scroll. Using Animbrusli/Pickup, grab exactly half of the area of the moving map — one square. To create the compound tumbling effect, clear the animation frames and draw a rough -con ton red, tilled -free- hand asteroid shape in a solid color, like the red shape in the illustration. Pick it up as a brush and, with the Move requester, rotate it 360 degrees on the z-axis over 25 frames. Now set the Fill Type to Wrap and select Anim- brush/Use. Mold down the Animpaint- ing key and execute an Anim-Fill on the rotating shape with the map anim- brush. Note that Anim-Fills are possi- ble only with DPaint version 3.21 or higher. Play the loop to see the aster- oid in motion. The illustration shows three succes- sive frames out of 25. The eye is fooled by the detail of the rotating map into seeing a rough, solid object rotating on its y-axis. Unless your shape was ex- tremely irregular, the /-axis rotation is no longer noticeable. Plant this aster- oid in your starfield for an interesting effect, or use the Move requester to add a motion path guaranteed to make any Trekker duck! ■ Joel Hagen's credits include work in art, astronomy, science fiction,, and software development. Write to him at 10512 Sawyer, Oakdale, CA 9536 L Please include a stamped, self-addressed envelope for a reply. "Asteroid and Stars" (above) shows color ranges and the stages in creating an animated starfield and an asteroid that uses compound rotation. AmigaWortd 49 Crispy Clips with Traveling Mattes With all the 24 -bit advancements of the past year, who'd have thought that a simple black-and-white graphic would be your ticket to high-end video effects ? By Mark Swain ONE OF THE tricks to using comput- er imagery in video post-production is mastering the crispy luminance clip. This means to cleanly paste a comput- er graphic (title, image, animation) over another video source. Yes, a gen- lock accomplishes this task, but not with a luminance key. Genlocks simply remove color register zero and replace it with another video source, thus limit- ing a genlock to the .Amiga's basic resolutions and color palettes. When you use 24-bit graphics or single-framed (24-bit) animations over live video, they become video sources, not computer sources. In cases like this, the basic Amiga genlock will not work; you need a luminance keying device, which removes either the brightest or the darkest part of a video source. So, with a graphic containing while text on a The cleanly composited space and space-sta- tion scene created from Fig- ures 1 , 2, and 3. black background, you could replace the black or white with another video source. The problem in luminance keying arises when the graphic to be keyed lias both light and dark properties. For example, take a 3-D ball that is lit with a spotlight on the upper-right side. The rendered 3-D ball would contain a very bright spot on the upper right, but be very dark on the lower left, making it nearly impossible to achieve the crispy edge or luminance dip that you need lor the production, The solution is to tise a traveling matte. Also known as alpha channels, key-holes, stencils, and matte fills, traveling mattes serve one very useful purpose — crispy luminance keys. A traveling matte works by using a black- and-white silhouette of the computer imagety to cut a hole in the back- ground video source. You 111! the hole with the detailed version of the graph- ic. The final result is a cleanly compos- ited image that gives the overlayed graphic crisp edges. Crispy Matte Creations The first step in creating the traveling- matte effect is to generate the graphics to be over laved. You can use a 2-D or 3-D graphics package, but always keep the background plate in mind. When placing your images, determine whai works best with the background video. Animations that need to match live- action background movements can be troublesome. Consider; for example, the combination of a live-action back- ground of a distant purple planet and a few stars (created by panning a camera over a painting or photograph) and a 3-D space station that orbits the myste- rious planet. The background pans from the right, leaving the planet in the screen's lower-left corner, and the space-station animation should match this motion as closely as possible. To accomplish this, grab two or three frames of the background at different stages of the live footage to tise as a reference in the animation package. If you use the reference frames as back- grounds for key-frame positions of the animation, you can easily place the space-station object in the proper per- spective and location. Once you set the key frames, surfaces, and lights, and save the scene, remove the backgrounds and render the space station on solid black. Finally, single-frame the anima- tion to videotape, You can create a traveling matte for a 3-D environment by simply rrrodi lying *■ 50 May 1992 All photographs me of actual DCTV screens. Now Available in PAL The Future Is Here! A Paint, digitize and display beautiful fail color campasite video images on any Amiga f A Capture an image in 10 seconds from any color video camera. (Also works with still video cameras, video disk and still frame capable VCR's.) A Convert DCTV" images to or from any IFF display format (including HAM and 24 bit). A Full-featured paint, digitize and conversion software are included, DCRT is a complete system, right out of the box! A Create spectacular 3D images and animations. Compatible with all popular 3D programs. $495 Klin, I Meg. required 3-5 Meg. recommended ^ DIGITAL Telephone 91 6/344-4825 FAX 91 6/635-0475 Digitize and process full color composite video images in millions of colors. Sophisticated true color video paint, digitizing and image processing soft- ware ore all combined into one easy to use package. Create beautiful full color video images with all popular Amiga 3D programs. Animate video quality DCTV images in real time using popular Amiga animation creation tools. DCTV (Digital Composite Television) is a revolutionary new compressed video display and digitizing system for the Amiga. Using the Amiga as a com- pressed video buffer, DCTV creates a full color composite video display with all the color and resolution of television. Cirde 16 on Reader Service card. VIDEO SUITE your finished 3-D scene. First, remove all texture maps or surface details that you added to the original animation. Then change each of die surface colors to white (255 in each of the RGB sliders). The matte should contain only black and white, so you must turn off the object's shading. Of the three basic ways to do this, choose the one that works best for your 3-D animation program; Method I: Remove all lights from the scene. In LightWave (NewTek), change the first light's intensity to zero. Next, increase Ambient light to 100 percent. Method 2: Remove all lights, as above. Turn on LightWave's Luminous func- tion or Imagined (Impulse) Bright function for all surfaces. The Luminous and Bright functions cause the object always to be the surface color, white. Method 3: Change the Diffuse value for all surfaces to zero percent. Then turn on the Luminous or the Bright function as described above. Finally, make sure the animation will be rendering on a black background. With the changes complete, test-render a few frames to make sure you get a crisp black-and-white traveling matte. Now, render it, save all frames, and single- frame the traveling matte to tape. Edit Points With your three video-tape sources in hand, head to the editing room to as- semble them into a composited anima- tion. To accomplish a traveling matte in which all three video sources are live or moving (as in our example), you need a video-tape recorder for each source, another to record the final composite, and a switcher. Your first step is to con- nect the \TRs and switcher. Start with source A, the background, on the pro- gram bus. To cut the hole in the back- ground source, input source B, the traveling matte, to the external keying portion of the switcher. Feed the final source, the detailed 3-1) animation, into the matte-fill section of the switcher. Editing all of these sources is fairly easy. Using a computerized editor that controls all four VTRs, you do little more than synchronize the traveling matte, the animation, and the back- ground. The alignment of the matte and the animation must be frame- accurate, however, or you'll Hub the effect. In the final result, the traveling matte cuts a hole in the background that the detailed animation then fills. This example, with four VTRs, is, of course, an extreme case. One way to cut down on the amount of equipment is to use a D2 recorder or a digital disk recorder (DDR). D2 recorders have the ability to record and play at the same time: You could play the background on the D2 and record the final com- posited video over the original back- ground. The obvious problem with this method is that you erase the master background video source. DDRs are similar beasts: You could record the background to side A of the disc: and the final composited video to side B. This method has the advantage of not erasing anything in the process. A third way to cut down the number of high- ticket items required is to make one or two of the sources still. For exam- ple, you could freeze the background on a still store or time-base corrector and composite it with an animated traveling matte. Or, the matte could be a still logo over a live background. .Another ultra high-end method is to composite with a DDR and a Video Toaster (NeuTek). DDRs are very ex- pensive (S30-180K), but if one is within your reach, this is a nifty compositing idea. The recorder accepts both video- source and alpha-channel (traveling matte) input The Toaster can otitput two signals— program and preview Thus, if the program bus outputs an animation frame, and the preview bus outputs the matte, then you can com- posite the computer imagery veiy clean- ly with a background video source on the DDR. This method also eliminates the need to single-frame both the ani- mation and the traveling matte before compositing. The process composites and single-frames all of the imagery in a single pass — no VTRs and no editing. The process is very manual, however. You must load each frame of the ani- mation and the traveling matte, and operate the recorder manually. The only way to automate this process is to save all of the frames (animation and matte) in LightWave as framestores and to sequentially load them into the Toaster's switcher, using a clever ARexx script. The script should allow you to load the next frames into the correct busses by pressing a key, leaving only the DDR on manual operation. Crispy Toaster Cups The Video Toaster is (he perfect device for demonstrating the effects of a simple traveling matte. First, create the image and the matte in LightWave. Start by entering LightWave with a click of the 3- D button in the Toaster's switcher. Next, select the Object menu and load the urn from die phonebook. The default posi- tions of the object and camera are fine, but you should adjust the light. Move it to the urn's far left or right, creating a dramatic effect, with one side of the urn lit and the other dim. Next, select the Camera menu and turn off Overscan, switch on Letterbox, and select the Anti alias rendering mode. If you wish, you can alter the surface characteristics of the urn before rendering. The final step in LightWave is to click the render button and wait. When the urn is finished, return to the Scene menu and click Enter Switcher. *- Figure 1. The space background plate, which is set on the Video Toaster's program bus. Figure 2. The overlay image of the space station, which is set on the Video Toast- er's overlay bus or the key-fill portion of most switchers. Figure 3. The black-and-white traveling matte of the space station, which is set on the Toaster's preview bus or the external-key portion of most switchers. 52 May 1992 Go From Musical mess iRNiGHT Success VJ1TH The „oild of music* you" '">< • "Ke'toSeKd j : i chords. >ki*ji.»lW : \ sgggasss s withS rS- s "vo»St - a multi-voiced music ™ . ntsatonce*N°addi : you can invent and edit yo u • effects using Super) am- » V : Sound editor. lfy ouownanyMiDKom e s - T&U1 directly into BAlS^c ' * bi iramsatonce! ^ SuperJAM! comes com Piete with everything vo U ' : P«no. bass. gS 3r f as : to create , „. " and drum s - ■ ^caj mente , s „^ r Create rhythmic and melodic patterns easily. - resign sionals alike; _MAJORFEATaRES "vices and profes- orkeyb«; d /lnMraCO " (ro "«iby n '^ ch ^We musical styles : 'One-touch chord play™ Bementsand : S^^^IK^ ins,n ""ent • •S£st^:T , v indedi «"g - : • :fetl ed P !! ingandr ^ r : •MiD7co^ibl^ ta&s ^^ ■' ; •S^'ironizationwithl^Hin . : ^ 3 pp\i a ucn S m&maki - : ;ARen compatible ■T-fe^^^PecialVdesi^ X * and muc ; Workbench LforTo"""" *' meg of memory * Amiga 500.1000.2000.2500.3000 < mem oa-JSiT A M,t " tetra- See, hear and touch your music. -J, la.yBaaiMi^-Bnapf*.) [iiyni |-.W- 1 |^« "£» "LLfL, 1 5i' If «i | : o|.m ri";|-^l n| aaEnBRK:ii? x: Integrate SuperJAM! seamlessly into BARS&PlPES Professional's m\m 1293 BRIARDALE LANE NE ATLANTA, GEORGIA USA TEL: 404-377-1514 FAX-. 404-377-2277 THE BLUE RIBBON SOUNDWORKS LTD 72 on Reader Service card VIDEO SUITE In the switcher, select DV1 on both the preview and program busses and save the new image as a frames tore. To create the black-and-white matte version of the image in LightWave, you simply tweak the lights and the surface characteristics. First, return to Light- Wave from the switcher and enter the Surface menu. The matte image should have no shading, so change the diffuse value to zero percent, Next, change all surfaces to white. You should select the Luminous button for each of the named surfaces. Finally, click the Render button to create the matte image. Return to the switcher and save the matte as a frames tore. To use the matte effect, load the image of the urn to DV1 and the matte image to DV2. Instead of using live video for this project (which takes too much time), enter the Preferences menu and select Video Snow as the back- ground generator. Return to the switch- er and select bank D of the effects grid. The Toaster effect that makes the travel- ing matte possible is the Art Card crou- ton (the keyhole icon). This effect ac- cepts three video sources, the back- ground plate on the program bus, the sou ice image on the overlay bus, and the traveling matte on the preview bus. To set up the project, select the Art Card effect, set the preview bus to DV2, the program bus to BKG (Background — or Live Video if you wish), and Overlay to DVT. Next, click on the scissors icon to select luminance keying for black. Finally, set the clip level under the scis- sors icon. The best level that I obtained was between 30 and 45 (depends on image luminance). Once tweaked to perfection, die urn is cleanly clipped over the video-snow background. More Marvelous Mattes You can use crispy Toaster clips for a number of other sensational special effects. One of the most obvious matte effects is to generate black-and-white text with the character generator or LightWave, and then fill it with a video- source or graphic texture. You could also try painting the matte in Toaster- Paint or other 24 -bit paint programs. For example, suppose that in your next feature video, a scene calls for the back window of your home to overlook an oceanside vista — but you live in the Midwest. No problem for the Toaster matte: First lock down the camera and frame the window scene. Freeze- frame the scene and save it as a frames tore. Load the window scene into Toaster- Paint and paint the glass parts of the window a solid white. Next, remove everything in the scene but the freshly painted glass. The final result in Toast- er Paint shoti Id be a black-and-white matte, with the white parts in the exact positions of the glass panes of the window in the live-action scene. Return to the switcher and set up the Art Card effect as described above, with the window matte on the preview bus. The final step is to find video footage of an ocean vista and set the clip. Your prop- erty value just skyrocketed! ■ Mark Swam is a California-based freelance writer who does video post-production and computer animation. Write to him c/o Amiga World Editorial 80 Elm St., Peter- borough, NH 03458. Get Even More From Your DeluxePaint™ IV With the DeluxePaint IV Video Guide, you will be taken through many of D Paint's features in- cluding the new Menu Structure, Metamorphosis, HAM color mode, the new Gradients and Cycle requesters, the advanced Palette Mixer and much, much more! Many examples are shown in any easy to follow, step-by-step fashion. Wh ether you are a new user, or a seasoned professional, you will be easily shown how to best utilize DPaint IV's features and tools to fulfill your specific graphic and animation needs. Two different 60 minute VHS videos to choose from! Exclusive AmigaWorid Offer! ORDER NOW! 1-800-824-5499 or 41 0-543-1 989 Only $24.95 each Or complete set for $39.95 For shipping and handling, please add $2.95 for one video or add $3.95 for both. CA residents add 7.25% tax. Canadian orders add 7% GST. Please mail to: ^ 1 TechMedia Video P0 Box 2151 ♦ Salisbury, MD 21802 DeluxePaint is a registered trademark of Electronic Arts. DeluxePaint IV Video Guide and Advanced Techniques with DeluxePaint IV are products of Saddleback Graphics. 6E2DP Advanced Techniques with DeluxePaint IV will show you many lips and tricks for com- bining DPaint's different lools to achieve spectacular effects with professional results. You will be shown how you can create effects such as 3D text, drop shadows, tex- tures, color cycle animation, pro- fessional titling techniques and much more. The various examples dem- onstrated will be helpful guides for anyone creating video graphics, multimedia presenta- tions, or just wanting to learn more about DPaint IV. 54 May J 992 It Takes An Art Department With Connections LLYWOOD Sure, talent and good looks help, but in the real world, you've got to have connections. This is true whether you want to star in pictures or just manipulate them, Using Art Department Professional (ADPro) you can connect to just about any type of color input or output device such as video digitizers (PP&S and CVP), color scanners (Sharp, EPSON and others), film recorders (Polaroid and LaserCraphics), display boards (Impulse, GVP, Digital Ain«S a *«*2E? pro^s s\ona\ ••: -@ Over 400 Male and Female Pedestrians With Individual Characteristics. Some Nice, Some Nasty. Amiga screens shown. Pictures of the actual TV series have been used with permission from MTM Production. Available for A500, A1000, A2000, A2500, A3000 and other computer formats. Retail Price: $39.95. Visit your software retailer or call toll-free 1-800-783-8023 to order. ^Software 1916 Twisting Lane Wesley Chapel, Florida 33543 (813)973-7733 G A M E PRESERVE completely dispenses with the unwieldy interfaces too often found on computer war games, offering instead a slick, joystick-only system of movement and combat, and even such niceties as repairs, information gather- ing, and strategic viewing. Those who regularly play SSI -style war games will find Battle Isle lacking some options, but in the end, these options aren't really missed at all. In Battle Isle, you are in control of one force while your opponent or the com- puter controls the other. Your goal in each mission is either to destroy all enemy forces or — and this is more fun — to capture the oppos- ing headquarters building. You play through a series of 32 missions, and you have to win each one in turn to progress to the next. Appar- ently there are two bonus missions as well, but I'm stuck in mission #22 and have yet to see them. UBI Soft promises add-on mis- sions as well. The strength of the sys- tem of missions is that it effortlessly succeeds in intro- ducing you to an ever- in- creasing complexity. Each mission takes place on a unique map, and most of them include a type of unit that you have neither con- Test your tactics in Battle Isle. trolled nor opposed hereto- fore. As you move through a mission, you gradually learn how to fight with the new elements of your land, air, and naval forces, until, in the final missions, you must concern yourself with all of them at once. The game itself is entirely joystick-controlled. Each map is divided into hexagons, and the joystick moves the cursor from one hexagon to anoth- er. When the cursor is on a hexagon containing an ene- my piece, you can find out what it is, but not much more. When it's on one of your own units, you can perform one of several ac- tions. By holding down the firebutton and moving the joystick up, down, left, and right, the cursor icon changes to signify 1 each possi- bility. When you finally have the icon you need, release the button to perform the action. One final strength of the game is that each stage of Battle Isle plays quickly and equally well against the computer or a human oppo- nent. This is a superb late- night strategy game, with a very worthwhile system. You'll want to install this one on your hard disk. Everything Battle Isle does right, Fireteam 2200 seems to do wrong. First of all, the main battle display offers some of the worst graphics to appear on an Amiga game. Not only are they unattractive, they're also counter-productive. Figuring out where your units are is tough enough; trying to decipher which way they're facing and what kind of terrain they're in is next to impossible. The game's interface isn't much better. Its keyboard - only control is both unwel- come and downright diffi- cult to use, and it takes an inordinate amount of time to learn how to perform crucial actions. Moreover, the computer updates the battlefield every six seconds, and during the updates (which themselves take a few seconds), you will find your- self hitting the keyboard futilely. What is good is the game's premise and wealth of detail. Only the most dedicated gamers (who have one megabyte of RAM) are going to bother playing this thing for long, however, and then only if financial restraints mean they can buy no new games for a long while. Fireteam 2200 would be marginally acceptable on an old IBM-PC; on an Amiga, it's not worth the effort it takes to load it. Thunderhawk By Jeff James You lake the controls of a high-tech helicopter gun- ship for some frantic target- busting action in Thunder- hawk (Virgin Games, $49.99). You're not just any average helicopter jockey, however; you're an agent for MER- LIN, a secret military orga- nization commissioned by the United Nations. Your job is to fly to world hot spots and bring the irksome troublemakers to justice in this engaging mixture of arcade, role- playing, and strategic elements. You start in the common room. From this location you can fly a flight simulator, view your combat awards, save and load games, or be briefed on your forthcoming mission. The war room supplies the strategic ele- ment: You have six theaters of war to choose from, in- cluding the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Central America. In the briefing room you're warned about the threats that you ma)' meet in the combat area, usually consisting of SAMs, MIGs, and antiaircraft fire. Complete with a flicker- ing black-and-white film of die target area and a curmud- geonly commanding officer, the briefings are a nice realis- tic touch, Next, you select your weaponry, then take off from your airbase, which is usual- ly near the target. In the air, Thunderhawk is a marvel. The frame rate is easily one of the fastest I've seen on the .Amiga, with the land- scape smoothly gliding under your craft. Granted, most of the landscape is rather bare (usually only a few hills, buildings, and such), but it's still a joy to fly over it. Controls are simple: All the flying, target, and weapon selection is done with the mouse, while the *■ 60 May 1992 THIS OPPONENT IS PROGRAMMED TO BE CHALLENGING. If you think youVe good at games, then let's have some real fun. When youVe online with GEnie^ Multi-Player Games, you're playing real people, in real time. Some of the best players around the world. □ Splash a bandit in Air Warrior®, and you've just taken out eight other guys, who'll be back gunning for you. Blast a MechWarrior* in Multi Player BattleTech™, and who knows? Could be that jerk from the coast. Could be a mercenary who's looking for a few good friends. □ With GEnie, the possibilities are endless, the AIR WARRIOR uvn I nuLi L corporation-"' MULTIPLAYER BATTLETECH tw people are terrific, and even the prices are competitive. So put some new life into your joystick, and sign on. We'll see just how good you are. □ Sign up now: I . Set your modem for half duplex (local echo) at 300, 1200 or 2400 baud. 2. Dial toll free — 1-800-638-8369. Upon connection, enter HHH 3. At the U # - prompt, enter XTX993I3, Amiga92 then press RETURN 4. Have a major credit card or your checking account number ready, i: For more information in the U.S. or Canada, call 1-800-638-9636. GEnie. multi-player games 100% ORGANIC OPPONENTS STELLAR EMPEROR™ Air Warrior rs a registered trademark and Stellar Emperor is a trademark of Kesmai Corporation. MultiPlayer fcattleTech is a trademark and MechWarrior and BattleTech are registered trademarks of FASA Corporation. Circle 18 on Reader Service card. RGB-Monitors Use It 4 s E G A SUPER N N E E O s G F E A O M SB* For The Dealer Nearest You! EAST COAST WEST COAST _ 615-478-5760 206-882-2009 — Circle 172 on Reader Service card. m— jm± postscript type 1 ^^^^ g^ — 70 fonts 69.95 For PageStream 1 .8 to 2.2 and Professional Page 1 .2 to 3.0 ProStream Plus fonts by Allied Studios BOULMlCtl Arctic q^facfc Qu* ncer y Crillee Playbill tSoooiDrr Borzoi I'wBFflCF GR€€fl CAPS lofuqibonrq S1®W1©*1 POST C&YPT Upsilon 60 display/headline fonts - 10 dingbat fonts Send check or money order - Call for COD Specify ProPage or PageStream versions - Add $3.00 for shipping. Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery. For sample printout of all fonts, send $3.00 n-« iaiow MnrlU 1035 Guerrero, San Francisco, CA, 94110 One Way media telephone m 824-8774 GAME P R E S B R V K toggling of night vision and your electronic counter measures (HUM) equipment (chaff, jammers, flares) is controlled by a handful of keys. Thunderhawk has managed to cut back on the overwhelming multitude of keyboard commands that you usually find in many simulators, and this makes for a lean and quick playing experience. After you've pummeled your target into oblivion and limped back to base, you're given the rundown on how well your mission went. Then you're back to the briefing room for your next mission, filled with more challenges and dan- ger. This format roughly continues until youVe ac- complished the missions in all six theaters, earning awards and promotions in the process. I had no end of trouble getting this game to work on my A3000. 1 could only load it when running Kicks tart 1.3, and even then it was prone to strange behavior, such as an unresponsive mouse and scrambled game screens. It did work fine on other Amiga models run- ning AmigaDOS 1.3, al- though it did seem to have problems with the new T Ami- gaDOS 2.04 ROMs found in A500s and A20()0s. Ha ixl -drive installation isn't supported, and the disks are copy protected with disk-based and manual- oriented schemes. The re- quester for saving and load- ing games is another sore spot, seeming rather cum- bersome and awkward to use. Finally, the lengthy opening animation cannot be bypassed — every time you reboot Thunderhawk, you must sit through it. If it sounds as though 1 have mixed feelings towards Thunderhawk, I do. The fast frame rate, simple controls, and well-done briefing sequences are a joy to experience, and the sound is exceptionally well done. Unfortunately, it seems that Thunderhawk was rushed across the At- lantic (it was programmed by Core Design of the U.K.) without thorough testing on North American Amiga hardware. If you have a fairly un- complicated setup (no A300Q, no AmigaDOS 2.0. no hard disk), Thunderhawk could be a blast. As matters stand, it shows a great deal of promise that is unfortu- nately frustrated by a cum- bersome implementation. Corporation By Jeff James A magnificent mixture of a Dungeon-Master-style inter- face with a futuristic, hi-tech game world, Corporation (Virgin Games, S49.99) offers a challenging diver- sion from the hackneyed role-playing norm of ogres and hit-points. In the hard-edged world of the 21 st Century, the malevolent Universal Cyber- netics Corporation (UCC) has begun illegal genetic experiments to create the ultimate killing machine. As a Zodiac agent, you must enter the IB-level headquar- ters of the UCC and return with evidence to prove the research is taking place. Before embarking on your mission, you select a charac- ter from the two robots and four humans (two male and two female) available. You can outfit yourself with an impressive array of equip- ment: five handguns, four 62 May 1992 Circle 159 on Reader Service card. COMPUTER ANIMATION FR >$ 1 49. OCT A OO -1__U.I_(_U.L ,^C7VqJ v(( W V fe For local distributor details Tel: (44) 506 46660 • Take 2 Is compatible with any Amiga. • Supports 2 t 4, 8, 16, 32 and Ham colour modes. • Load and Save IFF Images or D- Paint Anims. • Uses traditional animators Dope sheet layout. Up to 4 levels of animation and 4 channels of sound. Playback at 24 or 25 frames per second. (Real Time) Further manipulate your image within any popular art package • Add "Vidi-Amtga" or The "Complete Colour Solution" to digitise yo drawings or images directly from within Take 2, This will allow you draw with a pencil, its easier than a mouse. . : U-L_L^_^L^_ ~J ur to J _^_L^L_L.l1; -I APPLICATIONS • Traditional animation. • Storyboards • Product presentations. • Home line tester. • Cartoon Productions, both visual and sound. Take 2 is a must for computer artists and enthusiasts of any age. It wilt cater for both amateur and professional applications. So get the most out of your computer and open up your imagination to Take 2. CONTENTS • Comprehensive and easy to folio • Disks • Sample sounds and animations, • Animators Peg Bar (to hold your paper into p< line drawn animations for you to get s AVAILABLE ROMBO PRODUCT AD LIVINGSTON SCO o (0506) 4666 COMMODORE — AMIGA • These Images have been drawn with a pencil, digitised then coloured using D. Paint 3. Fly with the best. Scenery Animator 2*0 Scenery Animator is a 3-D landscape rendering and animation program. You can fly through real- world landscapes from US Geological Surveys (Yosemite and the Grand Canyon included), or explore imaginary fractal landscapes like the one shown above, "...I highly recommend this piece of software. Scenery Animator is a versatile, powerful, and extremely satisfying program that will bring you many hours of enjoyment." Amiga World, December 1991 Scenery Animator 2,0 feature^; * Realistic 3-D trees, clouds, lakes, oceans, and snow * Infinite fractal landscapes * Automatic camera banking * Gradient sky shading * Built-in animation system * 24-bit color and DCTV support * Requires 2 megabytes See it at your local dealer today! Natural Graphics P.O. Box 1963, RockJin CA 95677 Phone (916) 624-1436 Circle 179 en Reader Service card Attention Foreign Computer Stores/ Magazine Dealers You have a large technical audience that speaks English and is in need of the kind of microcomputer information that TechMedia provides, Provide your audience with the magazines they need and make money at the same time. For details on selling AmigaWorld and RUN contact: Linda Greenblatt World Wide Media 115 East 23rd St. New York, NY 10010 (212)420-0588 Telex: 798269 GAME PRESERVE armor types, grenades, power packs, bombs, lock- picks, a backpack computer, a jctpack, and a plethora of other hi-tech gadgetry. Corporation's approach to movement is ingenious; instead of clicking on sepa- rate buttons to move your character, a combined move- ment square allows quick and direct movement Click in the center of the square to stop, at the top to go forward, at the bottom to go backwards, and at the sides to slide sideways. The far- ther you click from the cen- ter of the square, the faster you move. A central view screen showing the action is flanked by two humanoid outlines that display your character's health and your equipment's status. At the bottom of the screen are the controls to click for object manipulation and movement. Graphics are well done, especially the fluid, animat- ed movement of your adver- saries. Monsters don't simply appear or lurch toward you in the jerky gait of a looping animation. Using a method called "bitmap scaling," beasties that move toward you gradually become larger and more distinct, eventually filling your screen with hos- tility. All sons of background sound effects add to the spooky atmosphere. Gam ep I ay is decidedly arduous; within moments of my arrival at UCC head- quarters, I was beset by a horde of energy-spitting robotic spiders. In addition to the bestiary of robotic and artificial life forms that impede your progress, secu- rity cameras, pressure plates, infra-red warning devices, and dozens of other futuris- tic traps and pitfalls are waiting for you. For help, you can access such devices as compute]' terminals, elevator controls, and securi- ty access panels. Corporation requires only 512K of RAM to operate, and although it isn't hard- disk installable, games can be saved to disk. The excel- lent introductory animation refused to work on an A3 000, but the game itself ran fine. With its crisp pre- sentation, challenging gameplay, and intuitive interface, Corporation is a role-playing experience not to be missed. Fmm p. 58. there's a very wide range to the questions therein. Questions about games released when the Amiga had 64K and a cassette drive (just kidding). Questions about things I've already answered — twice. So, I've decided to focus on a current game or two in the hope of helping as many folks as possible at one time. If there's something you'd like to see covered in this fashion, write and say so. If I can, I'll do it. (I've had a few votes for The Immortal and The Jetsons already.) If I can't. ..well, I can always use more firewood (grin). 64 Mm /992 I've also been getting the occa- sional letter from folks who are evi- dentiy playing illegal copies of games. (They're asking questions that either concern copy protection or that indicate they don't have the docs,) Naughty naughty. Coinciden- tally, all these questions have exact- ly the same answer: Put the pirated disk in dfO:, select it with the mouse and choose "initialize" from the Workbench menu. Your computer will solve the problem for you. If you're having trouble with a game — "I can't get the dice into that little slot" — you can write to me at: 25 Belmont Ave., Madison, NJ 07940 or send electronic mail to Peteroo on GEnie and Portal and 74160,3053 on CompuServe, ■ Introducing the NEW 3-PART SERIES. . . From the editors of Amiga World Magazine comes the most definitive series on animation.. . and how to do it yourself! Now, in three easy-to-follow videos, you will leam the history of animation; software and hardware available for / animators and techniques offered by the leaders in the field of animation. How to Animate, Part I covers the various types of software available and their applications such as Deluxe Paint IV. Lightwave and / Imagine. You will learn about the many features o 2D and 3D software and some tools that make thos programs unique. Part I will describe animation utility software; describe what they are and why you should buy them. You will also see artists' renditions using the leading animation software packages. TechMedia Video is pleased to make this exclusive offer BUT HURRY. . . this is available for a limited time only so order now! ftftPt? YES ! I want HOW TO ANIMATE. PARTI. I understand it is offered for only S29.95 plus S2.95 shipping & handling. LEARN ANIMATION SECRETS! Call Toll Free 1-800-824-5499 A0 GA Hurry while supplies last! MasterCard DI/C#VER For shipping & handling please a Canadian orders add 7% GST. California orders add 7.25% tax. Make check or money order payable to: TechMedia Video, PO Box 2 1 5 1 , Salisbury, MD 21802. Available in VHS. Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. TechMedia is the licensed North American distributor of AmigaWorld Videos, Amiga is a registered trademark of Commodore Amiga. Inc. TechMedia v I d E o PO Box 2151. Salisbury. MD 21802 410-543-1989 Also see your local Amiga Dealer for these videos. SJgfa. 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MQJTtnJOTBUa _ HARD DRIVES •ass ptwiaitntaB pnaitjMirttcii quwmwimatrt astro — „_ m» WHTll it ww tea HUB) «Tf ___ «a REMOVABLE MEDIA m. bue Nspeir to ffiaTi! nut jtbot grace *9« sua iTOBTUflTTCSSBK 1ZUB COMMODORE SOFTWARE UK4UB __ 58J5 -&3S -at* COMMODORE REPLACEMENT PARTS _iaw laaWUBIBPFlT. — „~Z31W MHMIEIffUfiaBtT 1BJI COMMODORE ACCESSORIES I1B XTSS SRffiBa #:« AEtf T. — £tii AlQlt ST03E FLBfFT 3JTBi ■ J31& ats® 121a B4w mm ; - , '■;--, 43.es jiaar am-tam brd , zmas 1388 JST StefiEtttO __ — * QUO Bsagsfl-EaSLmiaa mm mimwwtwm j?.ss FOR GVP*S ACCELERATORS SEE OUR GVP FULL PAGE AD PWHTCKSAND F«NT£R SULKIES PRINTERS *»K*5Ptl 1I5JQ „„Mt08 OT2»Eni3*24Hl„ ttfWETSM _«1M lima UJ&jnwiT!TTlHHT«ri P«fTJETPAftlUEPW(e„ ptfi4iiua MHOKM0B PRiNT CARTRIDGES THBI1«t?WH 4&* KflfJET BUCK CWT _________ 16.95 HK£\ FOOT CDTO „_ ptfiTJETi-raopJiret MULTISYNC MONITORS tm immwm _,.,. gum rmmmMtm sjs LASERJET PRINTER CARTRIDGES ntmiflUKTPE mil vmn na%mnmmm-r titJi mfi PM»4HBl2»t-JETri 19UB HBNTCfl ACCESSORIES uuin KItJCMClfMWNIWl l.« PttdJfT CST PIPB -17* WT138M- KHTl»t«LTW«— TJtM INPUT HARDWARE WJOf CT10WS 353.50 ana intra um — _. — „4»ja antmuraiEiii moo ircMiwttTiifTirm mm I-KE» HUM SCANNERS/DIGITIZERS seisonsisBSf- »7BJS EMULATORS IIMIIMUItl HisemiiwrrtTTB) JtTNfHQOlMtKfaUtOTTK) POWER SUPUES -lTttJC -mm ... mm . , H ■ AUDJO/MUSIC lBNflaiaattM„ WOBULtWWIWPUU EEEWH1« „1«JS _BJI -HJ6 -T7J5 MHGOLOKnOfS. w rows awn, __. CHIPS (VARIOUS) esssz-s utn cenee ibsjb 08tt«nwnrc8Pwc mm tumttummmm -~bj« ic Matura fit muom ims a*.. .tuo aHramiai ™»» i£[iaiPinuui2«auoa„ PBKCT S31M 3.H5O0, «0OD „, pwirwiwinwG -41* -3:.9& MODEMS -BJ5 EXPANSION/PORTS eOM« TOTfa . ™. 281,00 apru !46i urr net _ ap«Hamz40ici7Ut~ apBiMttBiaaiito . PAL SPECIFIC HARDWARE rowwwntmwMi — ^.isajoe .ian The Art Department Profession? Art Department Pro gives you the most' powerful image processing system ever offered for the Amiga. Now with JPEG compression and 24- Bit printing : 159 Q! Epson ES-300G Scanner 600 DPI, 24-Bit full page color scanner ...^Baa™ With ASOG Driver Bundle .. *1 073 00 ii PRO(iR€^IV€ P€RIPH€RflU- &/OFTUJRR€ A2000 28mhz '040 s 1685 00 Mercury A3000 with FREE Imagine 2.0 $214900 ProRAM 64mb expansion card for A3000 with 0k ... S 3G9 00 Ultra Design A Great CAD Package at a GREAT price .. s 99 95 DeluxePaint IV The King of Paint and Animation thought icient art!' Il-screen metamorphosis alable fonts ptimized HAM painting modes • improved support for Amiga Dos 2.04 • Palette and range requester ihancements ill easy to use! $ 109< New Version rr Best International freight service and low, low rates via: /liRBORNE EXPRESS MEMOCT EXPANSION RAM CHIPS MOST RAM CHIP SIZES AVAIL AT ECONOMICAL PRICES (CALL) A500 INTERNAL RAM BOARDS B«tB0WJIA5M04H8 bum «ffBlRAM5Wn«S iW A500 EXTERNAL RAM BOARDS WUMM5MKXTW 1J5JM nwnuiminm _ .... tftJl WPMJUMMmiUMB JMH A20Q0 RAM BOARDS $UWMM20W2MBJW_ 171D0 SUPMMIIZBOQWHUW Z4Q.K tfiRUMM2flO0B»BAM —mm wmmtmamsm - mm VIDEO soomoNs (SOFIWARSAND HARDWARE* IMAGE PROCESSING Overnight International Shippin Including Canada as low as $1 Most rates cheaper than Express Mail at the Post Office! 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J9SS UHBOSPTPSRSraMl „„ R95 SPREADSHEET AWWTIS ..„ _ » 119.DQ tUmJJlPlBSVDtO0IZ.D 89.95 PIPfFWINffl Hit „ „ ■ „ mmja-„ — , „_„ e*js DATABASES flMLTHSffitflm? 4MS .59.35 EUPS8AlfPB0niMML< Z«,W WORD PROCESSING DdBiQIEE V9SKW 2 - ... 99.95 aswfis „ „ ■ ■ .. uhlwt urn mmwmm sm PSSCRFF , ... 3££ PMHBTCliJ ..■—-■,, , ..„,... OJKItlNitMROPMCEStSR^^*- — «J5 TRWBVfflfTF -™ 33.95 WHO WJUi WW WftN ,,.„■ 51 Si WffifflPBHCT.. ma wmpnffmtwnr 7M5 HOME/PRODUCTIVITY CTflBSUfMF BH f (!.-; tETFBSSKasm „ — *Ui tttMISl BUS OFRCEeatBWSK isue l^fllGfUaWWl, _ ™, ™57J5 TOf WW -52.85 Now with proc amp control and color balancing ICD The ICD Advantage mUttf™ — '178" PHmal06 |:v _. UM bum video/toaster fonts WMGETOHTBHHTSKn «J5 ■iBina WBTU1TBHHTS ^MJ5 ffHUIONTIIITFflmmi .94J6 CMllUNITlUTFflRTinil MJ5 gold gawfgFMTS turn u.te tD.VDH)FWTtIM«FfZ 64* ._HJB _MJ6 __ WJS HI 5U6 mi intra wntwi— sus IWSTMPKETMUBFWIl BUB GtWHlCSSOFTWAM ANIMAHON SOFTWARE "■Iff 87.95 ■KTiHmMSTpi ~7U5 TSMFfTflOWB 74.9G DCnuuuncAR ^nm ^ii^ijF^ii(i Ltll m? mm m. mem ..45,13 MW ttUTffl FOR UfirtWAW .14* KfHRTMVim ...„.,- .8435 tcset uMimsiu biwdwtw _IS.fi scam imiTsi 6iT» mum — -ia« VBBfiimmmiiM „1lfi mmaenamm* -ffifi FWffffi H .11100 vtsr* i r -I7JS VtSTA FH3FTJHHU 2.0 „ 82-96 VBTI UUHMU WTIBtM - „IIM tSTtFUMWGSffiHIIIZ -Mas ran bum owmuru »2iK VSTItftn»lhlf3IBAri2 ~!t* wii jnmBaMifi i _ M.95 TTfTfl vtxf ^J«*3 Wfi WTimSTTJWilMTIflWl -28J5 H8fIU2- .Cia **Qf.PftE8TBWraH)CUP«1 ,„38J5 wnufsmMtiaAwc um othviibuki people ux tmtxFt mm ■ tauKTBJt* _ KTOFsnuRf iyjumiu _ 4195 _44J5 CAD ftirUMPUBfCHSlKT- ftTSJCat t _44* -SJI -BUS PRO BURS HTPIDUttPM.. PKQKTF1 -99.95 PAJNT/DRAW SOFTWARE BHEMItTFt^ lit* BOSimRI 7M5 8T3 5135 tfl« 189J9 CLIP ART DISKS tumult nxime srsw snua ... FlOmitt 2,1 « sPKraieasR.. GENERAL VIDEO MegAChip 2000/500 *219°° w/o Agnus S2990O wrth Agnus D K DKB 2632 Ram Expansion Now expand your Amiga up to 112 MllltiStarf II „. ...*59 95 megs of 32 Bit memory rf you own Provides for Amiga 500*s & 2000's to the CBM A2632 Accelerator board, operate under Workbench K3 & 2.01 With 4megs *599°° FIVE\^ Supra Corporation Moderns Supra 2400 Baud Modem .....89.95 Supra 2400 MNP Plus 135.00 Supra 2400ZI Plus.. 179.00 Supra FAX Modem *309°° SupraRam 2000 2/8mb Board s 1 7900 This new 9600bps modem has MNP5 and V.42brs, V.32bts error correction and data compression. SupraRam 2000 4mbRAM .240.00 SupraRam 2000 6mbRAM.... 299.00 SupraRam 2000 8mb RAM 379.00 SupraRam RX 1MB 135.00 SupraRam RX 2MB ...199.00 SupraRam 500 512k 47.00 * | Due to industry Jluctuallon. ftAM prices ore igbjecl to change without notice The Kitchen Sync *1 599 00 Two Complete TBC's on one card Works with any video source S-VHS and Hi-8 compatible Optional Y/C output Great Ion use with the Video Toaster Digital Graphics Library SCfEEVH^rW Our Wedding 100 Background Images 24-Bit IFF 40 HAM Images SA095 $yM°5 Prices Effective Apr* 1,1992 Educational, Corporate and Aerospace purchase orders accepted. Call (310) 542-2292 for details. USE OUR TOLL-FREE INTERNATIONAL PHONE LINES Australia 0014-800-125-712 ; Canada 1-800-548-2512; Denmark 0434-0297; France 19-0590-1099; Italy 1678-74086; Japan 0031-1 1 -1351; Netherlands 06-022-8613; Norway 050-12029; Switzerland 046-05-3420; United Kingdom 0800-89- 1 1 78. SOFTWARE net Mr hi maw 17SJQ Ifff? - „,5]ffi TBttJW FBI MAGBM 17S.S9 PAL SPECIFIC VIDEO SOFTWARE »ww«iiiiMiP(ii _m xi. ■! .i.f,-i - '»•*" WPWTSft , J . L. , LL, ^ _LLL ■■- 56 BS lUia^fnpii JIIDO nupr 1 1 vu HM.W WHMl __ 5U5 NtlrVTUUMfltlMl MJ6 ,.. OJB TELECOMMUNICATIONS SOFTWARE XTALIl 4&9S HUD WOT ™__™~ « »J6 p.011 -3S.9G GENERAL fvlUStC SOFTWARE mtmwm- auirumw. DOS TOOLS/UTILITIES UTILITY/MISC. GENERAL UTILITY SOFTWARE BACKUP/COPY SOFTWARE Ml OPUS* ^_ ™^IWB MflSAMRPlI .mm 1I7JS HmuLtttMniot ~-~E,85 unnwwtn _ _B£85 «BflPtM^A STJ6 u/Kmt . BUS blFtFOtTQfll tttt Win -- .. „__a« ■.T1C8PTBTHT- yimuxanwcart ssji fi n upotarwaum fflUMTMIM t I4US UK mMTUriMr III TRfitflt 78J5 TMJtHHSTMO »■ EDITOR/LIBRARIANS tmm 4 pwtju nun evrn — . sus SAMPLING SOLUTIONS uuim . ..mm BRMrmnmiwiEi K.CO PSSBSTSIR 70.86 asemis HMMST. 8*bl — „ 123 JO tnvttfttm .... M.B5 ' ■ *$***«: rr 1ZS.I5 tSSGO mtrnmij , am HOC iUKTwrownr 45J5 smspH 42,95 inECCKumniiHJffm -iKisa WKtwBfftaaw 1ZU0 urn it lift firniMWUt nj6 ciimNiimai . MJQ oiffw unm ».» ■HTffipm TUB rasrrsittfNSf -1RW HSPffBIHSCB ILK K8VHTKUI sue JPBrT Tl RfflRKBKUtL .. mm UtTWCMW -j«.w iiTTirri* „n» rfllrol WHWs 2-6 «_ — — — trjii -HA .239,03 -MBS UTILITIES poiircarr v i.i i „ft.8S RntmSABUXEKTWaORffT .HUB umrm 101 .., ,. 7495 acre ji ma m . -ffljfi KlI-IWraTMMl -?*» EffilUHIW*RWTI?Btl ,3335 Bamuuanwm*WTiwti -3195 PMOtteaoeTonpA _ase -SJS UBOMU IIGI THITK TTTWUtTIF -,1JJ5 TAPES/GENERAL AMIGA WORLD VIDEO iMUMfltBYin _ass ^fmwmvm -MJ5 imun ^mJTlr^vnff., ..,„. -IIS amcj trauma JUHinMTBUHE1» ..13 51 AMumnstm ARCADE GAMES „?3.9fi „W.8S aiwi -4M& -45J5 renBEauaactiou HP PaintJet .725,00 HP DeskJet C (Color) 759.00 HP DeskJet 500 428.00 LaserJet IIP+ ...899.00 QMS-PS 410 ..„ ., 1899.00 -~"~^~~^ ftflB\Bt«r-" ,, tibriinart designed to bu bottf^- 1 iV* °*\ a ^* ^ 0Q ' s Pro in***! environment. BarsSPipes Add-On Series interna) Sounds Kit S 32 8S Multi-Media Kit s 32" Pro Studio Kit 6 34" Music Box A or B 832*9 Rules for Tools s 32 95 Creativity Kit. s 34»* Triple PtnyPUm .*165 oa MIDI interface with 3 Separately nddrossobla MIDI-OLits On!y s 209 00 ,.. ...for Bars & Pipes Pro BnrsSPJpes... 5 99* s Coming Soon... SyncPro SMPTE Time Code Reader/Generator Tootorial Kit ...BarsSPipes Profession^ tutoriaC software The i-.i-.y way lu vwrlto music. Make your Amign play up to 16 internal sounds simutttmooufily! ine Bundle! Imagine pius .j ■ Imagine: A PSl Guided Taur video Q| $1]900 Also inciudes free object disk CRLIGRRI Real time response in full perspective Photo-realistic Rendering User friendly ^ * HAIV1, HAIWE & DCTV Support £S^ Free Videotape included! c W I z TRIM EUIA Incorporated 1/2" x 7 1/2" Wiz Drawing Tablet s 233°° Prices Effective April 1,1892 leader Service card. COMPUTERS U.S. ORDERS ONLY: CUSTOMER SERVICE OR 800-872-8882 310-214-0000 CANADA: 1-800-548-2512 ORDER STATUS 4458 Redondo Beach Blvd., Lawndale, CA 90260 - Man-Sat 8-8 P8T • FAX: 81 0-21 4-0882 nKHtRflSJyf .„ Grout—.—— „3iS5 ACTION/STRATEGY Mini cm _ -t\m nm ~i&.m SSEflT «JETCTTK. WIRCJTIt, papuuKit' nrgierig „ 38.85 TUtfUWH- IfWIWTMWIIWM.. .-WJ5 - 18J5 -38.86 WBttOf HaStaiHIWSDIB „ 8J5 DantiaKfliofimf*™^ — ~__34js — ,3855 13.35 1185 11* Ua_19J5 Its NUMHttTBL DtKHHMMTBIfflTBit _ ROLE PLAYINGS mvTKtamfw — iwsnifitsfiffttn wm — MJUT3!. P EM I ^US MM . EtEDFTIf remi Fffitnui -14* an of TKffljw _ HEDFTK«ttOR. ailKfWyWGBSIFKfTKT 35.95 FLIGHT SIMULATORS A-llTWtnUBt StS6 — UU 94.19 _- VM _HJ6 «GFPfttY_ _38* nsimewau- FlItSMlTPUT .„ FisrcaeffTB FiifTEMiinnB- fasu mmmammn^ wmwmmt- „MJ5 „1SJS -1U5 .a* $99 JF ProWrite 3.2 Now the ail-time best- selling word processor supports Postscript output * Audio/Video Scriptwriting. * Are xx support. » 100,000 word Spell Checker. ■ Thesaurus with 300,000 word cross reference. * Supports columns. * Wraps text 1 around graphics. « Mail Merge 95 Beetle Mouse $3495 ESSt =KB-Talker= Use a standaid IBM AT keyboard on your Amiga High-resolution •••!_ • 24-Bit graphics display card Works on the Amiga 2000 and 2500 Charts & Qrapfte $6495 Information Graphics • Over 45 Chart Types • Grayscale PostScript • Color PostScript • 2D St 3D Charts • IFF Backdrops . IFF Chart Objects • Automatic Legends • Automatic Tables • Combine Chart Types t- " ' T— MZSM I ' T\ hnmUm.cn VIDEO UIRECTOR ^. - Ml*rtl 1 • Complete Video Editing System for everyone with a camcorder, VCR and an Amiga! jLl * Quickly and easily catalog and edit the best moments from ^^ . your video tapes! • Includes hardware to control — most camcorders and VCR'sl CanDo v. 1.6. INOVAtronics | Directory .$89" Opus ....$36" Interactive audio-visual authoring software lets \ m non- ^ £• Drogrammers build custom applications. % U The New Wave Directory Ulility opens files, launches applications, plays anims & sounds and has a hast at other file-related features. Visit our Amiga Superstores! South Bay: 4453 Redondo Beach Blvd. - Lawndale, CA 90260 - Mon-Sat 1 1 -7 PST -Phone: (310) 542-2292 Westeide: 318 Wilshire Blvd. -Santa Monica, CA 90401 - Tues-Satl 1-7 Sun 11-5 PST-Phone: (310)394-7779 HRtmff ncsn,_ — „«J5 Fsstisimtni. _27J5 - 3S.S5 „raj6 sHoiFnTKinG., -3SJG ItBBtT RBffMTSl „ -37.35 netRKnuauuran ,.,, .tzjs GRAPHIC/ ADVENTURE immwrneum as* StCBff Of WWffT BUW _ JS 85 wen aim DMfiort uw «,w ffJSIBTI S8.B6 WBWTII l£J6 -ft* „KJ6 [TiHUBnOJIBOai- IXKVIttfiMIUWI- «1T»» imtnefTiEian roGEMCfCFEKJUBQft—. SPORTS ENTS RTAINMENT «w*n*sifi™— ™ «J5 mWR&ffiWBS 34J5 tistotmmm.^^. I&86 sutdJMJfJKeer, .„. It* OTMtl5 nJU , „ • . , ^ .as rifi fi»>ri pool ,..— . BM stFTPma&Fti . ,«f 42.96 UfinftilEMTftftSft 11B5 nanwmm ttfS mwwBuw&m . »« miw»9Simt HJB ■■WMtflSW. , . ,,. WJ6 bun me us ran ores 14* JKXKfUUSfiaBEIOK *e ma nmjtDS hm ssu t sb. ~_„ _me wcswiaitf "ssar -,t&M MSttftCMUfiKE ~wjb PttM«Sfflf .. -.3iK m TOWS TOWE aw PWfflOTMUSM ,.nm WEBCAM TISTDSVE 1 MIA m _nas TmwwiTsan 32.46 wmmmtmrm .HK tap- TXW\n TtfPI - : . -IMS urn nans is ran _27J6 USffTiemEUKF^ „rs§ XUMCSGITtBlia _IKJE us or nc cum* cam ..,»(& SUSSC MMB EAHI - mum hutwy skitws „, wBtntmaistmrnm . QKT|t9MCt0diBS« fflare*cflLiitn« „. m p*m -3435 „&8S ..48* -m» TMTOUBBSSfISt?aLmCS UJ5 flf TJ&f KBKK 1 MOWM „. . « 8S uraomsT* . tie rammssnao. dctk & dpakt it.. mummzmmit . cui INPUT ACCESSORIES ALT* BATA fflllTtt IRACXUU -...„...._ MIL BfEU! hhs mm cares} _ w.» SMpnULUMftMUJUli. 71* 33* _au TMSSSAU ttTTWC - -5SJG zmtt m mti ssjvhi a nl „ Workbench Management System 8 32 95 Brigade Commander $2995 Fusion Forty '040 Board $ 1449°° TTR20mb Floptical Drive •25mhz, with free upgrade to 28mhz •Accepts wide variety ol memory configurations. •Lowest cost '040 board tor Amiga 2000 Internal S 499 M While supplies last! MR Backup Professional S 32 95 Teacher's Toolkit $3495 entaur Softwa BJLD. Fantastic Voyage: The Computer Game "Incredible!" "***•*" 5 Stars - JnfQ Magazine $3495 World Atlas 3 Disks of info on over 170 countries + 255 maps. B.A.DVer.4.0 Best selling disk optimizer for ell Amigas, Speeds floppy and hard drives by up to 5 times! $29 95 MindLink The hottest, newest, super-powerful modem package. $28 95 Pro-Net Pro- Board ProNet ProEtoard $289 95 $2:v 95 For a limited time only, buy ProNet and get ProBoard Free For Innovative schematic capture and PCB layout. A complete solution from schematic to PCB. MyPaint The best children's paint program for the Amiga. $2995 Pixound Musical Graphics Player "Incredible!" "*•***" 5 Stars - .info Magazine s 56 95 Professional Page 3.0 The Latest Upgrade for the Professionals Choice in DTP NEW VERSION! Draw 4D Pro Finally! Professional, User Friendly 3D rendering & animation for the Amiga! Renders any Amiga mode plus 24-Bit. Easy texture mapping! Great Manual Direct DCTV support! Output 3D PDraw Clips! Video and Publishing! Unlimited Lights that animate Parallel Spaces to work in Double buffered real-time editor Phong/Gouiaud/Facet Built-in Font Editor reative COMPUTERS The Creative Computers Low-Price Guarantee. Creative Computers is the service and low-price leader and the largest Amiga mail-order company. Check out the prices in this ad, then in the unlikely event that you find a lower price anywhere else in this magazine, well beat it!** Commodore Amiga 5D0DS Comes with: 3.5" Floppy Drive, Mouse, Joystick, bundled with the following software packages: Kindwords, FusionPaint, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, F40 Pursuit, and F/A-18 Interceptor. SPECIAL PRICE $399 I } Amiga **3*^ MMMHaMH Amiga 3000 FREE 1200 ^ Baud Modem with this system purchase , FT Cr Commodore* AMIGA Authorized Sales and Service Creative Computers has the largest and best equipped fully Authorized Amiga service center. The Creative Computers Exclusive Money Back Guarantee Program UX-MBG) When you purchase any accelerators! floppy drives, memory expansions, hard drives and hard drive controllers or any GUP Hardware from Creative Computers, you are protected by a full 30-day, No-Questions- Asked Money Back Guarantee! Are you in the market for a GUP Impact Vision but don't know if it will work right with your set-up? Or are you waiting for your Amiga to compute but don't know what an accelerator will mean in practical terms to you? You need not wait any longer. Just buy it from us, and if you don't like it, send it back for a full refund! Prices Effective April 1,1882 Even Newer, Lower Prices! A Ton of Great New Products from Great Valley Products G- Force 040: 28Mhz 68040 accelerator for the Amiga 3000 with 2megs $209§oo New G- Force 030 Combo Accelerators G-Force 030-Combo 40/4 ..M 189 00 - 68030 running at 40mhz - 68882 running at 40mhz - 4mb of 32-Bit RAM (16mb max.) - Onboard Series li SCSI Controller - Hard Drive mountable - All on one board G-Force '030 50/4 M569 00 - 68030 running at 50mhz - 68882 running at 50mhz - 4mb of 32-Bit RAM (16mb max.) - Onboard Series II SCSI Controller - Hard Drive mountable - All on one board SIMM32-1 MB/60 ....Call SIMM32-4MB/60 Call Combo Accelerator/ Hard Drive bundles (The best selling GVP accelerator with a large Quantum Hard Drive factory installed. Save a bundle! Also includes a GVP Series it SCSI controller on boardj G-Force 030-Combo 25/1/ no drive w/68882 math co-proc. .J685 00 G-Force 030-Combo 40/4/ 120Q w/68882 math co-proc ^1529°° G-Force 030-Combo 50/4/ 240Q w/68882 matt* co-proc. .....*2129°° DSS-8 ..... s 95°° Record, edit, compose.., with a high-quality, stereo sound sampler. Includes a fast, powerful, easy-to-use editor and a self-contained 4-track sequencer Scala 2000/NTSC Titling '. s 249°° Scala 500/NTSC Titling M49 00 Hard Cards Impact Vision 24 Series If A2000 SCSI Hard Disk and RAM Card: A2QO0-HC8+D/52Q-LPS (Quantum 52Mb Hard disk) „.„.,. ...,..,....*379 ao A2000-HC8+0/ 1 20O-LPS (Quantum 1 20Mb Hard disk) .....S519 00 A2000-HC8+0/240Q (Quantum 240Mb Hard disk) J 839°° GVP OPTICAL/REMOVABLE MEDIA GVP WT- 1 50 Tape Drive *639°° SQ555 SyQuest 40mb Removable with cartridge and HC8 Controller .„ *599°° SQ800 SyQuest 80mb Removable with cartridge and HC8 Controller . ^719°° 16 Million colors, 24-Bit Frame Buffer + Genlock + Framegrabber + Flicker- Eliminator + PIP + Video Titler + 3D Modelling System. A3000-1V24.. $ 1879°° A20Q0-IV24 Adapter .J49 00 A500 HD+ The Series A500 HD8 + uses the same technologies of it's powerful A2000 cousins and additional features like: Exclusive Game Switch, Fast RAM Expansion up to 8MB, External SCSI Port, Free dedicated universal power supply! New PC286 Module (Optional PC286 AT compatibility. 16Mhz 286 board which plugs inside hard disk unit) s 399 M A500-HD+/52Q (Quantum 52Mb Hard disk).. .......... s 499°° A500-HD+/12QQ (Quantum 120Mb Hard disk). $ 649°° A5O0-HD+/24OQ (Quantum 240Mb Hard disk) $ 899°° Prices Effective April 1,1992 Cirete 13 on Reader Setvice card. REVIEWS From p. 26. MegaChip 2000/500 MultiStart II SecureKey DKB Software Add flexibility and security to your system. By Michael Hanish LONG LRTl THE entrepreneurial spirit! DKB Software has recognized three needs of Amiga users and filled them with effective, simple, and inex- pensive hardware solutions. Solution #1: MegaChip 2000/500 Until the release of the Enhanced Chip Set (ECS), the maximum amount of chip RAM (the section of memory used for graphics and sound processing) available to Amiga 2000 and 500 own- ers was 512K. With the ECS Agnus installed, A2000s and A500s can access one megabyte of chip RAM, but they still lag behind the A3000, which, with its special circuitry and ECS Agnus, can access two megs of chip RAM and manipulate more and hunger graphics and sound files. The MegaChip 2000/500 ($299,95) evens the score. A daughterboard that plugs into your A2000*S or A50G's Agnus socket, the MegaChip 2000/500 gives you up to two megs of chip RAM. Tlie board comes populated with one meg of mem- ory, but you must supply the A3000 two- meg ECS Agnus chip to drive it. Installing MegaChip is most definite- ly not for the faint of heart, (Being somewhat of a hardware wimp, I enlist- ed the help of an authorized service person. Plus, opening the case yourself voids your warranty.) Believe the manu- al when it says removing the original Agnus from your motherboard witnout the proper chip-pulling tool is next to impossible. It is all too easy to destroy the socket by trying to pry the chip out. Not having the correct tool, we removed the chip by stripping the machine down to the motherboard, removing it, and gently pushing the chip out from below. Tli is works, but is not recommended. Details of the rest of the installation vary according to the model and configura- tion of your Agnus. Follow the steps that are thoroughly described and clearly illustrated in the manual, then double-check your work before reassembling the machine. When you reboot your upgraded Ami- ga, open a Shell and type AVAIL. I! you were successful the amount of available chip RAM listed should be slightly over the two- meg mark. In operation, MegaChip is complete- ly transparent, except that it gives you more space to perform graphic- and audio-intensive operations. With it. you can have up to ten megs of RAM in- stead of the previous limit of nine. The MegaChip board was recently redesigned into a smaller size, both for easier installation and greater compati- bility with a wider variety of add-on boards and configurations. It works llawlesslv under Workbench 1.3 and 2.0. Without doubt, this is one of the MegaChip gives your A2000/A500 two megs of Chip RAM. best and simplest hardware improve- ments you can make to your system's performance. Solution #2: MultiStart II While many users want the power and flexibility of the 2.0 operating system, they also need 1.8 to run favorite older programs or games that break under 2.0. MultiStart II ($59.95, without ROMs) lets vou install and use both 1.3 and 2.0 in A2000s and A500s. Your choice of the default ROM lor booting is determined by a simple jumper placement or by which ROM you insert in which socket. Installation requires removing the old ROM from the motherboard, in- serting it and the new ROM in Multi- Start II, and working the daughter- board into the motherboard's socket. All the options and other installation details are thoroughly covered in the manual. Be careful, however, of two problem spots: Fi rst, the pins on the MultiStart II board seem fragile, so seesaw them carefully into the ROM f YOUR TURN: Installation of the MultiStart II card on my ASOO's Rev 6a motherboard was a bit more demanding than I anticipated. The orig- inal MS board I received worked on a Rev 5 or lower. 'The DKB service tech was very helpful, and the new board arrived promptly. Unfortunately, the installation manual was not updated, and no adden- dum was included. After following the original instructions and receiving a blank, fuzzy screen at boot-up, I eventually dis- covered that the board had to be config- ured for A2000 operation, not set for the A500. I have had no problems, since. The board works great. JeffCrystal Houghton Lake, Michigan socket. Second, the installation, as with MegaChip, involves attaching a clip to a particular pin on the Gary chip. In the version I used, the clip's wire is about two inches too short to make a neat run attachment; it's a tight fit in an A2000, but it reaches. DKB says it has lengthened the wire by about an inch on the newer models. Make sure to check all your work before reassem- bling the machine. \ b run with the option of using either operating system, you must modify your hard-disk layout and startup-sequence. (The manual clearly covers both alter- ations. ) Basically, die default system stays where it is on Workbench, and the sec- ond system resides in a drawer. The new startup-sequence checks to see which ROM is active, makes the proper assign- ments, and executes the appropriate startup-sequence, Changing systems is as simple as holding down the Control and Amiga keys for five to six seconds. I have never had a problem rein n in g MultiStart II, and I recommend it highly if you need to access both operating systems. Solution #3: SecureKey Need to lock up your data? SecureKey (S 1 24.95), a card" for the A2000 or A3000, lets you boot only after you enter a password. The board slides simply into one of the 100-pin slots, an easy and well-documented installation. When vou power up the computer, you are confronted with a screen asking for the password. The first time you boot, you enter your new password, verify it, and pro- ceed. After that, on each power up or warm boot, you have three tries to get 74 May 1992 R E V I E \\ S it right, after which you are denied access. To try again, reboot. You can change the password at any time; just enter the old one, and then its replace- ment. One word of caution: Make sure you have a record of the password in case you forget. There is no way to recover it from the card, but registered owners can get a new key from DKB. This board, like DKB's others, works flawlessly and transparently. All three boards are simple and elegant hardware solutions to system needs, doing exactly what they promise. DKB's technical support will be there for you if you have any prob- lems, but you probably won't. I highly recommend these three products. MediaShow Gold Disk Put it all on the line. By Greg Morris IF YOU LONG to do multimedia stints but face budget restrictions, Media Show ($129.95) from Gold Disk is worth a look. With this scaled-down version of ShowMaker (Gold Disk), you can combine pictures, animations, music, and sound effects for complete video productions without complex— and expensive — equipment. As in its full- featured brother, Media- Show's heart is the scene window, which displays a timeline containing the video, title, music, and sound- effects tracks. The timeline, in conjunc- tion with other event-parameter win- dows, lets you not only coordinate events, but also specify effects, fonts, and other options. For example, to display some previ- ously digitized video or Amiga-gener- ated graphics, you add a video event to the timeline: Simply click on the track labeled "Video" and drag the mouse pointer to the point in time where you want your video event to end. Once you release the mouse button, a re- quester appears asking you to select the file for this event — either a picture or animation file, as there is no sup- port for incoming live video. Next, a video-event window displays informa- tion such as the resolution of the pic- ture, how much memory it tises, and a reduced version of the image. Addi- tional video-event options include several wiping effects, and, for ani- mations, the speed of playback. If you want to overlay titles on top of video events, simply add a title track into the scene window in the same manner as the video track. You can select type style and size, as well as what effect, color, and motion to apply to the text. Once you make your selec- tions, you can enter several lines of text directly into the title-event window. The Preview option lets you see how your current selection will look when the entire production is played. If you don t like what you see, it is very easy to modify it and try again. The Sound of Music In addition to pictures and titles, you can add music files (IFF SMUS) to the timeline in the music track. When you select this track, the music-event window appear, allowing you to specify the tempos, looping options, and locations of the instruments used. Unfortunately, you must specify where the instrument files are located every- time you add new music, even if the instruments are al- ways in the same place. It would be nice to have some kind of default option for locating instrument files. You can add sound files to any one of the four specific outputs found in the scene window. There are tracks labeled LI, L2, Rl, and R2 for the two left and right audio channels, respectively. Once you have made all your selec- tions, click on the Play button and experience either your entire produc- tion or just a portion of it. During the testing of this feature, however, the image movement was a little jerky at times in some of the display updates on my three-megabyte, unaccelerated Amiga 2000 (no disk access was in- volved, either). This problem could be solved with an accelerated machine, a solution I support for professional use. Another drawback for profession- als is the inability of the program to control video recorders, which is a strength of t he more expensive Show- Maker. You can, however, record your presentation to videotape by using a standard genlock. Editing a production is very easy to do. You can highlight events and copy, delete, or shift them in time, much as you would perform cut-and-paste oper- ations in a word processor. There are three ways of editing: You can move one event in time and not affect any other events; move a particular event on a track so that all the other events are adjusted accordingly in time; or move all tracks as a group. Additional- ly, if the mouse pointer is not specific enough, you can adjust starting and ending times more accurately through special gadgets on the scene window. Even though entering information on the scene window was easy, the response to my mouse selections was a bit sluggish on my unaccelerated ma- chine, especially when I was dragging the mouse pointer along the timeline while adding or editing an event. There is also a delay before a produc- tion begins while the program preloads several picture and sound files into memoiy. Even performing a minor change to the production causes the program to load every thing into mem- ory again, even the files that you did not update. This adds a lot of time when you're trying to make adjust- ments. What's more, there is no undo option, so once you make a change, there is no turning back. There were a couple of other unusu- al things that I noticed with version 1.11 of MediaShow. Just after loading a saved production, I saw that on the Edit menu the selected edit-mode option doesn't always match the event window's edit-mode box. Once you load your production, however, select- ing a different edit mode {through either the menu or event window) keeps the two synchronized. Don't Believe Everything You Read As far as the user manual is concerned, the on-disk ReadMe file explains that several changes were made in the soft- ware since the manual was printed. There is some resulting confusion, be- cause most of the pictures in the manu- al showing the scene and event windows do not match what you see on the screen. I hope future manuals will more accurately reflect what you see on the screen. Other than these outdated pictures, the manual does a good job of explaining how to install and use the program. It takes you step by step through creating a production, and it is augmented by on-disk tutorials. As an added bonus, Gold Disk in- cludes two separate programs called Paint and Music. These provide you with the basic tools needed to create picture and sound files for use in the MediaShow program. These programs do not contain the elaborate features offered in other well-known drawing and music programs, but they work if you have no alternatives, MediaShow is a very easy-to-use program for creating sequenced video productions for display on your .Amiga. The learning curve is minimal, and you will be very quickly on your way. * AmigaWorld 75 REVIEWS However, because of the hick of smoothness in some of ihe video dis- plays and the sluggish response during timeline manipulation, the program doesn't live up to its full potential on a stock Amiga. For home productions and other small projects, by all means consider MediaShow; but for profes- sional use, I would look elsewhere. Voyager, the Dynamic Sky Simulator Carina Software A good tool to complement your telescope. By Gene Hamm IF YOU YE EVER wanted to view an eclipse without going blind or watch the stars all night without freezing to death, then Voyager, the Dynamic Sky Simulator (SI 24.95, Carina Software) is the program for you. A friend of Voyager lets you see such sky figures as the Bull, the Hunter, and the Twins. mine had to go to Baja Mexico to see stars as clearly as Voyager shows them. It's like having a planetarium on your Amiga. You can gaze at the stars and planets as they would appear from any location on the Earth or in space, and you can go fonvard or backward in time to see how the universe changes over millennia. You can even look at the Big Dipper from such a remote point in lime or space that it doesn't Where Do You Go for Help When You're the Expert? BIX - the Online Service for People Who Know Amiga! • Get quick answers to tough coding questions • Interact with other Amiga developers • Download source code, utilities, and other programs for the Amiga • Keep up with the latest Amiga developments • Send and receive private e-mail with binary attachments • Chat with other Amiga users in real time You can become a BIX subscriber today for only $13 per month! Choose from 2 affordable usage plans, and enjoy local access from over 600 locations throughout the continental U.S. Join BIX Today! 1. Via modem, dial 1-800-225-4129 2. At the "login:" prompt, enter K bix" 3. At the "Name?" prompt, enter "bix.amiga" Questions? Call 1-800-695-4775 DIX is a service of Genera) Videotex Corporation 1030 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge. MA 02138 1-800-695*4775 617-354-4137 Circle 54 on Reader Service card. look like the Big Dipper any more. For serious astronomers, three optional Skv Data disks arc chock full of additional stars if those on the Voyager disk aren't enough. When you load the program, you see a sky full of stars, each one about a pixel in diameter — so small that they could be (1 y specks on your monitor. Center the cursor on any one and click the mouse button to call up a display box that has more information on that little fly speck than you probably want to know. Interested in another star? Horizon- tal and vertical scroll bars and zoom control buttons allow you to move freely about the sky. You can bypass the zoom buttons by holding down the left mouse button and dragging a box around any section of sky you want to see at closer range. If you want to see the stars from your backyard, you can custom design the horizon to imitate your immediate surroundings. For realism, you can make the ground opaque, or, to see through the Earth, you can make it transparent. You can fix on one star and track it all night, or fix on the horizon and watch the sky rotate around you. Con- trol buttons turn on displays of planets, stars, deep sky objects (galaxies and so on), outlines of constellations, and grid lines. These can be viewed separately or all at once. The more thai is displayed, the more your machine slows down, but the speed ai which pictures are shown is still remarkably fast. If you find an especially interesting screen, you can print it, and in doing so you can save wear and tear on your ribbon or toner cartridge by reversing the colors to output black stars on a white sky. It's All How You Look At It You have a choice of four view modes for seeing the whole known universe at once. The Star Atlas view shows it in the form of a flat map, while the Local view adapts the Star Atlas view to dis- play the universe as it would appear from your local position on Earth. In the Full view, the universe resembles a mural that scrolls horizontally in an endless loop, as if it were going past your car window. The Celestial Sphere view is a fish-eye 180-degree display of one-half of the sky, and this is the most COSmically mind-blowing panorama in the Voyager program. I'm sure the programmers intended you to feel as though you were inside a dome, but because concave and convex are per- ceived subjectively, I feel I am outside Continued on p. 88. 76 May 1992 PREMIER PRODUCTS of the month goldenIMAGE ® RAM Expansion 4 MB RAM for Amiga 500 Attractive Case Simply Plugs into Side Expansion Port. Comes with 2 MB already installed! The Best Memory for your A500, • pass-through to further expand • can be daisy-chained • populates with 1x9 simms* only Amiga — Replacement Mouse # 1 Seller! • Opto Mechanical $32 i — Hand — i Scanner with Deluxe Paint HI • Mlgraph Touch-up Software • 100/200/300/400 dpi selectable modes • 64 halftone levels $195 I Covert \ Action World Championship formula one racing at its most intense with Micr op rose's new World Circuit: Grand Prix Racing. Authentic performance, multiple camera angles, and stunning crashes. Amiga now. IBM coming soon. Thrilling game of undercover crime fighting from Sid Meier. In Covert Action break codes, unravel plots before they unfold. James Bond who? Available for Amiga and IBM. Gold Disk VideoDirector •Complete Video Editing System for everyone with a camcorder. VCR and an Amiga •Quickly and easily catalog and edit the best moments from your video tapes! •Includes hardware to control most camcorders and VCR - * Gold Disk Professional Calc •The First Truly Professional Spreadsheet far the Amiga! •Powerful) Math, Trig , Financial. Staiitisiical and Database functions •Advanced icon based interface •Full font and color support •2D&3D graphs ♦PostScript outrut •Full ARexx support $169! anh $199! IRACLE TEACHING SYSTEM State-of-the-art electronic keyboard, Amiga software and artificial intelligence music technology work together to create the perfect teaching program -for anyone who has ever wanted to learn to play the piano. FEATURES: • over 128 sampled instruments, sounds and effects • f u 1 1 s i ze ve loe i i v sen s i ti ve kc y s for true musical expression • learn real music notation, proper lingering techniques, how to read and play rhythm properly, and pedaling • customized lessons to meet your individual musical needs • over 50 songs, with a wide variety of music styles • lessons are fun, including arcade quality video games, historical facts and computer accompaniment. • built-in stereo speakers, fool pedal, stereo earphones and connection to your home stereo sty stem. • fully MIDI compatible, with MIDI in and out jacks • keyboard can be used without Amiga for performance Price Too Low to Advertise! Amiga Supra^mMModem v.32.bis Package Includes SupraFAX Software, A Talk III Telecom Software, and Amiga Modem Cable • 14,000/9600/7200/4800/2400/1200/300 bps data • Up to 57.600 bps throughput with another V.42 bis • Send/Receive to class 1, 2, and 3 fax machines • LED Display gives 25 status reports •Activity log & customizable fax cover pages Stand Alone Modem • no software or cable* $309 $165 Amiga SuprapMMModem 2400 Plus SAME PACKAGE AS ABOVE but with these features: •2400/1200/300 bps data • 9600 bps class 1 & 2 send/receive fax • MNP 2-5 & CCITT V.42bis error correction/data compression for up to 9600 bps throughput with another V.42bis modem • compatible with Group 3 fax machines • activity log & customizable fax cover pages • Sell 103/212A & CCITT/V.21/V.22/v\22bis/V.23/V.42/V.42bis • 100% compatible with industry-standard 'AT' commands & result codes • extended error correction/data compression "Ar commands & result codes Supra corporation ^m Since 1 S82 t-omputrfthilitg uo/i A time* cJElacttonlc!* See Following Pages for More Exciting Products & Prices! vmasm Circle 10 on Reader Service card. 800-558-0003 e^uSL.*.* 800-558-0003 - AMIGA 500 - L UPGRADE KIT J 880K Disk Drive + 512KRAM Expansion Hm $109 SOFTWARE SPECIALS AMOS 57J5. Pagestream 2.2 159.95 Art Department Pro 2.1 ...147.95 Proper Grammar .,,. 54.95 Can Do .79.95 Prowrite3.2 .-87,95 Final Copy 57.95 Super JAM! 84.95 PACKAGE! V deo Package price includes 16mm tens with Variable Iris: $385 INCLUDES: Panasonic 1410 Camera • • Copystand with Lights • • DigWiew MediaStation * AMIGA AD Speed {all Amiga Computers) .......... $164 Air Drive int 3.5 "-A30Q0 S89 AMAXX II $137 Amiga RF Modulator ......... $29 Amiga 1680 Modem S39 BCD Internal SFC - A2000... S749 Big Foot Power Supply ...$95 Bodega Bay $279 Chroma Key/ Switcher $315 Colorburst ....$659 Color Splitter ... , ...„...„.....„„..... $105 Data Flyer RAM Card OK $89 Digiview Media Station ....$152 Digital Sound Studio ..„ $85 DMI Floptical Disk Drive Call ECE Midi Interface , $48 Flicker Fixer $235 Flicker Free Video 500/1000/2000 $235 Firecracker $825 Internal Drive 2000 $69 K-Stert Selector ...$35 Light-24 Call Mega Chip 2000 w/Super Agnus $299 MIDI Gold A500 / Insider A2000 S55/S59 Mini Gen , $185 Miracle Keyboard CALL Multipart II $54 Personal SFC (Nucleus) $339 Perfect Sound $65 Prefessional V;deo Chassis $242 Rcctec Internal 500 Drive $79 EXTRAS ••■•••• Sharp JX1 00 Scanner $489 Taco Single Frame Animator Cntrlr ..... $1 .739 Video Blender ....$939 Vidi Complete Color Solution ..$235 GOLDEN IMAGE: Jin Mouse ......523 Replacement Mouse S32 Optical Mouse $45 Cordless Mouse w/Deluxe Paint II ......$69 Cordless TrackBall w/De!uxe Paint II ..$79 1/2 MB RAM Expansion for A500 ..,....$36 ATonce-Plus 16MHz PC/AT-Emulator for Amiga 500, A2000 $285 PROGRESSIVE PERIPHERALS: Free Delivery in Contiguous 48 States! 68040 Board for A2000. OK 31,579 4MB / 8MB , S1 ,719 / 51 ,849 16MB / 32MB $2,299 / $2,999 Microbotics VXL-30-68030 Accelerator Board for the A500/2000 25MHZ No Math Coprocessor ,. S289 25MHz w/68882 Math Coprocessor $449 40MHZ No Math Coprocessor ..,., $449 40MHz w/68882 Math Coprocessor ..... $629 Hi-Speed IDE Hard Drive Packages for the A500 lnternanCD-ADlDE40Kit int. ICD-AD IDE 40 w/AD Speed Trumpcard 500 AT External 0K expandable to 8 MB 52 IDE Quantum A50D S349 S529 S439 105 IDE Quantum A500 S459 S639 S569 130 IDE Maxtor A500 S489 S679 S579 Includes: cables, Software, Drive, Mounting Hardware Series II for A500 HD+ OK Expandable to 8MB 52 MB $489 120 MB $639 Impact Series II for A2000 SCSI Hard Disk + RAM Expansion 120LPS $509 240LPS S819 SEE HARD DRIVE GRtD BELOW FOR ADDITION OPTIONS PC Snap-In Module AT Emulator for GVP A500 HD+ Series $319 NEW LOW PRICE! Digital Sound Studio S85 G-Force Combo 0-30 Accelerators for A2000 Series Expandable to 16MB •• FREE DELIVERY •• (in the 48 Contiguous States) 25MHZ w/Math Coprocessor + 1MB $679 40MHz w/Math Coprocessor + 4MB ...$1,189 40MHz, 120MB w/Math Co + 4MB $1,519 40MHz T 240MB w/Matft Co + 4MB $1,749 50MHz w/Math Coprocessor + 4MB $1,559 50MHz, 240MB HD w/MathCo+4MB ...$2,049 CALLF .VIDEO TOASTER PERSONAL TBC II DC TV DPS 230 EXTERNAL TBC Rackmountable KITCHEN SYNC PERSONAL VSCOPE Panasonic -IL KX-P1180J $155 KX-P 1123 .$195 KX-P2180 $175 KX-P 2180 w/Color Kit ..$219 KX-P 2123 $245 KX-P 2123 w/Color Kit ..S289 KX-P 1124S $279 KX-P 1624 $337 KX-P 2624... .....$359 KX-P 1654 ....$535 KX-P 4410 $645 KX-P 2124/Color Kit Call NX 1001 Multifont NEW ..$135 NX 1020 Rainbow NEW $179 NX 2420 Rainbow $285 NX 2430 Black .................,$235 Star Jet 48 ......$285 Laser Printer 4 ...$799 Laser Printer 4 Star Script ...$1,159 m CITIZEN 200GX / with Color Kit $159 / $199 200GX-1 5 / with Color Kit $295 / $359 GSX-130 / with Color Kit $239 / $279 GSX-140PLUS .$295 GSX-140 PLUS with Color Kit .........,.$339 GSX-145 Wide 24 pin $365 GSX-145 Wide 24 Pin with Color Kit .$425 AMIGA 500/2000 HARD DRIVE PACKAGES DRIVES DRIVE ALONE as advertised TRUMPCARD TRUMPCARD GRAND SLAM 500 OK Exp In 0MB GRAND SLAM 2000 OK Exp to 8MB SUPRA WORD- SYNC 2000 GVP HC8 series II OK -8MB DATA FLYER 2000 PRO200O 500 PR 500 2000 500 Quantum 52 LPS $205 $285 $345 $379 $439 $509 $445 $305 $369 $289 $349 Quantum 105 LPS $335 $419 $479 $515 $579 $649 $585 $435 $489 $425 $485 uuamiim 240 LPS $655 $749 $809 $845 $909 $979 $915 $755 $799 $755 $815 Maxtor 7060 SCSI $239 $319 $379 $415 $479 $549 $485 $339 $385 $325 $385 Maxtor 7080 SCSI $289 $369 $429 $465 $529 $599 $535 $389 $439 $375 $435 Maxtor 7120 SCSI $349 $439 $499 $535 $599 $669 $605 $449 $515 $445 $505 _^ points and convert from one format to anotheri igh-res 16.8 Million Colors 24- Bit graphics display card •Works on the Amiga 2000 ar The Kitchen Sync .$1595 cAprti oni y > •Two Complete TBC's on one card * Works with any video source -S-VHS and Hi-fl compatible -Optional Y/C output -Great far use with the Video Toaster ipraRam 2000 4mb RAM . SupraRam 2000 6mb RAM . SupraRam 2000 8mb RAM . SupraRam 500 512k SupraRam RX 1MB.... SupraRam RX 2MB ci u at ion, RAM prlc 245.00 309.00 379.00 ..47.00 139.00 199.00 ire subject to change \ Imagine Bundle! Imagine, plus Imagine: A Guided Tour video $lJO00 The World's Second Largest Distributor ofAmigd" Products Centaur Software Inc. Fantastic Vo; The Computer Ga. JL4J>. B.A.D. Vbp.4.0 Best-selling dish optimizer tor ail Amiga*. Speeds floppy and hard drives by up to5 llmesl r |BOING!C , World Atlas 3 Disks ol Jftlo on over 170 countries + 255 maps , Being! Mouse Best-selling optical mouse for the Amiga with Free D.tl.Oi. inltware (a B39.B9 value). Hard Series II A2000 SCSI Hard Disk ond &AM Cord; State-oHhe-Art Integra I ton pocks GVP's high-performance SCSI controller, 8MB Fast RAM expansion and a 3.5' hard drive into a single A 20 00 Expansion Slot! A2000-HC8+0/52Q-LPS (Quantum 52Mb) s 399°° A20Q0-HC8+0/120Q-LPS (Quantum 105Mb) 5 525°° The ICD Advantage AdSpeed™ .. s 189°° a»r overot performance of ony acc&anta in If j price nnge Flicker Free Video™ ....... ^ac* ElfnftoJei Inteckjcc flicker lot ony Ami^-i eompuror Prima 105i™ s 549°° 105 m**ai memeHy m VOu* 5QO. 1000 or 2000 AdIDE 1 * 40 Kit ^o 03 Trw jmoJoit hard t*rvo ono tnlerfoco n the wcid for your ArrwQa 600 Fitj «i*mofy Novia 60i rM s 599 co NOVia 201™ ....^S 000 IDEdJjforyour 2.5 Inch hard drive. ..'11 9» AdRAM 540 w/Ok S 6V* AdRAM560w2mb ......... s 239°° AdSCSI2000 W J High Speed SCSI Hard Card Prima 521™ s 379°° Shuffle Board™ ^ JJwouTei DW. to ino otiornoi floppy connector. Boot from an external fioopy *or on Amiga SO0 Of 1 000 Accelerators Combo 22/1 *659°° G-Force 030-Combo -4mb Of 32-Bit RAM {1 6mb max.) ■Onboard Series II SCSI Controller ■Hard drive mountable G-Force 030-Combo 50/4 , ....... *1569°° ■68030 running ol SOmhz -68682 funning at SOmhz -4mb of 32-BJ1 RAM < 1 imb max.) ■Onboard Series II SCSI Controller ■Hard drive mountoble -All on ooe board SIMM32-lmb/60„...Call SIMM32-4mb/60 Call (The best selfmg G VP accelerator with a large Quantum Hard Drive factory installed. Save a bundle! Also includes aGVP Series II SCSI COntrofter on board.) G*Forc~ ** 52Q ....„ '1399* G-force 030-Combo 40/4/ I20Q ,. M529™ G-Force 030-Combo 40/4/ 240Q ... s l 759* G-Force D30*CombO 50/4/ 52Q ..„*1769 M G-Force 03D-Combo 50/4/ 120Q .., , .»ia89* G-Force 030-Combo 50/4/ 240Q international orders call: (3 10) 370-9550 } OF FER CO DE: G2-rt09MG CaUter il other thtpphm Informal*.. fclKattoiiJi, corporate m aercfajce purcnate enters accepted. No nrrctune fir VUiltoiterCanJ; 4% nrdurgs far JUwrion Ixrnmr IS b Si?^r , JSr!SL!i (31 °1 2 " 000 ° '" """« * B » rint, ™< * n «« *"*»« »«*«*«*. mtor IRMM) wfttt refit*. SSfPtSS^SttSSSSSSi ^mmiZmSSlSSSiso day, of oar k pbasa. teiecmg product tichanpei only. Wt make no guarantees tor protect performance, bcftangei wttft nai predicts art at aw oatkaa and sottect ta i i2^%r#*tocka» in rSmT^p^^-^Saw^ iL*5 W^, i ^ i y ^ ^ a^aiiari^nel^ u. Please), tl ordering by credit card include expiration date and Circle 13 on Reader Service card. ManufacturersVDistributors' Addresses ACDA 2 20 Be 1 It- Meade Aw. Setauket, NY I 1738 516/689-7722 Activa International Keienbergweg 95 1101 GE Amsterdam, I [olland 011*31-20-97-00-35 Distributed by Programs Plus & \ 'id en Agfa 90 Industrial Way Wilmmgton, MA01887 508/657-5328 AltoFirma Software 36M Ridge Rd. Greenbelt, MD 20770 301/345-2357 AmiEXPO 465 Columbus Ave.. Suite 285 Valhalla, MY 10565 800/32-AMIGA 914/741-6500 ASDG 925 Stewart St. Madison, Wl 53713 608/273-6585 ATOP 1 1914 Girdled Rd, Painesville, OH 44077 216/352-8471 Black Belt Systems 398 Johnson Rd. Glasgow, MT 59230 4067367-5513 800/TK-AMIGA Bread Box Magazine 21611 Stevens Creek Blvd. Cupertino, CA 95014 108/252-0508 Carina Software 830 Williams St San Leandro, CA 94577 510/352-7332 Central Coast Software A Division of New Horizons 206 Wild Basin Rd., Suite 109 Austin, TX 78746 5 1 2 828-6650 Commodore Business Machines 1200 Wilson Drive West Chester. PA 19380 215/431-9100 215/436-4200 Consultron 1 1280 Parkview Plymouth, MI 48170 313/459-7271 Creative Focus PO Box 580 Chenango Bridge, NY 1 1*745 607/648-4082 Digital FX 3145 Geary Blvd., Suite 528 San Francisco. CA 941 IS 415/664-5566 DKB Software 832 First St.. MUford, Ml 48042 313/685-2383 Dynamtx 99 W LOthSL, Suite 224 Eugene, OR 97401 503/343-0772 Earth Care Paper PO Box 7070 Madison, Wl 53707 608/277-2900 Electronic Arts 1450 Fashion Island Blvd. San Mateo, CA 94404 4 13071-7171 800/245-4525 Empire Distributed by ReadySofl Fred Fish Catalog Disk Update 1S35 E. Belmont Drive Tempe, AZ 8528 I Glass Canvas Productions PO Box 6171 Boston. MA 021 14 617/367-3229 Gold Disk 5155 Spectrum Way, Unit 5 Mississauga, Out. Canada L4W5A1 416Y6G2-400Q 80Q/GOLD DSK Great Valley Products 600 Clark Ave, King of Prussia, PA 19406 215/337-8770 Hewlett-Packard 19310 Pruneridge Ave. Cupertino, CA 95014 800/752-0900 Impulse 84 16 Xerxes Ave. N. Brooklyn Park, MN 55444 612/425-0557 Inkman 8976 Foothill Blvd., B-7 Suite 311 Riii u ho Cucamonga, CA 91730 714,948-2243 InnoVision Technology 1933 Davis St. San Leandro, CA 94577 415/638-8432 J. Miller & Associates PO Box 17 Iniblei; OR 97841 Kara Computer Graphics 2551 Lincoln Blvd. Suite 1010 Marina Del Rey.CA 90291 21:1578-9! 77 Mach Universe 2421 E. BallRd., B100 Anaheim. CA 92806 714 563-9542 NEC Technologies 1255 Michael Drive Wood Date. IL 60191 800/562-5200 New Horizons Software 206 Wild Basin Rd.. Suite 109 Austin, TX 78746 512 328-6650 Okidata 582 Fellowship Rd. Mount Laurel, XI 08054 800/654-3282 609/235-2600 Oxxi PO Box 90309 Long Beach, CA 90809 213/427-1227 Pacific Data Products 9125 Rehco Rcl. San Diego, CA 92121 6 19/552-0880 Polaroid 784 Mermaid Drive Cambridge, MA 02139 800/225-1018 Programs Plus 8c Video 544 Queen St. Chatham, Ont. Canada X7M 2J6 519/436-0988 Progressive Peripherals 8c Software 164 Etalamath St. Denver, CO 80204 303/825-4144 Quma Software 20 Warren Manor Court Cockeysville, MD 21030 410/666-5922 RAW Entertainment 3027 Marina Bay Drive Suite 110 League City, *1"X 77573 713/538-3399 ReadySoft 30 Wertheim Court, Unil 2 Richmond Hill, Om. Canada 1.4 B 1 B9 416 731-4175 Rimik Enterprises 836 Osborne St. Vista, CA 92084 619/630-1217 Saxon Industries 14 Rockcress Gardens Nepean, Ontario, Canada K2G 5A8 613/228-8043 Sim Systems Distributed by RAW Entertain men i Soft-Logik Publishing 11131 South lowne Sq. Suite F St. Louis, MO 63123 314/894-8608 SoftWood PO Box 50178 Phoenix, AZ 85076 602/431-9151 Technical Tools 2S461 Cherice Drive Warren vi lie, I L 60555 708/393-6350 UBI Soft Distributed by Electronic Arts Virgin Games 18061 Fttch Ave., Suite C Irvine, GA 92714 714/833-8710 ■ 84 May 1992 ORDERS ONLY: 1-800-888-9273 INFORMATION: 1-305-491-0398 840 Northwest 57th Court, Ft. Lauderdale, Fl 33309 1-800-888-9273 Orders Bringing The World's Best Amiga Software To Your Door 1943 14.95 3 Stooges 14.95 Alpha Waves 16.95 Altered Beast 14.95 Amazing Spiderman 16.95 Axkonoid I 6.50 Arkonoid 2 14.95 Atomic Robo Kid 9.95 Austerlitz 14.95 Baal 13.95 Badlands 16.95 Ballgame 16.95 Ballistyx 14.95 Barbarian 2 14.95 Bat 16.95 Batman The Movie 14.95 Battlesquadron 6.50 Beast Busters 24.95 Bionic Commando 14.95 Blade Warrior 18.95 Blasteroids 14.95 Blockout 14.95 Bloodmoney 14.95 Blood wych 14.95 Bloodwych Data Disk 12.95 Brat 16.95 brigade Commander 16.95 Bubble Bobble 16.95 Budakon 18.95 Cabal 16.95 Cadaver 24.95 California Games 16.95 Captive 18.95 Carrier Command 14.95 Championship Run 16.95 Collosus Chess X 16.95 Commando 14.95 Conflict In Europe 14.95 Conquest of Camciot (Sierra) 21,95 Corporation 18.95 Crackdown 16.95 Crime wave 17.95 Crystal Of Abborca 17.95 Cyberbowl 16.95 Days Of Thunder 16.95 Demons Tomb 9.95 Disc / Tron 16.95 Double Dragon 2 16.95 Dragon Breed 14.95 Dragon Force (Intcrstell) 16.95 Dragon's Flame (SSI) 18.95 Dragon Wars 18.95 E-SWAT 16.95 i J -l6 Combat Pilot 16.95 Fast Break 14.95 Ferrari Formula 1 14.95 Fire & Brimstone 14.95 First Samurai 24.95 Flight Of The Intruder 24.95 Flood 18.95 Forgotton Worlds 14.95 Future Basketball 16.95 PUtUre Wars 18.95 Gauntlet 2 14.95 Games Summer Edition 14.95 Germ Crazy 16.95 Ghouls and Ghosts 16.95 Globulus 6.50 Guns hip 16.95 Hard Driving 2 17.95 Haiiey Davidson 16.95 Heroe's Of The Lance 14.95 Hoyles Book Of Games 2 21.95 Hunt For Red October (Arcade) 1 Impossible Mission 2 Infestation 14.95 16.95 International lec Hockey 17.95 Iron Lord 16.95 h Came From The Desert 18.95 It Came From The Desert 2 16.95 Ivanhoe 16.95 Jack Nicholas Greatest 18 14.95 James Bond: SLcakh Affair 18.95 James Pond 16.95 Journey 16.95 Jupiter Master Drive 14.95 Kecf The Thief 18.95 Khalaan 14.95 Kid Gloves 14.95 Killing Cloud 19.95 King Of Chicago 14,95 King's Bounty 16.95 Kind's, Quest IV (Sierra) 21.95 Klaxx 16.95 The Krystal 19.95 Kuk 14,95 Legend Of Faragahl 19,95 Line Of Fire 16.95 Lords of the Rising Sun 18.95 Lost Dutchman Mine 6.50 Magic Fly 18.95 Match Pairs 17.95 Menace 16.95 Midnight Resistance 16.95 Might & Magic 2 21.95 Monty Python 17.95 M.U.D.s: 16.95 NAM 1965-1975 16.95 Ne u romancer 1 6. 95 New Zealand Story 16-95 Night Hunter 16.95 Night Shift 16.95 Ninja Spirits 14.95 Nitro 16.95 North & South 14,95 Oil Impcrium 9,95 Operation Harrier 16.95 Operation Snowstrike 16.95 Pacmania 16.95 Paperboy 16.95 Persian Gulf Inferno 6.50 Pictionary 14,95 Pirates! 14.95 Populous 18.95 Populous Data Disk 9,95 Pro Te nn is Tou r ] (,. 95 Projectile 18.95 Puffy's Saga 12,95 Q1X 12.95 R-Type 2 24.95 Rainbow Island 16,95 Red Lightning (SSI) 18.95 Red Storm Rising 19,95 Resolution 101/Hoverforce 14 95 ROTOX 16.95 Satan 14,95 Savage 6.50 Shadow Of The Beast 18,95 Sherman M4 14.95 Shogun 1^95 Shoot Em' Up Constr. Kit 19.95 Sir Fied 14.95 Ski Or Die 16.95 Sky Chase 14.95 Shufflepuck Cafe 14.95 Silkworm 14.95 Space Quest 3 (Sierra) 21.95 Speedball 2 24.95 imand(SSI) 18.95 Starflight 18,95 Starglidcr 2 16,95 Street Fighter 16.95 Street Rod 12.95 Stride: 16.95 Stryx 16.95 Stunt Car Racer 16-95 Summer Olympiad 14.95 Super Hangon 14,95 Switchblade 16.95 Sword Of Sodan 9.95 Swords Of Twilight 14.95 Sports Basketball 1895 T.V. Sports Football 18.95 The Immortal 18.95 The Third Courier 16.95 'Hi under Jaws 14.95 Thunderstrike 14,95 Toobici' 14.95 Tournament Golf 16.95 Turbo 9,95 Turrican 1 6.50 Turrican 2 21.95 Tunnels Of Armageddon Typhoon Of Steel 14.95 16,95 Typhoon Thompson 14.95 Unreal 16,95 Vaxxine 16.95 Vegas Gambler 14.95 Viking Child 16.95 Voodoo Knight mare 17.95 Wargame Construction Set 16.95 Waterloo 14.95 Weird Dreams 14.95 Welltris 9.95 White Death 21.95 Wings 18,95 Wings Of Death 17.95 Wings Of Fury 18.95 w. lipack 18.95 World Class Lcaderboard 14.95 Xenophobe 12.95 Xybois 16.95 Zoctropc 19.95 Amiga Ten Stan You get all TEN for $19.95: Clever and Smart ♦ Eskimo Games Power Sticks • Spin World • Sky Blaster Vampire's Empire • Crystal Hammer NEW COMPILATIONS!! 4-D Sports Driving Space Gun Utopia Magic Pockets Abandoned Places Silent Service 2 Robo cod Hunter The Simpsons Hcindall Chaos Engine Indy Heat Knighcmarc Lotus Turbo 2 Final Fight Deuteros Pitfightcr Smash Tv Double Dragon 3 W.W.F. Wrestling Harlequin A320 Airbus Epic Microprose Racing Simearth Video Kid $42 $57 $40 $37 $40 $35 $37 $40 $37 S45 $37 $37 $40 $37 $40 $40 $37 $37 $37 $37 $37 $45 $40 $42 $42 $37 mm-msm Price, Availability Subject To Change SHIPPING CHARGES: MasterCard / Visa / UPS ground: $5 for up to 3 pieces. C.O.D. Ccash only) / U.P.S. ground: $10 for up to 3 pieces. Add $1.00 For Each Piece Above 3 Winning Team: $29.95 Includes: Klax, Vindicators, A.P.B., Cyberbowl, Escape from the Planet of Robot Monsters. Air-Sea Supremacy- $49.95 Includes: G unship, Silent Service, Wings, P47 Thunderbolt, Carrier Command. High Energy: $24.95 Includes: North and South, Teenage Queen, Hostages, Fire & Forget, Tin Tin On the Moon. Amiga Classics: Includes: Carrier Command, Starglider 2, Midwinter. $34.95 Power Pack: $24.95 Includes: T.V. Sports Football, Xenon 2, Bloodwych, Lombard Road Ralley. MAX PACK: $44.95 Includes: S.W.I.V., Night Shift, Turrican 2, St. Dragon. TOP LEAGUE: $49.95 Includes: Speedball 2, F-l6 Falcon, Rick Dangerous 2, Midwinter, T.V. Sports Football. EUR0MAGS Amiga Format Amiga Action Amiga Power C.U. Amiga Amiga User Amiga Comp. Amiga Games Zero W/Disk W/Disk W/Disk W/Disk W/Disk W/Disk W/Disk W/Disk $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10,00 $10.00 $10.00 NEXT DAY AND SECOND DAY DELIVERY AVAILABLE! NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ROM INCOMPATIBILITY. Shipping Note: Compilations Count As 1 Piece Circle 45 on Reader Service card. MANTA WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! CALL OUR PRICE DIRECT HOTLINE TO PUT YOU IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH A SALES MANAGER AUTHORIZED TO BEAT ANY PRICE. * 908-542-1491 AVMTK Computers & Software Order Toll Free • 1-800-477-7706 For Customer Service Please Call (908) 542-8767 Call for current price quotes Sf latest releases! Many more items In stock at the lowest firiccs! Multifunction Card SCSI Controller Add up to 8 mg RAM * Printer face parallel port Grandslam A500 • $299 A2000 • $239 Trumpcard ........A500 • $179 ..A2000 • $ 89 Trumpcard Pro.. A500 • S24n A2000 • $159 Trumpcard 500 AT $229 FAST IDE Interface ■ 8 Meg Expansion * An affordable upgrade solution Graphics and Video Department Deluxe Faint IV $ 104 Paint and animate in HAM using 4096 colors NEW Animation Features HEW Faint Tools PLUS Alt the power of Deluxe Faint HI Video Toaster Let MANTA upgrade your Amiga system to take full advantage of Mew Teks Video Toaster... ■ CAT Accelerator Boards 22-50 MHZ • Memory Upgrades * Hard Drive Packages ■ Removable Media • T.B.C. ■ Training Tapes... HANTA's video consultants will tailor a package tor your needs Caul. For Best Package Prices 2.0 Toaster Upgrade • in stock Features: Dozens of new transitions ■ Improved luminance keying Mew chroma effects - 3000 x 1900 resolution in lightwave Videos & Books Abacus Desktop Video Book.S 17 Amiga for Beginners 15 C for Beginners,., $14 Desktop Video 2nd Edition ..19 Amiga World Toaster Tape ....20 Desktop Video Work&ooh ...,29 Amiga DOS 2.0 Companion. .20 Dos lrt and Out 1 .3 2 1 r Amigavision Handbook ..,20 Lightwave 3D Video. ..35 Animation Video #2.. .20 C for Advanced 29 Toaster Microwave . .. 32 Ultimate Guide to Video Toaster. 34 External CD ROM Package • $599 Chinon Drive * CD ROM FS Software • SCSI Cable CD Caddy ■ Prcd Ush CD ROM Disk - Power Supply Kitchen Sync • $CALL Duo! channel SVHS/VHS in & out bocklit LCD external display unit, internal card. Toaster Fonts bread & Butter Fonts $55 Cinnamon Toast fonts 55 Masterpiece Fonts 129 Kara font it<2 59 V (Jeo Fonts 2 64 Fonts rout Enhancer $99 Tont Pack 99 InterforiL,.... ..75 Kara Fonts.. ....49 Pro Video 1-5 59 VktcoCllpse ...,49 BCD - 2000A Call for best price Amiga Video Animation Con t rosier Graphics & Video Amigavision $89 Art Department 2.0..., 149.95 Cafllqary 2 239.05 Cotor Splitter 99.93 Disney Animator 89. 95 Dkjimale 3 23 Dlglpalnt3 ..,,62 Dili! view Gold 4.0 I 19 Director 2.0 73 Draw4D Pro ....179 Mlcker Free Video 239.95 Foundation. 135 Image Finder... ......40 Image Master.... CALL Imagine 149 Imagine Guided Tour...,.,.,35 imagine 2.0 , 22B Maptnaster for Lightwave 59 PlXd 3D 2.0 S67 Pro Conversion Fak 50 Pro-Video Gold ....... 1 29.95 Pro- Video Post 169 Real 3D ...CALL Scene Generator., ..28 S* •in'iy Animator, ...... ...55 ShowmaKer .,.....,,219 Spectra Color 64 Tttler H. „. 219 Turbo Silver 59 TV. Show 2.0 58 TV. Text Pro 98 Video Clipse.... 49 Video Director. 139.95. Vista Pro ...,85 DPS Personal TBC II • $789 Internal Time Base Corrector Software controllable procamp Finally a Lou End TBC Solution... ■ fits Inside an Amiga * Proc-Amp Control ■ Full ffTSC and 5VB5 ■ I utl Prame Storage ■ Fully compatible with all VCRs & flewTeks Video Toaster * Genlocks to any stable ^ fcleo source. CAltl Coming Soon Personal V-Scopcl Hard Drives Syquest 44 Mb Drive. S319 IDF. AT 120 CALL Sv quest 88 Mb Drtve.,,435 Quantum 52 LPS SCSI ,. CALL Low Prices On Cartridges Quantum 105 LPS sesi .call IDC AT 52 CALL quantum 210 SCSI CALL IDE AT 105 CALL Maxtor 213 Mb. CALL Hardware ICD New From ICD AdIDE Smallest Amiga hard drive Interface made. FOI IDE (AT) drives. IDL\ 44 (or your 2.5 Inch hard drives. IDE 40 for your 3.5 inch hard drive. Novia 20i The small hard drive and interface in the world for your Amiga 500. fits internally. Novia 60S now you can have the flovia with a 60 meg 2.5 inch hard drive. Prima 52i Mow mount a 3.5 inch IDE drive internally In your Amiga 500, 1000 or 2000. Prima 105i 1 05 megs internally in your 500, 1000 or 2000. Shuffle Board Reroutes DFOi u> the external floppy connector, Hoot from an external floppy, for an Amiga 500 or 1000. The ICD Advantage AdSCSI 2000 1 Sard drive interface with unmatched speed and flexibility. AdSCSI 2080 Hard drive interface with up to 8 megs of FAST RAM. AdSpeed Best overall performance ol any accelerator in Its price range. Flicker Free Video Eliminates interlace flicker lor any Amiga computer. AdKAM 540 Add up to 4 meg of RAM Internally in your Amiga 500 AdRAM 2080 8 meg internally in your 2000/2500. 9 n s> r 1 - 1 1 AdSpeed $ 16995 ^ p & i* J 31 J nicker Free Video $239** Call For Other Prices Memory 1x4 SIMMS..... .....tall 256 k x 4 80ns DRAM .Call IMCi x 1 80ns DRAM ...Call 3000 Memory Upgrade ...Call QVP SIMM32 Memory for . Accelerators Call Monitors Commodore I084S..CALL Nee Multisync 3FGX .CALL Seiko CM 1440 S499 Seiko CM 1450 S649 Citizen Printers GSX 200 Q pin New CSX 130 & 140+ 14 pin Cofor Option Available ■ CALL Genlocks MlniGen $185 SuporGen $599 SuperGen ZOOOs ,.,..51299 Vidcomaster $999 DM1 Resolver. CALL DCTV. $379.95 firecracker 24/2 Mg .$759 Int. floppy A500/2000 .CALL Mam-EPlus.. ......CALL Kitchen Sync .........CALL Personal SFC $349 JX-100 Scanner $549 Sketchmaster 1 2x 1 2 .CALL Sketchmaster 12xl8.„589 Video Blender..... ...CALL VXL-30 $299.95 VXL-40 $469.95 V XL Math Co .CALL Supra corporation SmDrive r SOOXP PC Power Board CALL 52 MB 1 mg CALL 120 MB 2 mg CALL 240 MB 2 mg 919 2400 f Ki\ $129 Supra 2400 Zi Plus $ 1 49 • 2400 Bd External $79 Supra Wordsync....$99 Supra FAX Modem V32....$239 Supra RAM 500 RX 1 MB. 2MB. 8MB. $119 179 399 * Umited Quantities Supra RAM 2000 2MB $169* 4MB 235 6 MB 299 8MB...,,. 369 Power PC Board Cat! Cirde 34 on Reader Service card AUTHORIZED ^SMM SALES & SERVICE CENTER EXPANSION T E M THE BEST QUALITY AT THE BEST PRICE. DataFlyer High performance low cost A500 w/ chassis SCSI $1 39.00 A500 w/ chassis IDE $129.00 ASOO IDE & SCSI $1 79.00 A2000 SCSI ....$85.00 A2000IDE,.. $75.00 A1000 SCSI $159,00 DataFlyer RAM 8 MB A2000 RAM card also fits in DF500 chassis. oK memory,... .... $95.00 BaseBoard 4MB internal memory for ASOO with clock. oK memory . .....$95.00 GOLDEN IMAGE Cordless Trackball & Mouse New Item Cordless Mouse $69 Cordless Trackball $ 79 RC1000 4 Mb Rom Board for ASOO with 2Mb $169.00 Hand Scanner wth^jt^x,.^ reason.. $209 Optical Mouse ,..,...$49 Opto Mechanical Mouse $36 Amiga RC-500$i?>oAWwPhcJGo<^A5tc $36 1 Vtarwmamyo^cK Sottw imag* products. cvr CALL Super Pricing GREAT VAIXEY ! J KOI>rrrS. IXC Enhance your Amiga Systems with GVP's Outstanding Quality <5f Performance Manta carries the full line of GVP products! Optical Drives * Removable Media • Digital Sound Studio New G-Force 030 in stock 25 mhz • 40 mhz * 50 mhz Series Controllers • ASOO HD • 52mg • 120 mg Impact Vision 24 Graphics Board * ASOO AT Bridge Board G-Force 040 Accelerator for A3000 • IBM Emulator Is Your Amiga Sick? MAINTA is a Full Amiga Service Center We have the parts to put you back on track: • Power Supplies • Tatter Agnus • Rom Chips • Keyboards • Drives 2.0 operating system call for price 8C availably C* Commodore* AMIGA 500 DS * Amiga 500 CPU • 3,5" 880K internal floppy * Mouse, Joystick, and power supply • 9 Disks of software including F/A-18 Interceptor, Fusion Point, Kind Words nnd lots more! Call for the lowest prices on all Amiga 500's! MLS.S. Works — $79.95 Excellence _ $99.95 BBS PC - ~ $29.95 Scribble - _$39.95 I On Line— _ $29.95 $89° Micro R&D Big Foot Power 200 Watt ■ ASOO replacement Quarterback 5.0 Supports Tape Backup DOS 2.0 Compatible Data Compression CALL Specials Art Dept 2.0 .$149.95 DCTV .$379.95 External Floppy 3.5 1 year warranty $74-. 95 Fagestream 2.2,.., .$164.95 | Imagine 2.0, ... $224.95 Superbase IV ....... .$169.95 Digital Graphics Library SCEEEN-AiArER 1 00 Background Images in 24-bit IFF Top 40 HAM images $49 95 $59 « 25 Still Images in 24-bit IFF in HAM formal $54 95 $44 « Miscellaneous Amaxll $129,95 Amax ROMS ...CALL Amkja Action Kcplay .99 Am track.,, 63 Apro Draw,..,. 459 Arexx ,....28.95 At Once Pius 289,95 Audio^aster 4 .....64 Audition..... 62 Bars fl: Pipes Pro ......214 Cross DOS ...25.95 Distant Suns 4,0.... .......55 ECT Mid 500/2000 49 JSTK Power Flay... , 9 Keyboard Shin..... ...17.49 Miracle Piano , 559 Mouse Mat , 7 Perfect Sound 64,95 Quarterback....,,,.,,., 39,95 Quarterback Tools 52 SAS/Lattjce C 5. 1 189 Soundmaster CALL Stereo Speakers CALL Super Jam ....77.95 W, Shell 2.0 49.95 Games. Reference. Music, Education. And a whole lot more. Introducing the next generation in home electronics. m TV lOTEfcACTWE EuEmeDu Commodore Call for Pricing on CDTV and Accesories Tftles Available Advanced Military C 542-5767. * "Real any price' guaranty may not apply to certain items. Circle 34 on Reader Service card. R E V I E \\ ' S From p. 76. the universe, looking at the celestial sphere floating in a sea of blackness. It's a humbling experience to see the universe looking so finite and fragile. For perspectives closer to home, try the Solar Neighborhood display and Planet Gallery. The first shows the sun with its 60 nearest stars. Clicking on the big arrow buttons rotates the stars left. right, up, and down around the sun. If you activate the Trail bullous before you click on the arrows, the stars leave a visible path behind them as they move. The Planet Gallery views individual planets up close, although the only detailed planet is the Earth (after alt, we've explored it the most). Click the Time buttons to animate a planet for- ward or backward in time. Viewing Saturn in this manner, (or example, reveals the wobble in its rings, The Day-Night map displays the Earth laid out flat with the light and dark areas appearing as a horizontally stretched vin-yang symbol. Activating the day cycle animates the shadow across the map through the course of 24 hours. (Check this before you make -YOUR TURN: While not as visually striking as Distant Suns (Virtual Realities Laboratories), Voy- ager makes up the difference with out- standing accuracy and professional fea- tures. Especially useful is the ability to measure angular separation. Hen* at tin* Abratns Planetarium, I tise Voyager to plot accurate maps and Distant Suns lo create beautiful star fields for video. Doug Murphy East Lansing, Michigan an international call, so you don't wake someone up and get sworn at in a foreign language.) When you activate the year cycle, the moving shadow drifts downward and then back up, so you can graphically see why they say the nights are six mouths long at the poles. For more information on our night- time neighbor, consult the moon map, THE MIND'S EYE A COMPUTER ANIMATION ODYSSEY MIRAMAR A compelling look ui the creation of the universe by the world's top computer animation artists, with music composed by James Reynolds. Forty minutes of visually powerful imagery from over 300 of the leading talents in the Held. Only $19.95 ORDER SOW! 1-800-824-S499 or mail io: TECHME DIA VIDEO PO Box 2 1 5 ] . Salisbury. MD 2 1 802 i;MCMXC Mirjrrur Image*. Inc. !.P. jig 6E2ME which shows all the moon's craters. Just click on a crater to see its name or number, longitude, latitude, and diam- eter. If simply viewing the moon at 80- times magnification isn't close enough, then you can look back the Earth from the point of view of the moon. You can even see the moon's shadow pass over the Earth. For a more wonder- filled and less scientific view of the sky; you can super- impose mythological sky figures, such as Orion and the Big Bear (Big Dip- per) on their appropriate constella- tions. The 12 zodiac figures are includ- ed, as well. For those with an astrologi- cal bent. Conjunction Search finds dates when planets line up, as well as the times of eclipses and full moons, which could be useful in making per- sonalized star charts. (An enterprising astrologer could make a lot of money using Voyager.) Usually I prefer to create mv own explorations rather than watch demos, but Voyager has several great ones — Halley's Comet, several nice eclipses, a few satellites, and sunset in Hawaii — that you can customize. The Hawaii demo shows the sky growing dark as the sun goes down in the west, then lets you turn around and watch the sun rise again in the east. Cosmic Rifts Although I recommend Voyager as a fine educational tool for school or home study, it could be better Taking a lesson from Broderbund's Where in the World is Carmen San Diego?, which includes a world atlas, the Voy- ager manual should include at least a glossary of astronomical terms for those of us who thought a Messier Object was simply worse than a messy object. The Image Sampler disk is fttll of incredibly beautiful digitized astronom- ical pit olographs, approaching the picture quality of the National Geo- graphic. The manual recommends thai you view them in DeluxePaint, but this is an ordeal, because every time you load a picture, you must change the screen size. All the pictures should be the same size, or at least grouped by sizes in separate drawers. (One remedy is to use another viewing program.) I have saved the biggest annoyance for last: When you try to save a screen as an IFF file, it saves the requester on top of the screen — so much for load- ing a sequence into DeluxePaint III and creating an ANIM. The people at Carina Software's friendly help line told me the}' had received several *■ 88 Mm 1992 TO ORDER CALL 800-544-6599 MON.-FRI. 9-6, SAT. 9-3 CST CODS welcome! Software A-Sound Elite....... 75.99 Air Bus .45.99 Ambassador 47.99 Amy's Fun 2 3.. 31.99 ARexx 31.10 Artistic Clips.... 32.99 Battle Isle 33.99 Birds of Prey... 33.99 Black Crypt ...33.99 Buddy System/DPaint IV 31.99 Caligari 2 253.99 Can Do 1.6 85.00 Castles... .........35.99 Charts and Graphs 59.00 Cross DOS 5.0+ 37.00 Fighter Duel.... 31.99 Fun School Titles 32.99 Gateway/Savage Frontier.. ...31 .99 Harpoon BattleSet 4 23.99 High Speed Pascal 114.99 Imagine 2.0... ..256.99 Keys to Maramon 33.99 Lattice 5.0... 189.00 Lost Treasures 45.99 Macro68 (Puzzle Factory) .135.00 Matrix Cubed 33.99 MediaShow..... 75.99 MediaStation... 149.99 Micro League Baseball 31 .99 Mig 29 ..31.99 Might & Magic III 39.99 Miracle Song Collection 36.99 Notebook ......27.99 Our WeddinglFF/HAM....54.00/43.00 BOOKS Best of ArnigaTips ...,..,...25.00 Amiga Companion 2.0 20.99 Amiga Graphics lnside/0ut.,..27.95 AmigaDOS Manual 3rd Ed 22.00 Desktop Video Power 28.95 DOS Inside & Out 2.0...,. 22,95 Hardware Ref Manual... ,...24,00 Includes & Autodocs 35.95 Interface Style Guide 20.99 ROM Kernal: Devices.. 25.99 Using ARexx on the Amiga .,..27.99 'Call us tor Euro magazines, too! Out of this World 36.99 Paper Boy 2 ..........26.99 Phasar4.0.... 55.99 Power Packer Pro 4.0 21.99 Professional Calc 168.99 Professional Page 169.00 ProFills2,0 32.99 Red Baron 35.99 C* Commodore® AMIGA H.IiH;mifMi INCLUDES ■ 3. 5" Intern a I Floppy Drive ■ 512KRAM ■ 94-Key Keyboard and Mouse ■ RF Modulator ■ TextCraft Plus Word Processor ■ Where/World is Carmen San Diego? ■ Tetris ■ Free issue of AmigaWorld Magazine Call for Pricing!!!! Resource (Puzzle Factory) 135.00 Romance^hree Kingdoms I! .42.99 Screen-Maker IFF/HAM .59.00/49.00 * Secret Monkey Island II 39.99 Sim Ant,. , 37.99 Space Quest IV 37.99 Superbase Prof 4 ..227.99 Texture City Pro 60 175.99 Third Reich,.... 25.99 Toaster 2.0 Software 305.00 Ultima VI .,...41.99 Vista Pro 2.0 59.99 Wild Wheels 33.99 Hardware 68030 Accelerators from GVP! 25MHZ/1MB..... 669.00 40MHZ/40/4MB.... 1169.00 40MHZ/40/4MB/120Q...1 499.00 40MHZ/40/4MB/240Q ...1719.00 50MHZ/50/4MB. ,.1529.00 50MHZ/50/4MB/240Q ...2059.00 SIMM32/4MBExpansion289.00 C 1 Commodore in it i /-^L We carry ALL ( I lITl/ amiable V*H CDTV titles! ^■n -^ WUW-HHOA CDTV Prof Bundle 195.00 CD Caddy 2-Paek,,,.,.. ...14.99 CDTV Genlock 155.00 CDTVTrackball 95.00 CO Rom File System 36.99 Space Wars CDTV 25.99 Fred Fish 1,4 45.00 Town With No Name CDTV.,.33,99 NASA's 25th Year CDTV 19.99 Ad IDE/40 98.00 AdFlicker Free Video ...249.00 AdRAM540 .91.00 AdSpeed 179.00 AirLink 45.99 Brush Mouse................ .....112.00 DSS Sound Digitizer (GVP) .95.00 Floppy Drive, Internal 2000.89.00 Floppy Drive, Internal 500. ..89.00 ^OGel3) lSupraFAXModern96Q0BAUD V.32/V.42A/.42bi Send/Receive FAX capability ISupraFAXModem14.4BAUD V.32bisA/.42bis Send/Receive FAX capability $305 /With Software #359 Supra corporation Floppy Drive. Supra Ext.......95.00 Genlock, RocGen Plus 345.00 Harddrive. 120Q Bare 399.00 Harddrive, Impact 500/52Q .509.00 Harddrive. Impact 500/1 20Q .665.00 Harddrive. 500XP 52Q/1 ...489.00 Harddrive. 500XP 52Q/2... 565.00 Harddrive. 500XP120Q/2 .675.00 Impact Vision 3000.... 1849.00 KB Talker 53.00 Blue Ribbon's r done it again! Write music in any style without ever picking up an THE k instrument! blue ribbon * Also from Blue %^ Ribbon Soundworks: Bars & Pipes Prof .,., 208,00 w/ Internal Sound Kit ......239,00 w/ Pro Studio & Creativity 270,00 MuliiMedia Kit 32.00 Music Box A or B ....32.00 Patchmeister 59.00 Coming SOON! Tootoriaf Kit Triple Play Plus MIDI TOP DCTV .37900 © Art Department Pro...,. 154.00 €) Directory Opus ....36.99 ©Amiga DOS 2.04 85.00 ©Cross DOS 4.0 .........24.99 ® Final Copy ............... .......59.99 @ Ami-Back 47.99 ©Deluxe Paint IV ...J 09.00 O ProWrite 3.2 99.00 ©Pixel 3D 2.0 64.00 K-Start Selector ..33.99 MegaChip 500/2000 225.00 MIDI Interface 40.00 Modem, Supra 2400 ...........85,00 Modem. Supra 2400+ ,.130.00 Multipart II Board (DKB)... .59.00 Perfect Sound 3.0. 69,00 Personal V-Scope ............789.00 Power Supply. Big Foot 99,00 SCSI Controller Supra 500XP..1 99.00 SCSI Controller Supra 2000 ,1 1 0.00 Scanner. Alfa Scan Plus ...299.98 SupraRAM 2000/2 ............ 169.00 SupraRAM 2000/4 225.00 SupraRAM 2000/6 „ .,..285.00 SupraRAM 2000/8 349.00 SupraRAM 500 RX/1.,., 125.00 SupraRAM 500 RX/2 ...189.00 SupraRAM 500/512K.. ...39.00 Video Director........ .....1 39.00 Video Toaster 2.0 2025.00 WIZ Tablet 229.00 For a complete product listing, information or support, call (414)548-8125. Syguest Drive Packages S415 $579 $515 S685 44MB (2000) 88MB (2D00) Package includes drive, cartridge, manuaUnd a dual SCSI 50-pin cable; external models include case Circle 44 or Reader Service card. K I \ I I. W S complaints about the save- screen function, and they sent me an updat- ed version with the bug fixed in ex- change for my original disk. Despite these shortcomings, Voyager should prove satisfying to children, nonastronomers, novices, and serious astronomy buffs for years to come. Install it on your hard drive and go exploring. Notebook Black belt Systems High school meets high tech. By Dave Johnson "ECOLOGICALLY FRIENDLY paper- work for the Amiga," proclaims the packaging. While vague, it is as apt a description as any of Black Belt Sys- tems' Notebook ($39.95). In somewhat more concrete let ins, I describe Notebook as a free- form idea organizer that allows yon to combine text, [FF graphics, and structured drawing doodles in a package that mimics the concept of n lined, three- hole notebook. Notebook opens on a high-resolu- tion, interlaced screen. The right side contains a variety of control icons, while the rest of the screen displays the actual workspace — an authentic-look- ing version of the notebook you proba- hlv used in high school. Digital Doodling To begin a new notebook, simply click on the icon that adds pages to the n YOUR TURN: At a street price of $25. Notebook is great. I like the fact that you can draw and write on a page. Most ofmy thinking is clone by drawing How charts. Tom Miller Casper, Wvoming Organize your thoughts, IFF files, and structured graphics in Notebook. initially empty document. You can control ihc appearance of each page and add or delete sheets at any time. Do you need lined, graph-ruled, or blank pages? With or without binder holes or a vertical rule? Grid snap may be enabled even when the paper is not in "graph" mode. Notebook accepts text in two ways. You can begin typing anywhere on the page or import ASCII text onto the *- Call now: 1-800-824-5499 VOL. I: $19.95 VOL. H: $24.95 [MasterCard m 1 D1/C0VER- for the best in animation! VOL. I & n SET ONLY $34.95! Also available from your local Amiga dealer. Act now on this limited offer from TechMedia Video and see the most innovative creations using Sculpt-Animate 4-D, Lightwave 3-D. Turbo Silver, Imagine, Deluxe Paint 111 AND MORE! A dazzling collection of exciting and inspiring animations you won't want tomiss! CALL TODAY ! YES! Please send me both Volume I & II at the special price of $34.95 plus $4.95 shipping & handling. OR I can purchase either video separately: VOLUME I at $19.95 plus S2»5 shipping & handling. VOLUME II at S24.95 plus $2.95 shipping & handling. Make checks payable to: TechMedia Video. Canadian orders add 19c GST. California residents add 7.25% CA Sales Tax. Available In VHS. Allow 4-6 weeks for deliver/. TechMedia is the licensed North American distributor of AmigaWorid Videos. Amiga is a registered trademark of Commodore Amiga. Inc. TECHMEDIA V I D ePo PO Box 2 1 5 1 , Salisbury, MD 2 1 802 410-543-1989 6E2AV VOMm 1992 □- u 500 ReasonsTo Buy An Amiga 3000 Before AprO 30* A check for five hundred bucks. That's what you can get direct from Commodore when you buy an Amiga 3000- 25/50, or 3000-25/100 before April 30th. Or. you can even use your $500 immediately right in the store toward the purchase of your Amiga. Amiga 3000 series computers set the standard for multimedia platforms, with true 32-bit architecture for demanding video and graphics applications. The A3000-25/100 features a 100M hard drive and 5M RAM. The A3000-25/50 has a 50M hard drive and 2M RAM. All Amiga 3000s feature four-voice, two- channel sound, thousands of displayable colors, AmigaVision* (which lets you control graphics and video simultaneously), on-site service* and convenient leasing terms. For more information, call 1-800-66- AMIGA. Or see your participating authorized Commodore-Amiga dealer before April 30th. (Terms may vary in Canada. Call 1-800-661-AMIGA.) a C s Commodore 1 AMIGA ■Q 1 W2 G>ntrtodo« Bumk ss Macbna, Inc Commodore and (be Connadon: logo ant regsod trademarks o: CorcrjcdorE EletrcriG Ltd Amiga ts a regstntd todemark of &mnwd0rc*Amip. Inc Not did vmh my other promotiora] ofo *Avtikbfe on qraems putchastd in she L'5 through an auhorud Cotiraodore-Amiga dealer Circle 9 on Reader Service card. R E V I i; w s page. If text flows beyond the current page, Notebook adds pages as necessary until all of the text has been ren- dered. Notebook lets you type with any nonproportional system font, so you aren't restricted to basic topaz or a single typeface. If, perchance, you write something that is particularly important, consider highlighting it. Notebook oilers four marker colors for highlighting text and other objects. To spice up your pages, you can import graphics of any standard Amiga IFF format into your notebook. Hie program converts the image to a dithered, four-shade grayscale and renders it on the page in a box you draw with the mouse. The conversion and scaling is fairly snappy, and the final result usually looks surprisingly good. What use would a notebook be if you couldn't draw in it? A full complement of drawing tools allows you to add rectan- gles, circles, lines, freehand shapes, and the like. You can Leave them unfilled, or you can fill them with any of 36 dithered colors. One of the nicest aspects of Notebook is that all of these components are treated as structured objects. Thus, you may later move, resize, or change the color of anything you draw, as well as combine it into a group with other objects. In addition, you can move objects in front of or behind others. Tabbing Around Now that you've stored some data in your notebook, you probably uaul to be able to hud it quickly and easily. Note- book carries the analogy of its paper cousin to the logical extreme: For easy access, you can mark pages by placing paperclips anywhere on them. You can then add or delete these at any time, and you can skip directly to clipped pages at a single click. In addition, you can add labeled and color- coded tabs to page margins. Clicking on a tab takes you instantly to that page. Overall, Black Belt has put as much though! into navigation as into actual page creation. Putting a Notebook on Paper Of course, there may come a time when you want to break a notebook out of its digital confines: that is, print it. Note- book lets you print notebooks by the page, section, or entire document. Output is scaled up so that each notebook page becomes 8 V-jXl 1 inches, rather than the size of the smaller, on-screen replica. Unfortunately, output is Notebook's Achilles heel. De- spite the fact that drawing elements are structured objects, they do not render at your printer's highest resolution. Rather, they look like bigger and jaggier versions of what you see on the screen. Text, too, gets (he short end of the resolution stick. ( )n the other hand. Notebook prints aren't quite what you (1 pass out at a board meeting: Notebook is a personal idea processor, and the printouts are meant to be personal as well. Regrettably, the output quality probably ensures thai they'll stay that way. What is the bottom line for Notebook? It is an innovative product that just about everyone who owns a computer can llnd at least six good uses for. It is the sort of program that causes you to say, "Why hasn't anyone done this before?" Thanks to its speed, fluid interface, and a plethora of other little conveniences, you'll ("md yourself using it often. Re- member that Notebook always runs on an interlaced screen, so a display enhancer is just about essential. That and the print quality not withstanding, my advice is to buy this one; you can't go wrong. ■ 92 May 1992 Orders Only USA & Canada 1-1*00-258-0533 J J Mlf P - y M - P l West Coast customers cut! up io 6PM PST) JO- 5 Sat rpi Open SUNDAYS 12-5PM X Kjn. 14 Hou| , Rix ]itlc (4 j 2 j 9 6 2-0279 Customer Service (4 1 2) 962-OSJtt (ICO's of titles available) Games Agony Call Battle late S37 Birds of Prey S37 Black Crypl Call Bo Jackson Baseball $31 Castles S37 Celtic Legends Call Drag, Lair 2 (Time Warp} $37 Dungeon Master 2 $25 Elvira: Mistress of the DarkS37 Elvira 2; Jaws of Cerberus $47 Eye of the Beholder S39 Eye of the Beholder 2 Call Falcon S31 Falcon Mission 1 or 2 $19 Fantastic Voyage $31 Fighter Duel (Corsair VsZero)S31 Gateway Savage Frontier $34 God Father $31 Greens - (Microprose Golf) $37 Guy Spy Call Heart of China $37 Kings Quest V $37 Knights of the Sky $37 Leander S31 Leisure Suit Larry 5 $37 Lemmings §31 Lemmings, Oh No! More... 522 Lord of the Rings S34 Mig 29 Super Fulcrum $31 Murder $28 Ork S31 Out of This Wodd S37 Perfect General S37 Perfect General Data Disk $22 PGA Golf $34 Pools of Darkness $39 Populous II $41 PowerMonger $34 Power Monger WWI data diskS22 Railroad Tycoon $37 Secret of Monkey Island $39 Secret of Monkey Island II $39 Silent Service II $37 Sim City $31 Sim City Graphics 1 or 2 $23 Sim City Terrain S12 Space Quest IV $37 Speedball 2 $25 Strip Poker III $31 Wayne Gre1zky2 $34 Wide World of Boxing $31 Willie Beamish $37 Wo rid C i re ui t G ra nd Prix $37 ffTEST $41 $41 $40 $39 $40 $40 $37 Call $43 $39 $41 $39 $43 $39 $40 $39 Crime City Cruise for a Corpse Deuteros Double Dragon 3 Final Fight Gauntlet 3 Gods Heimdall Life and Death Pu Fighter Realms Robocod: James Pond t Robocop3 Smash TV Terminator 2 The Simpsons Utopia Wolf Child I WMy AMIGA Caliqari 2 PROF. PAGE 3.0 $179 VIDEO TOASTER 2.0 $329 CDTV American Vista S54 Barney Bear School $27 Barney Bear Goes Camping $27 Battle Storm $33 Case of Cautious Condor $33 CD Remix $37 Classic Board Games $33 Defender of the Crown S33 Falcon $52 Fred Fish Collection $47 Gretzky Hockey $37 Guinness Disc of Records SC Illustrated Dictionary $47 Illustrated Holy Bible KJV $37 Illustrated Shakespeare $37 Lemmings $33 Mind Run $34 Murder Makes Strange,,., $33 My Paint $33 Power Pinball $29 Sim City $39 Snoopy $33 Spirit of Excaiibur $37 Team Yankee $33 Time Table Business $39 Time Table Science $39 Ultimate Basketball $33 Wrath of the Demon $33 Xenon II $39 Lots of New Titles CALL Productivity Software Art & Animation Art Department Pro 2,1 $164 deluxe Paint IV $119 3isney Anim. Studio $79 Draw 4D Pro $199 Imagine 2.0 Pixel 3-D 2.0 $75 =>rof. Draw 2,0 $125 Spectracolor $62 Turbo Silver 30 $59 Vrsla Pro 2.0 $59 Databases Microfiche Filer $62 Microfiche Filer PLUS $112 SuperBase Personal 2 $94 SuperBase Prof. 4 $249 Music 3ars and Pipes $99 3ars and Pipes Pro Delx Music Const. Set $219 $69 Super Jam $89 Multimedia Kit $ Music Box A $38 Music Box B $38 Spreadsheets Advantage $125 Maxi Pian Plus 2.0 $62 Professional Calc S189 Tele-Communications A-Talk III $37 Baud Bandit $30 $31 $25 $37 $44 $47 $37 $35 Call f53 199 $62 Utilities Arexx Cross DOS Directory Opus DiskMasteHI Labeldex! Project D 2.0 RX Tools Quarter BackS.O Quarter Back Tools SAS/Lattic C Visionary Workbench Management $35 Video & Presentation AmigaVision $89 Broadcast Tiller It $229 Can Do 1 .6 S85 Pro Video CG Call Pro Video Post $209 Scala £275 Showmaker $229 TV Texl Professional $99 Video Director $169 Word Processors & Desk Top Publishing Final Copy Page Stream 2.2 Pelican Press ProWrile 3.2 Professional Page 3 Proper Grammar $59 $169 $62 $89 $179 $59 MMM r s g9EK«»-| PROWRITE32 FINAL COPY $199 SJfiQ S";3 $31 $34 $25 $31 $25 $25 $25 S41 S19 $35 $31 S37 2.04 ROM for AMIGA 500/2000 * ft _ includes books and S>K*I workbench disk ^ • Authorized Sales • Authorized Seryjflg • Fast Service Express your love for your Amiga ALL NEW T-Shirts. Sweatshirts, Caps and Mugs Orders Only USA & Canada 1 -800-258-0533 9am - 9pm M-F, 10am- 5pm SAT Open SUNDAY 12 5pm Complete Video Toaster Workstations BASIC WORKSTATION $4195 Y52MB MD. 7MB RAM, & VI I )KO TOASTER Video Toaster Enhancement Options Video TuiiMcr Personal TBCU Personal V -Scope Personal SFC ncn :imk)a\ ac DU-tACO AmiLinkC/I (cuts only) AmiLinkOl (ABRolli A mi Link/Toaster Software Kile hen Svnc S2099 SS4^ CALL 5379 S849 S I S79 S1595 $150 Toaster Fonts 1st PrzToastcd Fonts Cinnamon Un 11 Bread & Buttci KaraToastertoi II Masterpiece Vickti Fonts 2 ScrCOl Maker Our Wedding SI 59 $62 $69 MO ^') $62 $62 156 Call for pricing £_k& Nm-ia 401 $379 40MB internal hard drive & inter face for your Amiga 500. ENTRANCED WORKSTATION $4895 W/S2MB Ml) 25MHZ, 7MR RAM & . VIDliO TOASTER : ilfMy AMIGA 7 WifJiev&Sf order DELUXE WORKSTATION $5595 W/ 120MB IID.40MHZ.9MB RAM & VIDEO TOASTER WORKSTATIONS FULLY ISSEMBLEO WD TESTED New RACK MOUNT version Available- CALL ■\dd up to 4 meg of RAM intemal- ; ly in your Amiga 500 , AdSpeed $189 ',68000 at 14.3 MHz. Best Overall i performance of any accelerator in [its price range. Flicker Free Video $259 r limtn ;ir:s mtcrlact flicker tcr anv Amiga Computer. Use with VGA or Mult i svnc Monitors Ad RAM 540 $95 AdJDE 40 for 3.5" hard drives $99 Smallest Amiga hard drive inter- face made foriDE(AT) drives AdlDK kits (Primal $139 Now mount a 3.5 inch IDE hard- drive internal Iv in your Amiga 500. Includes IDH 40, Shuffle Board and mountings for hard drive. Shuffle Board $29 Reroutes am: to the external flop- py connector. Boot from external floppy drive. IDJKJB Multi-Start II Dual ROM Board assembly Run 1 ,3 or 2 .0 on you r Amiga 500/2000 at the push of a key. $55 w/2.0 ROM SI 39 MegAChip Get 2 megabytes of chip RAM for your A20CO & A500 djAAQ w/Agnus S309 <^£.£^ D 2632 Memory Board for the Amiga 2500 arfd 2630 accel Up to 32MB RAM CALL HARD DRIVE CONTROLLERS FOR A2000'S A2000 Haiddrive Controllers Grand Slam $239 add up to 8MB RAM & built-in printer port TRUMPCARD PRO $159 The fastest SCSI Controller for the Amiga TRUMPCARD A2000 $89 Data Flyer 2000 Budget hard drive solution for your A2000 Controller only IJ)OJ W/52 MB Quantum HDS319 W/120MB Quantum HDS479 Da taFlyer RAM For DataF[yer2000 OK S99. 2MB$194,4MBS289 With up u> 8MB •RiES il RAM VV/52MB HI) $399 VV/120MB HD $549 W/240MB HL) S849 Hard drives Factory Installed Now with 2YR Factory Warranty | MicroBotics VXL30 68030 Acceleration for A500, A2000 25MHz $329 with 68882 S459 40MHz S479 with 68882 S649 Compatible with 1,3 & 2,04 ROMS VXL RAM-32 2MB CALL VXL RAM-32 8MB CALL #J Name in AMIGA Accelerators G- Force 30 - NEW 68030 All in one board uiihSCSI mlcrfjcc 25MHz/25/lMB $699 40MHz/40/4MB $1199 W/52MB Drive SI 399 w/ 1 20MB Drive Si 499 50MHz/50/4MB $1579 W/52MS Drive Si 779 W/ 1 20MB Drive SIS79 i'AitirkiJik' il' i 6mb of nAn ram 4MB 32I«1 extra RAM $299 as low as EXTERNAL .880K DRIVE A.LR. Drive- $89 Alpha Data - $89 Roctec Ultraslim - $95 AMIGA501 CLONE $36 51 2K RAM Expander 512K RAM wCiock. Calendar, Bat. SupraRAM RX m r External RAM „„ Expand your A500 up to 9MB EXPANSION SYSTEMS base bOARD $95 0K EXPANSION SYSTEMS DataFlyer ? Hard drive Budget solution for your Amig QpPtroller only C AMIGA 500 EXPANSION SET 512KRAM A'Cloctt'CalendaflBal m W/52MB Quanlum ^£ S385 jS3wi 20MB Quantum S535 HiQ A500 Tower TURN YOUR AMIGA 500 INTO A POWERFUL AMIGA TOWER. 3 A2000 StotB, 2 PC State, Accelerator Slot. Video Slot, Keylock Security. Speoo LED, Keyboard Case w/cord, 250W powers uppy. ID drive bays, speaker, metal cabinet- Toaster Compatible, j-^ Alt the power of the A2QQQ and More Midt s ECE Midi m Midi Gold 500 Midi Gold Insider S65 Midi Connector w/ cables S59 Phantom SMPTE MO S229 Midi cable 6ft SR Miracle Keyboard $349 Audio Audiomasler 4 S62 Audition 4 S62 Digital Sound Studio S99 $69 Perfect Sound 3.1 So undM aster $139 Studio 16/AD1012 Call Video Chroma Key S329 Alter ImageGenlock $199 DCTV * $399 MiniGen $199 RocGen Plus §359 Supergen Genlock $649 Video Blender Call Video Master $999 Misc. Big Foot 200W powers up. $69 Ricker Fixer $249 A2000 Internal Drive $89 AMAX 2 PLUS $399 Power PC Board Call Grand Slam 500 Expand up to 8 MI3 Ram S299 TRUMPCAR D PRO 500 The fastest SCSI controller $245 TRVMPQm? 50P S179 iWfp SERIES II A500HARD l^^l DRIVES t^~^ \ EXPAND UP TO 8MB W/52MB Quantum $49b| W/105MB Quanlum $699 GVP/PC286 IBM Card S379 I yMy AMIGA 1 RI.I Bumper S tu 'Jeer with even/ order New Improved COLORS MOUSE ■ BUTTONS Red ■ Black Ye' low - Biack Black - Black Blue - Black B^ack - Yellow Red ■ White - Blue O! her colors on special order Circle 1 2 on Reader Service card. Joysticks. Mouses & Trackballs Slik Stik Joystick $7 Boss Joystick §15 Tac 50 Joystick S17 Bat Handle Joystick $25 Jin Mouse $25 Opto-Mechical Mouse 535 Optical Mouse S55 Boing Optical Mouse $94 Gl Cordless Mouse $75 G I Co rdl es s Trackba 1 1 $85 Amtrac Trackball $69 Kraft Trackball $59 Mouse Switch (manual) $29 Mouse Switch (automatic} CALL Supra Modems 2400 External 2400PkJS Extern^ 24O0Pbs 2 internal FAXModem$14400 FAX Modem 9600 FAXModem2400 FAX /Modem Software $89 $139 $169 $309 $249 Cal Cal Zoom Modems 2400 Ext. $75 2400vVMNP5&v.42bs $145 9600 v.32 bis $399 Cable $10(S5w/modem) GREAT VALUE SOFTWARE FROM EUROPE! LOWER prices for the world's best PD and Shareware - from just $3.50/disk! Fastest shipping -^Only latest versions Free technical assistance! 'Huge library ^Quality catalog ***Evening hotline Experienced AMI people! ABOUT THE DESCRIPTIONS When ordering, please refer only to «* prawn mm Please notejMwrae pwafns iwetarifcosed ol shown in parenthesis gar the dejuipjjo n it Bej mOoiu! Airy spcc&i nenvxy requrMErts ore no 600 BUSINESS LETTERS A147 Contracts, tetters, allsorts induded in text form lor import to your word processori A-GENIE A073 Good genealogy program - trace your family history, keep track of where your roots realty are 1Mb ADVENTURE SOLUTIONS A001 2 disks of great adventure solutions! A must-have for adventure hair- pullers (2) AIR WARRIOR A002 Right simulation program - funi ALGORYTHMS A199 MIDI program for synthetic music creation - give your creativity a Boost and enhance your MIDI ALL NEW STAR TREK A003 Tobias Renters great new version of this classic - all the rage in the UK now (2) A075 One of the best Amiga databases AMIBASE PROFESSIONAL A153 A superb database system AM ICASH A072 Brand new bank management program - easy to use and a great way to put your Amiga to useful work! AMOK A186 Your robot is trapped in a strange world (1Mb) AMOS ASTEROIDS A185 Four versions on this disk of the arcade game, guaranteed to give endless zapping fun AMOS BINGO/CRACK THE CODE A183 2 popular games on this disk - bingo lovers will want to stay home - plus extras AMOS MULTIPAINT A164 Another good AMOS paint program AMOS PAINT A165 Nice paint package with 2-64 colors AMOSAGRAM A190 An anagram solving game - great fun! ANALYTICALC A076 Definitive spreadsheet type utility (2) ANIMATED POINTER PACK A074 Disk full of cute animated pointers - this one will keep you busy for hours trying them out ANTEP & SLOT CARS A004 Graphic role-playing and car game - great fun with appeal for all your family members ANTI LEMMINGS A156 Power animation - fantastic (2) (2Mb) APIDYA A005 Good demo of great new game - recommended for stunning enjoyment and graphic finery! ARCADIA A1 63 A nice version of the breakout" game ART OF MED A202 Disk full of more MED music scores ASI LABEL PRINTERS A077 All the best label programs on one disk ASSASSINS AUDIO MAGIC A203 Collection of soundtrackers and rippers - great hacking AT THE MOVES A157 Anim from Schwartz featuring Amy squirrel (1.5Mb) ATIC ATAC A006 British Spectrum game conversion AUTOMATED LIGHT A158 Great battlestar galactica type animation - must get (4) (3Mb) BALLOONACY A170 Good version of the classic "bomber 1 game BEATRIX POTTER A152 Beautiful dip art converted Irom the PC - extremely popular in the UK BIORHYTHMS & STARCHART A078 Check biorhythms and chart the stars! A better program of its type - check it out BLACK BELT A181 Chop the btocks in this marte! arts game BLACKJACK A007 A good version of the classic card KaFj®t© rT THE PROFESSIONALS' CHOICE FOR SUPPLY OF THE WORLD'S FINEST P.D. AND SHAREWARE. CHECK OUT OUR PRICES 1-9 disks - $5.50 ea. 10-1 9 disks- $4.50 ea. 19+ disks- $3.50 ea/ 'Special Offer! We will ship 5 top quality 3.5" blanks, p re-formatted for the Amiga, with every 10 titles! BLACKJACK TRAINER A192 A good tutor for this ever popular game - improve your odds Tor the real table play! At 93 Get Herbert back home to his village! BUCK ROGERS A00S Great shoot-em-up from the C64 days - an interesting, fun and absorbing proggy, this one! BUSINESS CARD MAKER A079 Make your own with this useful utility, and save time and money at the printers BUSY BEE A154 Cute anim of a freaky bee - looks almost wooden! High in the UK animation charts just now(1Mb) BUZZED A 159 Great animation of wasp crashing into things - you'll need the extra memory though, but GREAT! (3) (3Mb) C-LIGHT RAY TRACER A080 Commercial ray tracing package is now PD - a fascinating graphics utility - great results CASSETTE LABELER A188 Great utility for tape collections CASTLE OF DOOM A009 Easy graphic adventure - good for beginners and cunningly addictive for the veteran hacker CHEMESTHETICS A081 Chemistry program for molecule display - the marvels of mother nature unfolded before you! CHET SOLACE UTILS A082 26 utilities on this disk CHINESE CHECKERS A010 Computer version of the boardgame classic - always great for family fun C LI PART A083 8 disks of some of the best clip art around - you will NOT be disappointed with this set (8) COLOSSUS & WORLD A011 Two great adventures from Software Distillery - highly recommended to you adventurers COUNTACH A084 3 disks of various and useful clip art (3) CROSSFIRE A169 Good kids' game - keep them occupied for ages. What a great remedy for Nintendo boredom! CROSSWORD COMPILER A012 A quality puzzle creator and editor - if you like crosswords this will give you pleasure! ER BASIC COMPILER A085 Speed up those BASIC programs, and free yourself from interpreter constraints DARKSTAFF A013 Spectrum-emulated text adventure game DARKSTAR UTILITIES A086 Another disk full of utilities for all - you won't want to be without this disk in your collection DART ANIMATION A155 Dart passing through an egg animation - you have to see it fo believe it Very over- easy! DATABASE MASTER A178 Good database for extra memory, and has sophisticated features you'd expect to find (1Mb) DATING GAME A160 Schwartz classic animation (2) (3.5Mb) DBW A087 A good ray tracing program complete with some nice pictures - snows the graphics power of Ami! DEMOLISHER UTILITIES A088 168 useful utilities - something for alii DEMOLITION MISSION A176 Another good version of the classic 'bomber' game - very playable DESKBENCH A089 Nice alternative workbench, icons etc. This is a really neat program! (3) DESKTOP PUBLISHER A090 From Germany now in English translation -a MUST HAVEf DIRECT ACTION A091 A useful utility for editing animation sequences, loads of features DOPE INTROMAKER A092 Make you own intros wtth this utility DRAGON'S CAVE A014 Nee dungeon type game with good graphics - you may spend hours! DUNGEON DELVER A179 Roam around mazes, collect keys etc. (2) DYNAMrTE DICK A168 Intriguing little game done in AMOS -good DYNAMrTE FONTS I A093 Excellent fonts for use in DPaint etc. Add these to your collection now! DYNAMITE FONTS II A094 Very popular fonts disk - stacks of IFF fonts - a veritable treasure trove for you artists EDUCATION SET A095 5 disks packed with good educational programs, with something to interest everyone in the family (5) ENSIGNIA MAZE A017 This game allows 4 simultaneous views of maze, and gives a good insight into 3D creations ETERNAL ROME & DOMINOES A016 Two good and stimulating games, get this if you're interested in history! PR E-FOR MATTED 3.5" DISKS *o have ewer 30,000 blanks in our -"--n on blank disks and Not us. We will sdl EXILE FONTS A096 More excellent IFF fonts for DPaint FAMILY HISTORY DATABASE A172 Very good genealogy program, keep track of your ancestors and origins (1Mb) FLASHBIER A018 Boulderdash type game with 200+ levels FLEXIBASE DATABASE A097 An excellent, easy to use database system with flexible layout options and features FONTS & RAM MANAGER A098 Lots of fonts plus a software RAM switch - a very useful utility for A500 users FONTS & SURFACES A099 Lots of useful fonts, brushes etc. for DPaint, plus rich textures and backdrops for you to use FORMS REALLY UNLIMITED A162 Great forms designer program - must have - GREAT for both home and office FRAfsmC FREDDIE A019 Classic platform game with good music - we just couldn't stop playing this frustrator FRUIT MACHINE A196 Good simulation of this gambler's favorite, you can have the fun without losing the dough! GALACTIC FOOD FIGHT A020 Fight your way through ice cream & fruit! A popular game in Europe at the moment GENESIS DEMO A100 Superb fractal generator - very good GRAPHICS CONVERTERS A149 Convert graphics, format PC disks etc. An absolute essential for transferring art formats GRAPHICS UTILITIES A102 Useful, graphics oriented programs which will assist you in the manipulation of your art GROWTH A021 Really good game in which you aim for the brain! Stimulate your own brain cells with this nifty escapade! HACK A022 Good text adventure in the Infocom tradition HAMLAB A103 Convert VGA PC pctures to Amiga HAM with this utility - opens up a true wealth of pro- created artwork HANGMAN A1 94 Good, fun version with word editor HARD DRIVE UTILS A1 04 A must have for hard drive owners HOLLYWOOD TRIVIA A023 Loads of questions in this good trivia game - so you think you know your entertainers huh?! HOLY GRAIL A024 One of the best text adventures around HYPERBALL A195 Latest version of woodenball, an excellent game that will keep you burning the midnight oil and soma... " ; A 105 Loads of programs for icon creation with many icons! Great for hackers, or enhancing your system ICONS A106 This disk is just crammed full of varied & useful icons - redesign the way your workbench looks srvi fpf^ls IFF SAMPLES A204 Great samples from the Kawai K1 digital synthesizer, ready for play on your Amiga - breathtaking! IMPLODER A107 A very good crunching program - ver^ efficient in terms of time and file size. Great for telecomms INTERFERON PRO A108 Create protection bootblocks against viruses - we may see Michelangelo on the Ami soon - prepare! JAMCRACKER A205 4 channel chip music sequencer - handles samples also. Get this one with A204 above JAZZBENCH A 109 An alternative workbench preferred by many, another disk that will change the way your Ami JETMAN A025 A British classic conversion of Jetpac JR-COMM 1.2 A110 The definitive modem software - must have! This is the one that we use and is VERY powerful KARATE WORM A198 Very nice platform game, jumping over worms etc! Keep the kids (or yourself) amused for hours! KAWAI K1 A210 Editor/librarian for MIDI users with K1 KAWAI K4 A21 1 Editotfibrarian for MIDI users with K4 KILLER CARS A026 A good car game with filled vector graphics, fun and intriguing to see this clever graphics style KING JAMES BIBLE A111 Old and New Testament and text reader. In ASCII format so you may import to your files (4) LAMER GAME A027 Similar to Operation Wolf, shoot- em-up LANGUAGES DISK A112 Forth, Modula 2, X-Usp and Logo LARN A028 Anolher well- respected text adventure game LASERZONE A030 Good old C64 classic arcade game LAST HOPE A1 48 Priceless when you've just erased a valuable file! We define this one as an essential addition! LEAPING LARRY A031 Platform game done in AMOS LEARN & PLAY A029 Great fun for the kids on two disks (2) LETTRIX A032 Good puzzle game with a fun Tetris flavour LORE OF CONQUEST A033 Space trading game, dungeons & dragons style, with an addictive theme - enjoy! M-C AD A1 1 3 Computer aided design - good quality (1Mb) MACVIEW. DRAW, ROTATE A114 Three good graphics programs - unusual, but useful for designers, etc.! MARBLE SLIDE A034 Puzzle game in which you build up slides, and frustrate yourself in the process. Fun though MASTER OF THE TOWN A035 Shoot the signposts in this one, and sharpen up your wits and grease your keyboard.... MED 3.2 A200 Latest verson of this superb music sequencer - great! A rea) must-have for budding Ami musicians MED MUSIC DISK A201 Some nice MED music on this disk MESSY-SID A115 Easy to use PC-AMIGA file transfer program, very high in the UK popularity charts, this one MIDI DISK A206 Lots of useful utilities for MIDI MIDNIGHT THIEF A067 A great text adventure for hackers MISSILE COMMAND A177 Good version of the ever popular classic arcade, a hit on the UK BBC micro when it appeared MISSION X A070 Shoot-em-up type arcade game with excellent graphics - well, we think you'll like it anyway fylOBED All 6 A good bob and sprite editor for programmers MYSTIX HARDWARE MODS A117 Documents disk for hardware modifications - interesting and curious contents NAPOLEONIC WAR SIMULATOR A036 A good strategy game with a requirement for a good, strategkal battle plan NCOMM A118 Latest version of this excellent comms program NESTOR CARD GAME A037 A novel treat for card freaks NETHACK A038 A very popular D&D style game (2) NO MAN'S LAND A039 High-tech war games in shoot* em-up style - requires nimble fingers and less of the strategy! NOISETR ACKER A207 Music sequencer with loads of functions - if youVe into music on the Ami then try this out NORTH C* At 19 The complete 'C compiler by Steve Hawtin - another major seller across the pond - excellent vaJue (2) NU GAME A040 Shoot-em-up game with good graphics - quite difficult and certain to trigger your ludest profanities PAIR IT A 167 Match the cards to make a pair - easy card game for the easily amused, or just to pass time! (1Mb) PC EMULATOR A120 Needs MSDOS to run, gives CGA graphics output. An interesting disk for experimentation... PENDLE EUROPA MEGAUTILITIES A121 A superb collection of 200+ utils, hotfoot from the darkest depths of Europe PETER'S QUEST A041 Rescue the maiden in this fun platform game, but don't give up too easily. Persevere for a good endf PIXIE KINGDOM A180 Another dungeon style game of quality and frustrating design - can you beat the enemies? (2) POM POM GUNNER A042 Latest version of this Beachead clone, popular now both here and in Europe * get it and enjoy! PRINTER DRIVER GENERATOR A122 Design your own drivers PROPERTY MARKET A043 Become a millionaire before you retire at 65! Donald Trump uses it for his deejsbn-making OBASE A123 Good database system, easy to use, with full searching facilities - great for both beginners and old hands QUICK BENCH A124 Another alternative workbench system, very clever? We love evaluating these - as much fun as games R-DRAW A182 Another well laid out drawing package RAINBOW WARRIOR A164 Paint with coppers and save them out! We don't mean British policemen, programmers will know! RAPHAEL'S REVENGE A044 Mutant Turtle game done in SEUCK - give the kids a Turtje treat with this shoot- em-up! RAZOR A125 Graphics rippers, vims killers, disksarv, powerpacker - for the more experienced Amiga user, this one RETURN TO EARTH A045 Space trading game in classic UK 'Elite' vein - another popular game in the UK on the BBC RE VERS) + SNAKES & LADDERS A166 Two well- known and popular games for kids of all ages - snakes=chutes in the US RIM DATABASE A126 Comprehensive relational database - powerful, with the ability to cross-reference data files RINGS OF ZON A046 Absorbing adventure and strategy game ■ what more can we say about good adventures'? ROBOCOP A015 A shoot-em-up (language may offend) ROT A127 A simple but very popular 3D drawing package SCOPE 114 A128 Structured clip art for PPage, PSlream etc. SCOPE 115 A129 More structured and useful clip art SCUM HATERS A048 Shoot-em-up done in SEUCK by Brazzle Atkins - the title does fair justice to the blot" SEALANCE A049 A submarine strategy game - quite sophisticated - good II A051 this one! Another favourite with our English cousins just now (1 Mb) TILE TRIAL A174 Solve the sliding puzzle within the time limit! TOMCAT A065 Good quality vertical scroll arcade game TREASURE SEARCH A161 Find the buried treasure in this fun game- another good program on our recommended list TV GRAPHICS A136 Superb DPaint backdrops and some great fonts - get this if you're into Toasters and video etc.! (2) U EDIT A 137 Another great shareware wordprocessor ULTIMATE CARD GAMES A068 Cribbage, Hearts, Bluemoon, Patience and Solitaire should be enough to keep you busy ULTIMATE ICON DJSK Iconmaster, FISH 'n' CHIPS! : 4^ We have the entire Fred Fish collection in inventory -disks 1-590. up to SHOOT Our price for the Fish collection is just $2.50 per disk - or we can supply your choice of 20 disks on one of the new 'flopticals' for just S79.95. We have rare European collections available; please request our catalog which contains full details of all the Ami disks worth collecting! PROGRAMMERS WANTED! We are URGENTLY looking for highest quality softvw>«> fof our new Ami commercial publishing company. Wo pay very and continuing royalty payments, and seek to publish both in mo US and Europe. Ptoaso send us (or ask us for a) non-disclosure agreement so that wb may evaluate your wort confidentially. ._ SERENE Follow SERENE UP below SERENE SHOOT UP A050 Another quality game for fire button freaks! SEVEN TILES A047 Superb futuresports speedbaJI type game SHAPES A187 Very intriguing, mind- boggling puzzle game SIMON & SPACE MATHS A173 Two good educational programs here - recommended SIMPSONS GAME A052 A vertical scroll game done in SEUCK SNAKE IN THE GRASS A197 Collect mushrooms and toadstools! SOMETHING FOR NOTHING A130 Full of video utils, fonts etc, although you'll have to pay us the cost of the disk! (2) SOZOBAN C" A131 Another popular 'C programming environment, great for learning this powerful language SPANISH TUTOR A175 Gooef language learning program STIMULATOR At32 Run Atari ST software on your Amiga - needs 2 drives - very useful if you have access to ST progs! ST-80 BEAST SAMPLES A208 Pan flute sounds from Beast, Beast II. Some of the best Psygnosis sounds created to date STAR TREK NEXT GENERATION A053 Strategy game in Hires, needs 1Mb, but well worth the extra memory! STAR TREK THE SHOOT-EM-UP A054 The classic done in SEUCK, and a pleasant change from Trekkie 'simulations' STORYLAND A071 Two very good kids' games, great fun SUPER SKODA CHALLENGE A066 Nice new car racing game SUPER WORKBENCH A134 Yet another alternative workbench! Fascinating how programmers spend their time! SUPERKILLERS A133 Kills 190 viruses stone dead TAROT II A1 50 Read the cards - great version (2) TENNIS A055 An excellent tennis game, needs 1Mb TEXT ENGINE A151 Another good quality word processor TEXT PLUS A 135 One of the best word processors, includes spell check and numerous extra fadities for the exoerienced THE EVIL DEAD A056 Blast the ghoufes in this crazy game THE INSIDERS' CLUB A058 Good stock market game - see how far you get! Gives you an insight into the markets... THE JAR A057 Very ntoe littlejump and run game THE WOODEN BALL A171 Great shareware game, get We know that some chips are currently a tittle difficult to find; try us for availability:- Super Denise Fatter Agnus Super Agnus 2.04 Upgrade Static Zips FPU Math Go's A500 + 512Kb Others -Calif A138 tconmeister, Icontab, icons etc. Everything you need for icon creation ULTRAPAINT A139 A nice paint package cr IFF pictures VECTOR DESIGNER A140 A comprehensive but difficult to use program! Persevere and discover structured drawings VIDEO APPLICATIONS A141 Assorted programs for genlock & video applications - must have this (2) VISICALC SPREADSHEET A 142 Easy to use spreadsheet based on VC WAR OF THE FOUR A191 A good shareware graphical adventure game - hours of amusement here WASTELANDS A069 Superb new 3D vector game - you MUST get this one! Absolutely superb! WATER MINES A059 Good Boulderdash style game WET BEAVER GAMES A060 Version of the old Pong game WINDOWSBENCH M43 A Windo wsSWorkbe nch2 lookalike, very nice! Spruce up your Ami (2) WIZARD'S DOMAIN A189 Nicely done graphical adventure game WIZZYS QUEST A062 Great arcade game from Germany WONDERSOFT GAMES A061 Golf, Congi, Missile, Trillon, Windmill etc. Gotta gettit! WORDWRITE WORDPROCESSOR A145 Comprehensive, with spelling checker, and all the full- blown features of some commercials WORKBENCH HACKS A144 Loads of amusing fun with these hacks! This is another definitive musRiave disk - funny stuff YAMAHA DX7 VOICE FILER A209 Librarian program YELP! A063 Nice little painter type game with surprises! ZEUS A064 A very intriguing block puzzle game ZX SPECTRUM EMULATOR A146 For the Sinclair {Timex) with sound! The Spectrum was the UK's most popular at one time RED SECTOR DEMO MAKER B001 Ever wanted to have the means to create your own power demos? Try this one! (1Mb) MEGA CLIP ART I B002 This 10 disk set contains pictures for DPaint, ready to load Pagesetter art, over 30 screens of IFF alphabets, Animals, Anatomy, Buildings, Cartoon people and animals, Holidays, flags, flowers etc, Music, School, Signs, Titles, Logos, Headings, Teddy Bears. Vintage cars, bikes (10) MEGA CLIP ART II B003 This set of 9 disks includes Occasions, Transport, Signs, Electrical, Architecture, Frutt, Vegetables, Kitchen, Men, Women, Boys, Girls, Babies, Anatomy, People, 52 different Alphabets, Arrows, Borders, Stars, Humor, Cars, Sports Trade, Art Deoo, Headings (9) FONTS GALORE I B004 Cosmopolitan: Rangers, Peignet, Avant Guard, Aldous, Gertie etc. Beautiful stuff in this set FONTS GALORE II BOOS Fancy: Hollywood, Park Avenue, Broadway. Camelot. Courier, HAM;.... FONTS GALORE III B006 Publishers: Helvetica, Akashi, Andover. Bookman, Boxie. Times FONTS GALORE IV B007 Vanous: Unusual, Videofonts, Large & small fonts, utlities and more..... FONTS GALOTIE V B008 Ripped: Fonts, logos from demos! Incorporate them into your own works! $3 DEFINITIVE CATALOG! YES, WE CHARGE FOR IT - WHEN YOU GET IT YOU'LL SEE WHY. QUALITY PRINTED CATALOG INCLUDES OUR OWN LISTING. TBAG, AMOS, FAUG. SMAUG, SCOPE. AGATROW, APOC PANORAMA, AMICUS, SLIP, TCUG, LARSON ANIMS, SCHEME 17, DEJA VU etc.. ORDERS ONLY: 800-GET-EURO FAX: 503-644-9779 SUPPORT: 503-690-1980 ORDERING DETAILS: Post your order, or call our toll-free number 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. We accept payment by credit card, check drawn on US bank payable to EUROSOFT, money order, cash or wire to our account (call.) COD is OK. Prices as indicated. SHIPPING; We ship by UPS ground no later than day after order received, FREE within USA. No PO box numbers please. Canada please add S5. Specialsame-day/ovcrnight rush orders OK, but please add $25 next day, $15 second day air/handling surcharge. Rest of the world by fastest air courier add S40. We specialise in serving our "alien" friends in other countries! All orders to: EUROSOFT (AW5), 3003 SW 153rd Drive, Suite 211, Beaverton, OR 97006, USA, Dealer pricing available! Circle 60 on Reader Service card. LIST OF ADVERTISERS Great Valley Products, Inc., 5 Greai Valley Products, Inc., 7 Great Valley Products, Inc.. 11 Great Valley Products, Inc., 13 Great Valley Products, Inc.. 15 Hammond Photographic Services* 108 ilolz Computer Supply. 107 I. DEN Videotro tries Corp., 16 INOVAtronics, Ine., CIII J&C Computer Service, 109 Kasara Micro systems, 108 Mania, 86-87 MegageM, 108 Memory World , 99 Micro R&D, 109 MicroMiga, 109 Montgomery Grant, 100-101 Natural Graphics, 65 New I lorizons Software, 9 New Horizons Software, 17 NewTek, Inc., CIV Octree Software, 25 One Way Media, 64 Progressive Peripherals, 41 Pysgnosis, 27 Ramco Computer Supplies, 108 Redmond Cable, 64 Rombo, 63 Safe Harbor, 89 SAS Institute, 40 Seven Seas Software, 108 Sideline Software, 85 SMC Software Publishers, 107 SoftLogik Corp., 23 Software Hut, 107 Softwood, Inc., 21 Supra Corporation, CII Virtual Reality Laboratory, 24 Visibnsoft, 107 Vbrtex Computersystcme GmbH, 81 Zippenvare, 107 'lliis index is pmvuk-d .in an additional scnin 1 . Thi- publisher docs imi assumr liability for mors or omissions. * This advfitisci prefers in be < oniat lid directly. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS All advertising is subject to the approval of the Publisher and AmigaWorid reserves the right to refuse adver- tising without notice. The advertising herein that has been typeset and/or designed hy AmigaWorld is the property of AmigaWorld, arid not that of the advertiser. The advertiser has purchased the right of reproduction in AmigaWorld only, and does not have the right to reproduce (head in any other publication without the expressed written con- sent ofArmgaWforld, Advertisers and/or their agencies assume the responsibility lor the condition of the contents of the adver- tising printed herein and agree to indemnify the Publisher of AmigaWorld (or any claims ami/or expenses incurred therefrom. AmigaWorld is not responsible for changes to artwork after the given advertising deadlines, nor assumes re- sponsibility for mistakes, misprints, or typographical errors, and will not issue credits of any kind for such errors. AmigaWorld advises advertisers that statements regarding shipping and handling charges, wan-antics and/or money-back guarantees should be included within all forms of advertising in AmigaWorld. The opinions expressed in the articles and advertising appearing herein are those of the authors and/or advertisers and ate not necessarily those o[ AmigaWorld. Advertising Inquiries should he directed to Advertising Offices, AmigaWorld, 80 KJni St„ llierborough, NH 0M58; telephone: 800-44 1-1-103. Subscription problems or address changes: Write to AmigaWorld, Sub- scription Dept, PO Box 58S04, Boulder, CO 80332-8804. Problems with advertisers: Send a description of the problem and your current address to: AmigaWorld, 80 Elm St., Peterborough, NH 03458, ATTN.: Mar- got L. Swanson, Customer Service Representative. Reader 41 A New Light Video, 107 23,24 Service 190 A&M Computer Repair, 109 25, 26 Number 51 AGFA, 22 27,28 12 Amigaman. 92-93 29,30 * AmigaWorld 155, 156 DPaint IV, 54 194 How to Animate, 65 31 Mind's Eye, 88 195 Animation 1 & II. 90 75 Animation III Contest, 97 17 3-D Objects. 106 * 96 Antpcx Systems, Inc., 108 31 4 ASDG, 55 167 85 Bare Bones Software, 1 09 93 54 BIX, 76 99 72 Blue Ribbon SoundWorks, Ltd., 53 183 182 Brain Technologies, 107 35 IS4 Brain Technologies. 108 179 7 Brhvall, 1 10-111 65 196 Clear light Software, 109 38 178 Coast to Coast Technologies, 57 37 9 Commodore Business Machines, 91 82 193 Commodore International Ltd., 98 159 10 Compellability. 77-79 150 13 Creative Computers, 66-73 62 8 Creative Equipment, 26 188 83 Desirable Productions, 108 172 14 DevWarc, Inc., 104-105 43 16 Digital Creations, 51 44 171 Digital Process Systems, Inc., 47 40 73 Digitek Software, 59 164 61 DigiVision, 108 45 185 Electronic Services, Inf 1. 108 90 60 Furosoft, 94-95 46 166 Foxy Tec, 108 S8 18 GEnie Information Services, 61 48 13 Go Ainigo, 82-83 * 154 Gold Disk. Inc., 1 58 20 Grapevine Group, Inc., The, 102-103 86 67 Graphic Impressions, 108 52 169 170 Groat Valley Products, Inc., 2 176 21,22 Great Valley Products. Inc., 4 AmigaWorld is a publication of International Data Group, the world's largest publisher of computer-re- lated information and the leading global provider of Information services on information technology. In- ternational Data Group publishes over 150 computer publications in more than 50 countries. Thirty mil- lion people read one or more of International Data Group's publications each month. International Data Group's publications include: ARGENTINA'S Com- putetworld Argentina, I njoivorld Argentina; ASIA's Com- pulerworld Hong Kong, Compulerworld Malaysia, Compute nvorld Southeast Asia; AUSTRALIA'S Aus- tralian Maavarld, Australian PC World, Computenaorld Australia, Information Decisions, Profit, Reseller; AUS- TRIA'S Computerwelt Oesterrekh; RRAZUZsAutamacao & Iiuiustria, DataNews, Miauia IBM, Mimdo Unix, PC Mundo, Publish; BULGARIA'S Compulerworld Bulgar- ia; CANADA'S ComputerData, Direct Accesss. Graduate Compulerworld; CHILE'S Inftmnatica; COLUMBIA'S Compulerworld Columbia; CZECHOSLOVAKIA'S Com- putenvorld Czechoslovakia, Network World, Nueral, PC World Czechoslovakia; DENMARK'S CAD/CAM WORLD, Compulenoorld Danmark, Compulerworld Fo- cus, Lotus World, Macintosh Produktkatalog, Macworld Danmark, PC/LAN World, PC World Danmark, Unix World; EGYPT'S PC World Middle East; FINLAND'S Mikro PC, Tietotekniikka, Tietoverkko, Tietoviikko; FRANCE'S Compu Search, Computer Direct, Dhlribu- lique, Golden, InfoPC, Is Guide du Monde hijbnualique, Le Monde Informatique, Telecoms International; GER- MANY'S Camputenooche, Computetwoche Extra, C.om- puterwoche Focus, Compuierwoche Karriere, Information Management, Lotus Welt, Macioelt, Netzwelt, OS/2 Welt, PC Woche, PC Welt, Unit, Unix Welt; GREECE'S PC World; HUNGARY'S Compiderworid SZT, Mikrovihg Magazin, PC Vilag; INDIA'S Computers 6* Communica- tions; ISRAEL'S People & -Computers; ITALY'S Comfnd- envorhl Italia, Maavarld Italia, Network World Italia, PC World Italia ; J A PA N ' s Compulerwo rldjapa n , Moat mid Japan; KOREA'S Comjndenvorld Korea, PC World Korea; MEXICO'S Computer-world Mexico, PC Journal; Tl IE NETHERLANDS' Compulenoorld Netherlands, Com- puter/ Totaal, LAN Magazine, Mac Magazine; NEW ZEALAND'S Compulerworld, PC World; NIGERIA'S PC World Africa; NORWAY'S Compulerworld Norge, C World, IDG Direct Response, Lotus World, Macworld Norge. Multimedia and Desktop, PC World Ekspress, PC World Norge, PC World's Product Guide, PubUsk! World, Student's DP-Guide; PERU'S PC World; PEOPLE'S RE- PUBLIC OF CHINA'S China Compulerworld, PC World China, IDG HIGH TECH, Neiuproductworld; PHILLIPPINE'S Computeruwrld, PC World; PO- LAND'S Compulerworld Poland; ROMANIA'S Infoclub; RUSSIA'S CADWorhl, Compulerworld, Networks, PC World; SPAIN'S AmigaWorld, CIM World, Communica- ciones World, Compulerworld Espana, Macworld, PC World Autoedicion, PC World Espana, Publish; SWE- DEN'S Affarsekanami Management, Attack. CAD/CAM Wold, CAP. CompulerSweden, Datalngenjoren. Data {ffTelekammunikatian, Digital/ Varhlen, Ijohata Natverkf IAN, Lotus, Macworld, Maxi Data, Mihodatorn, Sven- ska PC World, Unix, Wnulm^s; SWITIERLAND 1 ^ Com- puteruiorht Schweiz, Macworld Schweiz; TAIWAN'S Com- pulerworld Taiwan, PC World Taiwan; THAILAND'S Thai Com putenvorld, TURKEY'S Compulerworld, PC World; UNITED KINGDOM'S Lotus, Macworld; UNITED STATES' AmigaWorld, CIO, Computer Buy- ers World, Computer-world, Digital N civs, Electronic News, Federal Computer Week, GamePro, IDG Books, inCkter/ A+, hijoWorld, Lotus, Maavarld, MFC World, Network World, NeXTWORLD, PC Games, PC Letter, PC World, Portable Office, Publish!, RUN, SunWorld; VENE- ZUELA'S Computerworld Venezuela, Microcomputer- world Venezuela; YUGOSLAVIA'S Moj Mikro. 96 May 1992 ANIMATORS! Win the Ultimate A3000 System!! Now, in its third year, the AmigaWorld Animation contest tests the boundaries and imaginations of some of the best animators! We're looking for 2D and 3D animations that will roll your socks down! State-of-the-art style and technique is the theme this year. All you have to do is submit your most awesome anima- tion. If you're our grand prize winner you win a fully loaded Amiga 3000. Even if you don't win the grand prize, we may include it on The AmigaWorld Animation Video Volume HI (along with the best of all the other submissions). If we use your animation on the tape we'll give you $100! How can you lose? The Ultimate Amiga 3000 System - $12,500 Value Amiga 3000 with 100-MB Hard Drive (S4150) and Amiga 1950 Multisync Monitor (S695) from Commodore; G-Force 040 Accelerator ($2799) and fmpactVision-24 Video Graphics Board{$2199) from Great Valley Products; The Personal Single Frame Animation Controller ($425) from Nucleus Electronics; Caligari Broadcast 2.1 3-D Rendering Software ($1995) from Octree Software; VistaPro 2,0 {$99. 95), MakePath ($25) and Terraform ($25), from Virtual Reality Labs; Animation Station ($49.95) from Progressive Peripherals. 2nd Prize The International Package - $4700 Value Harlequin 2000 32-Bit Frame Buffer from The Amiga Centre Scotland ($2100); TVPaint from TecSoft, France ($1500); V-Lab digitizer from MacroSystem, Germany (S450) Will Vinton's 3-D Animation from Cineplay (S499); VistaPro 2.0 ($99.95), MakePath ($25) and Terraform ($25), from Virtual Reality Labs; Animation Station (S49.95) from Progressive Peripherals. 3rd Prize $1100 Value DCTV from Digital Creations ($495); 3-D Pro 2.0 from Progressive Peripherals ($399); VistaPro 2.0 ($99.95), MakePath (S25) and Terraform ($25), from Virtual Reality Labs; Animation Station ($49.95) from Progressive Peripherals. Also: Prizes for the next 10 winning animators: Best 25 Public Domain Video/Graphics disks from Devware ($99); Diskmaster graphics utility from Progressive Peripherals ($49-95); Professional 3-D Object Library from AmigaWorld ($89.95). Disk-based animations should be easily installable and playable on a hard drive, and should include the appropriate player software. Animations can also be submitted on a professional videotape format such as 3/4", Hi-8 or S-VHS, Tape submissions must include a VHS copy, plus enough material on disk to be proof that the animations are Amiga generated. Submissions should also include full details on what hardware and software products were used to create them. Your animation must be three minutes or less. Please include your name, address and phone number. The animations submitted must be your original work, and by submitting them, you are granting Amiga- World permission to use and distribute the work with our videotape. Deadline for submissions is October 15, 1992. Tim Walsh, c/o Animation Video Contest 80 Elm Street Peterborough, NH 03458 t Recognize The Famous Computer In This Ho. Or The Value. You'd never know the amazing things this black box can do just by looking at it. Not only does CDTV 8 play your audio CDs but it can bring words, music and pictures to life on your television. CDTV simply connects to your TV and stereo and through its ingenious marriage of computer audio and video technologies lets you play with a new generation of interactive CDs, CDTV is based on the Amiga* and if you buy the CDTV/P system before June 30th it comes with AmigaDos! a keyboard, floppy drive, mouse, Grolier's Electronic Encyclopedia 1 ? Lemmings 1 ? Appetizer pack and a savings of up to $848.00* just pick up a CDTV Multimedia Player and you'll have a full I Mb Amiga 500 with the potential to be a home video editing system, a home reference library a children's learning tool, a music studio and a language learning lab. All within reach of your sofa. For the name of the closest authorized Amiga dealer or for your free CDTV Welcome Tour video tape call 1-800-66-AMIGA, in Canada, call 1-800-66 l-AMIGA Look into CDTV Multimedia. You'll be amazed at what you see. C= Commodore " m TV IISTTERACTIVE MULTIMEDIA CDTV is a registered trademark of Commodore Electronics Ltd. Amioi and AmigaDos are regtstsred trademarks ol Commodore Amiga. I nc Electronic Encyclopedia^ a trademark of GroNer Electronic Publishing Inc. Lemmings is a trademark of Psy gnosis.® 1992 Commodore Business Machines, Inc. "Based on MSRP. actual dealer prices may vary. Circle \93 on Reader Service card DRAM BLOWOUT We Beat Any Advertised Price NOBODY CHEAPER 256x1 - 120 $1.19 lxl -80..... 4.49 256x4 -80..... 4.49 256x4 Zips - 10 5.50 1x8 4x8 1x4 80/70 Simm 34.99 / 37.99 80/70... 129.00/ 139.00 80 Dips..... 19.95 256x4 - 80 Static Zips S6.99 Citizen Print Buffer. 25.00 Panasonic 32K Printer Buffer Chip 19.95 GVP Simm32 4 meg............ ..239.95 Nibble Mode Sinmis 299.95 1x4 - 80 Page Zips 19.95 1x4-80 STATIC COLUMN ZIPS $17.95 70ns /60ns $19.95 / $24.95 EXTRA SPECIALS ! ! 68881RC20 S34.95 68882RG20 69.00 Call for PLCC PRICING FOR VXL 68882RC25 99.00 68882RC33 150.00 Oscillators $10.00 or 3 for $20.00 68882RC50 $199.95 LASER PRINTER MEMORY IIPII, IID, III* III, HID, HIP Board with 2 Meg $119.95 4 meg $179.00 DESKJET 256K upgrade $79.95 Similar savings on Panasonic, QMS, STAR, NEC, TI, OKI and others COMMODORE CHIPS CIA 8520 $10,95 or 2 for $19.95 I meg AGNUS w/putler 8c instructions $49.95 Super Denise $37.95 2 meg AGNUS w/puller & instructions $69.95 1.3 ROM IN STOCK $29.95 * * * AMIGA 1000 1.5 meg upgrade with clock $219.95 * * * U NEED SPEED??? CSA's Mega Midget Racer Look at these Deals!!! 1) MMR 20 MHZ CPU & FPU (20/20) .....$399.00 TESTED AND CLOCKED AT 25 MHZ This is a great entry level accelerator and can be user upgraded to our 38 Special. 2) MMR 33/33 for . ...$599.00 Need more speed? This is it. A sensational board at a sensational price. 3) 38 SPECIAL 38/50..... $799.00 For the speed demon or true professional. No finger tapping while waiting for screens. Allows SERIOUS productivity. 2 MEG $299.95 4 MEG $499.00 8 MEG $650.00 32 Bit 512K SRAM-70ns or a 50 Mhz coprocessor for $135 or both for $250.00 w/MMR purchase. All Mega Midget Racers come with MMU only... You get more for less only at MEMORY WORLD MEMORY WORLD /^BpK 215-244-7930 FAX 215-244-7932 3070 Bristol Pike Plaza I, Suite 213 (inf^S Add $5.00 S&H Add $7.00 2nd Day Add $4.50 COD Bensalem, PA 1 9020 vS&rfli/ VISA ; MC ' CHECK ! C0D Attn: Amiga Dept XS3px other chips/speeds available — CALL Circle 93 on Reader Service Card. MIOINITIGIOIMIEIRI 1 iRlAlNlfl / * : i — 1 j ^l f i i M i i § m I |jg1 EST. 1967 CELEBRATING OUR \2S tk anniversary] f OR ORDERS ONLY m U.S.A. & CANADA LORD OR CA LL: (718) 965-9077 htrlSMIIifcft MON-THURS. 9:30-7/IRI. 9-6:30 CLOSED SAT.,/ OPEN SUN., 9:30-6 (ET) AMIGA PARTS 8 CHIPS B372 FATTER AGNES .. $69 83728 SUPER AGNES..,.,.. ...$89 8373 SUPER DENISE ,.....$49 8520ACA1 „ - -.$13 1.3 ROM CHIP .$35 2 0ROMCHIP... CALL AMGA 500 KEYBOARD ASSEMBLY. „....J$79 AMGA 500 ORGIrVAL POWER SUPPLY $S8 AMIGA 2000 KEYBOARD..... .....$99 AMGA 2000 MOTHER BOARD CALL AMIGA 2000 POWER SUPPLY 5229 INTERNAL FLOPPY 0HFVE f/A-500 , J75 WE CARRY A FULL UNE OF AMIGA CHIPS, & PARTS' CALL FOR PRICING/ AD-SPEED ACCELERATOR for all AMIGA computers ADIDE 40 $79 ADIDE 40 KIT..„.......$ 119 ADIDE 44 ,..$99 AlUUEKAIUK '169 AdSCSI 2080 EXPANDABLE TO 8MB SI AQ FLICKER FREE VIDEO $ 229 ICD '\CD Ad-RAM ^ 2080 A-2000 RAM EXPANSION (EXPANDABLE TO 8MB RAM TOTAL) OK ............ $99 2MB $162 4MB $227 6MB, $292 BMB „ $356 ICD AD-RAM SQO 540-OK O^ A-500 RAM EXPANSION FITS IN A-501 SLOT ICD AD-RAM 540-1 MB $135 ICD AD-RAM 540-2MB $175 ICD AD-RAM 540-3MB S21 9 ICD AD-RAM 540-4MB , S259 ADIDE INTERNAL HARD DRIVE PKGS. FOR A 500 QUANTUM QUANTUM 52MB LPS 105MB LPS '399 *519 Packages include ADI0E, shu 111 aboard, Software. Gabies and Mourning Hardware r ASDC ART DEPARTMENT PRO VERSION 2 *169 AMIGA 500 6 AMIGA 2000 COMPATIBLE HARD DRIVE PACKAGES INCLUDES CABLES AND SOFTWARE SCSI CONTROLLERS DRfVE SEAGATE ST-157N-1 [49M&2IMS] QUANTUM (S2MB.L0W Prolle) QUAHTUM (105MB. Low Profile) EPSON ES-300C DRIVER for ADPRO Includes Stand Alone Scan to Disk Driver & Adpro Module. No special board needed!! H25 QUANTUM (120MB Low FYoSie) QUANTUM (240MB Low Profile) *979 J 539 INSIDER II 5T2K_ 1MB— Memory Expansion Board F/A 1 000 *615 DATAFLVER A-2000 (exo tcSMB'i *79 *289 $ 325 *439 *499 Rapid Access Turbo A-2000 (e*p lo 8MB) *239 M39 J 479 *599 *655 *839 DATA FLYER ASM leip lo6U3 M39 $ 339 *375 M89 *545 $ 879 *439 $ 519 *739 Rapid Access TURBO 500 i«p. 10 8MB) J 299 *489 J 409 *539 *439 J 659 *565 *715 *625 *59S *509 *675 *585 $ 899 *809 $ 209 ITRUMP CARD 500 AT...S 195 with Q52 AT... $425 withQ105AT S545 IGRANDSLAM 500 , S269 I GRANDSLAM 2000 , S209 I TRUMP CARD 500 PRO . 5205 I TRUMP CARD 2000 PRO.. $125 |TRUMPCARD500 5149 SEE OUR HARD DRIVE GRID FOR A DDt TiONA LIVSSA VtNCSt 1049 *959 GVPC0MBO25/1M.BRAM $729 GVPCOMBO40/4MBRAM $1229 GVP A-500 HARD DRIVE 52Q. .5569 GVP A-500 HARD DRIVE 120Q $715 GVP A-2000 HC8/0 H 5189 GVP A-2000 HC8/0-120Q.... $619 GVPDDS-6 $95 GVP HC 0/11 CONTROLLER $109 GVP IMPACTVISION 24 $1929 GVPG-FORCE040W/2MBRAM $2199 A-500 EXPANSION KIT SEAGATE 20MB SCSI $129 QUANTUM 425MB SCSI $1099 WESTERN DIGITAL20MBIDE....S1 29 j 3.5 P 88QK External Drive 512K RAM Expansion with Clock/Calendar $89 AMIGA COMPATIBLE ACCESSORIES & SOFTWARE 1 X 4 ZIPPS FOR A-3000 $1 9.95 256K X 4Z1PPS FOR A-3000 S5.95 256K X 4 aPPS FOR SU PRA 500 RX.....$$.95 68882 25 MHz. MATH CO-PROCESSORI1 29 68882 33 MHz. MATH CO-PROCESSOR$i 49 A-1000 RF MODULATOR -...$19 AIR 3.5' EXTERNAL DRIVE $69 AMIGA COMPATIBLE MOUSE. ........$25 A MTRAK TRACKBALL $59 ART DEPT. PRO Vera. 2 .$169 ATONCE EMULATOR $239 ATONCE PLUS 16 MHz AT EMUl ATOR $329 ATONCE PLUS 16MHz AT EMULATOR w.'DOS SOFTWARE.....S369 8ARS & PIPES PRO S229 BEETLE MOUSE....... S27 SfGFOOT POWER SUPPLY . ...$85 BOMAC TOWER ...$209 200WATT POWER SUPPLY for BOMAC TOWER $75 DC TV S-129 DELUXE PAINT tV $135 DIGIVIEW GOLD 4.0 ..$130 D1GIVIEW MEDIA STATION $155 FIXED LENS for PANASONIC i 41 CAMERA $16 FLICKER FIXER $229 G.I. CORDLESS MOUSE $78 G.I.CORDLESSTRACKBALL ...$90 G.I. OPTO MECHANICAL MOUSE $32 Heavy Duly Power Supply far A-5O0 $69 IMAGINE .....,„.„„.....Si49 IMAGINE: AGU1DED TOUR , $29 IMAGINE & IMAGINE:* Guided Tour $169 IMAGINE 2.0................. $255 KITCHEN SYNC $1 729 LEMMINGS „..,- —$31 MACCOMPATlBLEORIVElorAMAXIL.S99 MEGACHIP 500 2000 w SUPFR AGNES CHIP.......... S325 MEGA MIDGET RACER 25 MHz $449 MEGA MIDGET RACER 33 MHz. w;MATH CO PROC ESSOR $609 MICROBOTICS 25MHz. ACCELLEHATORwMATHCO., ..$470 MICROBOTICS4GMHZ. ACCELLERATOR w/MATH CO $659 M1NIGEN ....$189 MIRACLE KEYBOARD $399 MULT1START II $59 NEC 3DS-FGX. , $71 9 NUCLEUS Single Frame Controller $399 PROGRESSIVE PERIPHERALS 68040-2000 w 4MB RAM $1879 PROGRESSIVE PERIPHERALS MERCURY 68040-3000 with 4MB RAM $2235 PROWRITE 3.2 $1 06 RAPID ACCESS 3.5- EXTERNAL DRIVE SS9 ROCGEN PLUS GENLOCK $369 ROCTEC ROCHARD AT H.D $275 SAFESKIN A-500,A-2000, A-3000 $15 SMOWMAKER .$189 STAR60COLTHERMALPRINTEH 539 SUPERGEN 5649 SUPERJAM.. $90 SU PRA 3.5" EXTERNAL DRIVE..... ....$99 SYQUEST 44MB Internal HDwith Cartridge $415 SYQUEST 88M8 Internal HD wilh Cartridge $615 Ext. Chaasialor Syqucal Hard Drive $80 VIDEO BLENDER $949 XETEC A 500 HARD DRIVE $199 JOYSTICKS GRAVIS CLEAR JOYSTICK $36 GRAVIS JOYSTICK... , S32 GRAVIS MOUSESTICK $64 MAX YOKE JOYSTICK...... $79 SPEEDKING 50Qj*,.„ $16 WRITE TO: RETAIL OUTLET 1 CUSTOMER SERVICE] MONTGOMERY GRANT PENN STATION, MAIN CONCOURSE, N.Y.C., 1000 1 AND ° ( ^ 9 S 6 T 5 A J^ CALL MAIL ORDER DEPT. (Beneath Madison Square Garden) Customer Service Hr^ 33 34'" STREET DEPT. A OPEN: MON-THURS., 9:30-7 / FRI. t 9-6 / J-^tqmer 5ery, uso-a "■■' >•-:<- v. I . i' i. - t .--i . ■■-■ •■- ; Order Line Only 1-800-292-7445 giftterpd tnnJpmarfc ol CornmcKttxr Bumwm MacrrtnW Corp Tbe GRAPEVINE GROUP Inc. ff^^S THEICD IVafc^ ADVANTAGE AdSCSI 2000, Hard drive interface with unmatched speed and flexibility , $97.50 AdSCSI 2080. Hard drive interface with up to 8 megs of FAST HAM ..$164.50 Each meg of memory add $38.95 AdSpeed. Best overall performance of any accelerator in its price range .S177.95 Flicker Free Video. Eliminates interface flicker for any Amiga computer $244,50 Ad RAM 510. Just released for the new A500 PLUS- Take your Amiga 500 PLUS up to 2MB of fast RAM. Includes RAM and battery $77,50 AdRAM 510f for A500 PLUS {no ram) ..$43.95 AdRAM 540. Add up to 4 megs of RAM internally in your Amiga 500 with 1 meg ..,.$127.95 with 2 meg .,..$162.95 Each additional meg of memory add $38,95 AdRAM 2080. 8 meg internally in your 2000/2500 ..$97.50 Each meg of memory acid „,..„...... .....$35.00 AdIOE. Smallest Amiga hard drive interface made. For IDE (AT) drives IDE 44 Kit (for 2.5" hard drive) . $117,50 IDE 40 (for 3.5" hard drive) (includes controller & cable) ,. $92.50 IDE 40 Kit (includes Shuflle Board) ..$134.50 Novia 201 The smallest hard drive and interface in the world for your A500. Fits internally $239.95 Novia 40i ....$369.95 Novia 60i .$587.50 Novia 85i $714.00 Prima 52L 3.5" IDE drive internally in your 500, 1000, 2000 ....$358.95 Prima 105i $542.00 Shuffle Board. Reroutes DFO: to the external floppy connector. Boot from an external floppy for A500/1000 $27.95 SPRING SPECIALS Unique 1.3-2.0 ROM Selector Electronic ROM Selector Switch by Global Upgrades, Inc. allows for compatibility of ALL your software. Automatically switch between 1.3 or 2.0 ROM from your keyboard or mouse. Does not overlap the 68000 chip, which means complete compatibility with AdSpeed or Mega Midget Racer, Simple plug in, no soldering, Lowest priced electronic switch available. Instructions included $44.50 © EXPENSIVE REPAIR COSTS If your Amiga 500/1500/2000 shows the following symptoms, you may need a replacement of the most problematic (IC) chip in your Amiga, the 8520A Areas affected by either of the two 8520A chips are: Centronics port, RS232 port, joy stick pod. mouse port, drive LED. drive motor, blank screen, green screen, boot and external drive problems, (None of the above? See our Amiga Diagnostician.) The 8520A is a simple plug in. No soldering, 8520A $11.95 (2 for $10.95 each) McCOY (PLCC) AGNUS CHIP PULLER This «s an exact copy of the Burndy chip extractor that Commodore sells for $29.95. It is essential for removing the Agnus chip, Our price. , „ $14.95 SUPER DENISE 8373 UPGRADE New 8373 ECS Super Denise chip adds new screen modes: productivity mode for flicker free display and enhanced picture, superhi-res mode for ultrasharp video titling (1280x200 pixels). scan mode and new genlock mode allowing greater flexibility. (This is the same chip used in the A3000.) Comes with Super Denise installation diskette with full diagnostics. This chip is an absolute must with the 2.0 and is the latest of the Enhanced Chip Set...... , $42,95 ALL COMMODORE CHIPS & PARTS AVAILABLE 3 Chestnut Street, Suffern, New York 10901 Cusfcrser Serves {9m 366-4242 (Mwrtfbonal Qrfer Line. (914J 357-W24 Fax 014J 357-6243 Order Line Only 1-800-292-7445 A1000 UPGRADE by Phoenix Microtechnologies Within minutes transform your A lOOO into a powerful new Amiga and eliminate compatibility problems forever! Introducing the Phoenix AlOOO replacement motherboard, Features: • 2Mb RAM on board configured as 2Mb chip RAM. Uses the same 8372B 2 meg Agnus chip as the Amiga 3000 ■ SCSI controller on board supports Rigid Disk Block system • Mounting kit for hard drive included • Can be utilized as a complete stand-alone computer • Multiple switch-selectable Kickstart ROMs (Vl,3 supplied. Fully 2.0 compatible) • Select external drive as DF0 • A2000 video slot and expansion slot • 8373 new ECS Super Denise upgrade available for a few dollars more • 8Mb internal Phoenix RAM expansion (optional) • Easy solderless installation • 68881/68882 math co- processor socket • Use your original AlOOO peripherals • Send for complete literature and specifications • For SI 2 we will send you the complete installation/ instruction booklet, refundable with purchase • 12 month warranty DISTRIBUTORS in the U.S., Canada and Australia: The Grapevine Group 3 Chestnut St., Suttern, New York 10901 (USA) 800-292-7445 / (914) 357 -£424 ■ Fax: (914) 357-6243 IT Tech Box 467, Bushell Par* SK, Canada SOH ONO Voice or Fax (306} 691-Q520 Phoenix Microtechnologies South Australia Circle 20 on Reader Service card. $5.95 ea. 1-9 Disks $4.95* ea. 10-24 Disks I Exclusively serving the Amiga since 1985 $3.95* ea. 25+ Disks *Anti-Virus free on all orders of 15 or more disks! Public Domain Librar y Guarantee We believe so strongly in our product that we offer a full lifetime, complete satisfaction guarantee. No questions asked. We have been the official Public Domain Library of all the best Amiga magazines. Find out why these magazines choose us! Each of our disks are jam packed with only the best programs. The first two letters on each disk indi- cate the orientation of the disk: WB# general interest - most programs can be run from the workbench, FD# games and entertainment. VO# are video related programs/utilities and DD# advanced requires thorough knowl- edge of AmigaDOS. Thanks to our extensive arsenai of anti-virus software, ALL of our software is virus free! Featured Disk QTl: The A64 Package - A very complete Commodore 64 emulator. Supports any CPU and is fully compatable with WB2.0. This version includes a speciaf adaptor that will allow you to connect your 64"s 1541 disk drive to your parallel port of your Amiga for total emulation. Two disk set. counts as two. Special price $49.95 - including hardware. New Disks V07: StarTrek Objects - Contains me USS Reliant. MCC-1701D (the Enterprise from Star Trek:TNG) and a Ferengi Marauder ship As ai added bonus, contains a fully detailed Porsche 91 1 and Apache Attack Helicopter. V06: Modelling Objects ■ Contains 20 vector objects in Imagine format. These are perfect for use with V05 or your favorite 3D modelling program. Includes Amiga 3000. space station S many more! VOS: Modelling - Vertex allows you to create 3-D objects without using the abstract X. Y and 2 views. Loads, saves and converts between Sculpl- 3DVJD, Turbo Silver. Imagine. Ug hi Wave. GEO and Wavefront formats MagicTween win metamorphasize any two pictures by automatically animate the 'in-between* frames, V04: Video & Anlm - Video_DB will catalog all of your videotapes. Slate Is a sharp graphic of a slate for your productions. Cyroutiis splits, makes and gives into about ANIMs RTAP lets you play large ANtMs on small memory machines, V03: Image UtUs - let VideoTootsOnTap let you tap mio the video power of your Amiga for fades, cotor and greybars as well as a plethora of other inde- spensabie video functions. TitleGen will do professional crawlsrg titles. JPEG converts JPEG<->24-bil IFF with amazing compression. ImageLab performs spedal effect on IFFs. V02; Slillstore - UserJ to create the "over the shoulder graphic inserts ala the 1 1 :00 news, V01: Graphics - Picbase will let you view and track ALL of your IFF pictures over a of those floppies 1 Freepaint is a Deluie-Paint workalike. Agraph is a powerful utility to produce snazzy graphs . FD77: Arcade S«riM - Galaga^ is a done of the arcade game of the same name with several gameplay enhancements- with smoOQOth. sharp graphics. it's better than the ongional 1 Pharaohs Curse is a done Of the ongional C64 dassrc. Diplomacy is a beautifully computerized version of the Avalon Hill board game-conquer or be conquered! Galaga requires imeg chip memo- ry/Fat Agnus. FD76: Catacomb - is a full graphic adventure game with beautiful graphics and a very slick icon/mouse driven interface. FD75: Arcade Series Descender is a clone of the classic arcade game "Tempest"; complete with vectorized graphics. Tanx is the classic battle of trajectories and inertia between two tanks— incredibly well done' Search is a maze game unlike any other— induded is a level editor too (Tan* requires i meg chip memory- Fat Agnus) FD74: Arcade Series - HmgWar is an "Outer Limits' clone with vectorized graphics. MotherLode is a "Lode Runner clone with 50 levels! In BlitzTanks. they're coming at you from all directions!! Call in air strikes and use your heavy artit'ery to survrve! FD73: Arcade Series Intruder Alert 1 is a MULTI-level 'Berserk" done. Features smooth gameplay. great graphics & digitized sound f x. FD72: Sword of the Warlock - This is a demo version of a great public domain graphic dungeon adventure game. The adventure spans three diskettes and allows two players to go adventuring. The game has a Bards Tale feel to it Three disk set, counts as 2, Requires 1 meg of RAM and 2 floppy drives or HD FD71A&B: Star Trek: TNG Trivia Chotlenge ■ So you thnk you know The Next Generation, huh** Complete with fantastic sampled sounds and digitiied images, this game even looks and sounds like a genuine Star Trek terminal! VERY tnorough and complete' Counts as 2 disks. FD70: SpaceGames Contains Am.Go ds. >fina!lyi< an Asteroids game that lakes advantage of the Amiga— totally configurable with great sound and grpahics. In Cosmostruction the object of the game is for each Cosmostruction team to acquire the most pomts while construction energy ducts between the space station and planetoids. FD69: Mf ndGames Had enough of shoot-em up games'? Relax and let these 21 games exercise your mind instead of your wrist. FD68: Potpourri - Eternal Rome is a strategic simulation of the Roman Empire including military, diplomatic, political, economic and social factors. Lord of Hosts is a board strategy game for 2 players In Moonshine, you've got to get the hootch across the State line— a great rolling, scrolling driving game' FD67: Arcade Includes Liama'.ron a well-done Robotron clone Hate is a 'terrific* commercial grade Zaxrb is a tai get practice game, PipeLme a German interpretation of Pipe Dreams, Tron light cycies version, and wefrowdS a wonderful version of asteroids with a hilar ious twist FD3S: Omega (v 1.3} - A new outstanding dungeon and outdoors adventuri game m a similar vein as hack, rouge, and mona. Th.s version is consider ably faster and oette- that all previous versions. Play time several weeks c months. FD37A&B:Tactical Games - Empire 12. 2w) This great game comes highl recommended. With a fuis-graphic front end. FD38: Games - Chbbage Master - A great cribbage game and lutor, Spade a well done card came, ChineseChectofS - A computer version ol ihis das sic. Puzz - a slide piece puzzle game and construction set, FD39A&B: Star Trek. The Mew Generation - This is a, completely dHfenr version of Star Trek than that found on FD12. This one was created by th< German author Tobias Now with English instructions Excellent'!! Counts a two disks. flequ'res5i2k FD44; Game - Mechfight ts an out of this world role-playing adventure con- parable to hack and moria. The setting, interplanetary colonies and spac stanons. In your quest to explore the world, take t me out to liberate bad guy of their most vaiuabie possessions, engage In a mortal combat or two again; robots and alien fife forms, pick up a new Amiga 9000. Most of all, don't forge to slay alive... F049iChaos Cheats - This disk contains an everything you wanled to kftcfl about cheat se! 'or Chaos Strikes Back, including full maps, spels. objec locations, super characters and more. FO50; Submarine Game - Sealance. one and a half years in the making, thi is an outstano ng sjtrnar ne tactical game. Commercial quality, highly rec om mended FD52: Classics Games PetersQuest a well done Mano brothers type c game, Jymbc a two player missile command done, and Vstank a tank com mancer game FD53: Great Arcade ■ On this disk is a wonderful implementation of the eve popular classic arcade game Defender. Also contain Air Race a WWII flyim ace arcade game, and Psycoblast new creation >dea game. FD56: Arcade - Includes SpaceWar HueyRaid is a welt done helicopte arcade game. Power Pong's a great expanded pong game. FDS7: Arcade Games - Includes 2 truly commercial quality game; MegaBall, an Arkanoid-ish game, features S musical scores, multple level and addicting gameplay, Gravity Attack is a psychedelic trip through sever* different worlds— each dstmcily different. FD58: GAMES! - IncluOes Stemschlag, a great Tetns clone from German with music. SCombat: simulate battle between up to 40 players & monster Imperium Romanum: Battle up to 4 players far control ol the Mediterranea m this Risk-esque game. FD59: Game Potpourri - Xenon III is an almost exact done of the commei oal game of the same name, a great shootemup. Crossword will take lists c words S. automatically generate word 'search puzzles for any Epson compa able printer. FD60: Games - In Nebula, race over a 3d world to destroy enemy installs tions. Interferon; a great Dr. Mario c!one. Enigma; is it a gameor a puzzle FD61 : Games - Solitaire; great graphics, plays two versions Klide; an intei esiing piece of eye candy. Extreme Violence. 2 player kill or beWled gam* YATC. A Tetris done with Arttficai Intelligence, Genesis, create realistic 3 fractal worlds, Workbench Disks WB4;Telecommumnlcatlon - This disk contains several excellent pd conr mumcation programs designed to get you on line quickly and easily. Acces, (1.42) - A very nice ANSI term program based on Comm vl.34. but with lh addition of transfer protocols, Comm [1 .34) - Last version of one of the be: public domain communications programs ever made on the Atnig* Handshake (2.1 2ai Handshake is a Full featured VT52/1 00/1 02/22 WBS: Fonts #1- Several fonts (35) for the Amiga, also included are liv PageStream fonis.and ShowFonf a font display program WB6: Fonts #2 ShowFonti^ .0) This program al'ows you to quickly an painfessty view all 256 characters in a typical font. Large AmsgaDos syste' fonts (many up to 5€ptsl WB7: Clip Art - This disk ts loaded with black and wh.te clip art. A includes, trees, watches, tools, US and State maps, and mori WB9: Icons - Truly a multitude of various types and kinds, Also include iconMiester. IconLab, and others great utilities to help generate icom WB10: Virus Killers - The latest and best VirusX(4,0), Kv(2 1). an ZeroVirus III. WBit: Business - Clerk(4.0), finally a lull featured business accounting Pi program for the small to medium company. Includes receivables, payables end of month and uch more. WBt2: Disk Utilities ■ This great disk rs oaded with wonderful utilities ft everything including making disk labels, disk cataloging, disk optimizing, dis and file recovery archive and organizing, and ail sorts of file manipulation. must have 1 WB13: Printer Drivers and Generator over 70 different drivers, and these don't do if, with PrtDrvGen you can make your own. W815: Business This disk contains a spreadsheet, a database. project/time management program and financial analysis (stocks WB16: Business - This dsk contains an inventory manager, a loan anatysi program, a great calendar/scheduler, a rclodex program, and pennywise good "Cash Book* accounting lor home or office. WB18: WordText Processors - This disk contains the best editor; Indudes.TextPlus (v2.2e) a full featured word processor, Dme(vf.35) a gre; programmers editor with strong macro features JexED(v2,8} an enhance Emacs type editor, and a spell checker. VB20: General Interest DiskSalv V1.42 a disk recovery program lor all imiga We sysloim. FixDisk VI .0 another lile recovery program with leatures JiskSalv doesn't have, 3DLook gives a 30 appearance to your WorkBench, Jlean VI, 01 a program to defragment memory. Tracer ■ trace any part ol \n image. VB2Z: Fonts #3 Several more great fonis. These, like the other font disks York great with Dpamt and WYSIWYG word processors. VB23: Graphics and Plotting ■ Plot (20b) a three dirrensional mathemati- :al function plotter. Can plot any user defined function, BezSurf2 - produce twesome pictures of objects one could lurn on a lathe. Can also map iff ■nage files onto any surface that H can draw. Now compatible with most 3D lackages, and VScreen ■ makes a virtual screen anywhere, great for DTP' VB25;Educatlonel On this disk are two programs that can generate maps if differing types, World Data Base uses the CIA's data base to generate fetailed maps ol any entered user global coordinates. Also Paradox a great demonstration of Albert Einstein General Theory of Relativity. VB26: Disk Utilities #2 MrBackup. KwickBackup ■ two wesl done utilities to io harddisk and floppy disk backups, FileMast - a binary file editor. abe-pnmer ■ Disk label printer with very powerful features. VB27: Naget - 26 Patrick Magei pictures ol beautiful women. VB29: Graphics and Sound This disk has several different Mandelbrot /pe programs for generating stunning graphics. Induces. Man delWoun tains a realistic terrain generator, Fracgen - generated recursive fractals from tser input, Mandelbrot and Tmandei - two last mandelbrot generators, also /tostra ■ the best IFF display program to date, will display ALL IFF's including )ynam«c HAM, and Sound - a great IFF sound player, will play anything, Try his disk' VB33;Clrcult Board Design - several terrific routines lor the electronic nthusiast. Including PCBlool - a circuit board design tool. LogicLab - circuit 3gic taster, and Mead (t 26} a well done new release of this PD CAD pro- iram. ROW comes with predrawn common circuit components for insertion ito schemalics. KAt)3 12 ' Blank Diskettes DSDD 10 for S8.20 (.82 cents ea) 25 for $17.25 (.69 cents ea) 50 for $31.50 (.63 cents ca) 100 for $61.00 (.61 cents ea) VB34: Utilities ■ Several well done utilities, some will require moderate nowledge of a CLI or Shell tor setup. Chatter Box - this one will pJay any iser defied sound after any event (le. disk insert, mouse click, disk emoval.. ). . Artm - The Amiga real time monitor, gives you full control of the feiga OS. very powerful program,, Helper - help program to make learning be CLI eaS'er. and more 1 VB35: 3D Graphics ■ Tns disk contains several neat programs to use with our 3d modeling ray tracing programs 3dFonts - Full vector font set for use nth 3d orcgrams, FontMaker - make 3d fonts trom any system font. *ake3DShape - create 3d shapes trom any image, DumptolFf ■ create 3d immations preserves pallet, and Worid3d - a demo program of a front end qt usewthDKBReid--" VB36: Graphics ■ On this disk are several programs to create stunning iraphical images including, MPath ■ creates swirling gaJaxy images, Roses - .reduce an unlimited number o* variations ot images that a symmetrically fenitar to a rose. SimGen - display those spectacular images as part of your YDfkbenek screen, and RaySharJe - a very good raytracing program, create .:„- own beau! 'ui 2d graph c rnode l .'. :■- - s Dfie VB37; Educational Educational games and puzzles that cover math, leography. soeiiing, and books Ages 6 ■ 15 VB3S: Plotting and Graphics Plotxy is the most powerful foil featured dotting package. Used by many colleges and untversities. A welcome addi- on io our Ittirary 1 Highly recommended Plans ■ a incredibly well done Computer A (Jed Drafting program, very full featured. Tesseiator - a program bat helps generates fantastic looking, recursive M.C. Ecsher type pictures VB39: Musfc Injuitracker is a German offering of an exquisitely well done irogram "hat allows you to play music on your Amiga with CD like controls e's you str.p out music trom you- favorite games or others and include them 1 your m jsic library, VB40: Music - CD on a disk", SO m nutes of modem music on this well pre- ented collection. Requires 2 drives or HD, VB41: Music MED an incredibly well done, full featured music ediior Create your own stunning music directly on your the Amiga. Similar to »Dj"idT-.-icker but better Very powerful easy to use program, Version 3.20. *h>ch is compatable with W82,(R VB43: Business - This d>$k contains Analyt Caic - probably the most pow- rtul spreadsheet program on the Amiga. A Igll featured spreadsheet with nany features expected in a commercial package, Requires 1 .2 MB of mem- ory' V846: Clip Art ■ High Res clip art with the following molifs • embellishments borders, dodads ,...), people, and transports iot VB47: Clip Art - HighRes clip art with the following motifs - hair, dratling. ummer. animals and macfood. VB48: Clip Art - HighRes cdp art with the following mot ts - Holidays, music, nedicaL and misc. VB49ABC:AnEmation Sampler - On th Jihar arc available in Workbench 2.0. I Tool NkmHjicr ■ d wondfrtul uiili[> to odd program* 10 >^»r TOfiL hki jcrcne a collection «it icons on the vtorktH-iuh io c^sih launch irfiiucntly Ium'J programs.«and miich, omdi mmc! A iruc tmurt hove uiiiit) M" \ irus Che ■Ll^ 1-V I ■ It"1-Hl III JIWUI >■> Pi3fKIIUp >i:.im\-i. I Icon - Enhances Wori;ncnch r s "Shn^ All" to display ov Ifor diticTcni tjfpiM of Ilk- (text, iFF^. >muc codes, iit lp]c^.etL.'^ JFoni Editor - Crcatc/cdii t>itmap fonts with foil color -suppnrtf .Scrt-cn llbnkiTN - -iln l"r:wt.! No more norm;: black bcwol [Colorful, trtterestmg and highly hypnotic cffcciN! llti-qui'stcr 1'iihaiucrv ■ no nunc Stale Tlca'a: ln«rt Volume" rajuesiers— I these are Jiitnolcd requesters for ali q( the system's requesters. JCPUBHI speeds up ioxi displays lor owner? ol 68021H CPU** • Sate Reboot - adds .* safe way !o reboot yourcompcter._can cre-ur- r-.Jn~ (disk vaJidaik*n errorh! Two disk set, counts as two. 3 program m, Pascal. ware and PCO '1 0) zcc(t.O) front end. DD47: Pascal ■ This dsk contans everything n Includes A68k (1.2) 68000 assembier. BinK lin a modest Pascal sub-set c: D049: C Compiler ■ contains zc(I.Oi) full) A6Sk(t 2) assembler. Blink linker. DD50: ARexx #2 ■ a must have set of tutorials on ARexx and severa useful examples and utilities lor ARexx development. DD51 : Circuit Analysts - Aspce (2 31 A full featured program for electric cir- cuit analysis. DDS2: Scientific ■ Includes Elements - an incredibly well done periodic table program witfi source. Scientific plotting - over 60Ck of Lattice C sc^ce routines that can be included in your own programs, DD54: Compression - This disk is loaded with all of Me best file compres- sion programs and aids for tne Am:ga, Many of the programs can be used by the new user. Includes Arc, Lharc, IJiwarp. Pkax. PowerPacker a must have by ail. Zp. Warp, and Zoo. Also (FFcrunch an excellent compression for IFF files. DOSS: ARP - On this disk you will find the complete ArpRe'30 release including the full user docs, tne full Developers guide. ARP is the official AmigaDOS Resource Project (ARP) release t-3. ARP makes many improvements to AmigaDOS and makes your system eas er to use from the CLI. DD57: Advanced Utilities - Wsh - like Cross-dos, copies f.les to and from MS-DOS. Pal-NTSC - cor-vert any pal program ta NTSC and vice versa. Also several utilities that improve your stanup-sequence. plus 25 more programs. DD62: Basic and Xscheme - Cursor - a fu'l featured Ami^a 3as -z cz—z. er sbasc and ftext - several wonderful routines to help in basic programers, and Xscheme - an interpreted object oriented language. DD6G: Programming ToolBoi - Many programs to help in your develop- ment efforts (most for C some for basse) Includes programs to generate requesters, an ir-aedibte spntemaker toolbox, to great y aid compiling, con- vert DPamt brushes to C structures, a great library manager, and many more wonderful time savers' DD69:Advanced Utilities ■ SerNet and ParNel ■ Connect two Amiga s and share resources, MemMonitor - Similar to WFrag bJt greatly improved. Selector - put menus on your workbench screen, and more. DD71A4B:C Compiler Tr s dsk contains DICE. Matthew Dillons full fea- tured, powerful C compiler and environment system. 2 Disks, counts as 2- DD72: VT Emulators - Contains tnree powerful full featured VT emulators, with many advanced features irciudmg Kemnit. Xmodem and Tektronix pro- tocols VaxTerm, VLT. and more. DD77: Fortran • Conta ns a full featured FORTRAN77 environmental devel- opment system. Also contains E^Asm a strongly macro dependent 68000 assembler. DD78: Menus S System Enhancements - Several neat programs to aid m launching programs trom special icons (Next computer style), adding WoflVBench menus and more Also contains many useful programs to deter- mine operation system configuration, memory usage, oad and many other important utilizations DD79ABCD: Amiga C Tutorial - This is the most comprehensive C lan- guage. Amiga orientated set of tutorials available. Includes full working examples, source csde and an mceciO'e se; d* ^sso-.s, he ucec a^e ?l: o £CL=s ens and examples of every topic on Amiga programming, -t tis+ set. counts as 3. DD8Q: VFont System - A font rendering system that extends the Amiga so that it wi I be able :o use vectorized outline fonts. Fast rendering, rotating, and sizing For use m your own programs' DD61: ARexx Tutorial - Includes several sample Arexx scripts and sample programs Also includes APig; a library that gives you access to Intuition from within Arexx scripts Dealer inquiries and submissions welcome. Please send me the following disks: Enter disk ID (Example: DD17, FD12, WB10) cc# Signature . Name Total disks © S ea. = S Disk based catalog ($2.50) = S Anti-Virus (S19.95) = S Kao Blank Disks # = $ CA Residents add 7.75% sales tax = $ Foreign Shipping = $ Handling = $ 3.00 Totat Due = $ .i:xp Address . City Phone i_ , ST_ -Zip. ] Payment enclosed Please charge my. ] Visa ] Mastercard Discover Following day ihfpping In most cases, No shipping charges within USA. Canada add 5.25 each, Foreign add S.50 per disk for air mail delivery. Payment in US funds only, A minimum ai $20.00 required on all credit card urder*. DevWare, 12528 Kirkham Court, Suite 11-AW26, Poway, CA 92064 Orders Only Please! {800} 879-0759 Support (619) 679-2825 ' Fax (619) 679-2887 4W- TOOL CHEST The AmigaWorld ToolChest is a line of quality, low-cost software that brings many uniquely pow- erful programs to your Amiga. By purchasing our software you receive unmatched versatility, usability, and best of all, you support the independent Amiga-Developer. TSP9: Utilities #1 IconMeister— an (con editor with a complete set of editing/painting tools. TJFormat — a disk formatting program that will format disks that AmigaDOS wont. ChartMaster — a graphing tool that allows you to generate and save different graphs in IFF format, Graph3D lets you visualize complex data in 3-D and save the results. gtructGen fets you create gadgets, text, bitmaps and window structures and the program will automagically write the "C" source code for you. Label Maker is a very easy to use, full featured label printer. DoubleFrint fascilitates printing of text files on both sides of paper. TSP6: CNpart Stack & White and colorful clipan; for a variety of needs including desktop publishing/video. People, holiday related, school items, scrolls, food, mon- sters, fish, lobsters, symbols and lots more. TSP7: 3D Vector Objects #2 Books, Early American telephone, barrels, gun. spaceships, lamps, trombone, bugle, skateboard. Lego-Rover, remote control, glider and atrplane. Al? objects in Sculpt format. TSP6: 3D Vector Objects #1 Lamp, mirror, bed, chair, fire hydrant, lamp post, street tamp, street sign, traffic light, cannon, cannon supplies, rose, fork, spoon, knife and plate. AH objects in Sculpt format. TSP5: Games 3 QrQgsQ j remit is a one or two-player action/logic game that requires fast reflexes. WordSearch will allow you to generate your own word- search puzzles. In DrugBusters you rid the streets of cigarettes, alcohol, pills and needles. In C' n £P you try to get five X's in a row before your opponent. Colo.rLogic is an excellent MasierMind type game. TSP4: Games 2 Dyno-Wars— a strategic checker-style game. Kooties — assemble a bug before the computer beats you to it. BlockBuster is a colorful, well done Tetris-lype game. Warrior is a fun shoot em-up adven- ture game. MicroMan is a graphic maze game played with a joystick. Battle the computer's armies to take over the planet in Circe. TSP3: Games 1 C r yst a l Caverns is a clone of the arcade game— colorful, complex graphic adventure game. Dot2Dot is an adaptation of the classic 2-player connect-tne-dot game. PizzaDeliveryMan has you run- ning through the streets to get those pies to your cus- tomers. TinyBall is the world's smallest baseball game. Surround-Cy cles is a high-speed arcade game, based on the light cycle races from the Disney movie Tron, TSP2: Sounds Animai sounds, musical instruments and many, many more— 43 sound samples in ail TSP1: Maps of USA, Canada and Europe Hi-Res IFF brushes of all 50 US States, 10 Canadian Provinces and countries in Europe. Each map has a 3D extrusion effect with cast shadow. TC33: Measured is an incm^TET^jsefui utility triat wTTf convert' any type of measurement to another DiskLabeler is a database designed for storing and printing 3." disk labels. Jewels is a Tetris-esque game of action and strategy. Switch is a fun board- game. Gfxclip per will allow you to grab any screen and save it as an IFF picture. Softball Manag er is a database for storing stats for softbatl — any number of leagues may be tracked, WBExec allows you to execute CLI commands from within the Workbench. Several Clipan images are also included, TC32: Computer CQlorinflBooK is a delightful program for chil- dren of all ages— -comes with 15 pages of pictures to color again and again, ListmakerJ ets you make, edit, combine and print lists of words — great for those spelling tests! Moresmooth 1 scrolls text files smoothly on the screen and allows easy printing. Pocket Billiards lets you choose from several of the most popular poo! games with realistic action, textu r e allows you to create, manip- ulate and save (in standard IFF format) realistic fractal textured surfaces. Elaoue. is a monster maze game. Also includes Screen Fader. Snow bench, and FlipBench. TC31 : Calendar Publisher is a professional-caliber calendar maker that is customizable. CrossCircuit is a 1 or 2 player action/logic game that calls for fast reflexes and thinking. A£S is a much-needed printer utility. Pizza Delivery Msn is a maze game where you deliver pies in your neighborhood, Multiplayer is a single program that will let you see IFF pictures/brushes or playback IFF sound samples. Also includes RAMgauge, 3-D vec- tor objects and Hi-Res IFF brushes of maps and flags of European countries. TC26: Word S earch Mahfir lets you create word-search puzzles. TimeCalc is useful for anyone who has to calculate hours and minutes {great for adding up times of CD's to make tapes!) Drug busters is a fun game where you get rid of cigarettes, booze, pills and needles. Wordfmder lets you search binary or text files for a particular word or siring (good for getting hints in your adventure games!), KevClick will add a small audible click to your keys and MouseClick will do the same for the mouse but- tons. Sea war is a game between the Allied Navy and the Empire Fleet. Plus Early American 3-D vector objects, digitized sound effects, and a directory program. TC25: RcrBEnTolFF captures your screen to an IFF file. Pop Colors lets you change the colors of your Workbench screen. Warrior is a fun shoot 'em-up/adventure game for one or two play- ers. Kaleidoscope is a line drawing program Blockbusters is a game where you get rid of blocks by pushing matching blocks into them Amidemo will show-off your Amigas ability to do solid-poly- gon animations. Microscope lets you examine memory at any location. Also includes Hi-Res IFF brushes of all 50 states and 10 Canadian provinces, nine digitized sounds and two small disk utilities and printer utility. TC24: TableMaker is a tool lor effortlessly building numerical tables, Kooties is a fun game where you have to assemble a bug before the computer beats you to it. H ypertext lets you put links in a text file to other text, graphics, sound, animation, ARexx and other applications. Ihs LMe Black Book is a wonderfully useful telephone and address book. QoIqi Lagi£ is a MasterMind-type game. Also includes several disk and memory utilities — and some animal sound effects to lop it off. TC23: Wherels lets you quickly and painlessly find a misplaced file on your drive Select creates a "window from which you~ca~n run your favorite programs, MatheMagic lets you find the day of the week for any date in the century, also lets you enter statistical data to be analyzed, graphs data, and solves linear algebraic equations. Pointer Usl Mahfir lets you create your own pointers or import pointers from other programs and save them in a disk file, Dyno-Wars requires more strategy and thought than your regular checker board game. Also includes Ml Monster and Trili on games, 3-D objects, six sound effects and an animation of a pretzel, TC22: Amiga Checkbook is a fast checkbook manager with check printing ability, budget analysis, and a report writer. Ami Cry pt is a file encryption decryption tool to password-protect any file, ..a must for security. WaveSyn lets you design musical instruments and waveforms for use in other programs. It also lets you play your keyboard like a piano. Cinco is a game where you try to get five X's in a row before your opponent does. AlterCLI lets you change attributes of your CLI window (width, title, depth, height, location, colors) with a single command—very useful for scripts. Also includes an animation by renowned Amiga-artist Lou Markoya, as well as 3-D objects. TC21 : Circe is a "risk-style" game where you battle the computer to take over the planet. Batch man allows you to execute CLI pro- grams, batch fifes and ARexx scripts by simply clicking on a gad- get, Colors prims color test sheets and assigns RGB values to printer and screen output ...absolutely invaluable to achieve the best color printing results. Easy file is a powerful database for home or a small business. S_P_nle_ Edil&i lets you easily create animated sprites. Plus 3-D fruit objects and five sampled sounds, TC16: Cvberscaoe generates complex 3-D vector objects of ter- rain and saves your objects in Sculpt or Turbo-Silver format. Math plotter graphs mathematical equations in both 2-D and 3-D. Double Print prints your text files on both sides of the paper. Metamorp h. a graphic adventure game, Tinvball — the worlds smallest baseball arcade game and 6 digitized sound effects. TC15: Labelmaker is a very easy to use label program. SurroundCycles, a high-speed arcade game. Dot2DoL an adap- tation of the classical connect the-dot game. A tutorial on anima- $5.95 1-9 Disks $4.95 10+ Disks SAVE 39%!! -disk •'■* Receive 6 bi-monthl] issues for just $54.95! "* Save $34.45 off single-issue price!* l * Convenient Automatic Home Delivery #* Lowest possible prices! «► Receive your disks weeks before others do! ■■* Programs you simply just can't get anywhere else !■# Full Money-Back Guarantee; [f you're not completely satis- fied, well refund your money; -no questions asked, 'Based on single-disk pricing including handling, Canadian subscriptions add $5.00 shipping, all other Foreign add $10.00 shipping tion techniques by Amiga-artist extrordinaire Brad Schenck com- plete with one of his animations. Also includes a collection of clip- art and more animal sounds. TC 14: AmipoFile is a database and address book. Q&oh MX lets you visualize complex data in a 3-D manner and save the results. Spectrogram analyzes and displays digitized sounds. Pterona dona ball — an animation by Lou Markoya. Also includes M> Ii£ Tac Toe . 3-D objects, food clip-art, and sampled sounds. TC13: StrucGen lets you create gadget, text, bitmap, and win- dow structures and writes the C source code for you, LifeCycles plots your biorhythms. Create spectacular images with Mandelbrot s. Look, a CLI utility that helps you find files on your disk quickly and easily. Plus 3-D objects, holiday clip-art. an Amiga Flight animation, drive tlfiad cleaning utility , and technical discussion on how AmigaDOS stores information on disk. TCI 2: TJFormat formats disks that AmigaDOS normally wont. ChartMaster is a powerful graphing tool. MoreCandy generates an assortment of colorful graphic patterns and allows you to save them to disk. Shark, a game where you have to eat all the little perch you can catch to stay alive. Plus B&W clip-art for desktop publishing, spaceship 3-D vector objects, an animation, and Speakeasy (C source code for the programmer who wants to add speech to C programs). TC11: DiskSalvag e will fix corrupted disks and recover deleted files. IconMeister is an advanced Icon editor, AlienDuel is a fast, shool'em-up game. Crystal Caverns is a colorful, graphic adven- ture game like the arcade game. Also includes an animation, sound samples, 3D dinner table objects, and Hi- Res monster clip- art. The AmigaWorld Toolchest - 1 1 335 Carmel Mtn. Rd #1304-T3, San Diego, CA 92128 Please rush me the following: (Use disk ID code i.e. TC22) Orderline (800) 677-0416 Technical Support (619) 486-9538 [ ] Payment Enclosed Please charge my: [ ] Visa [ ] MasterCard CC#: Signature^ Name: Address:__ City: Following if.u' shipping In mostt ewe* Ni> --hipping rh.irgi*s within the USA. Canada ,idd £.25 per disk. Foreign add 5,50 per disk for air mai! delivery. Payment in US funds onW- Exp:_ # # # # # # # # #_ #_ #_ # #_ #_ #_ # NOTE: All "TC" disks count as TWO disks Total disks @S each $ Toolchest Subscription ($54.95) S CA Residents add 7.75% Tax S Canadian orders add 7% GST S _St:_ -Zip:_ Handling S 3.00 Foreign Shipping $ Total enclosed S InfoMarket FREE - 6 DISKS - FREE FULL OF SOLID GOLD HITS TRY US! Get 6/3.5" disks full of our best selling NO VIRUS soft- ware for AMIGA® COMPUTERS. Games - Animation - Clip Art Education- Utilities-Video Tools Pay only $5.00 shipping/handling SATISFACTION GUARANTEED SINGE 1985 CREDIT CARDS ONLY ORDER TODAY SMC SOFTWARE PUBLISHERS 619 931-8111 ext511 Qrcle 90 On Reader Service Card, Have We Gone Mad? In Uiis issue, 7JPPERWARE again is offering >ou cni/y low priues thai won't list too long! This offer for PD/Shareware is pod only through this tin) ad! Oh, yeah. ..good quality t\j sen ice .ire included! Fur an .i\\esoiiK- iliskf atalog, please send $2.fXI and you'll get coupons liihI li>is.i gtxxlies! 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Jmpwrted frum Entbtod, [his. p*.k <>ilm >«i irMSjsjnds of great images *ilh 1 7 general caiejoricv and nuntcrous sub-categonev ConxpJete wittian index far CSQ scjrchinj:! Tti&la tvllet itun many O OOinW Cla l rsfc-"Va£!-' , ' oul then: aMing hundreds of dollars. HighK RTommended! UWi ^u^facticm GLuraniecd for limited time! £Wv... ccq, Q> To order now: gppERWAfiE JJ"- ^^« Z%fe k j£?3S? r P.O.BOX952B5 SSSfbSSSST wixuhippingmL-Liging SEATTLE WA 98145 Mc^tys to Sundays (206)747-1 9d4 f 2JSSilAfljj The Ultimate 16 MHz PC/AT Emulator for your Amiga 500, 1000, 2000 IS NOW AVAILABLE! Order your ATortce+ (PLUS) DIRECTLY from the North American Importer! ♦ Intel 16MHz 286 / 512K FAST RAM on board ♦ Works with ANY Amiga compatible hard/disk drive system* our competitor's emulator doesn't! ♦ Simple "snap-in" Installation ♦ Math co-processor socket ♦ Bring the world of IBM MS-DOS to your Amiga ♦ Voted "Hardware Product of the Year" In Europe ♦ Microsoft's DOS 5,0 and Intel Math chip available ONLY $295 DELIVERY INCLUDED Shop and Compare our DELIVERED Price ORDER TODAY: Holz Computer Supply #12, 6120 - 1 1 St. SE, Calgary, AB T2H 2L7 Tel: (403) 262-6896 Fax: (403) 255-31 10 7AM to 9PM MST Mon, - Sat. MO / Check / MC / Visa (Monay Orders ship some day!) Tell your Amiga Club and local BBS about usl Wc nrrrfy all crcuii Into glvan ft wW proucul* fraud lo If* f utHrvt wtlmnf of fn* law. Circle 31 On Reader Service Card. VISIONSOFT 1 130 Fremont Blvd. Seaside, CA 93955 MEMORY UNIT 2MB 4MB 8MB 1X4- 80 SC ZIP % 19.00 152 304 1X4- 70 SC ZIP 22.00 — 176 352 1X4 -80 PAGE DIP 21.00 84 168 328 1X4 -80 PAGE ZIP 22,00 88 176 344 1X1-70,80 5.25 84 168 320 25* X4 - 70, 80 5.40 86 172 336 1X8-70, 80 SIMM 39.00 78 156 308 4X8-70, SOS (AIM 150.00 - 150 290 AdRAM 540 95.00 172 259 BaseBoard 95.00 172 259 _ IVS Mela 4 _ 180 255 DataFh ct RAM 92j00 167 242 392 AdSCSI :oso 1 69.00 244 319 469 DataFlyer 500 SCSI . ... 139 MulLiStart II 65 DauiHycr 1000 SCSI ... 159 BigFoot A500 89 DataFlyer 2000 SCSI ... 85 Super Dcnise 45 DataFlyer 500 / Q40 .... 329 Super Agnus (2MB) .... 85 C-Net AMIGA 2.0 BBS Software * Totally configurable * Multi-user (24 rtodea) * 1 .3 & 2 .0 compalib le * Ne l work & AREXX support Orders Only: 800-735-2633 VISA/MC Info & Tech: 408-899-2040 FAX: 408-626-0532 BBS: 408-626-0302 Circle 1 76 On Reader Service Carrj. Circfe 86 On Reader Service Card. HlHHM LIGHTWAVE 3D and other ANIMATIONS to VIDEO TAPE SINGLE FRAME RECORD - 35 cents / frame 68Q4G Rendering / Sequential Frame Grabs A NEW LIGHT VIDEO (704) 299-4341 PO BOX 18311 Ashevllle, NC 28814 Circle 41 On Reader Service Card. VIDEO ARTWORK BONANZA!!! CREATE SCENES IN MINUTES INSTEAD OF HOURS! piX LIL> Beautifully drawn 21 3 x 145 pixel pictures in 32 colors - 995 scenes/objects! animals, fruits, places, machines, people, buildings, foods, etc. - includes IFF conversion for Deluxe Paint, Dig! Paint, Video Toaster, etc - total price: $9,951 NEARLY 10OO COLOR SCENES! YOU PAY ONLY 10 PER PICTURE! ORDER YOUR COPY TODAY - CALL TOLL FREE: 1-S00-272-4601 add S2 shipping and handing - CA residents add 7.75% sales tax wim»^<^ Brai n Technologies Co.. P.O . Box 21 5 1 47. Sacramento, CA 9582 1 %£?&£% ™* Circle 182 On Reader Service Card. Special Offer on Amiga Products AmigaDOS Release 2 Upgrades Release 2 Upgrade Kit... $87,50 Release 2 Kil for A3000 42.00 2620/2630 cprom Kit for Com. Accel ...35.00 Super Dcnisc 8373 Chip 42.95 Fatter Agnus Chip 1MB 59.95 Fattest Agnus Chip 2MB 85.00 DKB Mcgachip for above 234.95 2MB Agnus Bundle w/sfflapOUt 285.00 AlfaData Kitbtan Switch. 39.95 MuhiStart II 500/2000 68.00 Hard Drives h Accelerators GYP Series II HCS/O HD Com........ $169,00 GYP G-Force Combo 030/25MH7J1MB ,...649.00 GYP G- Force Combo 030/40MI 1 774 MB ..1099.00 Above cards w/various hard drives..... .....Call GVP SIMM 32 - 1MB 60ns for above 59.00 GYP SIMM 32 - 4MB 60ns for above 209.00 GYP FasiROM for A2000 39.95 Quantum & Seagate Drives available,..,.., Call WangtekTape 150MB w/cait AmiBack 475.00 CBM 2630 25MHZ Accelerator 2MB 499.00 CBM 2630 25MMZ Accelerator 4MB 689.00 Motherboard Replacements A500 w/swapoui (all revisions) $150,00 A2000 w/swapout (rev, 4.5 or above)... 225.00 A2000 w/swapout (rev. 3.9 lo 4.4) 350,00 A3000 16MHZw/swapoul ..449,00 A3000 25M HZ w/swapom ..............489.00 Phoenix A1000 Upgrade Board 849.00 Amiga Chips & RAM Chips S520 CIA Chip $11.50 Dentse 8362 or Paula 8364 Chip 23.95 Gary 5719 Chip 14,00 KkkStauvl.3ROM 29.00 1x8 SIMM Module 80ns .................37.95 4x8 SIMM Module 80ns ...,.149.95 Motorola 68030 CPU 50MHZ...., ........189.00 Above CPU w/68882 50MHZ Math Co...... 269, 00 Power Supplies, Floppies & Keyboards CBM A2000 Power Supply ...$159.00 Above item w/swapoui.............. 1 19.00 CBM A500 Power Supply 35.00 A2000 Keyboard.. .....'. 95.00 A500 Keyboard......... 75.00 A2G0O Internal Disk Drive ....,.,,...,..........,89.00 A500 Internal Disk Drive 109.00 Above item w/swapout 84.00 .Alfa Data or Air External Drive 89.00 Amiga Computers & Monitors .Amiga 500- DS Model or 500-C Model ....$399.00 A501 512K RAM Type Expansion 49.00 A520Yideo Adapter,.. , .......38,00 1084S Stereo Monitor .,,,.289.95 1084 Monitor........ ........265,00 1950 Multiscan Monitor .......519.00 C m Software Hut, Inc. rf^, ~ 2534 S. Broad Street jfflb, Philadelphia, PA 19145^^ To Order Call: (800) 848-0079 In PA or for more information call: (215)462-2268 _. (215) 339-5336 (Fax) tHH Many additional products available for immediate ship- ping. Please call for information. Shipping on chips is $300. Power Supplies, Drives and Keyboards are $0,00. COD shipping please add $4.00. For other items or air shipping, please call. We accept International and Cana- dian orders and only charge actual shipping charges. We accept Visa, MC, Discover, Money Order or Personal Check. All items are shipped same day from stock, per- sona! checks allow 10 days to clear, Circle 88 On Reader Service Card, AmigaWorld 107 InfoMarket Top-notch Amiga software products & hard drive experts! FractalPro 5-1: HAM & 24-bil Fractal Art/Animation: $149.95 "... some of the most breathtaking images ever seen... Four Stars + " ScapeMaker 2.0: Turn IFF pics into VistaPro DEMs: $39.95 " ... strange and wonderful possibilities! Four Stars +" (.Info 3/92) d 42M 3.5 S 179 155M 5.25/FH S 499 594M Optical S2850 i200M3.5 569 330M5.25/FH 949 V426M3.5 1349 660M5.25/FH 1449 f 520M3.5 1449 lGig 5.25/FH 1999 MegageM 1903 Adria Santa Maria, C A 93454 805-349-1104 1 Gig Optical 3499 2Gig DAT tape 1499 and more, so CALL! Circle 167 On Reader Service Card. ■» I j flr tfl P.fcJ-t^JB MWffl Seven Seas Software, Inc. PO Box 1451 Port Townsend, WA 98368 (206)385-1956 "Math and Scientific Visualization Software" Circie 164 On Reader Service Card, AMIGA Files to Slides or Negatives IFF, IFF24, RGB, HAM, Toaster, Ham-E, Sculpt, Turbo Silver, DCTV, imagine, Caligari, JPEG 2000 Line Resolution Maintains RGB Quality & Anti-aliasing No Mosaic Pixel Appearance 16,7 Million Colors & Overscan 48 Hour I n ho use Turn Around for Slides Prv^jSaiioNS For pricing & samples cat: 1-715-856-5627 Or write: GRAPHIC IMPRESSIONS POB 254 Wausaukee, Wl 54177 Citcfe 67 On Reader Service Care llWummmm ELECTRONIC SERVICES INTERNATIONAL ACCELERATE YOUR AMIGA TODAY WITH A CSA MEGA MIDGET RACER m CLOCKED AT 25 MHz v* Sales Technical Support Line with math chip $375.00 1-800-729-4361 Visa/MC/C0D Circle 185 On Reader Seaice Card. FUN PICTURE-WORD GAME FOR AGES 6 AND UP Mr. Robot's Speak'n Spell is like trivial pursuit except with real-time speech animation, several musical scores by Bach, superb graphics, addictive crossword picture puzzles, and about 500 screens worth of full color pictures - 204 levels of play - 1020 picture/word pairs easy examples: caboose, tornado, wharf, laser, awl. funnel, stereo difficult examples: hookah, bathyscaph, bartizan, narwhal, palanquin classroom tested family fun * highly addictive - only $49,95 - Mr, Robot's Speak'n Spell is distributed by Vertical, Inc. SEE YOUR DEALER OR CALL TOLL FREE: 1-600-272-4601 add $4 shipping and handling - CA residents add 7.75% sales tax mmmmmmmMBI Brain Technologies Co., P.O. Box 215147, Sacramento, CA 95821 o Circle 184 On Reader Service Card. KASARA MICRO SYSTEMS 1-800-248-2983 • 914-735-0960 Now the only source you will need for your Commodore product requirements, We have been your AUTHORIZED source for more than a DECADE of quality service, prices on NEW or USED CPUs & accessories, up- grades, replacement parts & assemblies with our EXCHANGE programs, repair/maintenance services and stock-to-one-week delivery with our MONTHLY SPECIALS, 90 day warranty on parts/repairs & quantity discounts TST Weekday Hours 9:00 am-6:00 pm EST COMPETITIVE SAVE MONEY REDUCE COSTS COLOR RIBBONS & PAPER Colors: Black, Red. Blue, Ribbons: Price Ea, Black Color T-Shirt Brother Ml 109 5.50 6.50 7.50 Citizen GSX 140 4.00 5.00 7.50 Citizen GSX 140 4C 12.50 15.00 Okidata 1 92 5.00 7.50 — Panasonic 1124 5.00 7.50 — SeikcshaSPl600 4.50 6.00 7.50 Star NX1 000 3.50 4.50 675 Star NX1 000 4C — 6,25 10.00 Star NX1 020 4C 6.50 12,50 15.00 Green, Brown, Purple, Yellow T-Shirt (Heal Transfer Ribbon) All Colors Color Banner Paper: 45 ft, roll S8-95/pk. Asstd. Pastel Paper: 200 shts. $7.90/pk. Asstd. Bright Paper: 200 shts. $lO.90/pk. Minimum orders $25.00. Minimum S&H $5,00. Call for other ribbons and supplies. Price & spec, are subject to change without notice. RAMCO COMPUTER SUPPLIES PO Box 475, Manteno. IL 60950 USA USA (800) 522-6922 or (815) 468-8081 Canada (800) 621-5444 Circle 188 On Reader Service Card ULTRA HIGH RESOLUTION 35mm COLOR SLIDES from COLOR POSTSCRIPT • 24-BIT IFF HAM • Standard IFF • Over 4000-line Resolution - NO Scanllnes * NO Curvature Distortion * Brilliant Color HAMMOND PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES (310)390-3010 Call or Write for order form, price ii si 4 sample: 11280 Washington Place Culver City. California 9023Q Circle 194 On Reader Service Card. saaiuim auba Mamas Hundreds of previews of old and new games! Now you can test drive many programs cheaply before actually buying the final prod- uct! We also have an incredible amount of adult software and music modules! A 2-disk adult sampler is available for $7.00 (must sign stating you are over 18). All shipping is free. Write for a FREE cata- log today! Foxy Tec ■ PO Box 2266 • Gresham, OR 97030 Circle 16G On Floater Seivice Card. A500 Keyboard $ 89 A2000 Power Supply $189 m A1 000 Keyboard $1 30 A3000 Power Supply $249 _T A2000 Keyboard,.... $120 Super Denise ..... ......$ 50 A500 Power Supply $ 89 Fatter Agnus $ 79 AC(\n i Aonnn Check for all other parts -OUU / MZUUU $ AW|pEX S YsTEMS t INC Repair a/,y0 plUS parts 5344 Jimmy Carter Blvd. _. ■ , -* , « A l 1 Norcross, GA 30093 Discounts for Dealers & Schools M041 263-9190 Authorized Commodore / Amiga Service Center (800)962-4489 > Info: (404) 263-9190 Cirde 96 On Reader Service Card. Call For Free Catalog! DIGIVISI0NS INCREDIBLE" 1 $ 5 OFFER CONTINUES ! '/Choose ANY 4 FredFhh Disks PLUS i- EREE Fred Fish /DigiVision Catalog! £ And Always.. .10 Fish/S20, S DV/S15. 5 Customed Order ^> (918) 254-1718 NOW! V ninil/isinn 24 HR. BBS: (918) 250-6477 DigiVision 8125 "D" East 51st ste,1543 Tulsa, OK 74145 S5 Ofler Iper a ddress. S&H Incl. Add S4 for COD j Circe 61 On Reader Service Card. EARL WEAVER BASEBALL™ Absolutely the best stats disk yetl HALF-CENTURY TEAMS American and National League. I lit- 25 greatest players from each train, HJ50... present. Over 650 players. Exhaustive ResearchI Please sen4 $12.95 + $3.00 shipping in Check, Money Order or C< )l) in: Desirable Productions PO Box 13241, Los Angeles, CA 90013 '" Kail Weaver ha TRADEMARK OF ELECTRONIC ARTS Circle 83 On Reader Service Card. JOS May 1992 COMMODORE AMIGA SERVICE CENTER AMIGA 500 (Repair) $75.00 includes parts/labor We service the entire Amiga product line and carry replacement parts & power supplies. Call for prices. A&M Computer Repair • 20 Guernsey Dr., New Windsor New York 12550 • (914)562-7271 24 Hour Turnaround - Dealers Call For FREE Catalog 1-800-344-4102 Circle 190 On Reader Service Card. The InfoMarket AMIGAWORLD'* InfoMarket is a great opportunity for those with AMIGA products to reach over 100,000 Amiga owners- AmigaWorld is the only publi- cation with a subscription offer reaching every new Amiga owner, national newsstand distribution by Kable News Co., and single copy sales in computer stores carrying the AMIGA as well as large bookstores such as B. Dal ton and Walden Books. To reserve your InfoMarket page display ad, call Heather Guinard at 1-800- 441-4403 or 603-924-0100. We accept checks, money orders, MasterCard or VISA. MicroMiga Lowest Prices!! PSyB T m SptciruraHolobyK- ^V SpnnuV,Hey,CA9 1 977 tfV ice- 1619)670-3161 CalHor Pacing or FREE Catalog Circle 183 On Reader Service Card. Amiga Repair Services 24 hour Turnaround * 10 yean experience luUsg Commodore llqubntcut * TO clay warranty oq all parti replaced ,* Vaa my Trained Service lectin eliiu . * Low FUi Rale Pricea . No chxrgea fenlh Bringer Dragons Brcalh Dragon's Lair II Dungeon Master EasyThler EyeOfHorus Future Wars Galactic Empiic Germ Crazy Heat Wave Heroes Of Lance HilUfar Ironljord Manhuntcr 2 Math Blaster Plus Money Mentor Pictionaiy Pro Wrrtc Fonts I Pufly's Saga Securities Analyst Spritz Star Command The Ball Game Third Courier lltraDos titilities Universe 3 Waterloo 1 -£fl(Wi^K-l 1 ?*\ 10-9 M-Th All ittlcs arc new and fully gun ran reed. Call for free X UW U«7tr-llJfaJ lp-5F-Sai brochure of many other hWouls plus ou/ extensive line of Tech Support: (304)529-3232 _ E. 5.T. cu/Tcn[ rc fc ases arld Uw d Amiga titles We accept Visa. ~~ Circle 85 On Reader Service Card ^^^^~^~^^^^^^ @ SIZZLING SOFTWARE @| We offer the Best In Public Domain and Adult-Oriented Software. Over 250 Disks in Stock, Prices as Low as $3 per Disk, Free Brochures. Visa, MasterCard Accepted. Our Disks are Loaded! 3-Disk Adult Sampler; Send $10, Signed Statement of Age (21+) to: CLEARLIGHT SOFTWARE PO BOX 1411, DEPT. A MILWAUKEE, Wl 53201 InfoMarket Bigfoot 200 Watt A-500 Power Supply... Universal Joystick/Mouse Switch .*...« ....$129.95 ....$ 29.95 Slingshot A-2000 Slot For The A-500 Eureka 512K A-501 Clone , ...™. ™$ 39.95 .„.$ 74.95 Eureka 4MB Ram Expansion ..„$ 89.95 Eureka Swiftly 300 D.PX Mouse. Eureka Midi (1 In, 2 Out, 2 Thru) ....$ 34.95 ....$ 39.95 Micro R. & D. is pleased to be the North American representative for Omni-Eureka Electronics corporation. Omni-Enreka's product line represents an exceptional value for the Amiga user, low in cost, high in quality. These products are warranted by Micro R. & D. See your dealer! ^ebra^ pSebV* 3 (308)745-1243 (308)745-1246 FAX Circle 99 On Reader Service Card. AMIGA Programmers Wanted! The AmigaWorld Tool Chest has created a fantastic opportunity to publish new, uncir- culated Amiga programs. If you've written something special for the Amiga, and would like to earn some extra money, please contact us for our Tool Qiest Author Guidelines. Per- haps you'll be the next Tool Chest Star! AmigaWorld Tool Chest Submissions Dept. 11835 Carmel Mt. Rd. #1304 San Diego, CA 92128 619-486-9538 Circle 195 On Reader Service Card. AmigaWorld W9 IRaiWALU Total Solution Mailorder MODEMS PRINTERS STORAGE IVS Trumpcard Pro $169 Speed up your file transfers! With file sizes increasing and modem I prices dropping, slow modems just don't make sense. If you have questions, we'll be glad to help. Courier HST 38.4 $599 Courier HST Dual Standard $899 Supra FAX 9600 «32Hi $299 SupraModem 2400 $99 SupraModem 2400+ mnp v.^tw $ ! 45 Telecommunications Atalk III $39 Baud Bandit S35 Online! Platinum $29 EXTRAS Expand and Enhance It's part of the fun of owning a computer. Call us for ideas! A500 BigFoot 200watt S95 Bodega Bay $259 ; Bomac Tower A2000 S269 CBM 13/2.0 ROM's Seal! ECE A5OQ/2000 ext. MIDI $49 External SCSI Case S85 Mouse/Joystick Switcher S29 ! Switch It ROM Switcher $52 | Swiichbox A/B db25 Seal! Totes. Skins. Covers Stall Show off your ideas on paper Tel! us your needs and we can mutch a printer to your system. Citizen GSX 140+ $329 Citizen GSX200 $179 Canon BJ30G Bubble Jet S499 HP DeskJet 500 Color $759 NEC SitentWriter 2 Model 90 $1699 | Ribbons, Inks, Cables, Switchboxes, Color kits, Call! (Hard Drives) Increase your storage! Upgrade your Amiga system witn a faster, or larger hard drive. We offer a full range of sizes and controllers that make sense for your system. SCSI Controllers Dataflver $79 GrandSlam $239 CVP Scries 2 HC8 $199 IVS Grandslam $249 Al Controllers AdIDE 40 $99 AdlDE40kit $139 Rochard 500 $259 Call for A T tlrh e p rices SCSI Packages GVPA500 52MB Quantum S499 GVP A500 L 20MB Quantum $649 GVP A500 240MB Quantum S9 19 GVP A2000 52MB Quantum $409 GVPA2000 120MB Quantum $539 GVP A20£)O 240MB Quantum $839 DataFlyer $179 GI Mouse $36 G ravis J oy stick $39 Keyboards Scall Sharp JX 1 00 Color Scanner $559 Sharp JX320 Color Scanner $ 1 .259 SketchMaster 12x12 $459 Wiz Draw Tablet $259 Combo 68030 50MHz 51,549 MegaMidget O30EC25Mhz $399 MegaMidget 68030 25MHz with 68882 $499 MegaMidget 68030 33MHz wiih 68882 $599 Progressive 040/2000 $1,649 VXL30 40MHzEC $479 Zeus 68040 Combo Seal! A3000 GForce 68040 $2,099 Mercury 68040 S2.159 Progressive 040 A3000 $1,499 a A500 A2000 Toaster Systems Call the H r i wnl I BBS at (215) 683-7499 Complete catalog on-line! 1-800-766-5757 We Sell Coijnplet^ Systerhs VIDEO (Hardware) Create, The technology is expanding so rapidly, you can merge computer, video and still images in ways never before imagined. And we can help you select ■ the proper tools. AmiLink Junior Scall BCD2000A SFC S799 CBM2320 Display Board $249 Color Splitter $119 DCTV $399 DM I Resolvcrs as low as $999 DPS Personal TBC v2.0 $839 DPS Personal V-Scope $799 DPS Personal TBC230 $1 ,729 Firecracker 2400 $829 Frame Grabber $4)9 GVP Impactvision $1,899 GRAPHICS (Software) Produce perfection. In print, on screen, and in video, your work is a reflection of you, and it must be as you visualize it. Make it so. The tools you need are here today. Art Department Pro v2.0 $ 1 79 Broadcast Tiller II $229 Caligari V2.0 $259 CanDovl.5 $89 Deluxe Paint IV $115 Digi-View McdiaStation $159 Disney $79 Draw 4D Pro $219 Fractal Pro v5.0 $99 Imagine $129 Imagine v2.0 $269 ImerFont $79 Pagcsiream 2.2 $179 Call for fonts, textures, video tapes, conversion utilities and more! Kitchen Sync Dual TBC Minigen Panasonic AG 1960 Panasonic & Sony Panasonic 1410 Camera RGB Splitter Rambrandt SFC/Personal Supergen Video Blender Video Master VideoToaster v2.0 Pelican Press Pixel 3D v2.2 Pixmate Presentation Master Pru Draw v2.0 Professional Page 2. 1 Pro Video Post Real 3D Turbo Pro ScapeMaker v2.0 Scenery Animator Showmaker TV Text Pro Texture Citv Pro Vista Pro v2.0 A1000 Expand your Arnica 1000 Add memory, storage, speed, or all three with these exciting expansion products. Wc support your A 1000! Adspeed $189 CBM 1 300 Genlock $59 DataFlyer case & SCSI $229 DataFlyer 2MB package $289 Fastrak case & SCSI " $289 Insider 11(1 -5MB) $259 Kevboard $119 Kwikstart fl $69 MegaMidget Racer 25mhz $399 Phoenix Board $850 Rejuvenator w/1 MB Agnus $419 Rejuvenator w/2MB Agnus $469 FLOPPIES Eliminate disk-swappers* cramp! Add another floppy make life easier. A500 or A2000 3 5" internal $85 A3000 3.5" internal S99 Roctec Ultralite 33" $94 Bool Drive Selector $29 Bodeaa Bav Kit $99 Disks 25-fW* 35" $19 $59 S79 S45 S179 S129 $179 $169 $299 $29 $59 S229 S99 Scall $59 DISPLAY Ease your eyes It shouldn't hurl 10 look al your monitor. Whatever your needs, composite through multisean, call us. CBMl084SSiereo $299 CBM 1950 Multisean $569 DiamondScan AUM 1391A $569 DiamondScan 20L $2,199 NFC MultiSync 3FGX $699 Sonv 1304 $669 Flicker Free Video $259 Flicker Fixer $259 AM standard and custom cables ...Knowledgable Sales Consultants. ..In-House Technical Staff... roduct Descriptions On-Line... Complete Disk-Based Catalog SYQUEST Re moveable- media Hard Drives. Perfect for backups. animations and DTP 44MB 5.25" Internal $349 88MB 5.25" Internal $469 External - We II add a ease, SCSI cable, and setup for just S 129 1 please sjed fy the SCSI c™™i ler you own I Cartridges — Call lor prices! BOOKS & TAPES AmigaDOS Inside am] Qui w/disk AmigaDOS Manual 3rd edition Amiga Primer VHS Animation Video Vol. ! VHS IX-sklop Video Power jagine Companion | Hot Rod Your Amiga VHS Imagine Guided Tour VHS l-'sins ARcw Video Tidier VHS Mega-Midget Racer The upgradable alternative from CSA | I (you're going to imest in an accelerator, why lock yourself into a non-upgradable 'solution".' The Mega-Midget gives you the option 10 upgrade with: A2D-33MH/. 68030 using tlie same board A2O-50MK/. 6KK8J/2 using the ssUnc bond A Up to 8MB of 32-bil RAM (while fmantainln^ all 9MB of your existing system RAM!i AUp to 2MB of Fast, sialic ,i2-hii RAM (for the ROM Kcrmil, and super-fast screen updates.) MegsrMkfget RucerniDjs in the A50Q, A2000and AIQOO | «call on the A 1000), and is c omp ati ble with ih; Toaster, DTP programs, ray-tracing packages, and all Other 68030-awipatibfc: software. Prices starting at $399 Many irtherconrjguramnRv JvailaMe, Call for detail* New Video Products Ami Link Jr. — Cuts -only editor for use uTFtitnre Video products. DPS Personal V-Scope -- An internal card with both waveform tin nit tor and vectorseopc. TREXX Pro - Script generator for tlie Video Toaster. Texture City - Collection of textures in HAM,DCTV or 24-bit | Video Toaster 2.0 software! Addison -Wesley ROM Kernai manuals (2.04) Libraries, Devices, Hardware, Includes, j and Intuition Style Guide BfliWALL Solid Products and Solid Support Professional Page 2.1 I Powerful, Easy to Use, DesktopTuhlishing! I ■ Landscape priming on dot | matrix and laser printers! » Up to 2X faster than ZO • Interactive on-line help disk ■ Built-in Word Processor & .Spell checker! ,n$179 BRIWALL\t Choice for our in-house DTP needs! Get all 5 for $99! $169. EOl • Coin pic I e Video Editing System for everyone with a camcorder. VCR and an Amiga! • Quickly and easily catalog and t-'dit the best moments from yiHi r video tapes! • Includes hardware to control most camcorders and VCR's! iD)JiOB Innovative solutions to your needs I Megachip Expanding your Amiga just isn't complete until you've expanded your | graphics capacity to 2MB of chip RAM! You need Megachip to get it into your 500 or '20(H) (sorry 2'000's). Megachip 2000 or 500 complete with the 2MB Agnus - $309 Kwikstart/Multistart You want to get that 2.04 ROM, but.. .what about the stuff that doesn't work? Or you want your 1000 to autotowi off (he hurddrivc. DKB offers the solution. An casy-to-install board that allows you to switch easily between 1 3 and 2.0. KwiksUiri A 1 000 - $69 Multistat! A2000 or A500 00 system after ten years of owning MS-DOS machines, I was really getting tired of playing catch-up with the MS- DOS community, continually having to add to my system to meet new software requirements. I finallv learned that the 386-SX 16-MHz system is the new entry-level PC system. That was it! Now I have my A50D, and I haven't had this much fun with a computer since I had my Commodore 64! IBM PC owners should have the kind of support from other users that I have seen in my area lor the Amiga, Marc Chiarello Oconomou m 3 Wisconsin 112 May 1992 YOUHEA PROGRAMMER ALREADY. BOTYOU PROBABLY DONT KNOWITYET. Object Oriented Program Construction for Regular Ordinary People. hilc you weren't watching, we turned you and the rest of the world's Amiga users into programmers. With CanDo's intuitive interface and simple but powerful toolkit, ordinary people all over the country have been creating stand-atone utilities, data bases, word processors, vertical market applications, animated multimedia presentations, and all sorts of games. Experienced programmers (many of them not ordinary at all) have been prototyping applications in CanDo for the sake of expediency and finding as often as not that there's little left to do when they get through. We get rave letters every day. Give us a call. We'll read you some. Better yet, just say the word and we'll send you a nice low cost sample of the whole CanDo package. mWAtronhsJnt. $4W Greenville Avenue Suite 2Ci9B Dallas, Texas 75231 2J4 J40-4WI FA AV 2N 34&-8514 Trademarks: Amiga: Commodore-Amiga, Inc. INOVAtronics, CanDo: Inovatronics, tnc Crc'e 75 on Reader Service card TEST DRIVE CAND01.5 ■*"* FOR JUST 10 BUCKS. With CanDo You Can Do Just About V/SA Give us your address and $10 and we'll send two disks and a CanDo manual by return mail You'll have created a program before David Let term an goes off. Get a fresh look at what your Amiga is capable of. *Buy CanDo later and we'll give you yoursawbuck hack. New Video Toaster System 2.0 - New Effects, Ray Tracing, and even better Character Generator. Video Toaster System 2.0: 9 essential tools you need if you're using your Amiga for video or graphics. 4 Input Production Switcher Toaster System 2.0 includes organic switcher transitions like tire, smoke, clouds, pouring liquid and breaking glass. Powerful positionable effects for over-the-shoulder insets, soft-edge wipes and wild KikiFX' like you've never imagined. 24-bit Broadcast Paint ToasterPaint is the only true broadcast-quality NTSC paint system for the Amiga, System 2.0 brings new features including improved auto-scrolling and direct import of images from the Toaster's frame grabber. Luminance Key Much more than just simple weatherman over a map, Toaster" keying lets you do luminance fade transitions, or combine tv/o live sources using a third source as a key and even key-based digital trails. Digital Video Effects Real-time digital video effects on live video at 60 fps. From flip, spin and tumble all the way to amazing perspective warping effects and even incredible sphere and cube mapping in real-time, 3D Animation- Lightwave 3D 2.0 offers over 150 new features including blazing rendering speed, multiple morph targets, 3008 x 1920 resolution and true ray-tracing! 2.0 makes modeling a joy with new tools like bend, twist, taper, skin and magnet. Color Processing Control of color effects from the switcher and 20 new default effects make ChromaFX faster and more powerful. Now combine effects and color cycle with new organic switcher transitions for incredible new possibilities. 35ns Character Generator 16 million color 35ns broadcast text with over 100 high-quality, anti-aliased type-faces. System 2.0 also features faster loading of pages, •framest ores for backgrounds, improved keying and text tile import. Dual Frame Buffers Hold two high-resolution 16 million color video frames in perfect YIQ-encoded RS-170A network quality. System 2.0 brings you enhanced hue matching, even faster loading, and framestore file compression to save disk space. Still Store/Frame Grabber Freeze flawless broadcast resolution images instantly from any color camera, laserdisc or even cable TV with better color reproduction, faster loading, and powerful new field and frame saving options. Free Toaster Video Tape We can't show you the power and quality of the new Video Toaster in a magaiine ad. So we've decided to prove it with a free VMS tape about the Toaster produced entirely with the Toaster This award-winning demo-within-a-demo starring NewTek ; s Kiki Stockhammer is aptly titled "REVOLUTION". Call today to find out about the most successful Amiga product of all time. Call 8D0-7B5340G Grcte 37 on Reader Service card. Toaster 1 .0 users call your dealer or BOO 843-8934 to upgrade today. Outside North America call 612-832-1662 lor your free demo tape. Demo also available on S-VHS. Hi8. 3/4'. Mil, Betacam. 1\ LaserOisc and D2 at nom nal cost Next-day delivery available Price and specifications subject lo change Amiga ts a registered trademark of Commodore Amiga Inc. Video Toaster. Lightwave 3D. ChromaFX and ToasterPaint are trademarks of NewTek, inc