Workbench 3.5, v44.2, v44.4 (uses Kickstart 3.1 ROM(s))

Initial release: October 18, 1999
Boing Bag 1 release: December 24, 1999
Boing Bag 2 release: (soon)
New software (CD-ROM only), requires 3.1 ROM(s)
Shipped with: No known Amiga system yet; available as upgrade
Major enhancements:
  • Third-party TCP/IP, Web Browsing, and built-in e-mail
  • Support for Hard Drives larger than 4GB
  • Modern Graphical User Interface (GUI)
  • Extensive CD-ROM Support
  • Improved Printer support
  • PowerPC Support
  • HTML Online Documentation
  • Bug Fixes
  • Several new APIs

Click here for an extensive features list. For information on how to join the official 3.5 mailing list, click here.

Screenshots/pics:

Workbench 1Workbench 23.5 Logo
Media information:

Descriptions & Part Numbers

One CD-ROM
AmigaOS35
PN: 365535-31
Hidden messages:

The following five Easter eggs (two new ones added February 25th, 2000) were discovered and contributed by Harry "Piru" Sintonen. All three are at least in a Boing Bag #1-updated system:

  1. SYS:C/IPrefs has a "God Only Knows" message inside. Olaf Barthel explains that: "God Only Knows" is perhaps the greatest pop song ever written (that is, written by Brian Wilson, performed by the Beach Boys, found on the "Pet Sounds" album).
  2. SYS:Prefs/Printer creates a process called "Nicole". Nicole who? Again, Olaf explains: "Nicole is the lovely lady you see pictured in the Printer Prefs preview section. She was the press contact and administrative head at Amiga International until she left last year."
  3. Harry Sintonen adds: "LIBS:version.library and LIBS:icon.library seem to have something inside them (not sure what; I asked Olaf Barthel about that stuff). I'll keep you up to date."

  4. Easter egg in Workbench/About menu item:
    • Choose Workbench/About... menu item.
    • Position the about window so that both left and top are odd (for example to position x:1 y:1, you can turn off the mouse acceleration to make positioning easier).
    • Type "Who?" when the window is active (excluding the quotes).
    • Click OK.
    • Check RAM: for something cool.

  5. "Do You Know The Way To San José"--message inside the LIBS:workbench.library. There is a relocation entry pointing to this string inside the library, but it doesn't seem to be used by anything. Not 100% sure about this though.
  6. A little german rot13 crypted message at the end of the LIBS:workbench.library (CygnusEd has rot13 feature, AmigaOS 3.5 and CygnusEd have been greatly influenced by Olaf Barthel :-)

[Taken from "The threepenny opera" Guy Stern's translation]:

The encrypted message is:

Denn die einen sind im Dunkeln
Und die andern sind im Licht.
Und man siehet die im Lichte
Die im Dunkeln sieht man nicht.

In english:

For the ones they are in darkness
And the others are in light.
And you see the ones in brightness
Those in darkness drop from sight.

  • Further 3.5 Easter Egg comments from Olaf Barthel (in reference to Harry Sintonen's findings):

    From: "Olaf Barthel" 
    Subject: Re: AmigaOS 3.5 hidden message
    Date: 24 Feb 2000 16:03:03 +0100
    Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
    
    [snip]
    
    Hey, you missed most of the other easter eggs hidden in the other
    libraries and classes. It's just that workbench.library contains more
    than one.
    
    [snip]
    
    Amazing, I thought that nobody would find this before Easter this year :)
    By the way, the icon, as all the other beautiful GlowIcons, was designed
    by Matt Chaput.
    
    
Comments/Notes:
  1. The updated version.library (v44.4) was accidentally omitted from Boing Bag #1. Version numbers are as follows:
    • Original OS 3.5 CD: v44.2 (08/11/99)
    • Boing Bag #1: v44.4 (12/24/99)
    • Boing Bag #2: v44.x (coming soon)

  2. The Boing Bag archives (1 and 2) are unique; i.e. you are required to download and install--separately and in numerical order--both to correctly update your OS 3.5 installation.
  3. Chris Young notes: "The first update to OS3.5 called "Boing Bag 1" was released on December 24, 1999. This fixed some issues found in the original release, and also added some new features. However, a machine with the updated version of OS3.5 has exactly the same Workbench version number as a machine without it (v44.2), so the usual method of checking the OS version by looking at version.library is not entirely accurate in this case. Perhaps the easiest way to tell if a machine has been updated is to look for the AnimatedIcon utility. Also, the original OS3.5 is the only version of Workbench to "list by date" with the oldest files at the top of the list."
  4. 3.5 has unimplemented on-line help. Chris Young explains: "Pressing the Help key in Workbench attempts to load a file called HELP:english/sys/workbench.guide. However, this file isn't actually distributed with Workbench. If you want to test this, try renaming any AmigaGuide file and moving it to HELP:english/sys - press Help in Workbench, and the doc will display (a "cannot open node" message will also appear briefly.)"
  5. The version of Workbench 3.1 (v40.42) on the OS3.5 CD is identical to the original Commodore version, with the exception of the inclusion of v43.6 of SetPatch. Interestingly, even the original version command is included (v40.1) instead of the Y2K fixed version (v40.3), dated 01/04/99.
  6. The OS3.5 FastFileSystem has the version number 45.1, rather than 44.x. Similarly, the new serial.device has version number 43.1 instead of 44.x.
  7. OS3.5 contains the unregistered version of Miami 3.2b as the special OS3.5 version did not work out.
  8. The official OS 3.5 page from Amiga International, Inc. with registration and support for registered users.
  9. Chris Young notes that the release version of 3.5 saw the return of the disk space "fuel gauge", seen in pre-2.0 versions of Workbench.
  10. Holger Kruse explains the v44.x version numbering for OS 3.5; posted on comp.sys.amiga.misc (11.13.99): "V43 was used for a lot of things, but AFAIK never quite officially. The main reason why 3.5 is not V43 but V44 is probably to avoid revision number clashes with the various third-party V43 modules, e.g. the V43 datatype API and implementations. What happened is that a lot of third parties tried to extend AmigaOS on their own, once they saw that their was no official development going on any more, and they decided to use V43 because it was the smallest version number guaranteed to be higher than any official OS version number. Now with 3.5 AI has to increase the version number once more to officially obsolete those intermediate third-party products, hence V44."
  11. OS 3.5 could easily be termed "the most controversial OS release in the Amiga's history."