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- Using an Amiga CDROM on another machine.
-
-
- With over the equivilent of over six hundred floppy disks,
- it's worth making the most of the CU Amiga cover CDROM.
-
-
- Q. I don't have a CDROM drive on my Amiga yet, will I be
- able to use my CU Amiga CDROM on a PC or Apple Mac?
-
- A. Yes, but in a limited way. You will be able to access all
- data on it -- you'll see directories with files -- and this
- means you will be able to view any pictures or read any text
- which is stored in plain or cross-platform formats.
-
- A perfect example is HTML files: using a Web browser such as
- Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer you can read any
- HTML documents on the CU Amiga disk. This includes reading
- the text, viewing the pictures and using the links.
-
-
- Q. Can I use the programs though?
-
- A. No, you can't. Amiga programs run on Amigas, and won't
- run on PCs or Apple Macs.
-
-
-
- Q. Can't I get an Amiga emulator for the PC and run the
- programs that way? After all, I can emulate a PC and an
- Apple Mac on my Amiga?
-
- A. Well, yes, there is UAE. It's not very fast though, and
- to be honest it's still an A500 emulator even on an P120.
- Although technically impressive, it's not an ideal solution.
-
-
- Q. Is there a hardware based Amiga emulator for either of
- these machines?
-
- A, No, and it is unlikely that there ever will be. At the
- moment the best piece of hardware for running Amiga programs
- remains an Amiga.
-
-
- Q. I don't have a CDROM drive on my Amiga, but I have one on
- my PC at work. Will I be able to copy the files across to my
- Amiga?
-
- A. In theory yes, as the same standard is used to record
- data on PC and Amiga CDROMs. However, you may have some
- problems, such as the fact that the Amiga can cope with long
- filenames and the PC sometimes can't.
-
- Windows95 (or NT) solves the filename problem, as it can at
- last cope with filenames other than those in MSDOS format.
- However, you still can't copy those directly to floppy disk:
- floppies are still in MSDOS format. One way to procede is to
- use an archiving utility such as PKZIP which will pack up
- all the files on the PC, move the archive to the Amiga and
- un-ZIP it. The result is that the filenames are preserved.
-
-
- Q. How can I move the files from the PC to the Amiga?
-
- A. To move the files, you have two options: use a removable
- disk which both systems can read, or link the two platforms
- together. Using the Amiga's built in CrossDos device (PC0:)
- it can read floppy disks formatted by the PC -- but only
- double density, not high density (unless you have an A4000
- or special floppy drive). It's also possible to make use of
- Syquest or ZIP drives if you have the necessary hardware.
- You cannot use parallel port versions of the Zip drive on
- the Amiga.
-
- The best way is to network the machines using Ethernet, but
- this is overkill for file transfer, not to mention virtually
- impossible on the A1200 (go on, prove me wrong -- please).
- Send best way is to connect the PC and Amiga together using
- a Null Modem cable, run a terminal program and use ZModem to
- transfer files.
-
- If your machines are a long distance apart, you may have to
- resort to using modems and terminal software. If you only
- have one modem, it's possible to make use of a Bulletin
- Board or Internet FTP site to temporarily store data: you
- can upload it from the PC, and download to the Amiga.
-
- Q. Does the opposite hold? Can I use PC CDROMs on my Amiga?
-
- A. You can read PC CDROMS, but you cannot run the programs.
- Yes, it is possible to emulate a PC on an Amiga but it's not
- very fast and so games or sophisticated Windows applications
- won't work. If you see a program only available on PC CDROM
- then resist the tempation to buy it, even if you have a
- CDROM drive and a PC emulator for your Amiga. Ask for an
- Amiga version instead.
-
-
- Q. Is it possible make a CDROM which will work on both an
- Amiga and a PC?
-
- A. Yes. Both platforms can read the CDROMs perfectly, so
- it's only a matter of storing sofware for both machines. For
- example, a CDROM full of pictures which contain a viewer
- program for the PC and one for the Amiga. The pictures could
- be stored in a format which both viewers can read, such as
- JPEG or GIF. The result is that one CDROM is equally of use
- to both the Amiga and the PC: for example, a CDROM full of
- clipart.
-
- Another example are the CDROMs which contain objects for 3D
- rendering programs. An Imagine object can be read directly
- by both PC and Amiga versions of Imagine.
-
- In any case, there are many Amiga utilities for reading PC
- style graphics (e.g. GIF, BMP), animation (e.g. AVI, FLC,
- CLI) and sound files (e.g. WAV). There is usually some way
- of making use of data stored on a CDROM.
-
-
- Q. Can I play VideoCDs on my Amiga's CDROM drive?
-
- A. Yes, but apart from some very slow software, only if you
- have an SMD100 decoder from HiSoft and if your CDROM drive
- is compatible.
-
- Q I have a CD32 / CDTV -- can I make use of the CDROM drive
- with my A1200?
-
- A. Yes, it's possible to create a limited network which
- links the CD32 or CDTV to the Amiga computer. The CDROM
- drive will appear on the Workbench as though it were
- connected directly to the A1200.
-
- -- end --
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