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-
-
- Please read me:
- ---------------
-
- Well, this is it - my last ever Q&A. I can't do it any more,
- so please stop sending me the sacks of letters. I'm not
- doing it any more because:
-
- 1. I'm getting sick of it,
-
- 2. I'm very tired with having to threaten legal action
- every month to get paid by EMAP. August and September are
- still outstanding.
-
- 3. There is no way I'm writing all this for £150 ever
- again. Have you any idea how long it takes? I'm being
- ripped off.
-
- 4. I'm tired of sharing the credit with someone who never
- writes a single reply, ever. It happened with Mat, and now
- it happens with Andy. Well how about Andy writes the next
- year's worth of Q&A and I still get my picture at the top?
-
- Hmm. Those are all the reasons that spring to mind at the
- moment. Huh - prima donna writers, eh? Think they're so
- important.. yeah, yeah I know: but it's simply not worth
- my while to write for EMAP any more.
-
-
- john
- ----
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Q&A
-
-
- The Team of Amiga experts blaze their way through another
- sackfull of letters.
-
-
- John Kennedy: Can we have more letters about printer
- drivers please?
-
- Andy Leaning: Oh yes, and some more from A600 owners too!
-
-
- Title: Cheap TV
- Icon: Monitor
-
- I own a bog standard Amiga 1200, and a 14 inch Microvitec
- 1438 multisync monitor, and I would be grateful if you
- answer the following questions:
-
- 1. Is it possible to receive television pictures on my
- Microvitec monitor as the 0.28mm dot pitch would give a
- superior display? Unless I have my numbers wrong
- televisions receive signals at 50kHz, whereas the 1438
- monitor syncs at 15 - 38 kHz. Am I right in thinking I
- can't receive television pictures?
-
- 2. Assuming I can receive pictures, can I use Power
- Computing's Video Backup system, as the advert says you can
- use it on a 1084 monitor?
-
- 3. John, where did you get your Judge Dredd pics used in
- the Masterclass section?
-
- Dean Carl Pelier, Alpha House, Kilburn, London
-
-
- 1. Hmm, some number confusion here. A television updates
- it's picture at 50 kHz (which is another way of saying fifty
- times a second), but this has nothing to do with those other
- numbers, which are measures of the horizontal scan rate.
-
- Normal TV video signals have a scan rate of 15kHz, so the
- Microvitec will be able to display video perfectly, and as
- your say, with the good dot pitch should give an excellent
- picture. The only problem will be trying to sort out a
- source of suitable video signals - you'll need separate Red,
- Green, Blue and sync signals for the Microvitec.
-
- 2. The Video Backup system has a composite video output,
- and the 1084 has a composite video input - hence you can
- watch TV. The video backup unit itself isn't phenomenally
- smart though, it just provides an easy way of linking the TV
- tuner from the video recorder (which is required to back up
- the hard disk) with the monitor.
-
- You don't actually need the Video Backup unit at all to
- watch TV - just a suitable cable which any TV repair shop
- will be able to knock up for you. Alternatively, most
- Video-to-video repair kits will include enough adaptors to
- get the job done.
-
- What this all means by the way, is that unless your video
- recorder has separate Red, Green and Blue and Sync outputs,
- you won't be able to use it to watch TV. In any case, I
- suspect you don't actually have a video recorder and you
- only want some way of getting a cheap TV in your college
- digs.
-
- If this is true, I have three things to say:
-
- i. Remember that if you succeed, you will need to buy a TV license.
- Unless your TV is battery powered, students living away from
- home need their own license. The detector vans are very good
- these days, and with student grants the pittance they are a
- large fine could be disastrous.
-
- ii. Keep a look out in electronics magazines for stand-alone TV tuners
- (they cost about £50, and some will have suitable video out
- signal - especially old Amstrad ones, originally designed
- for the CPC colour monitor.)
-
- iii. Don't waste your time watching TV, and go to the library
- and do some work instead. Or you'll end up like John.
-
-
- 3. I don't know which pictures you are talking about. If I
- had scanned them directly from the comic with my zarjaz
- JX100 colour scanner, I'd be a totally grexnix copyright
- infringer - wouldn't I? The last thing I need need is a hot
- shot from Tharg thanks...
-
-
-
- Icon: Expansion Title:
- Size isn't everything
-
- I know the A1200 was only supposed to have the 2.5 inch IDE
- hard drives fitted internally, but is it possible to fit a
- 3.5 inch drive with maybe some slight modifications to the
- A1200 case?
-
- The larger drivers are cheaper and I've heard that they are
- more reliable as well.
-
- Adnan Hussain, Edmonton, London
-
- Yes, it is possible to fit 3.5 inch drives to the A1200,
- although you have to understand that this model of Amiga
- wasn't designed with them and you perform any operations at
- the cost of your warranty and your own risk.
-
- You will need some cables to take the different drive cable
- sizes into account, and also a power cable that borrows a 12
- volt supply from the internal floppy drive power (the floppy
- drive will continue to work as normal). Trilogic (tel:0274
- 691115) sell these cables quite cheaply.
-
- Fitting the drive inside the Amiga is a fine art, and
- depending on the exact size of the hard drive (which varies
- from model to model) it is possible to squeeze it into the
- case with only minor alterations.
-
-
-
- Title: Piracy plague
- Icon: programs
-
- I own an Amiga 500+ with 2Mb. I have had my computer for
- about four months. In the first few weeks I didn't have
- much software so I started swapping with my friends, but
- when I swapped 'Sensible Software' with one of them I caught
- a virus. The virus (called Joshua) has since started
- writing read errors to my disks. I have tried using brand
- new games but it does it to them too.
-
- Keiran, Brentwood.
-
- Sorry, Keiran but my first reaction is that as a software
- pirate you deserve all you get. Swapping software is a form
- of piracy, and it is partly a result of piracy that has the
- Amiga and parent Commodore in the state they are in today.
-
- Never use programs you can't trace directly back to their
- source, always switch off your Amiga for a few minutes
- between games and get a disk drive cleaner, because that is
- what's wrong with your computer. And one more thing - buy
- your own copy of 'Sensible Software' immediately.
-
-
- Icon: CD-ROMS
- Title:THE A600 IS PERFECT
-
- I have an A600 with 1Mb upgrade. My problem is that I have
- seen the new CD drive for the A1200: there seems to a
- CD-ROM drive for every Amiga except the A600. Why?
-
- Is there a chip I could buy to turn my 16 bit Amiga into a
- 32 bit Amiga? I have seen the A1200 in action and I'm not
- impressed. I will eventually upgrade to an A4000T but at
- the moment I am happy with my A600: I just need to upgrade.
-
- L. Pattison, Bradley, Bilston.
-
- Like the A1200, the A600 has a PCMCIA slot, and I am
- convinced that it is only a matter of time before it is
- possible to attach a CD-ROM drive to the A600. In the mean
- time, you can still keep a look-out for a second hand CDTV
- and use Parnet to connect it to your A600.
-
- Here at CU we have yet to see any form of accelerator for
- the A600 (you need a 68020 or better for '32 bit'
- performance), but try contacting WAW Elektronik in Germany
- (tel: 030-404-3331, fax: 030-404-7039) who are rumoured to
- be producing all sorts of hardware for the A600 and CDTV:
- we just haven't seen any yet, that's all.
-
- What do you mean you aren't impressed with the A1200? Which
- features weren't good enough for you then? The 2Mb Chip RAM
- not enough? The processor which goes four times faster?
- The new Workbench? The Advanced Graphics Architecture
- chipset, which can produce more than 256,000 colours from a
- 16 million colour palette and drive a multisync monitor for
- flicker free displays of 640 by 512? The ability to have a
- 50MHz 68030 in the trapdoor (and a 68040 is rumoured)? Come
- on Mr. Pattison - get hold of one of the latest AGA demos
- and pop it into an A1200 in your local computer shop. Then
- try to stop yourself from buying one. But if you are really
- planning on getting an A4000T, please don't hold your
- breath.
-
-
- Icon: Printers
- Title: MY PRINTER WORKS TOO WELL
-
- I have a three year old A500+ with two megs of RAM, a 100Mb
- hard disk and external floppy drive and a Canon BJ10ex
- printer.
-
- 1. What printer drivers will work with my printer? I was
- told to use EpsonQ but just about any one seems to work.
-
- 2. I am unsure if my RAM is working properly. I have tried
- the AVAIL command, but I am unable to understand it. How
- many bytes should I have free with just Workbench and a
- Shell running?
-
- 3. Could I connect two Amigas together through their hard
- drives via the SCSI ports? I would like to transfer the
- entire contents of my hard drive to my Dad's without having
- to go to the bother of backing up the disk and then
- restoring.
-
- 4. Is it worth buying an A1200 considering it's age and
- Commodore's present state?
-
- C. Robertson, Dumbarton.
-
- 1. Most printer drivers will work - but not all will take
- advantage of the Canon's advanced graphics printing
- features. For example, a simple word processor will output
- raw text which the printer will happily print. But try an
- italic, bold or underlined font and you'll start to have
- problems.
-
- A program like the excellent Final Writer uses it's own
- fonts, and if you try these you will simply get gibberish.
- The same thing will happen if you try and print something
- from within Deluxe Paint. For more control, take the time
- to buy the Canon Print Studio software, available from JAM
- (tel: 01895 274449). Mind you this has to be a world's
- first - a letter complaining that a printer driver works too
- well. I'll have to lie down for a bit.
-
- 2. What makes you think that your RAM isn't working in the
- first place? The AVAIL command won't test it anyway - it
- simply lists the amounts of different sorts available (Chip,
- Fast and the total) under different situations (current
- amount available, current amount in use, maximum amount and
- the largest contiguous block free). You will have about 2
- millions bytes of Chip, but how much depends on screen
- modes, drives fitted and a hundred other things. If you
- really need to test it, there are various programs in the
- Public Domain (try 17 Bit's PD Engineer's Toolkit for
- starters).
-
- 3. You could theoretically connect two Amigas like this,
- although I for one wouldn't like to have to write the driver
- software. The quickest way to transfer the data would be to
- connect the drives to the same SCSI bus (there can be up to
- six drives on the same SCSI bus), which will require one
- hard drive to be disassembled, the SCSI ID jumper to the
- changed and a special cable used.
-
- An easier (but slower way) would be to get hold of Parnet,
- and link the two Amiga's via their parallel ports. Parnet
- can do more than link CDTVs... But why not simply use the
- regular back-up you have made of your hard drive? What do
- you mean you haven't bothered?
-
- 4. The A1200 is great home computer, with many benefits
- over the A500+ (see previous letter). Get one.
-
-
-
- Title: Programs
- Icon: WHY OH WHY?
-
- I have been an avid reader of CU Amiga since 1989. Since
- then I have written to CU twice about three years ago and to
- this day I have had no reply.
-
- However, I would be grateful is you would answer this letter
- in your Q&A section. Is it possible to get a motor
- mechanics course on disk? For example designing or putting
- together card engines with a point, click and place basis on
- engine components. If not could you put these idea to the
- software houses.
-
- Anthony Bradley, Ballyfermot, Dublin.
-
- Sorry, Anthony but loyal reader or not we can't possibly
- reply to every letter sent to us. If we did, we wouldn't
- have time to create the magazine in the first place.
-
- The Good News is that yes, a mechanics course as you
- describe does exist (or one very close to it) and it's on
- CD-ROM. The Bad News that it is for the PC, and there are
- no plans for an Amiga version.
-
-
- Icon: Help
- Title: TEN QUESTIONS
-
- I am one of the original Amiga owners. I have an A500+ that
- didn't come in a pack or anything. I have some questions:
-
- 1. How do you make those little readme files which I find
- on a lot of disks?
-
- 2. What is the different between NDOS and normal disks?
-
- 3. Why are Atari STs so [rubbish] compared with the Amiga,
- when they nearly have the same power?
-
- 4. Is there a 1Mb 3D rendering package out?
-
- 5. What makes hard drives twice as expensive as floppy
- drives?
-
- 6. Are there any decent hard drives for under £100?
-
- 7. What is the Disk Doctor and where can I get one from?
-
- 8. How much does it cost EMAP to produce every edition of
- your wonderful CU?
-
- 9. Can the Canon 10sx produce multi-coloured printouts?
-
- 10. Finally, CD-ROM for the A500: where, how much and what
- will it run?
-
- John Addicott, Moorland, Somerset
-
-
- I'm sorry, but to qualify as an original Amiga owner you
- need to have had an A1000, or at the very least, a 512K
- Workbench 1.2 A500. Everything else is pansy modern-day
- stuff.
-
- 1. Use ED from a Shell to create a text file. If you need
- an Icon, the easiest way is to copy one from an existing
- text file. Make sure there is a suitable text file reader
- on your disk (for example, More).
-
- 2. NDOS disks have been formatted in a different way from
- normal AmigaDOS disks and therefore the Workbench can't
- understand them. Special programs present on the bootblock
- of the NDOS disks contain a specially written file handing
- system especially for dealing with them. The idea is to
- reduce piracy by making the disks impossible to read with
- standard software.
-
- 3. Time warp time! This issue was concluded a long time
- ago, when it became apparent that the Amiga's superior
- custom chips and more advanced operating system gave it the
- edge over the ST - even though they both use Motorola (not
- Montorolia as Dixons sometimes print on their little in-shop
- product cards) 68000 processors.
-
- 4. You can't render anything with only 1Mb, it's simply not
- on. Real 3D classic might get close but you will still need
- more memory to make it a worthwhile purchase.
-
- 5. Hard drives are considerably more advanced than floppy
- drives. They are much, much faster, and need to work
- reliably for years.
-
- 6. Hmmm.. probably not. You might get a second hand drive
- of about 20Mb, but this would be a waste of money. Don't
- get a hard drive smaller than 80Mb - preferably much larger.
-
- 7. DiskDoctor is a program that came with Workbench 1.3.
- It tries to read data from damaged floppy disks, and it
- occasionally succeeded (whereupon it renamed the disk Lazarus
- and cased a spate of virus scare stories in the letters
- pages of various magazines). Instead, get the latest
- version of DiskSalve from your local Public Domain library.
-
- 8. A little more than tuppence ha'penny.
-
- 9. No, it's a monochrome printer.
-
- 10. Commodore's A590. About £99 from various advertisers
- and it will read all CDTV disks and all the current disks of
- Public Domain software.
-
-
- Icon: Programs
- Title: BLITZ FIX
-
- I felt you somehow threw an unjustly dark shadow over Blitz
- Basic through your reply to N. Ferguson's letter in your
- Q&A pages in the August issue.
-
- Mr. Ferguson wanted to hide his graphics data from prying
- eyes when writing programs in Blitz Basic.
-
- I believe there exists a far more elegant and easier method.
- Here is a pseudo algorithm for achieving it:
-
-
- 1. INCBIN any external data files, taking care to assign
- START: and END: labels, before and after the INCBIN
- statement.
-
- 2. Write a procedure to READ the INCBINned data, using the
- START: and END: labels to calculate the address and length
- values needed by the READ command.
-
- 3. Write a procedure to WRITE (remembering to ALLOCMEM enough bytes
- before) the READ data temporarily to RAM:, once again using the
- START: and END: labels to calculate the length and address values.
-
- 4. Once the data file in in RAM:, use LoadBitMap, LoadMED, LoadFONT ,
- LoadSHAPE or whatever you require to load the data file.
-
- 5. DELETEFILE the temporarily created file in RAM: as it won't be
- needed any more.
-
- I believe that this method is by far more versatile than
- AMOS' own memory banks, as you can include any kind of data
- be it an IFF picture, MED or Soundtracker module, shape or
- font. In AMOS you can only merge IFF and bob files, but
- Blitz does it with style.
-
- Kenneth Summut, Marsa, Malta.
-
-
- Icon: Accessories
- Title: MODEM
-
- I own an A1200 and am interested in buying a MODEM. I have read your
- articles on comms and modems, and would be pleased if you could answer
- my questions:
-
- 1. Could you recommend a good modem between £100 and £200?
-
- 2. Which is better: the Supra Fax Modem 144LZ or the Pace
- Linnet PLus?
-
- 3. What is a fax modem, if not the obvious?
-
- 4. What is the best program for controlling the modem, and
- where can I get it?
-
- 5. Which is the best OLR program to use?
-
- 6. Please could you tell me the number of any boards in the
- Coventry and Birmingham area.
-
- A. P Malin, Cliffard Park, Coventry
-
- 1. The USR Sportster 14400 Fax modem falls into your price
- bracket, and is very reliable.
-
- 2. The Supra operates at 14,400 bits per second whilst the
- Pace doesn't. Need I say more?
-
- 3. A fax modem contains circuitry that enables it to
- communicate with fax machines (or other fax modems). With
- suitable software you can send pictures and drawings. This
- software is usually not included with the modem.
-
- 4. Term is an excellent Terminal Emulator for the Amiga. NCOMM can
- misbehave in ways which various Sysops have told me causes problems
- with some Bulletin Boards. For sending faxes, GPFax is the tops.
-
- 5. OLR (off-line reading) software is used to make sending
- email easier and cheaper. If at all possible, try to
- register as a FidoNet 'Point' with a Bulletin Board, and
- then use Spot 1.3 Otherwise, a OLR program such as Bluewave
- is as good as any.
-
- 6. It's a funny thing, but I can't find any. There must be
- some somewhere nearby, so log onto any board and leave a
- message asking for suggestions.
-
-
-
-
- Title: I WANNA MAKE A DEMO!
- Icon: Help
-
- I am 14 and am already thinking of making some animations to
- put on the PD market. Whether I will be successful or not I
- don't know but I am willing to have a go. The trouble is
- that I don't know how to get started or how to put a disk
- together once I do.
-
- I have an A500 with 1Mb of memory, Deluxe Paint 4 for
- animation and Octamed 4 for sound. I also have no
- programming experience whatsoever.
-
- Could you please tell me of a good simple to use program
- that could help me? Could you also me whether you think I
- should get a memory upgrade and if so, how big?
-
- p.s. Could you please tell me how to use Animbrushes,
- because I've lost my manual.
-
- Jon Doe, Little Stoke, Bristol
-
- The average demo disk works in a very special way: rather
- than simply replaying an animation created with Deluxe
- Paint, the animations are written into the program itself.
- This is necessary to create the lengthy and complicated
- miniature music videos which are par for the course these
- days.
-
- Now that's not to say you should be even attempt to start -
- you will able to create a lot of impressive effects with
- what you have got. Deluxe Paint comes with a program which
- will replay animations, and there are plenty of others in
- the Public Domain which will also do the job. You should be
- able to find a program which is capable of replaying sounds
- in the background too.
-
- As you guessed, your lack of memory might be a problem, so
- stick to animations with as few colours as possible and use
- short sound samples. The Video Tracker program given away
- with the June issue will help you as well.
-
- When shopping for memory, keep a look out for second hand
- bargains as many owners upgrade to A1200s or A4000s. You
- can't have too much RAM, and the more you have, the longer
- the animations you can replay in one go.
-
- p.s. Always put your manuals in a safe place - without them
- you tend to sound a little bit like a pirate. There isn't
- space here to list them all, but check out the regular
- tutorials in issues of CU for some hints.
-
-
- Icon: Help
- Title: GIF CONVERT
-
- I have a IBM-PC GIF format picture file which I want to
- convert to an IFF file for use with Deluxe Paint. I
- attempted this using Multiview (I got the GIF datatype from
- the PD disk NBS G318) but when I saved the image onto a
- normal AmigaDOS disk all I got was blank, black screen.
-
- Daniel Baker, South Wheatly, Notts.
-
- Try using Multiview's Cut and Paste to snip out a clip, and
- copy it to disk (it will be in the clipboard directory in
- the RAM: disk). Alternatively, get a program such as
- Screen-X or some other image grabbing program. Use
- Multiview to display the image (make sure your Workbench
- display has lots of colours) and then grab it.
-
-
- Icon: Expansion
- Title: MORE A600 FANS
-
- This is the first time I have bothered to write to a
- magazine such as yourself, so here are some questions I
- would like you to answer.
-
- 1. I am one of the many people who bought Mortal Kombat.
- It is an excellent game but there is something that should
- be remedied before the possible release of Mortal Kombat 2.
- On the Hard and Very Hard settings all the computer
- opponents seem to be nothing but missile attacks, making the
- game unplayable. Why is this so?
-
- 2. In the August issue of CU you did a piece on CD-ROM
- drives for the A1200. Why didn't Commodore use the PCMCIA
- slot instead of the trapdoor interface. Don't they know
- how?
-
- 3. Will there be a CD-ROM drive for the A600? If not, why
- not?
-
- 4. I read in a friends magazine that Commodore might
- produce the A600 with the AGA chipset. Is this true? Will
- there be an exchange offer?
-
- 5. Finally, I would like to ask you to persuade developers
- to develop an accelerator for the A600.
-
- Paul Marshall, Laneham, Retford, Notts.
-
- 1. Sorry, no idea. That's a question that only the game
- programmers and designers can answer.
-
- 2. Commodore had their reasons - what they could possibly
- be will probably remain a mystery. Not doing very well so
- far, are we?
-
- 3. There probably will be, yes.
-
- 4. This is total rubbish. The AGA chipset is designed to
- work with 32 bit processors (the Motorola 68020 and above)
- and so the A600 would also need to be redesigned to contain
- an 68020. Now tell me, what's the difference between an
- Amiga A600 with a 68020-based Amiga (with the AGA chipset)
- and an Amiga A1200? A numeric keyboard, that's what.
-
- 5. An accelerator is technically possible, although the
- price would have to be between 200 and 300 pounds to make it
- worthwhile. Clearly it would be better to buy an A1200...
-