home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Fresh Fish 10
/
Fresh_Fish_10_2352.bin
/
useful
/
reviews
/
software
/
cd-rom
/
aminetcdrom3
< prev
next >
Wrap
Internet Message Format
|
1994-09-13
|
17KB
Path: news.uh.edu!barrett
From: markus@TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE (Markus Illenseer)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
Subject: REVIEW: AmiNet CD Volume 3
Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.misc
Date: 13 Sep 1994 15:28:39 GMT
Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
Lines: 438
Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <354gf7$nq5@masala.cc.uh.edu>
Reply-To: markus@TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE (Markus Illenseer)
NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
Keywords: CD-ROM, collection, freeware, shareware, commercial
Originator: barrett@karazm.math.uh.edu
PRODUCT NAME
AmiNet CD Volume 3
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
The AmiNet CD Volume 3 is a snapshot of the most recent and popular
files of the AmiNet (about 1/3 of the entire AmiNet), the worldwide Amiga
File network. Is made available as "AmiNet Gold" and "AmiNet Share."
AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
Compilation Licence
Urban Dominik Mueller
Manufacturer
Stefan Ossowski Schatztruhe
Gesellschaft f|r Software mbH
Veronikastra_e 33
45131 Essen
Germany
DISTRIBUTION
Main places to buy the CD-ROM currently are:
USA:
Amiga Library Services
610 North Alma School Road , suite 18
Chandler, Arizona 85244-3687
USA
Phone/Fax: (602) 917-0917
Germany:
Stefan Ossowski Schatztruhe
Gesellschaft fuer Software mbH
Veronikastra_e 33
45131 Essen
Germany
Phone: +49 201 78 87 78
Fax: +49 201 79 84 47
and
GTI Home Computer Centre
Zimmermuehlenweg 73
61440 Oberursel
Germany
Phone: +49 6171 8 59 34
Fax: +49 6171 83 02
BTX: *GTI#
other dealers will follow.
LIST PRICE
Suggested retail price is DM 19.80 or about $13 (US) for AmiNet
Share.
Suggested retail price is DM 29.80 or about $18 (US) for AmiNet Gold.
Street prices are about the same.
SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
HARDWARE
A computer (an Amiga is recommended) equipped with a CD-ROM
drive, such as the Commodore A570, A1270, CDTV, CD32 or any
supported third party CD-ROM drive.
512KB RAM is required. 2MB RAM is recommended, and 5-8MB
RAM is best.
As some of the software packages are intended to be
installed on a hard drive if used more than once in your
lifetime, a hard drive is recommended.
SOFTWARE
AmigaDOS 1.3 or higher is required.
Works fine with AmigaDOS 2.x.
AmigaDOS 3.x is highly recommended.
Requires a suitable CD-ROM file system such as AsimCDFS,
AmiCDFS, Babel CDFS, or Xetec CDFS. The Commodore CDFS of
AmigaDOS 3.1 is known to have some bugs, but it is suitable
to get most of the stuff on the disc. AmiCDFS is on the CD
itself.
(The 'bug' of the Commodore CDFS not affect your work under
normal circumstances with the tested CD. Only some very
rare cases will be problematic.)
COPY PROTECTION
None.
MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
Amiga 3000 with 2 MB Chip RAM, 12 MB Fast RAM, several hard drives.
Apple CD300 CD-ROM drive (also known as Sony CDU-8003A).
AmiCDFS Version 1.12.
INTRODUCTION
In a general overview, i would like to explain the why, what and
wherefrom of this CD-ROM. This includes the important matter of pricing and
discuss the purpose of the CD. I then will review the Installation and the
compilation of the CD.
GENERAL
Do I have to explain the meaning of the word 'AmiNet' to you? One
of the bigger archives in the Internet, the so-called AmiNet offers a wide
range of software packages, artistic products (music, pictures, texts), and
of course games to the honest user.
From its inception, the AmiNet main site was mirrored (copied) by
many other ftp sites around the world. This gave AmiNet a boost for its
success. Requested files could be downloaded from the next server round the
corner rather than using a site across the ocean over expensive Internet
lines. This network offers the best service, and the name 'AmiNet' was born.
Over the years, AmiNet has collected about 2GB of files, an enormous
wealth of software packages, music files, pictures, animations, and so forth.
The current archive contains about 3GB of archived material. Unfortunately
not everybody has access to the Internet or a mailbox in the local area
which mirrors the AmiNet. To help those poor souls, the AmiNet was
snapshotted onto a CD-ROM. This mass storage medium offers space for 650MB
of data. By the definition of AmiNet, this is not enough to cover the entire
AmiNet archives. Thus, only the important part of the archive has been
copied on CD-ROM.
The first CD-ROM was issued by Walnut Creek, a US company selling
and manufacturing CD-ROM for computers. They offered a nice service and
promptly shipped the command. Only one snicker: the CD was not cheap at
all. The AmiNet itself earned no money with this CD.
To change this, but also to gain money with the CD, Urban D.
Mueller decided to go with Stefan Ossowski, a German dealer, who is selling
a good range of Amiga-specific software, who was willing to try the
experiment issuing a cheap CD-ROM. A cheap CD-ROM is easy to make; and even
better, a cheap CD-ROM would still offer a high profit margin to the dealer,
making it still worthwhile to sell the CD-ROM. The larger the pressing, the
lower the price.
GOLD VS. SHARE
(Please do read this topic carefully. It contains flame war
information and is pertinent to your budget.)
The idea of a shareware CD-ROM also was born at that time. To
support this idea, the manufacturer agreed to issue the new AmiNet CD-ROM in
two versions.
The AmiNet CD-ROM is issued in two versions: AmiNet Share and
AmiNet Gold. AmiNet Share is lower priced and intended for everybody with a
generous soul. The word 'Share' means 'shareware.' If you like the CD and
use it on a more or less regular basis and feel that the AmiNet deserves it,
you are requested to send a small shareware fee to the AmiNet
Administration. This could be DM 10 or about $5 (US). AmiNet Gold is
intended for the lazy guys among the readership. Being priced above AmiNet
Share, this CD offers direct support to AmiNet.
One would think that the difference between the prices of the two CD
s is going to the AmiNet directly. Unfortunately this is wrong! Only a
small part, DM 3,50 or about $2 (US), will go to the AmiNet. The rest is
going straight down the throat of the dealers (who might deserve this, too,
but this is another topic).
Only conclusion left: if you REALLY want to support AmiNet, buy the
AmiNet Share version of the CD and actually DO send the shareware fee.
There are no excuses left, since there are accounts made available for this
shareware fee all around the world. See more at the end of this review.
How does your shareware fee support AmiNet? Easy answer: it helps
to buy new hard drives, build up a (long awaited) full mirror in Europe,
make AmiNet more secure, and much more. It is more reasonable to get more
hard drives for AmiNet rather than using CD-ROM drives, because CD drives
are slower and actually more expensive than hard drives.
One small side effect: the rest of the money - once all money has
been spent for AmiNet - is going to the private pockets of the AmiNet
Administrators. That needs to be said. :-)
So much for this. Thanks for reading until here. The above is
quite important, as it will affect your budget but also keep the current
quality of AmiNet.
AMINET VOL 3
Let me use the abbreviation 'AM CD' from now on, rather than
using the full word 'AmiNet CD Vol 3'.
The AM CD was mastered in the ISO 9660 Mode 2 format (hence no
crippled filenames) with Commodore extensions to make mixed cases in
filenames possible and Rockridge Extensions. I couldn't locate any
directory level deeper than 4 or 5, so the CD is ISO compliant and will
work with almost every ISO filesystem. The Rockridge Extensions are of no
use, but simplify the handling on other platforms than Amiga.
During the making of a CD, due to a missing 'feature' of the
ISO-9660 filesystem (and POSIX filesystem), used on every good CD-ROM, the
typical Amiga protection flags (Script, Archive, Execute) and filenotes are
missing. This makes it impossible to start shell scripts di