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Conference hydra::amiga_v1

Title:AMIGA NOTES
Notice:Join us in the *NEW* conference - HYDRA::AMIGA_V2
Moderator:HYDRA::MOORE
Created:Sat Apr 26 1986
Last Modified:Wed Feb 05 1992
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5378
Total number of notes:38326

3056.0. "Would you believe Donkey-Kong ?" by AYOV28::ATHOMSON (C'mon, git aff! /The Kelty Clippie) Mon Oct 30 1989 09:33

    After the <FF> is a quote from todays VNS, which gives the Amiga
    a mention, 
    
    I _think_ it's an insult.....
    
    or has Amy become the _de_facto_ standard for running Donkey-Kong?
    
    Anyway enjoy... (We've had VAX vacuum cleaners here for years)
    8*)
    
    					Alan T.
    
    
    
VNS TECHNOLOGY WATCH:                           [Mike Taylor, VNS Correspondent]
=====================                           [Nashua, NH, USA               ]

     New VAX Reseller Sears Expects To Clean Up With Its Latest Offering
               t(   {Unix Today!, 16-Oct-1989, p47}

    VAX sucks.  Don't gasp and assume we're committing libel.  It's
    true. Even its manufacturer will agree.

    What we're talking about here is the VAX vacuum cleaner, a British
    machine that Sears began marketing this year.  The introduction of
    the vacuum with the same name as a rather well-known line of Digital
    Equipment computers has created a malestrom of confusion among piles
    of programmers who are less than bright and don't know a suction
    hose from a dirtbag.

    "I just don't think it's right," said I.M.A. Weenie, manager of
    information services for the Institute for the Study of We're Not
    Quite Sure What at Pork Barrel University in Pentagon, N.D.

    "We spent three weeks trying to boot Ultrix 3.1 on the Sears VAX
    without any luck at all.  Then, when we called the number for
    software support in the doc kit and asked for a patch tape, they
    asked, 'What color?' and told us Krazy Glue would probably work as
    well."

    Weenie did find one praiseworthy feature: "It runs Donkey Kong
    better than an Amiga."

    R.T.F. Immanuel, vice president of information services at the
    investment firm of Crosby, Stills, Nash and (sometimes) Young, said
    his company finds the Sears VAX far superior to the DEC product.

    "The VAXstation we were using just never got dirt out of those
    hard-to-reach corners and folds in the upholstery," he said.

    How did this confusing situation come to pass?  According to DEC
    spokeswoman Nikki Richardson, when DEC trademarked the VAX name
    prior to introducing that line in 1977, it was with the full
    knowledge that the British firm VAX Appliances had been using the
    name for several years.

    The two companies reached an agreement that allowed DEC to use the
    name for computers and the British firm to continue using the name
    for household appliances.

    Because the VAX vacuum cleaner had not been distributed in the
    United States, the two firms never clashed.  Until now.

    But DEC takes a game view of the situation.  "We felt there was no
    likelihood of confusion with the appliances," said Richardson,
    reading from a statement prepared by company attorneys.

    We asked Sears to supply specifications of the vacuum cleaner on the
    grounds that our readers are highly concerned with such issues as
    price/performance, processor speed, scalability, availability of
    applications and whether or  not the machine has a flat-topped
    display you can rest a beer on.

    UT: What operating system does your VAX run?

    Sears: Operating system?

    UT: (quoting from the well-thumbed newsroom copy of 'Computers
    Explained For People With Extremely Tiny Brains'): "An operating
    system is the software that manages the computer hardware.  Its
    development represented a giant step forward from the cumbersome
    binary I/O of the early ..."

    Sears: All you've got to do is plug the thing in and go.

    UT: (remembering something some marketing guy said once): Why, that
    would make your product... that would make it "plug and play."

    Sears:  Yeah, you can just plug it in to any standard wall socket,
    and after that, you just turn it on.

    UT: (typing): "... compliant with all relevant standards... features
    include high user-friendliness..."  What is the processor speed?

    Sears: Funny you should ask that.  We have one at home, and we have
    a really big living room, and the other day my son had a party for
    his friends and the band he's in, Humongous Jet Flying Low Over Your
    House, and the Missus got the whole room clean in a half-hour with
    the VAX.  It even sucked up those little parts that accidentally
    came off the dog.

    UT: (typing): "high...processor...speed...and...power..."

    Sears: And during the party, one of my son's friends dropped the VAX
    out the window, but the darn thing worked the next day!

    UT: "...robust..."

    Sears: It's very light.  I'm not sure exactly how much it weighs,
    because we couldn't really get it to stay balanced on the bathroom
    scale.

    UT: "...though the VAX has limited scalability..."

    Sears: And it costs less than any one like it around!

    UT: "...offers a favorable price/performance point to any comparable
    machine of its class..."

    Meanwhile, in a move DEC says is totally unrelated to the VAX vs.
    VAX issue, the company announced last week that it is renaming its
    product lines.

    PDP computers still in circulation will henceforth be known as
    "Kenmore Side-by-Side Refigerator/Freezers."  The DECstation line
    will be renamed "Sanyo Color TV With Full Remote Control."

    And all VAX computers and VAXstations will be recalled, so the
    following warning can be applied: "Do not use on delicate drapes and
    fabrics."
    {Unix Today!, 16-Oct-1989, p47}
    {contributed by Steve Lionel}
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
3056.1cute, but DONKEY_KONG/AMIGA=NOT_EXISTWAV12::HICKSStamp out hoplophobia!!!Mon Oct 30 1989 20:191
    
3056.2waayyyy back when...BAGELS::BRANNONDave BrannonWed Nov 01 1989 00:3313
    re:.1  it does exist, but it came out long ago.  I forget who
    made it, I believe it was called Monkey Business.  Will check.
    I think it broke when WB 1.2 came out.
    
    I'm still waiting for somebody to sell an Amiga pinball game in
    the US.  And Joust.  And Zaxxon.  And Berzerk.... The least they could 
    have done if they wanted to pick on the Amiga as a game system 
    would have been to pick something that runs on currently shipping systems.
    Space Invaders (Amoeba Invaders) or Tank (Firepower) would have been 
    great examples.
    
    -Dave
    
3056.3VaporPinWareSSDEVO::YESSEComputing at 6200 ft.Wed Nov 01 1989 17:006
	Isn't there a pinball simulation called MegaPinball. or something
	like that?  I've seen it mentioned in AC's last software listing,
	and in Abel Supply's list (though it may of course be vaporware).

	Is there nothing for us poor pinball/Amiga fanatics?  :-(    

3056.4RSN. Sure.TCC::HEFFELPigs and PoniesThu Nov 02 1989 01:096
    Accolade's "Pinball Wizard" has been a "real-soon-now" item for awhile. 
    This program runs on the ST and EGA/VGA PC's if I recall and looks like
    a decent construction set.
    
    I miss "Night Mission Pinball",
    Gary
3056.5Pinball how I long for you.CAM::ARENDTHarry Arendt CAM::Thu Nov 02 1989 11:478
    
    	I long for a good pinball game.  I used to own an Apple II and
    had "Davids Midnight Magic", it was the best pinball game that I
    have ever seen.  It would be a piece of cake on the amiga.  The
    game allowed for no variation of parameters, it had up to 4 players,
    but best of all the algorythm for the ball motion was superb!
    
    	Perhaps soon.
3056.6There is a pinball gameNBOSWS::FRIESFri Nov 03 1989 05:338
    What about Kingsoft's 'Pinball Wizard' with multi-ball game, bonus
    and up to four players?                        
    
    I don't know the price and whether it's distributed in the States
    at all. (Kingsoft is a German company, I think)
    
    Regards,
    Gerald
3056.7BAGELS::BRANNONDave BrannonFri Nov 03 1989 14:206
    some of Kingsoft's games have made it to the States, haven't seen
    that one yet.  Sounds great, how does the 4 player option work?
    
    Any news of a Joust clone?
    
    -Dave
3056.8NBOSWS::FRIESMon Nov 06 1989 11:203
    No, no. Not 4 players at the same time.
    But hiscores are saved to disk.