Tuesday, 7 July 2026

AMIGAOS 3.X - AMIGAOS 4.X - AROS - MORPHOS

AMIGAOS 3.X - AMIGAOS 4.X - AROS - MORPHOS

Well where to begin? The battle of all battles for the Amiga community. All Amigans seem to have a preference of which operating system to use and for which hardware, such as classic, next generation, Apple hardware, Apollo Standalone V4+ or emulation, the choices are pretty much endless. Over the years I have tried all variants of operating system and pretty much all variants of hardware (not necessarily all types of accelerator that are available). This may disappoint, but I have no favourite as I think they all have pros and cons.

The holy grail for me is and always has been an Amiga/Amiga like laptop which can be achieved, with varying success, using MorphOS, AROS or Amiga Forever (Emulation). I have used MorphOS on Apple Powerbooks and always had a most enjoyable experience, I've tried AROS on Netbooks and laptops which wasn't quite as enjoyable as MorphOS, I found AROS quite the struggle to set up and I have used emulation to create E.M.M.A. running AmigaOS 4.1 with much more success.

AmigaOS 3.5

AmigaOS 4.x

Amiga Forever (Can Be Made to Look Like 4.x)

MorphOS

AROS

The choice you make may depend heavily on what you want to use your Amiga for, such as applications, games, web browsing or a bit of everything, including something that has been the bane of Amigans everywhere, watching YouTube in a browser at full speed. I guess for me at the moment it would be nice to do my blog on an Amiga which means I would need a graphics program, a notepad type of program and be able to get onto the Blogger website.

I believe the main reason there isn't a unified Amiga operating system stems way back to 1994 when a certain company went bankrupt, the buyouts, the lawsuits causing the fracturing of the community, hardware and software. Recently there has been a truce between Hyperion and Amiga Inc. which could lead to potentially good things or, has often been the case, the bickering we have seen so many times due to who owns what intellectual property and who has what licenses. It would be nice if it could lead to good things, even if they just resurrect the Alice laptop, the hardware exists, the software exists, just do it.

I have a Sam440ep and a Sam460... I could list the collection of hardware I own, but let's just say I am able to run AmigaOS (OS1.0 through to OS4.1) natively, I am able to run AROS natively and I am able to run MorphOS natively on a Powerbook.

PROS AND CONS OF HARDWARE

 Sam440ep  PowerBook G4  Netbooks 
 Release  2008 November 2002 Various
 OS 4.1 MorphOS  AROS 
 Cost X  X
 Availability  Out of Production  Second Hand  Second Hand 
 Wi-Fi Yes Yes Some
 Bluetooth X Yes Some
 Memory 1GB 1GB Varied
 USB 4 (USB2) & 1 (USB1)  2 (USB1.1) Varied
 Ethernet 2 Ports 1 Port Varied
 Sata 4 Installed HD Installed HD
 Resolution Depending on GPU 1280x854 Varied
 Sound X X Varied
 GPU Various ATI Radeon 9000  Varied

Which would I recommend?
All options are very good and indeed worth a try but my preference, considering what is available at the moment, would be a laptop emulating an Amiga running AmigaOS 4.1 which I achieved with E.M.M.A. although the PowerBook G4 running MorphOS is a very close second.

Hypothetically what would be my ideal Amiga?
Unfortunately my ideal doesn't exist, not at the moment, I would like AmigaOS 4.1 running natively on X86/ARM architecture with all the bells and whistles of a modern day operating system, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, modern browser including running YouTube at full speed is needed.

Follow and comment below

Michael

Tuesday, 28 April 2026

CD32

 CD32

Hi all, I started a new blog called "Life-of-Tech" but thought if it was Amiga related I would post here also, so please read and enjoy. When I started "Life-of-Tech" blog I did say I would talk about things other than handheld consoles so here we go. A console from the early 90s.

My main passion when it comes to consoles and computers is the Commodore line of computers, mainly Amiga, my favourite of all is probably the A1200, but let's not talk about that, let's talk about the console, some call a variant of the A1200, the CD32 which in itself is a very powerful console and more expandable than was thought it ever could be when it was released on September 17th 1993.


Whilst in developement the CD32 had the codename "Spellbound", and the console was just what Commodore needed at the time as they were floundering financially at the time. Commodore needed a big hitter to enter the market just before the christmas period and a lot of hope was placed on the CD32.

Most people just see the CD32 as an A1200 without a keyboard, floppy drive and hard drive all of which may not come as standard with the CD32 but can actually be added if you wish to tinker a little. The most common add on is the Terrible Fire 328 which has 8MB RAM and a 2.5" IDE expansion which can be used for hard disk drives or CF/SD cards. Another option when it comes to a floppy drive is the AMIFDCD32 which plugs into the rear expansion port on the CD32. There are other variants of the Terrible Fire such as the Terrible Fire 330. Adding a Terrible Fire can cause compatibility issues.

Other peripherals:
Keyboard option: There is a port on the left hand side that can be used for a keyboard. Mice. Connecting to HDTV and the use of third party controllers.

No matter what hardware you attach to a CD32 that can change it into a fully fledged computer, most will always see it as a console, which is not a bad thing, and so will use it as such including myself, my CD32 was purchased as a console and has always been used as a console and probably will always be used as a console, I have an Amiga that I can use for computer work.

My favourite game for CD32 was Zool, probably due to it being the game I played the most (only game I had, for the longest time) but I am also a sucker for a good platformer but I am easily distracted by pretty graphics such as those in virtually every Bitmap Brothers game. Any point and click adventure game such as Simon the Sorcerer.

The question may be, do I still own a CD32? Yes I do, also do I still use my CD32? No because I mainly use handhelds, even my PlayStation 4 and Xbox Series X have been reduced to being Blu Ray players or for  streaming games to my handheld consoles. If you don't have a CD32 but want to play there is always the option to emulate the CD32 on other hardware. There are A1200 emulators which makle it possible to play CD32 games on other OSs such as Windows, Linux, MacOS and Android. Hardware: PCs, Apple, Raspberry Pi, other Amigas. Would people want to emulate the CD32 for that retro feel?

Peoples views and thoughts with regards to the official CD32 controller vary. Most think it very peculiar and shaped incorrectly compared to controllers of the time or if you compare it to todays range of controllers it just seems alien.


Would I recommend the CD32? Only for old school gamers that are willing to have the console plonked in front of the TV or for those that want to tinker and change it's use to a computer and place in front of a monitor. Prices of second hand CD32s vary in quality, bundle sizes anbnd whether they are boxed or not.

There have been various, what many would call retro, recreations of computers available to purchase recently such as the Amiga 500 mini, SNES mini, NES mini and coming soon the Vectrex mini. If the CD32 came out now would it be popular and what specs would people like to see on it? Such as HDMI out, USB ports, WIFI, Bluetooth, things that wouldn't detract from the aesthetic look of the original. Personally, yes I would purchase one but only if I could use my existing catalogue of CD32 games which means a mini variant would not be an option for me.

How powerful is it compared to modern consoles? It can't really be compared these days as 30+ years have passed and there really is no competition. Do the games of the time compare favourably with games that are available on modern computers and consoles? This question on the other hand is depends on the players requirements, a good game and good characters can easily beat the flash 3D rendered images and online play.

Follow and comment below

Michael