Nathan Sawaya’s “Art Of The Brick” Legos Exhibit
New York City has a thing for Legos. From the outstanding Lego Store in Rockefeller Center, to the incredible models at the Toys R Us in Time Square – massive builds of the Empire...
New York City has a thing for Legos. From the outstanding Lego Store in Rockefeller Center, to the incredible models at the Toys R Us in Time Square – massive builds of the Empire...
Several weeks ago, a friend was planning a trip out to New York to visit, and we were kicking around ideas of places to go and see. As we were both 80’s-Kids and huge...
In 1986, personal computers were not supposed to be powerful enough to render, in real-time, reflections and movement in 3D. But Eric Graham’s “The Juggler” demo for the Amiga did just that, building on...
Remember when subdirectories were “drawers”, not “folders”? It’s just an icon, so, it can be that way all over again! No more generic desktops! It is time for reclaim your computer with the Amiga...
The original Amiga concept was for a video game console which could be turned into a computer. Early in the development of the system, the engineering team constructed a controller called the “Joyboard”, similar...
Bringing a last round of bug-fixes to AmigaOS 1.x, and the ability to boot from hard drives, Workbench v1.3 is easily the best-known v1.x release. This downloadable ZIP file contains screen captures of the...
Like Kickstart, the initial versions of Workbench were a mess, with an extremely short development times and pushed-out-the-door on marketing’s schedule. To their credit, however, Commodore was able to get out Workbench v1.2, and...
The original Amiga computer was a technical marvel, but the underlying OS was very, very buggy. To deal with this, Commodore made the decision to not place the Amiga’s OS into ROM, but rather, requiring...