Amiga Plus (June/July 1989)

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(Edited)


Cover of the June/July 1989 issue of Amiga Plus

Antic was originally an Atari 8-bit magazine. However, for a while they also published an Amiga magazine titled Amiga Plus (or Amiga +). The June/July 1989 issue includes:

Features

  • Artificial Reality - This article discusses breakthrough's in ray tracing and ray tracing techniques on the Amiga. An idea that has finally reached the mainstream with new GPUs like the RTX 3080. If you can find one...

  • 3-D Modeling Comes of Age - An overview of 3-D modeling design and the software available to do it on the Amiga.

Arts

  • Fun with FunPaint - FunPaint was a small graphics program included on the cover disk. This article gives an overview of its capabilities and how to use it.

  • Amiga Graphics Software Universe - The first in a four part series about graphics software on the Amiga. This first part covers paint programs and image generators (basically any other graphics creation programs).

  • Dr. T's Keyboard Controlled Sequencer - The Atari ST may have been better regarded in the music world but the Amiga was capable to. This sequencing software is one example of what could be done.

  • Deluxe PhotoLab Workshop - Another program that is on the cover disk. This one allows you to create and edit large images that can be printed out, up to 10 x 10 feet. The author of the article talks about how his 16 screen image would not fit on one disk. Each screen is 320x400 so the entire image would have been 5120x6400.


Table of Contents from the June/July 1989 issue of Amiga Plus

Productivity

  • Moniterm Viking 1 - A hardware review of what was a very large monitor for the time, a 19-inch monochrome monitor with a resolution of 1008x1008 from a company called Moniterm.

  • Magellan - Interesting sounding software that lets you develop expert systems using artificial intelligence techniques. Apparently the Amiga was a good candidate for this software because of its multitasking capabilities.

Programming

  • Amiga Floating Point Math - Part 1 of a series of articles on programming with floating point math on the Amiga. Some examples are included on the cover disk.

  • Clearing Your Workbench - Some tips on managing disk space when working from floppies.

  • AmigaDOS Inside & Out - Review of a book covering AmigaDOS from basic usage, to scripting and more.


Table of Contents from the June/July 1989 issue of Amiga Plus (continued)

Entertainment

  • Falcon - Review of this F-16 flight simulator for the Amiga, one of the best flight sims around at the time.

  • Wayne Gretzky Hockey - Review of this famous hockey game for the Amiga.

  • BackGammon - This game is included on the cover disk. Apparently it was a commercial game in the U.K. but was being provided by Amiga Plus for free.

  • Games Galaxy - Mini-reviews of:
    • Sword of Sodan
    • Final Mission
    • Solitaire Royale
    • Menace

Departments

  • Masthead, Editorial - This editorial discusses the success of the premiere issue of Amiga Plus.

  • Alert Box - Brief Amiga related news bits. The main topic this month includes the NYC AmiExpo and various hardware and software introduced there.

  • Guru Bashers - Reader questions answered about Deluxe Music Construction Set, icons, and upgrading RAM on the Amiga 500.

  • Reader Input - Comments from readers on the premiere issue of Amiga Plus.

  • Using Your Amiga Plus Disk - Instructions for using the cover disk including a description of the directories and contents.

  • New Amiga Products - 50 New products are mentioned including a bunch of graphics and animation software, a new Canon scanner interface, a bunch of productivity software including a new word processor, various utilities, language software and more. A number of games are mentioned as well including Gold of the Realm, Balance of Power: The 1990 Edition, Willow, Combat Course, Out Run, Thunder Blade, Space Harrier, War in Middle Earth, Batman, the Caped Crusader, Manhunter: New York, and many more. New hardware mentions include Gen/One, Scanlock VSL-1, SupraModem 2400 and more.

Read more: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2013/12/02/amiga-plus-junejuly-1989/



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3 comments
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Oh wow, this is some pretty interesting stuff, coming from someone born in '93... would love to see the physical copy! But this summary was still fascinating :)

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You were born the same year I graduated high school. I was still using a Commodore 64 then :).

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