Any Amiga fans/users here?

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Train

Lifer
Jun 22, 2000
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Still have a pile of old Compute's Gazettes lying around, along with a bunch of other C64 and Amiga mags of the day.

Are those worth any money to the retro computing crowd?
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
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Still have a pile of old Compute's Gazettes lying around, along with a bunch of other C64 and Amiga mags of the day.

Are those worth any money to the retro computing crowd?

I think that maybe the magazines introducing the Amiga or other platforms might fetch a premium, but the others probably won't be worth tons. I've seen a lot of people selling AmigaWorlds for $10 an issue on eBay, but they don't really seem to move.
 

Pheran

Diamond Member
Apr 26, 2001
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There was a magazine either for C-64 or Amiga, I cannot recall, that was IMHO the best computer magazine ever published. It was just completely hardcore technically. I wish I could remember the name.
 

Train

Lifer
Jun 22, 2000
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There was a magazine either for C-64 or Amiga, I cannot recall, that was IMHO the best computer magazine ever published. It was just completely hardcore technically. I wish I could remember the name.

Probably Computes Gazette, the rest kinda sucked compared to it.

It came with tons of free shareware. You could either pay extra for the companion disk, or type in the pages of assembly code in the back of each mag.

The articles covered all kinds of in depth things you could do with your 64, with either basic or assembly language, or other tools.
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
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Probably Computes Gazette, the rest kinda sucked compared to it.

It came with tons of free shareware. You could either pay extra for the companion disk, or type in the pages of assembly code in the back of each mag.

The articles covered all kinds of in depth things you could do with your 64, with either basic or assembly language, or other tools.

I loved that magazine as well and I believe I still have the August 1985 edition which had a big feature on the new Amiga.
 

Train

Lifer
Jun 22, 2000
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I don't think that was it. I want to say it had a weird name like "kernel" or "boot" or something, but I can't remember. I just remember that it had amazing in-depth technical articles.

You might be thinking of "CPU" I think I may have an issue or two at home, will look when I am at home tomorrow.

Got a couple of boxes of those old mags (and books) that I really need to get rid of.
 
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Train

Lifer
Jun 22, 2000
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I will snap a pic if I find one. IIRC it was CPU in all caps, in like a check-number type font, in really big letters that took up nearly half the width of the cover, in the upper left.
 

TreyRandom

Diamond Member
Jun 29, 2001
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Ah, you probably had to replace an 8522 (IIRC) CIA chip. I should probably find a couple and keep on hand!

I've got a spare Amiga 2000 motherboard that had battery corrosion damage to the CPU socket (and maybe traces) as well. I really need to pull the socket off, clean the board, and solder on the new socket I bought and see if it works.

I learned to solder specifically to repair the Amiga and an old Dell laptop. The Dell works... time will tell if I repaired the Amiga. :)
 

Arkaign

Lifer
Oct 27, 2006
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Here is a list of 78 Amiga magazines:

http://amr.abime.net/magazines

Small necro here, but did you ever grab a magazine back in the day, and type in an entire game coded in basic? I used to do that with my Atari 400, which had a TERRIBLE keyboard, lol. It took forever, and I had nothing to save it on to, so had to recode the entire game before playing. I guess it helped with my typing skills and general understanding of BASIC.
 

JustMe21

Senior member
Sep 8, 2011
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I actually traded my first 386 PC for an Amiga500. I was a fan of the Amiga back when I had the Commodore 64, but I couldn't afford to buy it. The graphics were superior to anything else and it was the only system that could also run a PC and Mac emulator board, which I thought was so awesome. Plus, as one friend put it, it was the first true multitasking OS because you could format a floppy and do something else at the same time.