I have owned many Amiga 1000s and an A4000D. I swore I would keep them forever. Then the AOne came along. After six months using OS4, I gave away all my classic Amiga machines.
After I've run OS4, there is no going back. It's got speed, sure. But it just feels right. I believe in this OS.
The one I dreamed over the most would have to be the 3000T. I used to have an Amiga mag that had an advert for it and I would look at it for hours and dream. That was back when I still had an A1000.
It's hard to say. My A1000 was amazing. CDTV was where I learned SO much about Amiga. I had a bootable FredFish disk and would play around with all the hunrdreds of programs. Trial and error taught me all the in's and out's of AmigaOS.
A1200 though was sort of the perfect Amiga. Let me do everything I could before, but faster and with many more colors. CD32 w/ SX1, well I loved that one too.
If i want some extra things to the A1 then it should be:
hardware: TV-in/output, hifi-integration, new joypad, virtual glasses, ...
software: AF 2006 for OS4, download-service for older games and software, ...
hardware + software: easy-link with other computers, booting from ram/memory devices, ...
concepts: following industrial standards, finding new ways of interaction, artificial intelligence as a sort follow-up to our say-programme, integration into the household (child/girl/woman friendly spinoff's), ...
Currennt favourite has to be my A1, which has been the only one running here for several years now (don't do much classic gaming).
All time favourite - and I know it'll cause ructions - is the A600. Small and perfectly formed - an ideal games machine back in its time. Plus, I have fond memories of loading 3 disks of Pagesetter 3 onto a 4 Mb PCMCIA card and booting from RAD: no more disk swapping!
I was on my way to a computer show in 1992 and had resolved to buy an accelerator for my 500 plus. It was at this show that Commodore unveiled the A1200 to the unsuspecting public, so after some intense thought I decided to change my plans and buy this new machine instead. I had appreciated the 1200 was a 68020 based machine, but reading through the literature on the train I discovered it had 2 megs as standard!
Anyway, its been with me ever since. That particular model is resting at the moment, but I think you''d be hard pushed to find a piece of electronic design that has been expanded and developed as much as the 1200 motherboard. My own relatively modest model, being 68060, Voodoo3 and TV card with ADSL, something surely undreamed of by its designers 14 years ago.
And a further essential selling point?
It will play everything from Marble Madness and Carrier Command to Super Stardust AGA, UFO: Enemy Unknown and Quake.
...and under emulation I'm playing Mechwarrior (pc) and Warcraft and X-Wing (Mac).
I still have a soft spot to the old A500. I had it for 5 years, and got the A1200 because there was a chance to (actually traded in the A500 for A1200). Last time I saw it It had 1MB chip an A590 with 2MB fast and 40MB scsi hd. Then came A1200 with Mocrobotics expansion card with FPU and 4MB. It's expanded with 68060, 80GB hd,cdrom, cdrw, 64MB ram, prelude, pixel64, pcmcia network card, scandouble+flickerficxer. Still using it on regular basis of early death of my A1, which is the favourite of course. Otherwise A1200 would suffice with playing games and being used with midi.
All are great machines, but A1 is the best!!!
Jack
"the expression, 'atonal music,' is most unfortunate--it is on a par with calling flying 'the art of not falling,' or swimming 'the art of not drowning.'. A. Schoenberg
@All Easily my A1 933 XE. I thrashed my A1200/30 to death and loved it dearly, I didn't even scratch the surface of what it could do (now that I look at Amikit).
The A1 despite the "quirks" is brilliant and if that gives way to new refined HW so much the better.
I think something that has been forgotten about the A1 development was back in those days (yes old time IT wise) non Apple PPC HW was almost non existent, so it was inevitable we would face some problems.
Now I am informed that our memory bus is old and slow, well whooopppee things can only improve on this speed, brilliant.
The AOS4 team has done a magnificent job and set up a solid foundation on which a truly remarkable OS can continue to develop.
The AmigaOne is the best Amiga computer right now, (CPU speed, memory, USB, PCI, sound and disk speed)
I think the best classic Amiga is a 4000 whit some upgrades.
MC68060, SCSI, Cyber Graphics 3D, is where impressive at emulating Mac, and general usage, way do I like this setup, well the Amiga 4000 is the most complete computer of all classic Amiga models.
When you upgrade an A1200, you need change the cabinet and modify it, as well as there is number of crazy upgrade paths you most avoid.
But common for all fully upgraded Amiga models is that there is always some thing that pops out if of place, I think of the Amiga models as crazy computers, whit there none standard IO ports, and plugs.
(NutsAboutAmiga)
Basilisk II for AmigaOS4 AmigaInputAnywhere Excalibur and other tools and apps.
My A3000D with P-IV and 68060 was my fav. Amiga box for the longest time. I still have it around but the 060 accelerator died on me so I'm back to the 030 which is just bloody awful.
Today, the MicroA1-C (750FX) is my current fav. Amiga box by far. The lack of slots is the only real downside. Just wish they gave us two or three slots.
Gotta be the A500, the machine that kicked it all off for me. The A1200 was probably my most favourite machine while i was progressing through the Amiga's though - It had a 420Mb Conner 3.5" hard disk strapped inside which made the case stick up alittle, an '030 50Mhz in the trapdoor and a CD-ROM in the PCMCIA, but the A500 would probably be my most setimental overall.