Ahh today I finaly test last Amicygnix..and what I can say..Is great!!! Install on in AbiWord 2.6.2 and play whit it..is great have litle slow refreshing but I usint it on uA1c ..and only limit what I have it is memory..I still have only 256 MB :( in some case I have info out of memory ....but in global is great Sw!!!
Thanx for it!
Amiga x5000 ı o2o ı 4GB RAM ı RadeonRX580 | SBlaster Audigy Fx - AmigaOS4.1 FInal Edition
...and only limit what I have it is memory..I still have only 256 MB :( Are you using SWAP? To test the SWAP file, I installed Open Arena and it works fine with 256MB. So I assume it should work with Abiword. Yes or No?
Amicygnix is not Linux, it does not make your Linux programs run whit out change, how ever X11 (cygnix) offers way for programs to export there graphical output to an other X11 (cygnix) server, so if you say to linux export graphics to your Amiga, and start a program on your Linux computer, then the graphics should be displayed in AmiCygnix.
I hope I made it clear how this works.
(NutsAboutAmiga)
Basilisk II for AmigaOS4 AmigaInputAnywhere Excalibur and other tools and apps.
BTW: imho, AmiCygnix deserves a category in software forums here...
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
Agghhh. Do you know how painful this news is given my A1 XE has died and I am waiting for a SAM (stop laughing TCD!) -:)
Great work Ed, this solves 2 out of the 3 immediate wants for OS4, Excel and Word compatibility, the other of course is a modern browser which we know is being addressed by OWB and Netsurf.
Oh well I am having fun Amiganising my XP box (not too successfully either).
BTW: imho, AmiCygnix deserves a category in software forums here...
Bump (Orgin?, anyone?)
"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
"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