Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!uunet!vtserf!creatures!csgrad.cs.vt.edu!jle From: jle@csgrad.cs.vt.edu Newsgroups: comp.unix.amiga Subject: Hello to Amiga UNIX users Message-ID: <1289@creatures.cs.vt.edu> Date: 7 Jun 91 18:48:25 GMT Sender: usenet@creatures.cs.vt.edu Reply-To: jle@csgrad.cs.vt.edu () Distribution: usa Organization: Virginia Tech Computer Science, Blacksburg, VA Lines: 38 Things have finally settled down long enough for me to post to the usenet concerning our environment and usage of the Amiga 3000 UX. We have had a pc requirement for the past several years for our undergraduate students. Last year was our first year using the Amiga 3000 UX. So by the time this fall comes, we will have our freshman and sophomore CS majors using the 3000 UX. In addition we have about 25 units in our department spread over our undergraduate lab, graduate lab, and on our faculty desks. Systems in the graduate lab and faculty offices are connected via ethernet. We are currently working with commodore to set up a graduate server and undergraduate server. We want to test out the system under a more stressful environment. In the past the graduate server was a Mac II with 8Mb RAM and 900Mb of disk. We are working on larger configuration for the 3000 UX. Our network consist of SUN, DEC, Apple, NeXT, Sequent, IBM and Intel. A pascal compiler for Amiga UNIX was developed here at VPI, and we currently are working on prolog and lisp ports to the Amiga. Our support operation for the students include sofware updates, cloning, UNIX support as well as hardware consulting. I will rest my fingers now. I will be glad to answer questions on our operation and feelings of the 3000. I will probably have questions to post to the net as well in the near future. -Jamie Evans- CS Dept VPI 703-231-6102 jle@vtopus.cs.vt.edu jle@csgrad.cs.vt.edu