Proxy Master List
Proxy Master List
Amiga internet and communications software by jekky
Modem, Direct Connect, BBS managing, Fidonet, Packet Radio
Termite, X-Term, A-Term, Baud Bandit I and II, OnLine!
Direct parallel and serial cable connect: ParNET, SerNET
Fidonet Mail: Amiga version of GNU AWK, AmyBW, Q-Blue QWK and Blue Wave mail readers
BBS management: C-NET II, Zeus BBS, Hydra BBS, DLG Pro, Amiexpress, Infinity, Tempest
Packet Radio: AmiCom, AmigaTNC, and Amipac
Amateur radio: Amiga Amateur Radio Group, AMIGA-FAX/SSTV, METEO/FAX/SSTV, PakRatt, Multicom, AmTOR, AmigaCALL
Prestel, Videotel, Videotex, Minitel
In some European countries, and especially in France, Minitel data transmitting services were very popular before the rise of Internet. Minitel started the phenomenon of chatting, exchange mail, providing on-line services such as railways or TV broadcast timetables, travel and hotel booking, etcetera. Minitel used little terminals rented from telephone companies or computers with modems that accept Minitel transmission protocol speed. The speed was asynchronous at 1200/75 baud (1200 baud receiving, 75 baud transmitting). There were made Amiga Minitel communication programs in France, Germany and Italy. In Italy it was released Amiga Videotel.
Teletext, Televideo, Viewdata
Teletext is an information retrieval service system based on transmitting data with normal TV broadcast signals and showing it separately, without interfering with normal TV programs. About this kind of service, on Amiga there are TV cards viewers that view Teletext pages and save them as standard image files. Standalone programs for Teletext included the Amiga Teletext program, and the datatype Videotex Datatype.
FAX, Answering Machine and Voice Mail
AFax, Amiga-FAX, GPFax, FaxQuik, STFax, TrapFax, AVM, MultiAnswer, Zyxel Voice Mail
ISDN
ISDN digital telephone and circuit-switched telephone network system were supported via the expansion cards ISDN Master and ISDN Master II, their drivers and related software.
Networking and Ethernet protocols
Depending from the hardware cards and their drivers and software, Amiga supported SANA-II protocols, Envoy protocols from IAM, AS225, AS225r2 TCP-IP from Commodore, DECnet, Novell Netware through Amiga Client for Novell Netware, Quicknet fast proprietary peer to peer procol, Appletalk through emulators. Other network protocols available were AmigaUUCP, DNET, Link-It and Enlan-DFS. Amiga currently supports also Samba, and SMBFS.
World Wide web
Almost all these programs are recent and available mainly for new Amiga platforms.
Amiga TCP/IP: AmiTCP, EasyNet, Genesis, Miami and Miami DeLuxe, RoadShow for AmigaOS, MosNet and NetStack for MorphOS (both based on AmiTCP).
Browsers:
Old browsers or "text only" based ones:
Amiga Mosaic, Amiga Lynx, Emacs/W3 WWW client in GNU Emacs.
Modern browsers up to HTML 3.2 without CSS:
IBrowse, Voyager, AWeb, and also Amaya through the X11 Amiga compatibility graphic engine library Cygnix.
Actual Browsers with HTML 4.0 and CSS:
OWB (Origyn Web Browser) for AmigaOS 4 and Classic Amigas (OS 3.9), revision 1.21 (this software also integrates itself with IBrowse).
NetSurf for AmigaOS 4 also through the X11 Amiga compatibility graphic engine library Cygnix.
Released as beta:
Sputnik Browser for MorphOS and AmigaOS.
In development:
FireFox for Amiga X11.
(Sputnik and OWB are based upon WebKit)
E-mail: Thor, YAM, Simplemail, Anubis
Newsreaders: NewsRog, MicroDot II, NewsCoaster
Internet Radio: AmiAMP (Amiga look-alike version of WinAMP), AmiNetRadio, TuneNet.
Gopher: Gopherexx
Proxy server: PProxy, Privoxy
PPP: AmiPPP, Multilink
Telnet: AmTelnet
Podcasting: AmiPodder
Amiga RSS Feed: AmRSS
Distributed net: DNetC
GPS (Global Positioning System): Actually there is no Amiga software to pilot GPS devices.
Google Services:
GoogleMaps: Not supported
Google Earth: Not supported
GoogleMail: Supported only in 'basic HTML' mode.
GoogleBar: Not supported by Amiga Browsers
Amiga Instant Messaging and Chat: AmTalk, ACUSeeMe, AmIRC, Amiga Jabberwocky multistandard Instant Messaging, Epistula Instant Messaging, SabreMSN, MomosIRC, AmiGG, GadAmi, WookieChat, climm, Bitlbee
Voice Calls, Voice Chat, VoIP and Internet phone Services:
Messenger Voice Chat: Not supported
Skype VoIP: Not supported
H.323 VoIP Protocol: Not supported
Amiga Voice Calls: It has been reported of AmTalk supporting voice calls between two Amiga running that program, but this feature it is unconfirmed.
FTP: ATC (Amiga Trading Centre), Amiga wget, AmFTP, AmiFTP, GUI-FTP, HTTPResume, Charon, CManager, FTPMount (mounts remote FTP as standard Amiga devices), Pete's FTP (PFTP).
FTP Server: Amiga RC-FTPd, AmiFTPd
Weather casting news: Amiga WET, Weather Experience, Wetter.
Live Webcam supporting: AmiWebView, WebVision, WebCam
Amiga USB Webcam Driver: Personal Webcam, Amiga Sonix webcam driver for various models of USB webcams
Clock Synchronization: FACTS
SMS Short Messages: TaskiSMS
Web development & HTTP Server: Apache for Amiga, Apache PHP, Thttpd, Thttpd PHP, WebMaker HTML editor, Ami.HTML Webscape
Peer2Peer: Amiga Mule, Transmission, enqueueTorrent BitTorrent, Bourriquet, BeeHive, CTorrent[citation needed], AmiGift, EDonkey, mlDonkey
VCast, Online VCR: otrMUI for MorphOS by Thomas Igracki
Youtube: On AmigaOS and MorphOS there are various clients or downloaders for Youtube all based upon scripts made by ARexx language. These scripts spare some functions from existing Amiga programs like wget and MPlayer and join them in a big meta-application utility able to handle Youtube animations: youtube downloader.rexx from Fabien Coeurjoly, ib youtube.rexx by [[Ferr Garc]] loading youtube movies into Amiga browser IBrowse, getvideo.rexx by [[Jgen Lucas]], and Youtube client TubeXX by Paolo Germano, Flayer ARexx script by Amiga programmer Robert Williams.
Flash player: Amiga SWFPlayer
Monitoring webpages: Seventhsense
Remote Desktop: TwinVNC, VNCServer, MorphVNC
SSL, SSH: AmiSSL, Amiga OpenSSL, Amiga OpenSSH, SSHCON
Other: Sniffy, OpenURL, Net Tools (net ping, resolve, traceroute, etc.), Gallerius (generator of HTML galleries)
Communication Protocols
This section's tone or style may not be appropriate for Wikipedia. Specific concerns may be found on the talk page. See Wikipedia's guide to writing better articles for suggestions. (March 2008)
Skypix, which many consider the first modern interactive online graphics-and-sound protocol[citation needed], was introduced in 1987 as part of the Skyline (Atredes) BBS System. Years before the World Wide Web, Skypix allowed rich interactive graphics and sound, as well as mouse control, to be a part of the online experience, which was until then limited to text and ANSI graphics. Skypix allowed users the ability to write graphical programs and link them into the system, as well as the first "authoring program", Skypaint, Skypix created a large worldwide group of enthusiastic game and online application writers years before the World Wide Web made such features a common part of the online experience.
Notes:
^ (A more comprehensive list about Amiga based BBS Management Software is available at Wikipedia article List_of_BBS_software, in the Amiga section.)
Categories: Amiga | Amiga software | Lists of softwareHidden categories: Articles needing cleanup from March 2008 | All pages needing cleanup | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from December 2009 | Wikipedia articles needing style editing from March 2008 | All articles needing style editing | Articles with unsourced statements from March 2008
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