
(Credit:screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)
The Amiga 500 lives again -- in Google's browser.
Google developer Christian Stefansen on Thursday resurrected a version of the venerable computer system from the 1980s in the form of a Web app that runs in Chrome. Forty-year-olds who want to relive their childhoods or younger people who want to see just how hard their elders had it can visit the Amiga 500 emulator for Chrome online, boot the machine, and play some games.
Related storiesGoogle aims for slicker Web graphics, but can it get there?Google's dilemma: A faster but fragmented Web?Twice in two weeks: Another Web app for processing raw photosMozilla coder: Chrome violates Google's own Blink principlesChrome emulates the old operating system by a Chrome-specific version of the Open Source Universal Amiga Emulator. Stefansen brought its 400,000 lines of code, written in the C programming language originally, to the Portable Native Client (PNaCl) foundation built into Chrome.
The Native Client technology runs software written to run on a particular processor at close to the speeds that native software runs. The approach gives software more direct access to a computer's hardware , but it also adds security restrictions to prevent people from downloading malware from the Web that would take advantage of that power.
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