
           ___________________________  _____________   ________
          /            |              \|             \ |        |
         /             |               |              \|        |
        /              |       |\      |               |        |
       /       /|      |       |/      |       |\      |        |
      /       /_|      |               |       | >     |        |
     /                 |        ______/|       |/      |        |_______
    /                  |       |       |               |                |
   /         /|        |       |       |               |                |
  /         / |        |       |       |              /|                |
 /_________/  |________|_______|       |_____________/ |________________|

         Archimedes        Public         Domain           Library

  _____  ______ __  __  ____  _ _____
 |  __ \|  ____|  \/  |/ __ \( ) ____|
 | |  | | |__  | \  / | |  | |/ (___
 | |  | |  __| | |\/| | |  | | \___ \
 | |__| | |____| |  | | |__| | ____) |
 |_____/|______|_|  |_|\____/ |_____/
                        _
         __ _ _ __   __| |
        / _` | '_ \ / _` |
       | (_| | | | | (_| |
        \__,_|_| |_|\__,_|
               __  __  ___   _____  ___  ___________ _   _ ______  _____
              |  \/  |/ _ \ / ____|/ _ \|___  /_   _| \ | |  ____|/ ____|
              | \  / | |_| | |  __| |_| |  / /  | | |  \| | |__  | (___
              | |\/| |  _  | | |_ |  _  | / /   | | | . ` |  __|  \___ \
              | |  | | | | | |__| | | | |/ /__ _| |_| |\  | |____ ____) |
              |_|  |_|_| |_|\_____|_| |_/_____|_____|_| \_|______|_____/


This part of the catalogue contains non-commercial 'Demos' and animations
and also disc magazines.

For prices and ordering information see the main catalogue 'APDL Info'.

All items in this section count as ONE POINT towards Bonus Discs.

                 ===================================
===================  D I S C   M A G A Z I N E S  ======================
                 ===================================

Disc magazines abound for some makes of computer, especially the Amiga.
Personally I prefer my magazines printed on paper but the biggest advantage
of a disc mag is when you've finished reading it you still have a disc - so
far I haven't found a way of reformatting a printed magazine.


M001                Power to the programmers Issue 1
      Disc-based games mag from Coin Age filled with several interesting
      articles and worth a look. Aimed mainly at games programmers or those
      who want to learn how to write games and so is fairly technical.


M002                New Dawn issue 1
      Issue One. A variety of items and some good and informative articles.
      Published by Quantum, contributors include Tom Cooper who has written
      some of the best Acorn PD games. Includes two original games. I have
      reviewed several disc based magazines in the past, normally costing
      about 3 per issue, and this is the best I have seen -and it's PD. If
      this high quality continues I'll try to include future issues.


M003                New Dawn issue 2
      It has so I have (see above). If anything better than the first issue,
      mainly because there are more 'outside' contributions.


M004                New Dawn issue 3
      Different from the previous two. Some new members resulting in major
      changes. More 'articles' some rather puerile and others a bit smutty
      so not recommended for younger users and mature ones probably wouldn't
      be interested. I found the font used awkward to read but it's nice to
      look at. Two (short) articles on programming. No way to print them
      from the program but they're text files so you can do so yourself.
      Only one not very exiting game. In all, quite good, with a more
      polished interface than before, but in my opinion the content is not
      up to the standard of issues 1 and 2, though bearing in mind the low
      standard of most disc mags this is really 'praising with faint damns'
      so don't be put off!


M005                Spectrum issue 1
      New disc mag from the people who brought you the Riscy Game flight
      simulators. I'm won't go into detail about what's in it, if you like
      disc magazines try it for yourself.


M006                Lunchtime issues 1 and 2
      The first two issues of Lunchtime on one disc. Rather unusual magazine
      with articles on lots of subjects - except computers! Most are
      humorous without descending into either smutt or 'in jokes'


M007                Lunchtime issue 3
      Third issue, subtitled 'Edward's Revenge'. Includes an Interview with
      God. Presumably as it's a non-computer oriented mag they didn't think
      Bill Gates would be appropriate.


M008                Virtuality Sample Issue
      The 'PD sample' of Virtuality magazine, now merged with Illusions.
      Quite a lot of reviews and other articles but it's biggest fault is
      that it uses !Magpie. This makes it slow and cumbersome and difficult
      to get hard copy of bits you are interested in.


M009                Lunchtime issue 4
      'Yul Brynner's Memorial Toolshed'. No, I won't tell you why it's
      called that - read it and find out. Again there's lots to read. The
      user interface is improved so the text area is bigger and the colours
      are nicer too. Lunchtime continues to improve and there's no sign of
      contributors running out of ideas.


M010  Thumper - Issue 1
            Various articles including info on drum programming for
            Soundtracker writers, help and examples for Persistence of
            Vision, a Repton type game and some stories
      TipTop  - Issue 1
            magazine from Tim Willis intended as a continuing review of
            Acorn PD. Content is a bit sparse so there's little 'real' info
            about programs reviewed, but it compresses well so it doesn't
            take up too much disc space. Main problem is the display
            interface. This would OK except that if it decides it doesn't
            like the current screen mode it changes it. I end up with a
            %^&&$y awful flickering Mode 13 screen and have to change to
            something more suitable
      TipTop   - Issue 2
            Similar to the first but about double the editorial content.


M011        The first four issues of Opinions on one disc. It's edited by
            Linton Dawe and looks interesting.
      Opinions 1 - Reviews of FontFX, poster and various PD programs
      Opinions 2 - Reviews of Pipedrean 4 and various PD, plus various other
            articles
      Opinions 3 - More reviews and an article on outline fonts
      Opinions 4 - Improved user interface. Various reviews and an article
            on Watford Electronics. Obviously a personal opinion but it
            reinforces my own and that of many others who've dealt with them


M012                Thumper issue 2
      Better than the previous issue with improved interface. Still a bit
      thin on content but shows a lot of promise. Includes a few PD
      applications and some short Tracker tunes.


M013                Core Dump
      A magazine full of interesting things! The user interface makes it
      easy to read the articles rather than just look pretty (though it's
      that too, especially Issue 2). Scrolling sideways moves back and forth
      in the current article and up and down moves between articles. Nice.

      CoreDump 1 - One interesting item is a discussion on fitting two
            MEMC's to let you have 8Mb of RAM in an A310 (and probably an
            A400). There's a piece on doubling the speed of a 486 PC but I
            don't advise you to try it unless you're prepared to scrap the
            motherboard if it fails
      CoreDump 2 - Improved user I/face. You can now switch the sound off
            (well, turn down the volume to zero) and the 'dissolving scroll'
            adds a nice touch. Articles on programming the VIDC, ARM code, a
            DIY 30Mhz A5000 (plausible) and how NOT to speed up your A3000.


M014                The folding Fifth
      No, I don't know why it's called that and I can't be bothered to find
      out. It's a magazine which is supposed to contain articles on non
      computer related topics. As it uses Genesis and the 'links' are either
      scrambled or just badly written I couldn't even *find* the articles so
      I don't know what it's like. If you actually like Genesis/Magpie then
      you might want to take a look (perhaps you can make it work!)


M015                Kalaeidoscope
      'Sample' issue of a proposed magazine. Doesn't look bad but they've
      chosen to use fancy graphics so though the disc is crammed full the
      editorial content isn't very large. The proposed 'proper' version will
      have 3-4 discs and cost 3.50-4.50. Personally I have a strong
      objection to 'professional' (?) programs that remove my RAM disc,
      alter my mouse speed and don't properly restore the system font, so
      I'm not impressed.


M016                Lunchtime issue 5
      'Wardrobe Racing for Foreigners'. Even bigger and better than the
      previous issues. Nothing more to say, is there?


M017                Spectrum Issue 2
      Issue two of Spectrum magazine. Good balance of articles about PD
      software, computers, and other topics (even football gets a mention -
      how low can they get!). The software is quite good too, but it can be
      a bit quirky - you use the mouse to select items but the arrow keys to
      scroll the text. Still, probably one of the best disc mags around,
      disregarding 'specialist' mags only Lunchtime equals it.


M018                Spectrum Issue 3
      User interface much improved (easier to use and faster) and this issue
      is a great leap forward. Lots of interesting content, all non
      technical, and as well as reviews of commercial products there are
      short reviews of dozens of PD games. Now works OK on the RPC (issue 2
      needed Game On). Recommended.


M019                Lunchtime 6
      It's that mag again with even more amusing and intelectual (!) items.
      The best yet, and although it's been a long wait it was worth it.


M020                Queen
      These discs are from Queen Fan Newsletter (QFN). M020 has various
      items about the group, subsequent discs contain the quarterly
      newsletter, added as they become available. Each disc has a suffix
      which is the number of the QFN issue and contains one newsletter. At
      present it starts at 16 because earlier ones were paper only.
                    Although the content of of these discs may be freely
      read and used by the *purchaser* it is NOT Public Domain and is
      distributed with the permission of the Editor of QFN, David Parr
                    Prices - Single discs as normal discs with one Bonus
      point per disc. The entire set (however many discs it comprises) will
      be available at 1 per disc. This means that if there are five discs
      then all five, if purchased together, will cost 5, if there are eight
      discs then the set will cost 8, etc., but NO BONUS POINTS

      Complete Q-F-N set - 5.00  (NO Bonus Points for the entire set)

                    M020-16  QFN-16  -  Winter '94
                    M020-17  QFN-17  -  Spring '95
                    M020-18  QFN-18  -  Summer '95
                    M020-19  QFN-19  -  Autumn '95
                    M020-20  QFN-20  -  Winter '95
                    M020-21  QFN-21  -  Spring '96
                    M020-22  QFN-22  -  Summer/Autumn '96


M021  Aliquid Novi - First issue of a magazine by Edmund Richardson. Over
      100 articles and lots of info and reviews of PD software. It's HTML
      based (why re-invent the wheel) and includes a browser, so you can
      either use it 'as supplied' or use your own favourite browser. Highly
      recommended


M022  Aliquid Novi Issue 2 - Quite a bit bigger than Issue 1, this time it
      fills two 800K or a single 1.6Mb disc. The 1.6Mb version can be run
      from the archive on the disc, though it's faster from a hard drive,
      but you will need to copy the 800K version to a hard drive

                    On 2 x 800K or 1 x 1.6Mb discs

                          =================
============================  D E M O S  =============================
                          ==================

This section contains non-commercial demos. These are programs written by
enthusiasts to show off the graphics and/or sound capabilities of the
Archimedes. The other sort of demo's are demonstrations of commercial
software which can be found in the 'Commercial' catalogue.

These programs are most likely to suffer from compatibility problems,
especially with the RPC. They are often written by people who have graduated
from other computers and who have never even heard of the PRM's, much less
read them. Some badly written demo's appear to run OK but cause a complete
crash when they finish. In general -

 ** MAKE SURE YOU DON'T HAVE ANY UNSAVED DATA BEFORE RUNNING A DEMO **

Often the only way out is to press RESET. Sometimes they do stupid things
like clear memory or clear the RMA. Sometimes even a 'hard reset'
(CTRL-RESET) won't work and you will actually have to switch the computer
off. Many demo's ARE written by genuine Acorn enthusiasts who know how to
write good software and return cleanly to the desktop if you press ESCAPE,
but to be prepared for the worst.

Despite these difficulties demo's can be great fun. Some have staggering
graphics displays which push the machine to its limits. The Archimedes is
probably the only computer fast and powerful enough to have quite exotic
demos written in interpreted Basic, sometimes combined with a few machine
code routines to speed things up. Although the best demo's are written in
machine code or compiled languages programmers don't need to be use these to
produce good displays. Quite a few are written in Basic and this can be a
good way for people to see 'how it's done'.



D007  Projector - 1.11 from Ace Computing, disc 1 with 8 demonstration
      films. Compacted files

D008  Projector - 1.11 from Ace Computing, disc 2 with 13 demonstration
      films. Compacted files

D015  Music / graphic demos from Brothers in Arm. !ArmScroll, !Bounce,
      !Rotate, !Scarface, !Z_Brother

D027  Demo 1e12, Demo6399, Demo01 (works on RPC if you run it twice!),
      DudsDemo and James (Bond 007).

D028  DVS demos. Two, !Ray1 and !Ray2, each a series of animated ray-traced
      images plus a selection of stills. All can be selected from a menu.

D044  !BallsDemo and !Arcangels by Arc Angel, !Armaniac2, TCD Demo1 by The
      Chip Duo, Arctic Software's !PDemo and Medway_1

D045  Two demos by Network XXIII, Granny (Chow) and Wibble.

D048  Four demos by Archima/Pisoft based in Belgium, some very nice effects.
      !Archima (needs 2MEG), !Automate, !Demolition and !Wierd.

D052  Seven demos, !Demo_A, !PV_DEMO, !Ripoff, MEDWAY1, !DEMO (Bouncy bar
      demo), !Flump1 and BLOB (Zombiesoft demo 6).

D055  MegaDemo by Armaxess, a demo in six parts. Also !Overscan1 by Medway
      256 and ArabelaI.

D057  Three cartoon demos by German group Software Evolutions, Lucky Luke,
      Cubitus and Disc Run

D061  QRT Demo 1 - A demonstration of the raytracer with animated half
      screen pictures and an AMF the Doomwatcher scrolltext
      QRT Demo 2 - Another demonstration, this time an animated film about
      strange beings called Blibbles.

D063  !Ba (Bananaland by Sick), !Froggy, !Stingray and AM-Demo1

D064  Seven demos - !CamSoft, !DDD, !DreamSide, !Flip, !MegaNet, !Pathetic1
      and !Pathetic2.

D065  Three demos from DudleySoft - !5Min, Demo2 and Demo3. Plus !Blood and
      !MDemo-I.

D066  !MrM - a suite of five demos (!Balls, !MyDemo, !Scroller, !Starfield
      and !TheRing), !DemoGe72, !BOE and !Rats.

D069  Amiga Star Wars Walker demo. This requires a minimum of 2 meg memory
      and hard disc.

D070  Walker demo, for 1meg machines. Cut down version of D069. Plus !Balls,
      Andy_Demo and !Demo_001.

D072  !Squirrel animation demo, similar to "Mission Impossible" advert on
      TV. Needs 4meg.

D073  !CokeCan, !Gopher, !Wurld and C4 demo.

D076  Projector (1.11) from Ace Computing. Disc 3 with 5 demo films.

D078  !Archie, !Error, !G-o-d, !IrqDemo1, !QuickLime, !Runner, !Scroller and
      !TacRock

D079  Seven demos - !Canada (best with 2meg+), !3d_demo, !Demo_3, Eg_Intro,
      !Ferris, !PVS and ZODIAC.

D086  !RiscDream by Armaxess, even better than their previous MegaDemo. Plus
      !Wellen and !MaxIsBack.

D088  Two demos from Software Evolutions, !PicShow and !Xmas, plus
      !FishDemoS.

D089  !TeaPot rotating teapot demo, !Slide, demo with sliding block puzzle
      plus CC's Newton's Cradle demo.

D095  GelloSim, !SoundDemo, !AECDemo, !Awesome2, !SuperBall, !3, !Tunnel2

D096  !AceDemo4, !DarmTanz, !SoundDemo and Arc Angels' !WaterDemo.

D097  Arc Angels' Mega Demo, excellent. Be warned, it does contain bad
      language.

B098  !TNT (The New Triad), !Decem, !Windows and ACEDemo2

D099  BIA's !Demo2, !BitBox and !TransMrtl from ArcEmpire.

D100  ARMageddon's MegaDemo and !Ball_Rot, !XYMOX and a demo of Spacetech's
      Orrery.

D101  Three demos - RockBand from Arc-en-ciel, !KanDemo and !StuDemo7. Plus
      a few desktop sillies, !B+Q, !Border, !Cat, !CrazyIcon and !Plopper.

D102  Three demos - Arc Angels' !PowerDemo, !Tertius from Arc-en-ciel and
      !Apple.

D106  11thHour, AmpDemo01, AmpDemo02, BarDemo2 and FunkyDemo.

D107  Ice Cream demo from High Risc. Five part demo that includes a Frogger
      type game, NB requires at least 2meg and a MEMC1a chip.

D112  Armless 1, 3 and 4 and Orange Squash, all by Wayne Keenan.

D113  Rainbow demo. Collection of 43 short Basic programs. Nothing very
            exiting but as they are all fairly short they are useful and
            instrutive to anyone interested in Basic graphics programming
      ParaManic - Short 'scrolling stars' demo in Basic by Wayne Keenan
      Laser - Nice variation on the scrolltext theme by Chris Stephens.
            Again included more for their interest to programmers though
            they are worth looking at.

D114  !Chubby, !SkulDance, !SMSinFive and !Yeah. All Basic demo's from Wayne
      Keenan. Three nice scrolltext demos from Stuart Tyrrell, imaginatively
      called !StuDemo2, !StuDemo3 and !StuDemo4, all more than just
      scrolltext, some have simple games included, plus !Arctic

D116  Digital Aurora from Quantum (needs 2Meg) plus the short demo !SomeC

D117  !Roller, ray traced balls running down a ramp, makes Amiga owners go a
      funny green colour, !SkullDemo, !Beauty,'The Beauty of Fractals' demo
      plus four other stunning graphics demos called, imaginatively, Demo1,
      Demo2, Demo3 and Demo4, two with C source code

D118  !4DSolids, good graphics demo which rotates various three and four
      dimensional geometric shapes in a desktop window. !Bricks, short demo
      of flying bricks, !Thomas, animation of Thomas the Tank Engine,
      !WildWest, animation of wild west steam train, !LiteBike, good
      animation of ray traced Lite Cycle going in circles, !Rats, pointless
      demo of bouncing rats with a long wait before anything happens.

D119  Two scrolltext demo's, KOOL ICK from Kuldip Pardesi and RAIN. Although
      it's 'only' a scrolltext Kool Ick is worth watching. Rain is nothing
      exceptional but it's written in Basic assembler so nosey programmers
      can see how it's done!

D120  !Datawaves, !Stars (scrolling starfield in Basic assembler), !Tecc
      (the Author calls this an electronic Christmas card), !Triangle (a
      sort of orbiting scrolltext), !SlomptNeon (imitation flashing neon
      light display, simple but effective with the lights out), !FogDemo
      (the first original idea I've seen in a long time).

D121  !Animated (three different 'movies' at once), !Fourier, Demo3 from
      Noah, !Coral (draws coral like structures), !FlagDemo from Arm's Tech,
      !House (rotating perspective drawing of a house in a small window),
      !Persian (display Persian rug style patterns), !Planet (draws the
      Earth from any point in space in various ways, slow but good).

D122  Five good demo's from Moonlight Graphics - !Chick, 2DWaves, Jogger,
      !Earth (very good), !ESP. The last is billed as a 'game' but really
      it's a demo with a simple guessing game !Waves by Graham Hick Plus
      some graphics programs - Foglia, Juliana+, Ripples (superb), Snow2,
      Squares, Patcol.

D123  !VeryBig - A 'very big' (about 1.2Mb) desktop morphing demo !Rings,
      non desktop screen of moving circle !WavePlasm, a screen of moving
      multi-coloured wave patterns - would make a good (flashy!) screensaver

D124  !Tertis from SICK. Non desktop tetris game with lots of flashy effects
            bolted on. Graphics are very good, but so intrusive you wouldn't
            want to treat it as a 'real' game. If you want a good game there
            are beter alternatives, if you want nice graphics....
      !Molehills  Unexiting scrolltext. There may be more to it but I'm too
            bored to wait and find out
      !Colours1  Now this is an interesting scrolltext (not the text, people
            who write scrolltexts NEVER have anything to say). Very flashy,
            very colourful

D125  !BallsDemo and !ArcAngel (both from Arc Angels), !RUN, !Windows,
      222Sprites, C4 (nice animation of the Channel 4 TV logo), Triangles
      (just four moving triangles, shows how even a few lines of Basic can
      produce stunning effects on the Arc), !ARMscroll, !FullBordr, !Rotate
      and !Bounce (all four from Brothers in ARM), !RipOff

D126  Brain Dead. Some very good effects and superb graphics displays, let
      down by a moronic scrolltext with bad language, appalling grammar and
      worse spelling. Be prepared to switch off when you finally get fed up
      - the usual ex A***a owner's poor programming techniques thoroughly
      screw up everything.

D127  Series of short(ish) Basic demo's, useful to anyone who wants to see
      'how it's done'. !Bounscape, !Message, Scroller1, !YastiB, !Ballox,
      !Boxar, !MicroLiza, !Ognas, !Planet, RotatOr, !TacRock, TurboTxt2 with
      various other tools and short demos from the same author. PLUS
      !Scroll15, a 'sample' scrolltext which illustrates the techniques used
      and NewScrolle which demonstrates fast scrolling anti-aliased fonts

D128  Collection of demo's from AMF - !777, !Salaam 8, !Solemnis, !Novem and
      !Decem. Unlike most demo's with scrolltext AMF's are normally worth
      reading and don't just consist of a load of 'hello to...' and other
      moronic utterings.  PLUS  !Pathetic3 and !Kryten

D129  !Ped>Hex - Demo 'rave video'; text on a phsychadelic background. Very
      hypnotic effect. !Megatar - good graphics and sound effects spoiled by
      boring text too fast to read on an ARM 3 unless you switch off the
      cache. Probably worth watching to the end, I'm told it's very good,
      but I can't be bothered to wait for all that 'greetings to...',
      especially when most of it's in German!

D130  Render Bender animations. Almost 2Mb of pics. Five animations,
      Soldiers, Dripping tap, BoxDemo, RollerDemo and SpiraDemo
      PLUS  Four ray traced pictures created with Clare's Render Bender
      package with source code

D132  !Cindy_C from Quantum. Probably only of interest to frustrated
      adolescents lusting after Cindy Crawford but that could be a
      substantial proportion of APDL customers!  Well, at least we know a
      bit more about 'Nemesis' of Quantum.

D134  !BBC2 - You know that BBC logo - the one where it looks as if
      someone's flung a pot of paint over the '2'......  !Bodgering - Well,
      the name's original.  !SFDemo1 - Solar Flare demo 1.

D135  Three Ray Traced animations. !Krypton by Stephen Mansfield, !Mirrors
      (no name), and the superb !Molecule by Richard Cownie and David Seal

D136  !FlyingPig, !DemoBars, !Dreamers, !HotDog, !BallCubes, !HotDog - all
      scrolltexts with various additions - plus MegaDemo by George Saliaris.
      This reproduces a graphics display from Greek TV. The original was
      produced on  SPARC workstation, so, though it's soundless, it's a good
      illustration of how powerful the Arc is. A nice change from all those
      boring scrolltexts (and it gives your ears a rest!)

D137  !Jelli - very good Rave demo. Flashy rather than stunning but the
      music is superb. !TripATron - Great fractal images, much better than
      some of the normal graphics displays
    PLUS !Erasure

D138  !SquoQuo. No, I don't know where they get these names, but there does
      seem to be a connection between the silliness of the name, the
      banality of the scrolltext and the use of words like 'grafix', 'muzix'
       and 'compie'. Really quite good but the Authors say (yes, there's
      actually a !Help file) that the scrolltext lasts for about 30 minutes
      so I doubt you'll stay til the end!

D139  !Prodigy4 - Jericho. A large sound demo with over 1.2Mb of compressed
      sound samples. Nothing much to look at but great sounds, especially
      with extension speakers or headphones. Wire your Arc up to the hi-fi,
      turn up the volume, and wake up the neighbours.

D140  !Pulse - Another sound demo, not as loud as Prodigy4 but there's a
      choice of two plus a nice psychodelic graphics display as well.
      !PPP_Demo3 - Usual scrolltext and graphics demo in Basic.

D141  !PPP_Demo4 - 'Timewave'. Much better than number 3. All in Basic
      (uncrunched) but some great effects. Crude scrolltexts (the
      implimentation, not content), but lots of nice, short, interesting,
      graphics routines. !Flump3 - Not state-of-the-art but quite good.

D143  Liquid Dreams from Quantum. Probably the best demo I've seen so far. I
      managed to watch it without falling asleep or feeling a strong desire
      to go and make a coffee while waiting for it to finish. Some nice,
      imaginative, effects (no scrolltext!). Very few demo's are worth the
      time it takes to watch them, this is one that is.

D144  Rave 1 by Chris Savage and Richard Aldridge. Three high quality
      original tunes written using Coconizer with a non desktop
      selector/player. Works on RPC with !GameOn

D145  !1994ad by Joachim Schneider and !Adept by Denys Bogatz, both standard
      demos, neither work on RPC

D146  !4Mirrors by George Saliaris, !AcidWarp by Jon Ribbens, !Sphere by
      Gary Hunt, rotating globe in Basic, good example of how to wrap a
      sprite around a sphere, !TextAway, again Basic, how to make a Star
      Wars style text, !Whispers1, an even more exotic rotating globe,
      !Spider by Mark Moxon, !PoorJenny, !RayBounce, !Spiral, !Wavery. All
      of these are short graphics demos

D147  !BlackZone, very interesting demo with a novel start that makes you
            think it's all going wrong
      !PhotoCube by Uwe Kiwitt-Frischenbruder
            ** RPC only **  On HD disc, costs 1.65

D148  !MissTech by ARM's Tech. Best with S/Arm, terrific lighting effects
            with ray traced and fractal generated images
      !Fire by R.Williams, short demo of flames
            ** RPC only **  On HD disc, costs 1.65

D149  !FQuake by Jan Vlietinck, impressive 3D demo of a Quake clone. You
            'fly' through a building, controlling progress with the mouse
      !PeterC, rotating head by ArmOric
            ** RPC only **  On HD disc, costs 1.65

D150  !ARMed96 by AF Software, really needs 16 bit sound and hi res monitor
      REISNAC by Icebird, lots of good images and effects
      Flames  Fire effect demo by Jim Hawkins
            ** RPC only **  On HD disc, costs 1.65

D151  !AWDemo2 by Andrew wood, !CakeHead2 by Alain Brobecker, !Vectrix

D152  !TimesUp by Xymox Project, quite good multi part demo
      !Revolutif by ArmOric
      !FishTank by DFI, quite nice short demo of ray traced fish swimming
            round in circles

D153  !ARM2, !HereWeAre by Sacha Salevsky, !SERAUQS by Phill Coleman,
      !SR_Demo from Sounds Riscy

D154  !CosmicDemo, !Crimbo90, !JoJo by Archiologics, !Yarm1

D155  Come And See by Nophobia, quite good (not RPC), Incredible Demo by
      John Graley, VisiDemo from Norsoft Productions





