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AmigaOS is an operating system pretty easy to understand. Of course you need to learn some basic concepts. This documentation will provide these and your imagination will do the rest.


AmigaOS features

Here are some of the main features of AmigaOS that make easy to control your computer. Some of these concepts were copied by other operating systems which tend to show they are the correct way to do things.


  • Small footprint

AmigaOS can work with 64 MB of memory. On disk, a default installation takes around 200 MB only. The light micro-kernel

  • Restart only the operating system

If you feel the need to restart the system, you can do so restarting only the operating system. There is no need to reboot the whole computer.

  • Full name directories (Fonts, Libs...)

If you browse the AmigaOS system disk, you'll see directories with easy to understand names: Classes, Libs, Fonts, Prefs, Storage...etc.

  • File recognition based on their content

On AmigaOS you can rename a file whatever you want, even without an extension if you wish. Examples: "my file" or "picture of me in front of the computer". There is no need to add an extension to explain what the file is like ".txt" or ".jpg".

AmigaOS really examines the files to recognise what type of file it is.

  • Ram disk concept

On AmigaOS there is a special disk called the Ram disk which represents a part of your computer memory. This area is not fixed. It grows whenever you store files in it.

  • Command line and graphic interface tied together

Both the command line interface (where you type commands with the keyboard) and the graphical user interface (GUI) are tied together. You can easily use command lines from the GUI or open graphical elements from a command line.

What is AmigaOS

This is a description of the different parts of AmigaOS. This section talks about how the user files are stored on disks. Also it gives and introduction to AmigaDOS, the command line interface between the user and the computer. Then the Workbench will be explained.