The Amiga 500 is used as a character generator, and the Amiga 2000 is used as master controller of the editing process. The combination of the Super-VHS format and the Amiga's capabilities packs quite a punch! The Amigas are hooked into a video local area network using equipment from Videomedia. Videomedia's V-LA.N product uses a VSIO converter to convert RS-232 data to data V-LAN can understand. VSJO receivers convert V-Lfu'l data to fit the remote device. Receivers can be daisy-chained, and up to 32 devices can be on the V-LAN. RGB showed AmigaLink, a program that controls all the devices through an Intuition interface, sending messages through the Amiga's RS-232 port. AmigaLink provides frame accurate A/B roll editing capabilities which allows you to control two video sources and mix them. The AmigaLink software ran on an Amiga 2000 al the show and mixed video images from an Amiga 500 with video animation from an Amiga 1000. Titling characters generated with the ASOO were mixed with A1000 output from Hash Enterprises' Animation: Apprentice. The Amiga