Although many US Amiga users are worried about the future o (the computer in this country (Commodore is a mere sheii o! a company here now a iarge pércentage of the deveiopment. support, and marketing staff has been mid off over the pas! couple of months, and many others have resigned). NewTek's Video Toaster keeps bringing plenty of attention to the machine. Two new TV sertes. Steven Spielberg's Seaquest DSV and J Michael Straczynskt's Babylon 5. wiü be using Video Toaster 4000 workstattons for most of their speciat effects this year. Not content to sit back and enjoy their success, the boys from Topeka announced the Screamer at the SiGGRAPH graphies show in August. This box attaches to the Toaster 4000 and sports four paraüet R4400 RiSC processors which give it over 600 M P$ of performance! NewTek says the $ 9.995 Screamer gives the Toaster twice the rendering power of a Cray) supercomputer. Now f they'd just bring out a PAL version... [though there hasn't beèü a iot of Amiga activin* on the game Ldesign front here in the US, one company has been busily updating one of the best ftight sims around to make it even better. Jaeger Software' Fighter Due! Pro 2.0 is packed with new features, answering nearly every complaint and request lodged about the earlier version. tf you're not familiar with Fighter Duet's predecessors, you should be. The origins! program, Fighter Due!: Corsair vs Zéro, was a one-on-one air combat game where you battied a single opponent (computer-controüed or via sériai connection). it was fairly simple, but had realistic flight models and provided an amazing 24 to 28 frames-per-second screen updates in hires interiaced mode, even on 7MHz Amigas. its successor, Fighter Due! Pro, added more aéroplanes and some truly innovative features, such as the ability to hook a second Amiga up to use to dispiav the view behind your piano!