one respect, the display was terribly disappointing. Despite the fact that Amiga hardware and OS devetopment has remained stagnant for over two years now, there are plenty of apptications and gadgets that Amiga Technotogies coutel have loaded onto the machines to show that the Amiga is stitt a force to be reckoned with, one that can hotel its own against the newest Pentium by Denny Atkïn machines for many apptications. But they missed that chance, with a bunch of machines showing Workbench screens and pinbatt games. On the other hand, this time taft year Amiga owners thought they would never see an Amiga at COMDEX e er again, so it was a refreshing surprise to see the company making any kind of effort however disap-pointingtyexecuted-to get back into the North American market. Utitities Untimited have announced MAC Emulation Professional, a rewritten and enhanced version of the Macintosh emulation software for the Emptant board. UU promises that the new code is snatter and faster than previous versions, and a new interface caps it off. The original software witt continue to be updated to incorporate bug fixes, but t'd took to the Professional version for new features. The update costs $ 34.95, which isn't unreasonable when you consider that UU's Jim Drew has been providing free updates to the Mac emulation since the Emptant board's initis) retease. The update includes a new driver disk, updated documentation, and a reptacemeit custom logic chip for the Emptant board that witt attow UU to provide on-tine updates for registered MAC Emulation Professional owners. Among the new features is a completely revamped user interface that fottows the Amiga User interface Style Guide. The emulation software now opens on a Pubtic Screen instead of a custom one, and the program now uses ASL fife requesters. tf you're running AmigaOS 3.0