the time this what the worM-wrde AMIGA issue hits the shelves. Rest assured, we'll keep you up to date with companies that said it should concentrate on cheap, entry level commtmftyreaHyfhmfts... the Iatest developments. A M! GA SHOW RETURNS The World of Amiga UK Show returns this year and promises to be even more successful than last year*s exhibition. The two day show will be held at the Novote! Exhibition Centre in Hammersmith, London, on Saturday 17 and Sunday t8 May. The exhibition will be a showcase for ail the Iatest developments in Amiga technology, with products from a wide range of Cerman and British manufacturer on display. Judging by the fact there have been even more Amiga reiated hardware and software developments this year than last, the show should be a runaway success. Admission prices are E8 for adults and E6 for children. A show of this calibre is exactly what the Amiga community needs, even more so now than last year. With ail the uncertainty over the platform, it will show that, as always, Amiga users and developers are still fighting on to keep the machine alive. A new enterprise has been set up in Norway to collate as much data as possible on ail things Amiga. Jon Lennart Berg wants to set up an Internet based service for Amiga users ail over the world. He told Amiga Computing why he wants to set up such a service. "Ever since the death of Commodore, the voice of the Amiga community across the world has been a silent one. It Is under- standable developers are keeping their distance because the backbone we called Commodore, is no longer there to keep them updated with vital information information about the common hardware setup, général interest and total market demand. And by ail means, companies should not be expected to obtain such information themselves."