NewIcons

NewIcons is a third-party extension to the icon handling system for AmigaOS 2 and newer.[1] NewIcons was first invented and developed by the Italian programmer Nicola Salmoria.[2] Subsequent development was done by Eric Sauvageau and Phil Vedovatti.[1]

History

The need for NewIcons arose from the poor overall quality of icons in AmigaOS versions prior to 3.0. While the AmigaOS GUI had been revolutionary when it was first launched in the early 1980s, other operating systems such as Mac OS and Microsoft Windows quickly caught on and started to become more professional-looking. Standard AmigaOS Workbench icons were plain and uninteresting: limited to four colours, having no standard size, and viewed from a straight-on perspective that left them looking two-dimensional.

The aim of NewIcons is to solve all these faults. Unlike a standard Workbench icon, which only includes palette index information and is thus at the mercy of the user's chosen Workbench palette, NewIcons icons are natively drawn in 32 colours (5-bit colour) and hold the actual RGB colour information in the icon file. A memory-resident program (called a Commodity in Amiga terminology) tries its best to adapt the icon's colours into the current Workbench screen palette. Up to 256 colour icons are supported by NewIcons system.[3]

Features

NewIcons also establishes a standard icon size of 36×40 pixels, similar to those of Mac OS and Windows. The design guidelines recommend icons to be drawn at a more diagonal perspective, thus creating the illusion of three dimensions. The guidelines also strongly encourage the use of Workbench's "image" highlights, where a selected image changes its actual shape when clicked, instead of simply inverting its colours or becoming a darker shade. For example, a computer terminal could have its screen powered up, a pen could write letters on paper, or a robot symbolising a computer game could move around.

NewIcons are relatively large in file size compared to conventional Amiga icons or MagicWB icons. NewIcons are stored in 8-bit data even when only few colours were used. Image data was encoded in ASCII to application metadata consuming even more space for an icon.

DefIcons

NewIcons also includes DefIcons, a package of ready-made icons which aims to provide a default icon image for all files that do not have their own associated icons (provided as .info files in AmigaOS).[1] DefIcons uses a scheme that actually examines the file's contents instead of simply looking at the filename extension to determine the file type. This approach is slower than the file extension system used by Microsoft Windows, but ultimately more accurate; a PNG image file with a .JPG extension will appear with a PNG-specific icon.[4]

GlowIcons

AmigaOS 3.5 introduced GlowIcons icon format and suppored NewIcons without need of third-party applications.[5]

The GlowIcons format, based on NewIcons file format, is the native icon format used in AmigaOS 3.5, 3.9 and 4.0 by Matt Chaput. The major difference to NewIcons is how image data is stored. NewIcons used inefficient ASCII encoding embedded to the application metadata. In GlowIcons system developers extended internal icon definition without need to abuse metadata. The standard icon size is 46×46 pixels with maximum 256 (8-bit) colors and two image states (example: open and closed drawers). The second image state uses a glow effect to indicate that the icon is pressed.

Starting with the "Final Update" AmigaOS 4.0 supports 32 bit icon images.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Čížek, Pavel (September 1997). "NewIcons v4". Amiga Review (in Czech). No. 31. Atlantida Publishing. p. 16. ISSN 1211-1465.
  2. Camarasa, Laurent (May 1995). "NewIcons". AmigaNews (in French). No. 79. NewsEdition. p. 52. ISSN 1164-1746.
  3. Taylor, David (Christmas 1997). "Serious disk, New Icons 4". Amiga Format. No. 105. Future Publishing. pp. 108–109. ISSN 0957-4867.
  4. Vedovatti, P: NewIcons Documentation. 1999
  5. Vost, Ben (Christmas 1999). "Amiga OS 3.5". Amiga Format. No. 131. Future Publishing. pp. 14–17. ISSN 0957-4867.
  6. Christoph, Michael (January 2007). "AmigaOS 4 Final Release". Amiga Future (in German). No. 64. APC&TCP. pp. 20–23.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.