Penguin

Differences between current version and revision by previous author of AMP.

Other diffs: Previous Major Revision, Previous Revision, or view the Annotated Edit History

Newer page: version 3 Last edited on Saturday, July 23, 2005 2:03:20 pm by AristotlePagaltzis
Older page: version 2 Last edited on Friday, February 21, 2003 8:56:03 am by JamieCurtis Revert
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
-AMP is a command line mp3 player/decoder released under a BSD style license . This became the foundation of WinAmp. Winamp is 'the' mp3/audio player for Windows, and is said to no longer contain any remnants AMP source these days. 
+A CommandLine [MP3] player/decoder released under a [BSDLicense] . This became the foundation of WinAmp, ' 'the'' [MP3] player for MicrosoftWindows. WinAmp is said to contain no traces of [ AMP] code these days. 
  
-Some time after Winamp was released, it was cloned as ' x11amp' for *nix - which was again based on AMP. Winamp later got the x11amp folks to rename their player, and so it became 'xmms' (X MultiMedia System)
+Some time after Winamp was released, it was cloned (not [Fork]ed!) as x11amp for [Unix] - - which was again based on [ AMP] . WinAmp later got the x11amp folks to rename their player, and so it became [XMMS]
  
 ---- 
  
-[AMP] is also the tla for the Active Measurement Project, run by the [NLANR] Research team in the US. It consists of well over 100 well connected "amplets" spread over US universities and research organisations. All amplets ping each other in a full mesh once per min, and traceroute between each other once per 10 min. All results are collected on a central server and displayed to the public. Go [here |http://watt.nlanr.net] if you want to know more or see the results. This project is lead by the head of the [WAND] group at [WaikatoUniversity] and as such, many students in this group have had something to do with [AMP] at one point or another. This is another example of [ NamespaceCollision]
+[AMP] is also the [Acronym] for the Active Measurement Project, run by the [NLANR] Research team in the US. It consists of well over 100 well connected "amplets" spread over US universities and research organisations. All amplets ping each other in a full mesh once per min, and traceroute between each other once per 10 min. All results are collected on a central server and displayed to the public. Check [the homepage | http://watt.nlanr.net] for more information and results. This project is lead by the head of the WandGroup at [WaikatoUniversity] and as such, many students in this group have had something to do with [AMP] at one point or another. This is another example of NamespaceCollision.