

The only issue I have is a Grim Reaper when shutting it down, but since I leave Timberwolf running all the time, I can live with that for the moment. It boots to my home page in 3 to 4 seconds. It's now extremely fast, very usable and reliable.

Timberwolf worked fine for me on my AmigaONE X1000 (on an SFS partition) but since moving to the SSD drive (again an SFS partition) it's like a new program.

Incidentally, I transferred my AmigaOS System partition, which includes my Timberwolf installation, to a new SSD disk drive. I've attached a screen-grab from the Timberwolf web browser running on my AmigaONE X1000 which I captured after the large quake about week ago. 😉 Like many New Zealand resident's I've become addicted to the Geonet website which monitors and tracks all the latest wobbles and shakes. Fortunately, no one was hurt and a bit like James Bond's vodka Martini we were shaken but not stirred. When the earthquake hit we "ducked" for cover under the table. The most recent, which measured at 6.6 on the Richter scale, occurred while I was dining with friends in the aptly named Duck Creek restaurant. Sorry about the title for this month's blog but since my return to New Zealand, following the Silicon Dreams show and and my trip to Italy, the Wellington region and the top of New Zealand's South Island has been subjected to a number of severe earthquakes and multiple aftershocks.
