AmigaOS 3.9 is a proprietary operating system for Amiga personal computers, discontinued in 1996 with improvements to GUI, multimedia, and Internet capabilities.
AmigaOS 3.9 is a proprietary operating system developed by Commodore for use on Amiga personal computers. It was released in 1992 as an incremental update to AmigaOS 3.1, which added various improvements:
AmigaOS 3.9 required a Motorola 68020 or higher microprocessor to run. It was notable as the last operating system update for the Amiga platform before Commodore went bankrupt in 1994. Development partially continued in the Amiga community with fan updates over the next few years. But support was discontinued in 1996 along with the classic Amiga line.
AmigaOS 3.9 represented the peak abilities of the classic Amiga platform. It showcased advanced multimedia features combined with an intuitive user interface. While no longer commercially developed today, AmigaOS 3.9 remains popular among vintage computer enthusiasts looking to experience classic Amiga desktop computing.