There have been many threads in the past on
Usenet and other public forums where people argued about the possibility of writing an Amiga emulator. Some considered UAE to be attempting the impossible; to be demanding that a system read, process and output 100 MB/s of data when the fastest PC was a 66 MHz
486, while keeping various emulated chips (the Amiga
chipset) all in sync and appearing as they were supposed to appear to software. UAE was almost entirely unusable in its first releases, but slowly and step by step, it fleshed out its support of the Amiga chipset and by the end of 1997 was able to emulate an
Amiga 500 at a quality and speed that were sufficient for productivity use and for many games. Since then, UAE has been usable, thanks partly to the effort taken to develop it and partly to the big improvements in technology that brought computers many times faster than those UAE was initially running on. Many
Amiga games and applications can run smoothly on a
Pentium II-era system. A major improvement was made in 2000 by Bernd Meyer with the addition of
just-in-time compilation, which significantly improved the emulation speed, to the extent that average x86 PCs could emulate some
Amiga software faster than any real Amiga could run it. UAE can use as much of the host's power in
native mode as possible, or balance it with other requirements of the host OS, or to accurately reflect the original speed, depending on a user's choice. UAE also provides an
RTG-compatible "
video card" for the Amiga side of the emulation which is tailored for display on the host hardware, so as not to be limited to the emulation of the original Amiga video hardware. ==Project development==