Difference between revisions of "Amiga"
MartinJSUK (Talk | contribs) (my first contribution, I'm an Amiga guy primarily but I hope this is balanced and relevant.) |
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− | Commodore's 16 bit home computer AMIGA is one of the best known and loved of | + | Commodore's 16 bit home computer AMIGA is one of the best known and loved of its generation. |
It was maybe the first real Multi Media home computer long before Apple's Mac. | It was maybe the first real Multi Media home computer long before Apple's Mac. | ||
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Superficially similar to the Atari ST, using the same 68000 processor and similar memory and screen modes, but it had a lot of co-processor and sweet architecture tricks making it a powerful computer, with excellent sound hardware for its time. Many early releases were lazy conversions from the ST that did not fully exploit the above (rather like what the Amstrad suffered with Spectrum ports) but later releases largely did exploit the system. | Superficially similar to the Atari ST, using the same 68000 processor and similar memory and screen modes, but it had a lot of co-processor and sweet architecture tricks making it a powerful computer, with excellent sound hardware for its time. Many early releases were lazy conversions from the ST that did not fully exploit the above (rather like what the Amstrad suffered with Spectrum ports) but later releases largely did exploit the system. | ||
− | The A500 was perhaps the most well known emblematic model. Famous Amiga originals released for the CPC include [[Lemmings]], [[Defender of the Crown]], [[Sim City]], [[ | + | The A500 was perhaps the most well known emblematic model. Famous Amiga originals released for the CPC include [[Lemmings]], [[Defender of the Crown]], [[Sim City]], [[Shadow of the Beast]] and [[Pinball Dreams]]. |
− | Although it was great, it was eventually left behind by the PC standard thanks to Commodore's Corporates non sense and failure to develop the design further. This is a kind of sweet vengeance for Amstrad users (who suffered the same thing, thank you Lord Sugar...). | + | Although it was great, it was eventually left behind by the PC standard thanks to Commodore's Corporates non sense and failure to develop the design further. The ECS chipset offered minimal improvements over the original, and even the AGA chipset was underwhelming. This is a kind of sweet vengeance for Amstrad users (who suffered the same thing, thank you Lord Sugar...). |
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+ | Fun fact: the Amiga engineers left an hidden message in some Amigas, triggered by using some key combination, that said: "We made Amiga, They fucked it up". [https://youtu.be/omMOuyTLmyg Source] | ||
4.85 million units sold. | 4.85 million units sold. | ||
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*A3000 (1991): A workstation system aimed at productivity users, using a 68030 processor and the new Kickstart 2 and Workbench 2. | *A3000 (1991): A workstation system aimed at productivity users, using a 68030 processor and the new Kickstart 2 and Workbench 2. | ||
*A500+ (1991): Features the updated Kickstart 2 and Workbench 2, 1Mb internal memory and the ECS (Enhanced Chip Set). | *A500+ (1991): Features the updated Kickstart 2 and Workbench 2, 1Mb internal memory and the ECS (Enhanced Chip Set). | ||
− | *A600 (1992): a compact A500 with no numeric keypad, looks a lot like | + | *A600 (1992): a compact A500 with no numeric keypad, looks a lot like the newer C64 (not the bread bin ones). Similar internal hardware to the A500+, though with space for an internal hard drive. |
*A4000 (1992): A replacement for the A3000, has the AGA chipset and either a 68030 or 68040 processor. | *A4000 (1992): A replacement for the A3000, has the AGA chipset and either a 68030 or 68040 processor. | ||
*A1200 (1992): Intended as a long-term replacement for the A500, with 2Mb memory and the new AGA chipset. | *A1200 (1992): Intended as a long-term replacement for the A500, with 2Mb memory and the new AGA chipset. | ||
*A4000T (1994): a A4000 in a tower case, released shortly before Commodore folded in 1994, rare. | *A4000T (1994): a A4000 in a tower case, released shortly before Commodore folded in 1994, rare. | ||
− | == | + | ==Links== |
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+ | *[https://www.amiga500archive.com/ Amiga 500 Archive] | ||
+ | *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiga Amiga Wikipedia Link] | ||
+ | *[https://amiga.net.au/files/Tech_Amiga/Commodore_Amiga_500_Technical_Manual.pdf Amiga 500 Service Manual] | ||
+ | *[http://amigadev.elowar.com/read/ADCD_2.1/Hardware_Manual_guide/node0001.html Amiga Hardware Reference Manual] | ||
+ | *[[Media:MC68000 User's Manual.pdf|Motorola MC68000 CPU User's Manual]] | ||
+ | *[https://eab.abime.net/ English Amiga Board] | ||
+ | *[https://youtu.be/kjapiUQOi2s Commodore History - The Amiga 1000] by [[The 8-Bit Guy]] | ||
+ | <br> | ||
[[Category: Non CPC Computers]] | [[Category: Non CPC Computers]] |
Latest revision as of 18:45, 10 December 2024
Commodore's 16 bit home computer AMIGA is one of the best known and loved of its generation.
It was maybe the first real Multi Media home computer long before Apple's Mac.
Superficially similar to the Atari ST, using the same 68000 processor and similar memory and screen modes, but it had a lot of co-processor and sweet architecture tricks making it a powerful computer, with excellent sound hardware for its time. Many early releases were lazy conversions from the ST that did not fully exploit the above (rather like what the Amstrad suffered with Spectrum ports) but later releases largely did exploit the system.
The A500 was perhaps the most well known emblematic model. Famous Amiga originals released for the CPC include Lemmings, Defender of the Crown, Sim City, Shadow of the Beast and Pinball Dreams.
Although it was great, it was eventually left behind by the PC standard thanks to Commodore's Corporates non sense and failure to develop the design further. The ECS chipset offered minimal improvements over the original, and even the AGA chipset was underwhelming. This is a kind of sweet vengeance for Amstrad users (who suffered the same thing, thank you Lord Sugar...).
Fun fact: the Amiga engineers left an hidden message in some Amigas, triggered by using some key combination, that said: "We made Amiga, They fucked it up". Source
4.85 million units sold.
Range
- A1000 (1985): Technically an avant-gardiste multimedia PC. Has the OCS chipset.
- A500 (1987): The first mass-market Amiga model, the most successful, and the one the most games were designed around. The case is the Combo style shared with Atari ST or even Amstrad Plus range. All but the latest models use the OCS chipset
- A2000 (1987): Like the A1000, a PC style professionnal machine.
- A3000 (1991): A workstation system aimed at productivity users, using a 68030 processor and the new Kickstart 2 and Workbench 2.
- A500+ (1991): Features the updated Kickstart 2 and Workbench 2, 1Mb internal memory and the ECS (Enhanced Chip Set).
- A600 (1992): a compact A500 with no numeric keypad, looks a lot like the newer C64 (not the bread bin ones). Similar internal hardware to the A500+, though with space for an internal hard drive.
- A4000 (1992): A replacement for the A3000, has the AGA chipset and either a 68030 or 68040 processor.
- A1200 (1992): Intended as a long-term replacement for the A500, with 2Mb memory and the new AGA chipset.
- A4000T (1994): a A4000 in a tower case, released shortly before Commodore folded in 1994, rare.
Links
- Amiga 500 Archive
- Amiga Wikipedia Link
- Amiga 500 Service Manual
- Amiga Hardware Reference Manual
- Motorola MC68000 CPU User's Manual
- English Amiga Board
- Commodore History - The Amiga 1000 by The 8-Bit Guy