TheDaddy wrote:
Can you quickly summarise please?
It's not that easy to do "quick" if you're talking about a totally different principle of computers.
A-Clone: what is it and its specs?
A-Clone: There is no such thing. However, I have a project called Clone-A. This is the internal summary name for the project "reverse-engineering the Amiga set of chips for inclusion in various products". I do have boards that plug into the real sockets and they work in any combination with the original chips (just as a proof that I do the exact same inter-chip-communication as the original set), but I have no plans of selling chip replacements.
Plans are to make a new machine that is living-room-compatible. Something silent (all-flash based) in a nice case that lets you play games. You can choose between various processor speeds and chipsets - not on a by-unit-basis, but on a by-game-basis, as the same machine will have it all built-in. One game works better with 68000@7MHz and OCS, another game takes advantage of the 030 command set, fastmem and AGA. Clone-A technology will provide all this.
Knowledge gained from reverse-engineering the chips and inter-chip communication has already been used on the Indivision AGA flickerfixer.
C-Clone: is this an improved C64 clone? Specs?
You probably mean "C-One". It was meant to be a "C64 on steroids", but never reached that point. Back when the board was designed, it was meant to be an 8-bit only system for running C64, Amstrad/Schneider and VIC-20 software. With the new expander board, the 8-bit limit is broken, as the Minimig port shows. The C-One with the extender card will be used for public beta testing the Clone-A technology sometime next year. The Minimig core will be released next week, maybe already this weekend.
The C64 core for C-One has reached a compatibility level that is better than many emulators already. You can plug real SID chips (up to two of them!) to the board and use both from the C64 side. Both NTSC and PAL are supported, you can switch between the video modes while the machine is running (yes, the whole timing model is being changed while the machine runs!). If you always wanted to see all the nice PAL demos, this is your chance.
C-One is an ATX board with small changes. You need to provide a case, power supply, a CF card, PS/2 mouse and keyboard, monitor and some skill, as the case needs minor modifications.
The monitor must be VGA, and if you want to watch PAL demos, it should support a vertical frequency of 50Hz (for example compatible with old Amiga-scandoublers in PAL modes - Indivision AGA is not a good test here, as it can output PAL in 62.5Hz).
Jens