Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: Picture of a Vampire card mounted on an Atari  (Read 2702 times)

Description:

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Iggy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2009
  • Posts: 5348
    • Show all replies
Re: Picture of a Vampire card mounted on an Atari
« on: October 14, 2016, 12:48:29 PM »
Quote from: magnetic;815298
gahhh its not even close... amiga owns atari lol

Congratulations Vampire team!

Totally silly!
I'd love to see this used in other 68K applications.
Can I get one for a Peripheral Technologies PT68K4 board?
"Not making any hard and fast rules means that the moderators can use their good judgment in moderation, and we think the results speak for themselves." - Amiga.org, terms of service

"You, got to stem the evil tide, and keep it on the the inside" - Rogers Waters

"God was never on your side" - Lemmy

Amiga! "Our appeal has become more selective"
 

Offline Iggy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2009
  • Posts: 5348
    • Show all replies
Re: Picture of a Vampire card mounted on an Atari
« Reply #1 on: October 16, 2016, 12:43:13 AM »
Quote from: Motormouth;815353
I guess I was thinking of the older 68000 macs. The Quadra's are already 040s. From my memory, The addressing space in the early macs was quite simple compared to the Amiga's or even Atari's mostly due to the fact the later two have significant custom chips.

From what I remember the addressing schemes were a total disaster in some early Macs.
 Weren't there a few that could only address 8 out 16 MBs?
"Not making any hard and fast rules means that the moderators can use their good judgment in moderation, and we think the results speak for themselves." - Amiga.org, terms of service

"You, got to stem the evil tide, and keep it on the the inside" - Rogers Waters

"God was never on your side" - Lemmy

Amiga! "Our appeal has become more selective"
 

Offline Iggy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2009
  • Posts: 5348
    • Show all replies
Re: Picture of a Vampire card mounted on an Atari
« Reply #2 on: October 16, 2016, 02:01:33 PM »
Quote from: klx300r;815277
damn straight:hammer: my hate for Atari is almost as bad as that for Apple products:whack::lol:
 
 "..hate for Atari.."
 weird, the Apple thing I can get, 'cause Jobs was a nob...
 
 But the Atari ST was just an affordable 68K system.
 Crappy video, but still, a good price.
"Not making any hard and fast rules means that the moderators can use their good judgment in moderation, and we think the results speak for themselves." - Amiga.org, terms of service

"You, got to stem the evil tide, and keep it on the the inside" - Rogers Waters

"God was never on your side" - Lemmy

Amiga! "Our appeal has become more selective"
 

Offline Iggy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2009
  • Posts: 5348
    • Show all replies
Re: Picture of a Vampire card mounted on an Atari
« Reply #3 on: October 16, 2016, 02:09:51 PM »
Quote from: Motormouth;815358
Err well This is more a function of the 68000. They were similar to the A1000/A500/A2000. They could only address 8 megs with a 24 bit memory space. Unfortunately, doesn't this sound familiar.

Most of the really early ones could only be expanded to 4 megs on the motherboard. The mac SE (for example) could go to more if a 68030 accelerator was added, (again a function of the 68030 rather than the mac itself.)

A 24bit address scheme should be able to address 16 megabytes.
Not that its vital, since most of my early 68K systems couldn't handle more than 4MB either, ram was expensive.
But I'm fairly sure I remember at least one Mac model that wasted half the addressing capability.

As far as accelerators go, I've always wondered how they addressed tying in the ram to the rest of the system since DMA and other functions would be easily available.

AND, outside our little diversion, I'm glad to see the Vampire applied to boards outside the Amiga.
There are lots of applications that could benefit from this device.
"Not making any hard and fast rules means that the moderators can use their good judgment in moderation, and we think the results speak for themselves." - Amiga.org, terms of service

"You, got to stem the evil tide, and keep it on the the inside" - Rogers Waters

"God was never on your side" - Lemmy

Amiga! "Our appeal has become more selective"