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Author Topic: Amiga replacements - Why ECS?  (Read 1883 times)

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Offline HeiroglyphTopic starter

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Amiga replacements - Why ECS?
« on: February 17, 2013, 08:23:57 AM »
Lately the GBA 1000 board has gotten a lot of attention and I admit that I was tempted to get one myself for the challenge.

I've also seen requests for a expansion box for a 500 like a Bodega bay.

What is the attraction to one of these over a 2000 or 3000?  They're all ECS machines and all will take some digging to get fully expanded.

Why a new ECS board?  Isn't any AGA 4000 or 1200 better?

It's not like there are 060's, PCI and USB available for the GBA1000 board, it's just pretty much an A3000 with no slots in a hard to find case.  An A2000 is actually easier to expand and dirt cheap.

I tinker with hardware myself and I never thought of it as something viable.  The apparent market for new ECS based boards just really surprised me.
« Last Edit: February 17, 2013, 04:55:54 PM by Heiroglyph »
 

Offline HeiroglyphTopic starter

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Re: Amiga replacements - Why ECS?
« Reply #1 on: February 17, 2013, 05:10:43 PM »
Oops, Linde is right, I corrected it to GBA1000.

I'm not one to put down what someone wants.  This whole forum is based on an emotional rather than a logical response to a piece of hardware.

I just didn't foresee the demand being as great as it is and I thought I had a pretty good idea of how the Amiga market tended to go.

So are new ECS boards and A2000 (and A500) upgrades actually in demand?

I kind of figured that the Individual Computers upgrades had turned the A600 into the ultimate ECS machines these days, even though there are A2000's everywhere with faster CPU's and RTG.