1500 wrote:
g=c800:5
Heh! Haven't seen that written anywhere for a while!!!
I also used to use a friend's Apricot - it had a green screen high-persistence monitor, which really was
incredibly high-persistence to the point where characters on the screen would take 5+ seconds to fully disappear/refresh when the output data changed... Those were the days!
Anyway... back to the Archimedes... Used them quite a bit "in the day", but unfortunately at our 6th form college, most of them spent their time either running the BBC emulator or a very slow PC emulator rather than doing anything useful natively.
I remember being very impressed with Zarch and ProArtisan, making decent use of the 256-colour modes, and also with the 8-voice audio hardware (which certainly beat the likes of Oktalyzer in terms of output quality!!!), and then being slightly envious when comparing the same with my A500.
However, its hugely high cost and the lack of software vs the A500, plus the fact that programming graphical GUI-based applications in BBC BASIC was an exercise in torture meant that I stayed away other than for school/college use.
I did have some fun with an early greyscale video digitiser though (single frames only!) which was hooked up to a video camera, and transferred some of those pictures to my A500 (via MS-DOS disks and a quick hack in AMOS to decipher the Archie's "sprite" format), and conversely converted some Amiga pictures to the Archie using the great old "!Translator" shareware application.
I now have two (or three, can't remember!) Archies and an Acorn multisync monitor (which works well with the A1200), picked up for nothing as a friend of mine worked at a school when they were being chucked out.
I must admit my Archies don't get used much these days - Red Squirrel on the PC does the job for RiscOS 3.x stuff, but it's still nice to fire up the old hardware now and again! I also bought (for NZ$50!) a RiscOS-based thin client, but haven't yet got it to do anything - it appears to want to request some OS files via an NFS mount, and apparently it's "easy" to turn into a basic Archimedes, but I've not yet had any luck with it.
- Ali