Hello everyone,
I never owned an Amiga back in the day. I was like 4 or 5 when the Amiga 1000 came out. A friend of mine had a couple Amigas and tons of games. I always wanted one. I've always had a special interest for "retro computing" beginning with my very first computer, the Texas Instrument TI-99/4a--yeah, this was an extremely outdated machine for the time bracket I'm talking about--like 1991, but my parents were slow to get a PC for the house. Anyway, it was cool and sparked my general interest in classic "home computers"--the ones that are built into a keyboard all as one piece and connect to a TV.
Eventually I got a Commodore 64. Recently I found that the SID chip in it was dead so I replaced it with a C128... and very soon after I got to thinking it was time to add the classic A500 to my collection. Definitely the summit of home computer technology--a computer that could connect to a TV that was probably better (and definitely cooler) then any "personal computer" of the time. I mean, VGA-like graphics on mid 80s hardware--got to respect that!
So I just won my first ever Amiga (an A500) a couple days ago on eBay. I haven't even gotten it yet and I'm posting here so obviously I'm excited. I have a few questions as this is a new world to me:
The A500 I ordered is said to have been tested to load up with Workbench 1.2. My understanding is that beginning with the A500 model, Kickstart was encoded directly in a ROM chip. Does this mean that I'll need to upgrade the physical chip to load later versions of Workbench? I heard that the original Amiga 1000 had Kickstart on disk, so I guess I'm wondering if later versions of Kickstart can also be booted from disk? Also, I need a video adapter as I don't have an Amiga monitor (my Commodore monitor only has composite inputs). There are some A520 video modulators on eBay right now but they're from England--the guy believes they're PAL but says he's sold a bunch to the US without any complaints... if they are PAL, would they still work with an NTSC A500?--probably a stupid question, my guess is "no".