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dark willow

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  1. Coming from an ST with TOS and TeraDesk to DOS/Win3.x felt clunky, fragile and overly complicated when it come to the OS, but I appreciated the quality of the hardware. The ST keyboard, mouse and form factor was inferior to the minute but extremely well built IBM PS/2E, and Lotus Write and 1-2-3 felt well made. Ironically, there was software on the Atari at the time at least as good, but (living in a rural area) was hard to get and expensive. Had I been aware of what could be done with the ST and had more hardware knowledge, in hindsight I would have brought a Mega STe with HD, modem and decent monitor, and invested money and effort in getting hold of decent TOS software to tide me over till Win 2k came along.
  2. Ah I see what you mean. I'd like to use it on my current TT rather than get a new one, if only because of space/cost/availability. My motherboard is the old first revision one with a daughtercboard for the CPU, so I'm not sure how the CPU is mounted on later boards. Could the VME be used? I remember reading somewhere that the VME bus is basically just a breakout interface the 68k CPU pins. Actually, since you ported GFA Basic to the Coldfire, I think quite a few more people are now considering it I must admit, the lack of support for it was my initial reason for hesitating... Now, I've pretty much felt that with the amount (not enough) and sort of things I do with the TT (older productivity apps and "hello world" level programming) don't really justify €700 for a new Firebee. I get that the sort of hardware they designed can't be done for nothing, it's just I personally don't think I'd make enough use of the extra power to make it worthwhile in my case. Plus I'm shamelessly nostalgic about my TT and keeping original hardware going, ideally with a bit more get up and go.
  3. Personally, I'd rather have a plain vanilla accelerator, as I already have a decent gfx card and SCSI reader, but I'm not sure if others would (if it actually happened, I imagine they'd be a muddy compromise like the original ct-60, basic accelerator with an expansion bus for more add ons). As for making it PnP, maybe include a complete patched TOS (alongside a legacy TOS) on ROM chips? I think a clone wouldn't make it due to competition with the Firebee and price level. I doubt you could get a clone out the door for <€500, whereas an accelerator would be ~€300 (probabaly), so the market would be tiny (people who are willing to spend €500, *and* who dont want/already have a firebee). You could lower costs by dumping legacy support, but that would erode the pool of buyers too... tricky!
  4. Further thoughts on this, just stream of conciousness really... Unlike the Falcon, the TT has some other areas which hog-tie it sufficiently that for an 060 board to be useful would pretty much have to be addressed as part of the upgrade. * Video. Unlike the videl, the TT's built in video modes are pretty much fixed, and would cripple most applications which would benefit most from 060, including multi-tasking. Most 060 buyers probably have a VME gfx card, but not all, and many cards are themselves quite slow. Given the space inside the TT, including a PCI slot for a Radeon, or perhaps having an FPGAed upgraded virtual TT shifter chip on board would be pretty much essential to make use of the accelerated system. * IDE. SCSI storage solutions are increasingly old and hard to find. IDE (rather than a straight to CF or SD interface) allows people the option of adding a range of modern options, from IDE HDs, CF, SD, CD/DVD or whatever they wish. * Improved cooler support. IIRC the Falcon CT-60s often had heating issues. A new 68060 board really would benefit from being layed out in such a way as to have better support for modern coolers, poss. including liquid-coolers, as well as improved temperature sensing.
  5. I'd *love* to see this happen. As has been said, it's been raised before but getting enough orders seems to be the issue. I find it hard to imagine we can't get 100 TT users interested. If the project actually happens, I would be down for one unit. One thing that would need to be addressed is the different versions of the TT. Early TT's (including mine) have a daughter-board for the CPU, as well as not conflicting with installed VME cards. I'm not sure how much this could complicate a TT variant CT-60. Despite both being 030 machines, the TT are quite different in terms of architecture, so I don't think this would be a trivial project.
  6. I had a look at the articles. A lot of it was a bit beyond me, but very interesting as it seems the XEP was crippled more by Atari's sloppy programming than by inherent flaws in the hardware, though the choice of the joystick port for screen data transmissions seems bizzare to the say the least. Maybe less at the time, though, given the way terminals worked over standard RS232 ports in the days of yore - and as a plain text interface I guess that beyond a certain thresholdm higher bandwidth didn't make that much difference. Do the (improved) drivers work in a similar fashion to those of the VBXE, in that programs using the standard screen handler will be redirected to the XEP?
  7. So I am I understanding this correctly, that the VBXE can run existing DOS applications (i.e. TurboBasic, Kyan Pascal etc. in 80 column mode?). If so, that would be really useful.
  8. I'm looking into getting an 80 column display adapter for the 800XL, but confused by the options out there. I know the VBXE is out there, but I'm frighteningly hopeless at soldering, so really tossing up between a XEP-80 and other external or software solutions. Is there anything out there that is TurboBasic XL and SpartaDOS X compatible that can run comfortably on a stock 64k system?
  9. Suska has produced a new ACSI-SCSI adapter - been a while since I saw one of these, but still useful for scanners, CD writers - and anyone wanting a "real" hard drive on an ST, since IDE adapters seem to have dissappeared of late. Price is nice too, €65 http://shop.inventronik.de/store/17
  10. Falcons are different to the ST in this respect. * You can output the standard Falcon modes on a stock VGA monitor, so there's no need to use the RF-out, which is region specific. The output is also MUCH better quality than the RF feed. * The TOS language / keyboard settings are not fixed (unlike on earlier TOS versions), so you can just select whatever language / keyboard layout you prefer. * The power supply is NOT multi-system. You will need to swap it out for a UK one or get a transformer. You can get a transformer online for about £30-£40. Falcon PSUs are not common, but not as rare as you might think. However, if the one you have is healthy then the transformer is probabaly a better bet, since it also helps protect the Falcon from power spikes and feeds it a stable supply (something the PSU is poor at regulating by itself).
  11. I remember me, my sister and her b/f all playing the original Wipeout on his PlayStation. Lots of fun. And the evenings wasted with Lemmings... memories...
  12. Simple as it sounds really. Just looking for a UK PSU for the 800XL (doesn't have to be the black original XL one, can be an XE - as long as it does the job!) and two joysticks so me and my partner can go jousting We moved flats recently, and it appears some of our gear went AWOL during the move - a load of cables and a few carts. Note on joysticks: Not the Atari ones. Anything that works and in solid condition with plenty of movement, and ideally *not* microswtiched, with a trigger button on the stick itself. Yea, we go against the current
  13. The XC12 doesn't need a PSU, and the SIO cable is built in. It has no SIO pass-through port, though, so has to be at the end of the chain.
  14. Looking at the Svid cable, looks like a simple job even for me! All seems pretty encouraging - thanks guys
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