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- Path: news2.ios.com!usenet
- From: larrymb@gramercy.ios.com (UNREGISTERED VERSION)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Subject: Re: PowerPC !
- Date: 7 Mar 1996 18:32:21 GMT
- Organization: Internet Online Services
- Message-ID: <2599.6639T911T2363@gramercy.ios.com>
- References: <Pine.SUN.3.91.960220162223.624A-100000@scsscsc1.reading.ac.uk>
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-
- Lars Nelson <lars@infohwy.com> wrote:
- >>
- >> They have so far decided to use a custom chip, or chips. Thank
- >> heavens! Without them, the Amiga would loose its smoothness and speed
- >> among other things.
- >> --
- >>
-
- > The console machines perhaps, but slap some powerful PCI modules, such
- >as a graphics card from Radius, A Hammer PCI SCSI controller et.al. with
- >Amigatized roms and software and you'd see the real beauty of kissing the
- >custom chips good bye once and for all. Not to mention true multi-OS
- >compatiblity.
-
- No way! There are so many neat things that are lacking in those gfx cards.
- A truly updated (not another stupid little A2000 -> A3000 or AGA type
- update) chipset could do almost everything those cards could and more.
- And if the new chipset didn't support some ultra-high res mode or
- some ultra-high block transfer rate that the odd person might require then
- they could easily go out and add whatever card they need. Whereas if
- they can the chipset then anyone who misses any of its features is out
- of luck. Plus, if the hardware becomes totally generic who will buy it?
- Who says that Escom will be able to deliver the best price/power for
- a more or less generic PowerPC computer? If not they will have to count
- on raw AmigaDOS PPC version sales. But once people get their generic
- PowerPC elsewhere they might hold off on buying AmigaDOS for it until began
- getting AmigaDOS software that really took advantage of it and that might not
- appear until developers saw that lots of people were buying it which they
- wouldn't be because they would be waiting for the developers.
- Who will
- develop entertainment softwre for it? With a flashy custom chipset you can
- attract programmers to a machine despite the smaller market, without them. If
- they end up using the same gfx hardware as a PC, coupled with a non-Intel CPU
- who would think of bothering to write an AmigaDOS version of any non-
- application program? You might as well write for a clone, you'll have a huge
- market and the same gfx hardware to fool around with.
- Granted, you can also think of much rosier outcomes than above for your
- proposal (at least for those who have no care for programming and Amiga-
- style custom chipsets), however I wouldn't bet all that much on it. I even
- think that going with something like a HombrePlus coupled with a non-standard
- PA- RISC CPU would be less risky (and much more exciting; also if it failed
- at least you'd have a cool chipset to play around with on the side instead of
- nothing) than turning the Amiga brand name into representing nothing more than
- an operating system.
-
-