>Similarly, the RAM may be hideously slow, but at least it uses SIMMs. Getting
>hold of ZIPs is a bloody pain in the neck (are there any list members out
>there who happen to have any to spare? =).
        I remember a review for the DKB Rapidfire SCSI board a number 
of years back.  It had 72pin SIMM sockets onboard and one of the 
points that the reviewer made was that as slow as the A4000's RAM 
was, unbeleivably the Rapidfire's RAM was even slower.  The Rapidfire 
is a 16bit ZII card.  I did use one to add cheap SCSI capability to 
my A4000 though and you could mount a drive directly to the board 
itself if you lacked additional drive space.
>The A1200 is common, but it is essentially a closed architecture. Unless
>you're adventurous and put it in a tower with a slot card and all that, but it
>still turns out as a mediocre imitation of a real big-box machine. Still,
>given a PCI backplane, it turns out a rather cheap solution compared to a
>similarly equipped Zorro Amiga.
        It amazes me how expensive the later Amiga's still are, 
especially the newer A1200's and 4000's.  Do people still pay those 
kind of prices for the 'new' ones?
>run new software, though I'm not familiar with EGA myself. Didn't it deviate
>somewhat from the usual WB look? ISTR screenshots in mags with gadgets which
>seemed to come from a Motif system.
        Other than looking better on the higher resolution screen, I 
don't recall EGS changing the look of the WB at all.  Maybe the 
screenshots were using varous WB enhancers such as Magic WB and MUI?
>I didn't know that the Spectrum was a ZIII board, and thought it was very
>similar to the Picasso II in performance. I run a Retina ZIII myself, and
>while it doesn't put up much of a match against newer boards, it is competent
>enough. Certainly better than the PII.
        Yeah, it's ZIII.  It is autosensing with a jumper to force it 
to use ZII if needed for compatibility purposes.  It only has 2meg of 
VRAM though vice the 4meg on other later boards.  I've always heard 
good things about the Retina boards, but have never used one.
>BTW, you do have a CD-ROM, don't you?
        Yes, multiple SCSI drives around here.  I even have an older 
version of AmiCDFS here somewhere.
        Jeff
-- 
       Collector of Classic Microcomputers and Video Game Systems:
                      Home of the TRS-80 Model 2000 FAQ File
                 http://www.geocities.com/siliconvalley/lakes/6757
Received on Thu Jul 05 2001 - 15:40:09 BST