Amiga 1000

(Redirected from Joe Pillow)

The Amiga 1000, also known as the A1000, is the first personal computer released by Commodore International in the Amiga line. It combines the 16/32-bit Motorola 68000 CPU which was powerful by 1985 standards with one of the most advanced graphics and sound systems in its class. It runs a preemptive multitasking operating system that fits into 256 KB of read-only memory[1][4][5] and was shipped with 256 KB of RAM.[2] The primary memory can be expanded internally with a manufacturer-supplied 256 KB module for a total of 512 KB of RAM. Using the external slot the primary memory can be expanded up to 8.5 MB.[2]

Amiga 1000
Amiga 1000 with 1081 monitor
ManufacturerCommodore
Product familyAmiga
TypePersonal computer
Release dateJuly 23, 1985; 39 years ago (1985-07-23)
Introductory priceUS$1,285 (1985)
US$3,600 (2024 equivalent)
Discontinued1987
Operating systemAmigaOS 1.0
CPUMotorola 68000 @ 7.16 MHz (NTSC) 7.09 MHz (PAL)
MemoryROM 256 KB,[1] RAM 256 KB[2] (8.5 MB maximum)
GraphicsOCS 640×512i 6-bpp
SoundPaula 4× 8-bit channels at max. 28 kHz in stereo
DimensionsWidth: 451 mm
Height: 108 mm
Depth: 330 mm[3]
Mass5.9 kg (13 lb)
SuccessorAmiga 2000/2500, Amiga 500

Design

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The A1000 has a number of characteristics that distinguish it from later Amiga models: It is the only model to feature the short-lived Amiga check-mark logo on its case, the majority of the case is elevated slightly to give a storage area for the keyboard when not in use (a "keyboard garage"), and the inside of the case is engraved with the signatures of the Amiga designers (similar to the Macintosh); including Jay Miner and the paw print of his dog Mitchy. The A1000's case was designed by Howard Stolz.[6] As Senior Industrial Designer at Commodore, Stolz was the mechanical lead and primary interface with Sanyo in Japan, the contract manufacturer for the A1000 casing.[7]

The Amiga 1000 was manufactured in two variations: One uses the NTSC television standard and the other uses the PAL television standard. The NTSC variant was the initial model manufactured and sold in North America. The later PAL model was manufactured in Germany and sold in countries using the PAL television standard. The first NTSC systems lack the EHB video mode which is present in all later Amiga models.

Because AmigaOS was rather buggy at the time of the A1000's release, the OS was not placed in ROM then. Instead, the A1000 includes a daughterboard with 256 KB of RAM, dubbed the "writable control store" (WCS), into which the core of the operating system is loaded from floppy disk (this portion of the operating system is known as the "Kickstart"). The WCS is write-protected after loading, and system resets do not require a reload of the WCS. In Europe, the WCS was often referred to as WOM (Write Once Memory), a play on the more conventional term "ROM" (read-only memory).

Technical information

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The preproduction Amiga (which was codenamed "Velvet") released to developers in early 1985 contained 128 KB of RAM with an option to expand it to 256 KB. Commodore later increased the system memory to 256 KB due to objections by the Amiga development team. The names of the custom chips were different; Denise and Paula were called Daphne and Portia respectively. The casing of the preproduction Amiga was almost identical to the production version: the main difference being an embossed Commodore logo in the top left corner. It did not have the developer signatures.[8]

The Amiga 1000 has a Motorola 68000 CPU running at 7.15909 MHz on NTSC systems[9]: 87  or 7.09379 MHz on PAL systems, precisely double the video color carrier frequency for NTSC or 1.6 times the color carrier frequency for PAL. The system clock timings are derived from the video frequency, which simplifies glue logic and allows the Amiga 1000 to make do with a single crystal. In keeping with its video game heritage, the chipset was designed to synchronize CPU memory access and chipset DMA so the hardware runs in real time without wait-state delays.

Though most units were sold with an analog RGB monitor, the A1000 also has a built-in composite video output which allows the computer to be connected directly to some monitors other than their standard RGB monitor. The A1000 also has a "TV MOD" output, into which an RF Modulator can be plugged, allowing connection to older televisions that did not have a composite video input.

The original 68000 CPU can be directly replaced with a Motorola 68010, which can execute instructions slightly faster than the 68000 but also introduces a small degree of software incompatibility. Third-party CPU upgrades, which mostly fit in the CPU socket, use faster 68020 or 68030 microprocessors and integrated memory, as well as provide support for a 68881 or 68882 FPU. Such upgrades often have the option to revert to 68000 mode for full compatibility. Some boards have a socket to seat the original 68000, whereas the 68030 cards typically come with an on-board 68000.

The original Amiga 1000 is the only model to have 256 KB of Amiga Chip RAM, which can be expanded to 512 KB with the addition of a daughterboard under a cover in the center front of the machine.[10] RAM may also be upgraded via official and third-party upgrades, with a practical upper limit of about 9 MB of "fast RAM" due to the 68000's 24-bit address bus. This memory is accessible only by the CPU permitting faster code execution as DMA cycles are not shared with the chipset.

The Amiga 1000 features an 86-pin expansion port (electrically identical to the later Amiga 500 expansion port, though the A500's connector is inverted). This port is used by third-party expansions such as memory upgrades and SCSI adapters. These resources are handled by the Amiga Autoconfig standard. Other expansion options are available including a bus expander which provides two Zorro-II slots.

Specifications

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Jay Miner's signature from the top cover of a Commodore Amiga 1000 computer. The paw print is that of Mitchy, Miner's dog.
 
Rear view of the A1000
Attribute Specification[10]
Processor Motorola 68000 at 7.16 MHz (NTSC) or 7.09 MHz (PAL)
RAM 256 KB of Amiga Chip RAM; upgradeable to 512 KB by dedicated cartridge; max. 8 MB Fast RAM with external cartridge
ROM 8 KB bootstrap ROM. 256 KB WCS reserved for OS (loaded from the Kickstart floppy disk at power-on)
Chipset Original Chip Set (OCS)
Video 12-bit color palette (4096 colors). Graphic modes with up to 32, 64 (EHB mode; Early NTSC models do not have the EHB mode) or 4096 (HAM mode) on-screen colors:
  • 320×200 to 320×400i (NTSC)
  • 320×256 to 320×512i (PAL)

Graphic modes with up to 16 on-screen colors:

  • 640×200 to 640×400i (NTSC)
  • 640×256 to 640×512i (PAL)
Audio 4× 8-bit PCM channels (2 stereo channels); 28 kHz maximum DMA sampling rate; 70 dB S/N ratio
Removable storage 3.5-inch DD floppy disk drive (880 KB capacity)
Audio/video out Analog RGB video out (DB-23M); TV MOD audio/video output (for Amiga RF modulator TV connection); Composite video out (RCA); Audio out (2× RCA)
Input/output ports Keyboard port (RJ10); 2× mouse/gamepad ports (DE9); RS-232 serial port (DB-25F); Centronics style parallel port (DB-25M); floppy disk drive port (DB-23F)
Expansion slots 86-pin expansion port
Operating system AmigaOS 1 (Kickstart 1.0/1.1/1.2/1.3 and Workbench 1.0/1.1/1.2/1.3)

Retail

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Introduced on July 23, 1985, during a star-studded gala featuring Andy Warhol and Debbie Harry held at the Vivian Beaumont Theater[11] at Lincoln Center in New York City, machines began shipping in September with a base configuration of 256 KB of RAM at the retail price of US$1,295. A 13-inch (330 mm) analog RGB monitor was available for around US$300, bringing the price of a complete Amiga system to US$1,595 (equivalent to $4,520 in 2023). Before the release of the Amiga 500 and Amiga 2000 models in 1987, the A1000 was marketed as simply the Amiga, although the model number was there from the beginning, as the original box indicates.[12]

In the US, the A1000 was marketed as The Amiga from Commodore, with the Commodore logo omitted from the case. The Commodore branding was retained for the international versions.

Additionally, the Amiga 1000 was sold exclusively in computer stores in the US rather than the various non computer-dedicated department and toy stores through which the VIC-20 and Commodore 64 were retailed. These measures were an effort to avoid Commodore's "toy-store" computer image created during the Tramiel era.[13][14]

Along with the operating system, the machine came bundled with a version of AmigaBASIC developed by Microsoft and a speech synthesis library developed by Softvoice, Inc.

Aftermarket upgrades

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Many A1000 owners remained attached to their machines long after newer models rendered the units technically obsolete, and it attracted numerous aftermarket upgrades. Many CPU upgrades that plugged into the Motorola 68000 socket functioned in the A1000. Additionally, a line of products called the Rejuvenator series allowed the use of newer chipsets in the A1000, and an Australian-designed replacement A1000 motherboard called The Phoenix utilized the same chipset as the A3000 and added an A2000-compatible video slot and on-board SCSI controller.

Reception and impact

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In its product preview, Byte magazine was impressed by the computer's multitasking capabilities and the quality of its graphics and sound systems. It also praised its text-to-speech library for voice output, and predicted that the Amiga would be successful enough to influence the personal computer industry.[9]: 100 

The Amiga 1000 was released to positive reviews. Compute! lauded it as an inexpensive, truly general-purpose computer that might break preconceptions dividing the microcomputer marketplace. In this case, it was capable of outperforming most business, as well as arcade game machines and delivering sampled sound, making it suitable for offices, gamers, and digital artists.[15] Computer Gaming World praised the machine's versatility without any obvious hardware shortcomings and stressed that it was ideal for game designers demanding fewer system constraints.[16] Creative Computing magazine had only minor criticisms for what they otherwise called a "dream machine." These criticisms were directed toward its case quality, the disk drives slowing during certain operations, and not finding an AUTOEXEC command in AmigaDOS, though the marketing vice president of Commodore, Clive Smith, assured the magazine that later production units would address most of its complaints.[17] Months after the Amiga 1000 was released, InfoWorld offered a mixed review. It praised Intuition and the customizability of Workbench, but took issue with the operating system's bugs such as memory overflow and screen flickering of single lines as a result of their being interleaved when displayed in high resolution mode. It also criticized the sparseness of the software library preventing the publication from fully realizing the computer's potential.[18]

In 1994, as Commodore filed for bankruptcy, Byte magazine called the Amiga 1000 "the first multimedia computer... so far ahead of its time that almost nobody—including Commodore's marketing department—could fully articulate what it was all about".[19] In 2006, PC World rated the Amiga 1000 as the 7th greatest PC of all time.[20] In 2007, it was rated by the same magazine as the 37th best tech product of all time.[21] Also that year, IDG Sweden ranked it the 10th best computer of all time.[22]

Joe Pillow

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"Joe Pillow" was the name given on the ticket for the extra airline seat purchased to hold the first Amiga prototype while on the way to the January 1984 Consumer Electronics Show. The airlines required a name for the airline ticket and Joe Pillow was born. The engineers (RJ Mical and Dale Luck) who flew with the Amiga prototype (codenamed Lorraine) drew a happy face on the front of the pillowcase and even added a tie.[23]

Joe Pillow extended his fifteen minutes of fame when the Amiga went to production. All fifty-three Amiga team members who worked on the project signed the Amiga case. This included Joe Pillow and Jay Miner's dog Michy who each got to "sign" the case in their own unique way.[24]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Inside the Amiga 1000 - Slideshow". Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved May 14, 2016. The WCS included 256KB of memory used specifically to hold a basic OS that had to be loaded from a floppy disk at boot time.
  2. ^ a b c "Inside the Amiga 1000 - Slideshow". Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved May 14, 2016. Commodore designed the Amiga to accept a user-installed 256KB RAM module, shown here, to raise the system memory to 512KB.
  3. ^ "Amiga 1000 Spec Sheet". www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org.
  4. ^ John C. Dvorak (October 22, 1996). "Inside Track". PC Magazine. p. 89. The Amiga OS remains one of the great operating systems of the past 20 years, incorporating a small kernel and tremendous multitasking capability the likes of which have only recently been developed in OS/2 and Windows NT. The biggest difference is that the Amiga OS could operate fully and multitask in as little as 256K of address space. Even today, the OS is only about 1MB in size. And to this day, there is very little a memory-hogging, CD-ROM-loading OS can do the Amiga can't. Tight code—there's nothing like it.
    I've had an Amiga for maybe a decade. It's the single most reliable piece of equipment I've ever owned. It's amazing! You can easily understand why so many fanatics are out there wondering why they are alone in their love of the thing. The Amiga continues to inspire a vibrant—albeit cultlike—community, not unlike that which you have with Linux, the Unix clone.
  5. ^ 256 KB ROM + 256 KB RAM
  6. ^ "ISM 101 Seminar: 13 January 2005". USCS Engineering. Archived from the original on June 17, 2010. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
  7. ^ "Howard Stolz profile". Howard Stolz LinkedIn profile. Retrieved June 28, 2009.
  8. ^ Egger, Stefan. "Amiga 1000 Developer "Velvet" - computer collection vienna ENG". scacom.bplaced.net. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
  9. ^ a b "Product Preview: The Amiga Personal Computer". Byte. Vol. 10, no. 8. August 1985. pp. 83–90, 92, 94, 96, 98, 100. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Introduction to the Amiga (PDF). Commodore-Amiga, Inc. 1986. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 13, 2012. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  11. ^ "New York Magazine Aug 5, 1985". August 5, 1985.
  12. ^ "It Was Always The "Amiga 1000"". April 8, 2016.
  13. ^ Chira, Susan (August 29, 1984). "Amiga's High-Tech Gamble". New York Times, August 29, 1984. Retrieved April 11, 2008.
  14. ^ Starfire, Brian (September 13, 1985). "Commodore in tough market with new personal computer". The Evening Independent (Dallas Morning News).[dead link]
  15. ^ Halfhill, Tom R. (September 1985). "The Amiga: An In-Depth Review". Compute!. No. 64. pp. 16–28. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  16. ^ Freeman, Jon (September–October 1985). "Amiga: The Dream Machine". Computer Gaming World. Vol. 5, no. 4. pp. 24–25, 34. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  17. ^ Anderson, John J. (September 1985). "Amiga – The Message is the Medium". Creative Computing. Vol. 11, no. 9. pp. 32–34, 38–41. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  18. ^ Lima, Tony (December 16, 1985). "Commodore's Amiga Potent, but Troubled". InfoWorld. Vol. 7, no. 50. pp. 41–42. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  19. ^ Halfhill, Tom (August 1994). "R.I.P. Commodore 1954-1994". Byte. Archived from the original on October 19, 1996. Retrieved January 22, 2015.
  20. ^ "The 25 Greatest PCs of All Time | TechHive". Pcworld.com. Archived from the original on August 28, 2006. Retrieved January 22, 2015.
  21. ^ Null, Christopher. "The 50 Best Tech Products of All Time". PCWorld. Archived from the original on July 26, 2008. Retrieved July 24, 2013.
  22. ^ Nordlin, Bo (September 15, 2007). "Bästa datorerna genom tiderna: plats 4-12" [The best computers of all time: places 4-12]. IDG (in Swedish). Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  23. ^ Reimer, Jeremy (August 21, 2007). "A history of the Amiga, part 3: The first prototype". Ars Technica. Retrieved October 25, 2007.
  24. ^ Reimer, Jeremy (October 21, 2007). "A history of the Amiga, part 4: Enter Commodore". Ars Technica. Retrieved October 25, 2007.
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