Acorn Archimedes A3010 System Review & RISC Explained | Nostalgia Nerd

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • From the BBC Micro to the Acorn Archimedes. This is a full system review of the Acorn A3010, from the Archimedes range. Including a history of the Archimedes computers, an explanation of RISC, a look at RISC OS, some discussion on the ARM chip and of course, some classic Gameplay action on the machine Acorn penned specifically for the home computing & gaming market. Enjoy! Find the Blog post version of this review @ www.nostalgiane...
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Комментарии • 312

  • @_Stin_
    @_Stin_ 5 лет назад +11

    This was the first computer I bought for myself. I loved it. I still have a Risc PC 600 and an A7000 somewhere :)
    Good times :D

  • @RalphBromleyMadmanRB
    @RalphBromleyMadmanRB 8 лет назад +54

    Its really funny how much the world owes these computers right now especially thanks to ARM.
    its also really funny how influential RISC OS was as well, perhaps even despite its failure Acorn is more influential to our modern world than IBM was.

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад +2

      This synopsis is phenomenal.
      I'm a total ass about these things and often very critical - this is world class work. Not joking xx
      The best ARM pocket history on the internet. Full Stop :D - Thank You > #Pear

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад

      check out Lukes comment too

  • @danwood_uk
    @danwood_uk 8 лет назад +27

    Fantastic video mate, and drool-worthy machine! Always liked the Archie and RiscOS, the 3010 was my favourite model too. Had a couple at school, they seem hard to find these days though.

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +4

      +Dan Wood - kookytech.net Thanks! Yeah, it's a beast. I think you should take a look at one in a similar vein to your Atari ST vid

    • @bobl.1044
      @bobl.1044 7 лет назад +2

      I still have mine!
      Upgraded the CPU to an ARM 3 setup - twice as fast with an internal cache and more RAM.
      Took a guy with surface mount skills to do it.
      One problem with the A3010 was that ArcElite had a tendency to freeze up when a certain kind of ship was in your vicinity. Read that fitting a HD would fix that, but in those days hard drives were ridiculously expensive, so never got one.
      Maybe one of these days I'll dig her out, fire her up and play. She's a lovely machine.

    • @Zerbey
      @Zerbey 4 года назад

      They pop up on eBay very occasionally, but they are expensive and usually not in working order. Get yourself a Pi and run open RISC OS.

  • @Polysixchick
    @Polysixchick 2 года назад +1

    we had 3 of these at middle school, loved playing Lemmings on them at lunchtime, we got them around 1992 ish with Tesco Computers for Schools vouchers

  • @MrChiel78
    @MrChiel78 4 года назад +4

    Remember I was reading the acorn magazines back in the 90s, it looked even more awesome than my Amiga. I was jealous looking at the graphics it could produce and wished it became widely available in the Netherlands .

  • @markhayleybeadon
    @markhayleybeadon Год назад +1

    Never new about it. I was an amiga head. Glad to meet u acorn/risc you are awesome! Hello from Australia

  • @petertr2000
    @petertr2000 6 лет назад +5

    I spent almost my entire last year in primary school (uk - up to age 11 ish) in 1992 teaching the rest of the school how to use computers on an A3000. Happy times.

  • @outtheredude
    @outtheredude 7 лет назад +1

    The A3010 was the first computer I ever brought after leaving home, back in 2002 off eBay. Loved fiddling around with BBC BASIC on it.

  • @franksommer8151
    @franksommer8151 5 лет назад +21

    Didn´t know, that ARM came from acorn...
    Anyway, no RISC, no fun ;-)

  • @bantymcgee977
    @bantymcgee977 6 лет назад +1

    Way, way ahead of its time on many fronts. Even the BASIC on this was incredibly fast.

  • @SteveM000100
    @SteveM000100 8 лет назад +3

    4:35 - The fancy Watford Electronics building! (In Luton)

    • @phar2010
      @phar2010 4 года назад

      I remember visiting WE when it was located on Lower High Street Watford.

  • @Neffers_UK
    @Neffers_UK 7 лет назад

    I remember towards leaving high school they got a few of the A3010's in to replace some of the swathes of A3000's in the "I.T. Room" - a place no class ever seemed to use strangely. I thought they were gorgeous. It was like going from looking at an ST to a Falcon or from an A500 to an A1200. All lovely looking computers in their own right, but that next level of shiny really caught my eye.
    Sadly I never got chance to use the Acorns that much. It was almost like when the "first school" I was at had a BBC Master to share between the whole school, rolling in with the CUB monitor on a bespoke over engineered trolley, nobody got to use it for a decent length of time.

  • @Missfredawallace
    @Missfredawallace Год назад +1

    Sophie Wilson! what a genius. I love her. x

  • @gamepad3173
    @gamepad3173 2 года назад

    that's quite the though I never heard of Risc OS until now. though the Arm Processor does live in in Single board computers such as the Raspberry Pi.

  • @CasualCommodore
    @CasualCommodore 8 лет назад +4

    Wow, never connected ARM to Acorn. Interesting! :)

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад

      check our their servers xx they are Half the price per bang on Amazon cloud hosting - right now :D
      I'm buying shares like no tmrw xx

  • @alanmonaghan3657
    @alanmonaghan3657 7 лет назад

    wow i remember all these games from school man, couldn't remember what system it was on, just "the computer" in school, these went a long way to making me become a game developer, i even remember the teddy dress up game lol

  • @HuntersMoon78
    @HuntersMoon78 7 лет назад

    Used them in my local school - We all had a copy of Virus which got played when the teacher was out of the room

  • @a3HeadedMonkey
    @a3HeadedMonkey 8 лет назад

    I fucking love your videos, man.

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад

      +a3HeadedMonkey I fucking love your comments, man ;)

  • @doodoostickstain
    @doodoostickstain 7 лет назад

    music sounds like a damn hip hop song from the early 90s. i'm picturing nerds bobbing their heads with a big green bong on the desk, and poster of MC Hawking on the wall.

  • @bobalong3681
    @bobalong3681 5 лет назад

    Chocks Away and Mad Professor were worth a mention

  • @pdjames1729
    @pdjames1729 5 лет назад +1

    This synopsis is phenomenal.
    I'm a total ass about these things and often very critical - this is world class work. Not joking xx
    The best ARM pocket history on the internet. Full Stop :D - Thank You > #Pear

  • @Gunzee
    @Gunzee 7 лет назад

    I loved the Archimedes, we had quite a few at school. For some reason it reminded me of the Amiga. I don't exaggerate but no one used the machines apart from me, one kid tried to use it but ended up c crying?

  • @SabretoothBarnacle
    @SabretoothBarnacle 8 лет назад

    Subbed... nice channel.. keep up the good work! :D

  • @dykodesigns
    @dykodesigns 7 лет назад

    I have some fond memories of playing lemmings and pacmania on the A310. I also quite enjoyed terramex. The downside was that it was a rare machine in the netherlands. My dad has kept it around but the Stk520 harddrive is not working anymore. Any options of a CF-card retrofit? I've got lemmings on the mastersystem and I find it to be quite an authentic port.

  • @AndrewHelgeCox
    @AndrewHelgeCox 7 лет назад +1

    Did you show Zarch? I'm worried I may have had a stroke and missed it while my brain reconfigured around the lesion.

    • @bobl.1044
      @bobl.1044 7 лет назад

      Andrew Cox Yep, Zarch aka Virus depending on platform. He did another similar type of game called Aldebaran on Acorns.
      Damned hard to control it was, but silky smooth graphically.

  • @pferreira1983
    @pferreira1983 6 лет назад

    Well that was pretty informative. Well done.

  • @peanutismint
    @peanutismint 7 лет назад

    Great video! Instant subscribe from me :-)

  • @bulletmarv
    @bulletmarv 7 лет назад

    Oh how I used to use acorn computers back in school there were some great games I enjoyed but can't remember the names of . maybe you guys can help they were history educational games where you are a archaeologist and when you find an artifact you traveled back in time to find out what the artifact was used for. Anybody know what those games were called?

  • @colorfinger_old
    @colorfinger_old 7 лет назад

    I miss my old A410. My parents made me trash it because it was taking up space in our tiny cottage. Boo.

  • @eliteishan7777
    @eliteishan7777 3 года назад

    fun fact:acorn computers is known as the british apple

    • @Art-is-craft
      @Art-is-craft 7 месяцев назад

      They were not as innovate as Apple hence why they failed as a computer company.

  • @msdosm4nfred
    @msdosm4nfred 3 года назад +1

    No RISC, no fun! 😉

  • @timharig
    @timharig 7 лет назад

    Your explanation of cooperative multitasking is lacking.
    Cooperative multitasking works by the operating system allowing one program to take complete control of the CPU. This program executes until it voluntarily gives up control of the CPU. Usually this happens because the program needs to make a call back to the operating to get or send some IO. However, a program that never terminates or never makes a system call can effectively hog the CPU forever. A program bug that causes a non-terminating loop effectively freezes the machine and prevents the OS from ever again obtaining control of the processor.
    Preemptive multitasking prevents this occurrence by generating timer interrupts that will return execution back to the operating system in the event that an unruly program attempts to hog the processor for too long. It can therefore better ensure that each program gets a fair share of the time allocated.

  • @furrball
    @furrball 7 лет назад

    hmmm nice but no teardown? :( also, rather than thanking us for watching, we'd rather prefer a "thank you for hearing" and enduring the screeching background "thing"... sorry, had to point that out for the greater good of humanity

  • @LordBete
    @LordBete 6 лет назад

    Love your videos and your channel everything you make is really interesting and presented very well but for the love of god stop saying ‘bihbihsee’ you’re English you know it’s Bee Bee See 😫

  • @0xEmmy
    @0xEmmy 4 года назад +1

    0:37 did you have to deadname Sophie? No you did not.

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus 7 лет назад

    Hi. How much more powerful was it, compared to Amiga, ST and Apple's line in 1987? Thanks. God bless, Proverbs 31

  • @AishaDracoGryph
    @AishaDracoGryph 8 лет назад +13

    00:50 you mean "she" did, not he.

  • @DJ-xn9vu
    @DJ-xn9vu 7 лет назад

    roger wilson is now sophie wilson no wonder the world is fucked lol

  • @TheAkashicTraveller
    @TheAkashicTraveller 7 лет назад +4

    "Learn computing and programming in school" and then after 2000 they decided fuck that shit Microsoft Office lessons only.

  • @user-yv2cz8oj1k
    @user-yv2cz8oj1k 8 лет назад +19

    Gone but not forgotten... as Raspberry Pi can run a RISC OS port.
    And that's running how much more memory and clock speeds?

  • @valerfor8361
    @valerfor8361 5 лет назад +27

    A fantastic computer that never got the recognition it deserved.

    • @rogerwinter1563
      @rogerwinter1563 Год назад

      bit overpriced

    • @Art-is-craft
      @Art-is-craft 7 месяцев назад

      @@rogerwinter1563
      Nothing to do with being overpriced. They just did not have a model early enough or at the right price to compete with the other computers. If they had something in about 1988 that was on par with the other budget systems they would have sold. Acorns 3010 was far more powerful that the other competitors but far too late to market.

  • @GRBtutorials
    @GRBtutorials 4 года назад +3

    And nowadays, 21 years after Acorn disappeared, ARM CPUs are finally coming back to the desktop... at least in Macs, but I'd expect other manufacturers to follow suit promptly.

    • @TonkarzOfSolSystem
      @TonkarzOfSolSystem 4 года назад

      Recent strides towards x64 compatibility are making this more likely every day.

    • @Claro1993
      @Claro1993 3 года назад

      Also, the world's fastest supercomputer yet (as of 2020) is ARM-based.

    • @TonkarzOfSolSystem
      @TonkarzOfSolSystem 3 года назад

      @@Claro1993 Not a desktop though.

  • @ScoopDogg
    @ScoopDogg 5 лет назад +16

    So lucky to have grown up in the 80's and lucky enough to have a BBC B bought to help me get over my dads death (im sure that's the reason as we were poor) aint joking very poor (could never afford an Archimedes, but my god did I want one badly)
    Its not till years later I truly appreciate what my mum did that day, love n miss you mum RIP both of you
    GREAT VIDEO Nostalgia Nerd thankyou

  • @Dysphoricsmile
    @Dysphoricsmile 7 лет назад +8

    I wish you would have compared Elite with the current PC port of the game, I have only ever played it on DOS Box, even though I was gaming on a top of the line Zeos 486DX2 in 1991 - my dad bought it for "the family" (basically he KNEW he wanted, and figured me and my brother would quickly fall in love with it - which we did! But obviously, my mom almost never touched it, apart from Solitare!) I knew how to run DOS at nearly a professional level by late 1992, my favorite games in the early days were the likes of Wing Commander 2, Savage Empire, Commanche64 - and many others, some very popular like Lemmimgs, some all but unknown at the time. Never got into Elite though at the time - even though I jad a PC capable of full 3D at 640x480 to 800x600 and eventually even 1024x768 and above by the time games like Quake were around - my dad went through upgrades like CRAZY at the time - I don't even remenber all the different video and sound cards we got in the early days, though in 1992/3 I DO remember the first video card upgrade, he bought it to play full 3D flight sims at the best available performance, it was an 8 MB Diamomd Edge 3D accelerator, which IIRC had to be plugged into the 2 MB "2D" based video card, but it may have replaced it... Because even the video card and sound card and even the 350 MB HDD our Zeos brand FULL Tower 486DX2 top-of-the-line were all top notch, as they should be, since my dad did spend something approaching $5000 - I KNOW it cost no less than $3000!
    Anyway within 2 or 3 years (I forget exactly) we had upgraded the entire motherboard for a Pentium 133 which of course, was top of the line when dad bought it, I actually think it was a Pentium PRO possibly... And then the VooDoo3 right after the TNT, eventually I was playing games like Hexen at 1024x768 at around 60 FPS with video settings maxed out! THIS is why the N64 and PS1 were the LAST consoles we ever owned!
    Going from my family's PC to the N64 to play Hexen was TORTURE! As were those AWFUL CONTROLLERS! To the point where I NEVER played it on N64, Unless we had 4 people on split screen which made it great for hanging out. Of course since my whole family are PC people, we had LAN parties, and I LOVED THEM! Hexen on N64 was absolutley TERRIBLE! Much lower frame rate, resolution, constant hitching - and this was something like 2+ YEARS after it came out on PC, and I was already playing at MUCH better quality in every conceivable way!
    To me, looking back on all this COMPUTING HISTORY - it is nothing short of AMAZING! Almost miraculous- to think that RIGHT NOW - on my lap sits a Tablet with a 64 bit Quad core ARM V8 CPU - with a tiny Adreno GPU - that can EASILY blow away even PC games from just 6 or so years ago, and compared with my first PC ever, that nearly $5000 Zeos 486 - this tablet is LIGHT YEARS MORE POWERFUL IN EVERY WAY! And it even has a TINY 256 GB Micro SDXC- that is the size of the tip of my pinky, and it holds THOUSANDS of times more data than every single BIT of memory combined from my Zeos, Hell the 3 GB of RAM in said tablet is still hundreds of times more!
    And it is ALL BASED OFF OF ACORN ARCHIMEDES ARM TECHNOLOGY! Combined with Google's Linux based Android OS, it is SURPRISINGLY
    powerful in every way! 3D games run amazingly well and never fail to surprise me with how good they look compared with my INCREDIBLY powerful X86-64 desktop! ARM technology is really amazing!

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад

      it's insanely great :)
      not the gfx, they are fine. Tidy Classy and Fast - but the on screen buttons - so no function keys (yay - stupid but it's why the Nintendo port is so good xx)
      Other ships fight between themselves - often completely ignoring you. You are in a Live universe.
      and.... Police... omg the f---&& police. Fly in formations - dominoes and shoot as one.
      It should have been open world - god if they had... we would have had ARM everything (our current state of being ;o) 10 years earlier

  • @obsoletegeek
    @obsoletegeek 8 лет назад +25

    Man, I want one

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад

      have a look on Lukes comment - I don't wanna spam

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад +1

      that 3010 is the classic SOC collectors machine too.
      It's the first ever production computer with a System on Chip.. memc cpu vidc and io are all on the one die :)
      these were four different chips, in pqfp packets with legs on :D in an original 300 or 400 Archimedes xx
      also why it destroys the arm2 8mhz machines, even at the same clock speeds. ridiculous though it sounds, the bits are closer - it matters a lot -lol

    • @TheSulross
      @TheSulross 5 лет назад +2

      Funny thing is, you can easily and affordably get something that's pretty comparable - and you don't have to jump on eBay to hunt for it. The RISC OS has been open-sourced and is still being maintained. And hence there is a port of RISC OS to the Raspberry Pi - which uses an ARM CPU, of course. And the Pi, as small a little thing as it is, has specs that far exceed these Acorn machines of the late 80s, early 90s. Get a Pi and go to the OS download page at the Pi website, scroll to the bottom - will see link for RISC OS. Once you hook display, keyboard, mouse, power supply to the Pi, install the SD card to boot from, you'll be put into a retro nirvana experience. And bonus is that the BBC BASIC that is part of this RISC OS install is way, way better than Microsoft BASIC. It had a faster, more performant implementation (when running on the same hardware footprint) and it offers a better, more structured programming dialect of the language (and has a very note worthy woman computer scientist that was responsible for bringing about the BBC BASIC that people know and use). And the RISC OS provides a code editing experience for BASIC programming that is much better than, say, the Commodore 64K kind of BASIC programming experience.
      This is an entirely authentic pathway to becoming a retro computing experiencer and not just a passive observer. There are really no excuses for not diving in. You can't buy a board today that natively runs classic Mac OS or Amiga or Atari. (There are attempts to recreate these in FPGA implementations, but they're not fully there yet and the boards are costing $300 to $400 for such efforts.) For less than $40 one can get a Raspberry Pi and run the RISC OS and step back into that golden age of micros of the heady 80s, early 90s.

    • @respectforkurt944
      @respectforkurt944 4 года назад

      I remember the acorn at school in 1987 when I was nine- great machines. The BBC micro in 1983 when I started school, just awesome. Great machines. I'd advise getting the one with the first inbuilt hard disk, whatever one that was probably the A4000 (someone correct me if im wrong on that, my family had the Archimedes at home too, but we had if memory serves an external hard disk that was the size of a breeze block lol!) which like the mac was significantly faster than pcs of the era because of that risc chip....and remember the O.S on Acorns was all in Rom. Just very very fast computers of the day.

  • @SelfIndulgentGamer
    @SelfIndulgentGamer 8 лет назад +6

    I've never been lucky enough to have seen or used one of these. I do remember being impressed by the adverts at the time, even as an amiga owner, I still wanted one :)

  • @darkdoescosplays
    @darkdoescosplays 4 года назад +3

    It blew my mind the first time I learned Acorn created the ARM chips in most phones... It seems as though ultimately my primary school was ahead of the curve by being full of Acorn computers ;)
    Shame they very rarely let us on them.

  • @greekretrogamer4355
    @greekretrogamer4355 5 лет назад +4

    A500 dominated AtariSt and Archimedes !!!
    But as I remember, Archimedes at that time was a very expensive and powerful machine ( workstation they said )

  • @oktup
    @oktup 4 года назад +1

    "...a now infamous microprocessor".
    What makes it infamous?

  • @ChilliJonCarne
    @ChilliJonCarne 6 лет назад +1

    Canon Fodder is one of my all time fav games. Love it

  • @guywilkinson
    @guywilkinson 5 лет назад +3

    I'll never forget how awesome my A305 was. I later upgraded it to 4MB and used it to run my business. I wrote most of the applications for it too. Easy to program and blindingly quick.....oh the joy of computing at that time....🤩

  • @DailyCorvid
    @DailyCorvid 3 года назад +1

    I saw one of these when I was wee, in school and was like WOWOOW when I played lander! Jesus God I would have LOVED to own one of these.

  • @MaximumRD
    @MaximumRD 8 лет назад +3

    I found this platform to be very interesting. Something I would have loved to experience first hand.

  • @gdm413229
    @gdm413229 8 лет назад +5

    Don't forget the fact that the Motorola 68000 CPUs are used in early Macs as well as Amigas and Atari ST's.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys 8 лет назад +3

      Not to mention the Sega Mega Drive and Neo Geo...
      When you look at the early home computers and consoles, until we get into the era where 3d games start to become common, you see the intel X86 family off by itself...
      The closely related Zilog Z80 and clones. (surprisingly similar in several ways to the X86)
      The 6502 and derivatives such as the 68c816 (Seen in the Apple II, C64, NES, Snes and a bunch of other systems)
      And of course the motorola 68000 and it's close relatives...

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 7 лет назад

      Yeah, it was all Zilog Z-80, MOS 6502 and Motorola 68k for a long time.
      IBM POWER and PowerPC had little share in the home market but stayed mainly in the server and large computing realm, even after x86 came along. Which btw are RISC internally since atleast 1993.

    • @DJKav
      @DJKav 7 лет назад

      Most of the 80's arcade machine game boards we're powered by Motorola 68k and Zilog z80 daughter boards.

    • @Pervypriest
      @Pervypriest 5 лет назад

      Intel and AMD make cisc processors Even today as the x86 architecture is orginated from a Cisc design..

  • @davidknight247
    @davidknight247 8 лет назад +5

    I recall that there is an Easter egg in the rom. Some text which from memory says something like "help, I am trapped in this factory" or something similar. Can't remember if it was in all roms or just certain versions. My brother had an A300 and I had an A3010 so it was probably one of those.

    • @davidknight247
      @davidknight247 8 лет назад

      A3000

    • @davidknight247
      @davidknight247 8 лет назад +1

      "Help, I'm being held captive in a sofrware factory" according to the interwebs

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +2

      +David Knight That's pretty cool

  • @CesareVesdani
    @CesareVesdani 3 года назад +2

    I love the nostalgia that Acorn Archimedes computers had.

  • @liamoconnor7423
    @liamoconnor7423 5 лет назад +2

    I've been watching a load of these lately, I have a CPC464 in my room and used to own an Atari ST as a child which got lost when my dad was moving, I got a few Spectrums lying around but unfortunately they were damaged by damp along the lines.
    It's pretty interesting to see where computing started, and how things developed over the years though, thanks for these videos, they're an absolute gem!

  • @MajesticWhitetiger
    @MajesticWhitetiger 5 лет назад +2

    I had and still have a A3010 with the Red Keys .... I still love it too ... awesome games and so easy to use!!! I will never forget it

  • @alastairward2774
    @alastairward2774 7 лет назад +1

    I remember Lander and Pacmania so well from school, lucky friend whose Mum could take one home from her school.

  • @simonsunnyboy
    @simonsunnyboy 7 лет назад +1

    I always wanted to have one. As too late too ambitious, they were scarce here in Germany as well.
    We had an A3000 without red keys but 2MB upgrade, RISC OS 3.11 and serial port upgrade.
    A stunning machine, definitly beating the crap out of any Amiga 500 or our own Atari 520STM. But alas noone else had one.
    I personally would have liked the A3010 for the TV output and joystick ports.

  • @ElektrONEloQ
    @ElektrONEloQ Год назад +1

    RiscPC owner since the release here too. 😎

  • @silfortytypex
    @silfortytypex 8 лет назад +2

    Great video on a system that we never got in the USA. Keep up he awesome videos I love your work!

  • @maxpowers4889
    @maxpowers4889 8 лет назад +7

    The raspberry pi uses a ARM Processor

    • @madcommodore
      @madcommodore 8 лет назад +7

      Pretty much everything mobile on the planet uses an ARM processor today, and even in the past machines like the 75 million selling Gameboy Advance used one at 75mhz. A true success story of how a small team of British engineers produced something the yanks couldn't with their lahdeedah million pound research labs :)

    • @Phobos_Anomaly
      @Phobos_Anomaly 5 лет назад +1

      @@madcommodore Not sure why you felt it necessary to see it as a competition of nationalities, but ok.

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад

      @@jj-or2jn on the #ChoozeOS comfort distro, yes xx
      >> facebook.com/PearComputers/

  • @nuttyjawa
    @nuttyjawa 3 года назад +1

    My cousins had one and it got me into computing when I was very young, found memories of the paint program and being blown away as a kid at the starfighter game.
    Have been working in IT for 15 years because of it :)

  • @threebrothers8196
    @threebrothers8196 8 лет назад +1

    This was my first computer back in the day, had good times playing great games such as Wolfenstein, Chocks Away and Stunt Racer 2000, to name a few.
    It's a shame they didn't bring in great game designers to utilize the hardware, could of been a classic.

  • @retrogenius8397
    @retrogenius8397 6 лет назад +1

    High price of the A3010 and late to the party in 1992? It was only £100 more than the new Amiga 1200 from the same year and the Archimedes A3010 was about as powerful as an Amiga 4000/030 which cost a lot. The only other rival would be the Amstrad VGA multimedia PCpackages in the High St and they cost at least double the price of the A3010. An 030 Mac in 1992 cost even more than the PC or 4000/030!

  • @Hebrew42Day
    @Hebrew42Day 5 лет назад +1

    Now ARM is poised to take back market share in the desktop market and definitely low to mid range laptops.
    Rumor has it all macs in the future will be running the ARM architecture.

  • @cleminan
    @cleminan 4 года назад

    8:42 The A5000 (1991) was developed from the Acorn A4 (1992) laptop project, The A300/A400 series were ageing and they needed to pay the bills. The A30x0/A4000 machines were cut down versions to sell to the Sub-£1500 market Acorn was very bad at targeting.

  • @retrogenius8397
    @retrogenius8397 7 лет назад

    The A3010, the one most likely to be purchased as an alternative to the Amiga 1200, had a CPU about the speed of a 20mhz 020 (or 030 as they are pretty much the same thing for general computation speed) but it had only 1mb of RAM which is quite restrictive when you consider the space taken by 256 color bitmaps. The video output on a regular TV from an Archimedes has a border just like the Atari ST and Amstrad CPC unlike the Amiga which is full screen (except where 320x200 mode is used for games when they are running on a 320x256 resolution PAL screen of course) and finally converting the source code from 68020 of Amiga AGA/CD32 to ARM is not going to work well. So games like Pacmania and Lotus II instead of being the best versions fall somewhere between the ST and Amiga versions. Saloon Car racing is probably the best comparison for raw speed given F1GP by Microprose was never converted to the Archimedes. It is a fine machine but it just does things a little different than the 1985 Amiga 1000 as it has nothing like the power of the 2D assisted custom chips found in that machine. The lack of high quality software specifically written around the Archimedes unlike Shadow of the Beast 1 which was 100% designed around the Amiga 1000 (and hence A500) chipset. I really like the machine but ultimately without the best of the best being converted in the best possible way to the Archimedes it would be doomed to failure. As a creative machine it didn't have Deluxe Paint and Animation series or anything like it and midi packages were covered perfectly by a stock ST. The best thing Acorn could have done is written a software based PC x86 emulator into the OS to counter PC sales around the mid 90s when the only choice left for purchasers was single task OS Mac or putrid Windows (the OS for chumps and toilet cleaners). A great machine that never ever got their own spiritual development of things like the Amiga OCS focused Shadow of the Beast 1 or Lotus II (which uses the CPU and blitter time available to within a millisecond to achieve those arcade quality results in speed and animation) ultimately killed it not because it was too late to the party. Windows PCs only sold into the home because Commodore had been forced into bankruptcy when the loans were called in.

  • @AmbersKnight
    @AmbersKnight 8 лет назад +6

    Just a thought on the name. Whilst its probably true that it is named after the great scientist, Archimedes was also the name of Merlin's owl. This would also seem in line with calling the operating system Arthur as I know some did.

    • @Archimedes75009
      @Archimedes75009 6 лет назад

      It is named after the Greek mathematician as Acorn stated in the official presentation of the machine (video is on YT).

  • @Gooberslot
    @Gooberslot 8 лет назад +1

    I find the A3010 fascinating. Hardware wise it seems better than the Amiga in a lot of ways. It's too bad it never showed up over here in the US. The OS on the other hand, I'll have to disagree with you on. The OS just looks way too simplistic and toy like for my tastes. I'd take Amiga OS any day over this one.

    • @Nostalgianerd
      @Nostalgianerd  8 лет назад +1

      +Gooberslot Really? Workbench always looked like vomit to me. This is crisp, fresh and elegant, at least aesthetically

    • @Gooberslot
      @Gooberslot 8 лет назад +1

      +Nostalgia Nerd Workbench 1.3 wasn't the nicest looking but 2.0+ looked pretty nice for the time, especially if you installed MagicWB. Plus, it didn't look like RiscOS even had a command line. I can't take any OS seriously that doesn't have a command line.

    • @Archimedes75009
      @Archimedes75009 8 лет назад +1

      +Gooberslot Of course it had one. Press F12 and you'll get it.

  • @JanuszKrysztofiak
    @JanuszKrysztofiak 2 года назад

    The other point of RISC was a reduction of addressing modes to a "load-store" model to save on transistor budget: load data into one of many registers, operate on it there and store the final result. Whereas a model CISC would do otherwise: provide each data instruction with a full set of various addressing models (especially direct/indirect memory addressing). As a consequence, CISCs tended to have fewer data registers. The CISC/RISC distinction is rather blurred these days, with CPUs operating internally on hidden microcode, not the 'official' instruction set directly. One should add that a CISCy instruction set may have some advantages too: it is easier for humans to write and more logic can be stuffed into the CPU cache.

  • @pjaro77
    @pjaro77 3 года назад

    I am from east Europe. In the final days of eastern communist block people knew many informations about Commodore Amigas, Atari ST/mega and PCs. A few people owned them, usually they buyed on germany market when they have some relatives in Germany. But almost noone know anyting about the Archimedes. I remember i have read only one small article about Archimedes in one popular-technical magazine. After fell of the communist block the market with western goods emerge. Frontier opened and one cloud buy almost anything including computers. PC, amigas, ataris and many 8 bit computers appeared in the stores. They were quite expensive for us in the beginning , but they appeared. But even in that times I didnt see any Archimedes. I doubt any computer store brought them here. Why the Acorn company didnt expand on the eastern europe market more ?

  • @tHeWasTeDYouTh
    @tHeWasTeDYouTh 7 лет назад

    why did all the Western computer companies(European) die out? and what did the asians do that made them the biggest companies ever??!!!!!! it is so sad to learn about all these companies, see all their amazing products and find out they are dead today

  • @kgm1000uk
    @kgm1000uk 8 лет назад +1

    You'll need CAPS for that PRINT command to work!

  • @jakehepworth8938
    @jakehepworth8938 2 года назад

    8:36 - what was the name of that early learning program displayed on the 3020? It was the first game I ever played and cannot remember what it's called, nor can I find it anywhere on the web.

  • @ganswijk
    @ganswijk 3 года назад

    I was "'woke" back then and I'd loved to have one, but it was too expensive and too BRITISH!

  • @iStormUK
    @iStormUK 8 лет назад +1

    You. Are. Criminally. Undersubscribed! O_O

  • @Mark-ml3nv
    @Mark-ml3nv Год назад

    The ARM legacy lives on in the desktop computer that is the new Apple Mac Mini M2 Pro.

  • @paulmitchell-gears6765
    @paulmitchell-gears6765 4 года назад

    Undoubtably, we've all heard of RISC; but what does it mean? 5:02

  • @rickyyoung
    @rickyyoung 4 года назад

    OK but what the hell was the RM Nimbus?? That's what my Primary School had

  • @ninjasiren
    @ninjasiren 7 лет назад

    So is it possible to run a port of RISC OS on Android phones or iPhones. even if it is not applicable or stupid.

  • @elguinolo7358
    @elguinolo7358 4 года назад

    Is there already a RiscOS for rpi4 with USB3 support ?

  • @EdmundKempersDartboard
    @EdmundKempersDartboard 3 года назад

    "Risc architecture is going to change everything."
    "Yeah, risc is good."

  • @andreacau7541
    @andreacau7541 3 года назад

    This PC would have deserved more attention from the public of its time

  • @chriss2664
    @chriss2664 2 года назад +1

    Amazing machines. I dont have one any longer. But am using an Original Pi B overclocked to 900mhz on Risc OS direct. I use it like an every day machine, emails browsing.... just not youtube... using Risc OS direct. Probably use it more than my Windows machine as so bloated and slow... so i recommend anyone wanting to try something similar... grab an old pi. Risc os and there you go... brought your book btw Nostalgia Nerd.... very good. Like a retro bible... are you gonna make a new book on Handhelds soon?

    • @maxxdahl6062
      @maxxdahl6062 2 года назад

      Wish they'd come out with a version compatible with the pi zero 1 and 2, and USB ethernet adapters. I'd really love to play around with risc OS since we never got the acorn PC's nor the OS here originally here in the USA.

    • @chriss2664
      @chriss2664 2 года назад +1

      @@maxxdahl6062 yeah it's out for the PI zero. I dont think the PI zero 2 yet. But sure it's in the pipeline. Nah just buy an old crusty model b+ for a peanuts. Has the ethernet etc. Overclock a bit to say 950mhz... there you go... exact same. No point with PI4s or 3s really. Risc OS (at present) only knows how to use one of those quad core chips in later models. If you do get Risc OS I recommend the Risc OS Direct version... not slating ROOL... but it's so much easier... if you wanna run 26bit software etc... plus you'll have a bit more space out your SD card from the go as it normally gives just under 8Gb without even mucking around... hope that helps.

    • @maxxdahl6062
      @maxxdahl6062 2 года назад

      @@chriss2664 Hmm. Might just need to find a compatible USB ethernet adapter. Since I still have my zero 1 around here somewhere.

    • @chriss2664
      @chriss2664 2 года назад +1

      @@maxxdahl6062 I know there is a list somewhere it it helps (maybe ethernet hats, I can't remember)... best place to try is Stardot Forums probably...

    • @maxxdahl6062
      @maxxdahl6062 2 года назад +1

      @@chriss2664 Thanks man, I appreciate your help. :)

  • @synesthesiaamethyst6207
    @synesthesiaamethyst6207 4 года назад

    Yuzo Koshiro's 1980's PC of choice for music composition...

  • @dangerotterisrea
    @dangerotterisrea 2 года назад

    I had one, great thing for homework but annoying as hell to get games for!

  • @mikeyyls2044
    @mikeyyls2044 2 года назад

    Don't you think your city in SIMcity needs a fire department?

  • @niamaru2
    @niamaru2 8 лет назад +2

    funny how perception differs, I always preferred the Amiga and Atari keyboards heh

    • @madcommodore
      @madcommodore 8 лет назад

      The Amiga 1000, 2000, 3000 and 4000 keyboards are OK, better than PCs and Macs of the time in some cases like A1000 or 2000 but the keyboard on A600/1200 is as disgusting as the poor keyboard of the Atari XE machines and the 500 not much better than the 520STFM keyboard. I wouldn't piss on an A500 for typing endless lines of code into that's for sure lol

    • @niamaru2
      @niamaru2 8 лет назад

      completely subjective of course, I would rather have my A2000 keyboard than my corsair K70... wish there was a way to adapt them to use them today similarly to how you can with the C64 keyboards

    • @madcommodore
      @madcommodore 8 лет назад

      Lots of solder and a fine tipped soldering iron and an old Packard Bell proper keyed (not iMac style) USB keyboard. This is what someone did with a dead Atari 800 keyboard and hardwired each key to a key on the packard bell keyboard to make a USB Atari 800 keyboard for his emulator (which he ran on a small Intel Atom nano ITX board inside the case of an Atari 800. It is somewhere on Atariage, damned impressive but possible for any mechanical keyboard including Amiga 2000. Keyrah mapping for use in Windows with the C64 keyboard is not really suitable for day to day computer use if I am honest but is great for emulated systems inside real C64 keyboard and case though. (Well v1 keyrah was)

  • @dave4shmups
    @dave4shmups 5 лет назад +1

    I love how you can start programming in BBC Basic, right underneath the desktop! That’s cool! Unfortunately we never got these computers here in America.

    • @kelv7574
      @kelv7574 4 года назад

      It was super handy, and you could also use it to compile ARM assembly code into binaries e.g. absolute (like .exe) or relocatable modules (think of plug in OS extensions allowing you to add new commands e.g. like play a Soundtracker music module from anywhere with *play, provide new filesystem support, etc). There's so much more (the consistent !app structure for building riscos desktop programs, etc). If you can find digital copies somewhere, the RISCOS PRMs and Dabhand Guides Archimedes Assembly Language are awesome and tell you everything you could ever want to know.

  • @karlwalker1771
    @karlwalker1771 4 года назад

    Hi friends any chance of a link to an Archimedes A3010 emulator and games please,(ZARCH would be fantastic) I had access to this computer in the 80s on the schools BBC ECONET network after my computer teacher said "YOU CAN TEACH ME MORE THAN I CAN TEACH YOU LOL" and let me run riot on the system:):)
    PPS at the time I was working on a ray tracing version of CASTLE WOLFENSTEIN PMSL, BUT my friends younger brother BEAT ME TO IT and now he makes games for the mobile phones industry..

    • @maxxdahl6062
      @maxxdahl6062 4 года назад

      You're almost better off going with a cheap raspberry pi, and RiscOS for it. VERY similar hardware, and RiscOS is direct descendant of the OS.

  • @Wol747
    @Wol747 4 года назад

    Nostalgia indeed!
    The brief shot of Watford Electronics reminded of leaving my wife shopping while I bought my second Archie - I knew she wouldn’t approve.....
    You didn’t mention the A3 laptop which I used when travelling to write complex BASIC programs.
    Acorn RISC and the Arc series were way ahead of what was coming out of the States at that time - and putting the whole OS into ROM (wasn’t it just 2 Mb, including games, paint, vector graphics programs, word processor etc?) made it impossible to hack at the OS level. And the 3 button mouse made it so intuitive.
    32 bit, too - for some time during which IBM and Microsoft were wondering whether to go to 16 bits or stay with 8 bits. Look at the coding now on Windows - Gigabytes of sloppy and buggy code which eats up chunks of memory and requires hours of updating every week.

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID 4 года назад

      The other thing that is often not mentioned is that scalable fonts were built into the operating system along with anti-aliasing (albeit that only worked properly with a white background). Also, not unconnected, was the built in support for vector graphics. The release of RISC OS 3 and proper outline font support was roughly at the same time as Apple released TrueType in Mac System 7 in 1991. Vector graphics was very much at the heart of the graphics rendering in RISC OS and the way that graphics objects could be dropped and scaled into documents was a revelation for somebody using a contemporary Windows machine.
      At the time Microsoft were in the era of bit-mapped fonts only, and they only introduced scalable fonts with Windows 3.1, which was not something found on most desktops. It took multiple Windows iterations for MS to get that one "normal" desktops.
      The one big problem with RISC OS scalable fonts was printing. If you didn't have a (very expensive) Postscript laser printer, then it was laboriously slow bit map printing to render documents. Of course, you needed a Postscript printer for Macs too, but they sold into a different market. The Windows world and printing was also a major pain in the early 1990s where what came out of a printer was mangled by the substitution of resident fonts.

  • @madcommodore
    @madcommodore 8 лет назад +6

    The A3010 was the best home computer Acorn put out and technically superior to the slightly cheaper (£100 less) stock Amiga A1200. Sadly the only decent games of arcade or console quality were straight ports of Amiga titles like Lotus Challenge 2 and so were not better. If only some slick arcade games that didn't look like 50 pence PD software were released it may have taken off. The ARM chip in this is about the same performance as a 20mhz 68030 (the Amiga 1200 14mhz 020 is crippled to an effective 7mhz without an expensive 32bit FAST RAM memory expansion due to legacy design compatibility with Amiga 500 chipset butting in 1/2 clock cycles. And just last week ARM was sold off for a record price so it really is the end for an amazing example of British superiority. Proof that crap looking games hurt sales badly.

    • @pdjames1729
      @pdjames1729 5 лет назад

      tiz true. Very few of the original games were anything close to finished xx shame.
      everything else totally rocked. On just about every Acorn machine I've ever owned - and the ones we still dev xx

  • @bengmo64
    @bengmo64 7 лет назад +1

    At 8:03 you know the next line was going to be 20 goto 10

  • @macgoo9716
    @macgoo9716 8 лет назад

    Does the A3010 use standard 1.44mb PC disk drives or does it need a specific make and model to work as the Amiga and Atari ST computers do? I have one but the disk drive head is beyond repair by cleaning etc so need to swap it for another so I can enjoy this fabulous machine I bought a long time ago (PAYPAL thought a broken disk drive was OK for a 'tested' and 'working' system item description)

    • @asm1
      @asm1 8 лет назад

      Yes it can use a standard 1.44mb drive, but they need to be modified. I have once such drive in my A3010. As luck would have it I also have a working A3010 original drive that is nice and quiet but now surplus to requirements. Would you be interested?, if so drop me a line:
      andrewDOTmcconvilleATmetronetDOTcoDOTuk

  • @logtothebase2
    @logtothebase2 3 года назад

    I seem to remember about this time the IBM clone PC's were taking off, clock speeds of the inferior Intel chip started to ramp up as did RAM and storage installed. Intel and Microsoft beat off all comers apart from Apple as they had more to invest from global sales, Intel architecture added capable 32 and 64 bit extensions to their old nail of a processor core that kept it ahead of rivals, I think its fair to say the Arch couldn't keep up, but same could be said of every hardware manufacturer, including IBM, Compaq and dogs breakfast of successful clone manufactures all gone from PC manufacturer..Dell came along later.

    • @Art-is-craft
      @Art-is-craft 7 месяцев назад

      Intel had an architecture that could expand and it was known since the foundation of the company. The exact same people that used to write of Intel 40 years ago are the exact same people that write them off today

  • @CaptainJack406
    @CaptainJack406 6 лет назад

    Nice machine! Until my mum threw it out because it was just "gathering dust in the loft". Anyway, this one could also take 4Mb RAM, which came on a little board instead of two separate chips in case of 2Mb RAM upgrade. I also fitted a hard drive module from APDL with a whopping 170Mb of space. It was an amazing thing... Thanks for this review.

  • @Ingens_Scherz
    @Ingens_Scherz 4 года назад

    My school bought one of the first RISC Archimedes back in the day. We were in total awe of it, but the thought never entered our heads to buy one for home computing. By 1988, all any of us wanted was to upgrade to our CPC 6128s and the like to an Amiga.

  • @TheonlyJesusduck
    @TheonlyJesusduck 8 лет назад +1

    What a machine! 🖖