| I think I see where you are coming from now. You are not saying "there was no uncontended RAM in the Amiga", which is what I understood you to mean. You are saying "the Amiga did have uncontended RAM but it did not ship with any as stock." Is that right? If so, yes, true, but the key things here IMHO are: 1. The Amiga was designed and built as a games console, one which happened to be able to do other things. It was primarily marketed and sold as a games machine. I wrote about an Amiga-compatible OS recently: https://www.theregister.com/2025/05/22/aros_live/ And the comments are from slightly baffled readers asking if this is any good for running their old Amiga games, or how this makes gaming any easier. (It is not and it does not, but that is what people perceive the Amiga as being for in the 21st century.) 2. In the real 1980s market, the Amiga's glory was to a large extent stolen by the Atari ST. The ST was a much more limited machine but it was vastly better than any 8-bit machine, and an entry-level ST was more usable than an entry-level Amiga. ST games were pretty good for the mid-1980s when a lot of people still had ZX Spectrum or Commodore 64 level kit. Many games companies targeted the lower-end machine and ported to the higher-end one. The Amiga was competing with the cheaper, simpler ST in the market, and keeping the costs down became imperative. That's why Commodore didn't add more hardware or more RAM to the base-level Amiga. In fact for the Amiga 600 took the spec of the A500 and cut it down. I am not arguing that some Fast RAM as stock wouldn't have been good. It would. But probably irrelevant to most gamers, and probably would have hurt the machine's sales. |
Or much better, the Agnus chip could have had this scratchpad added into it. It should have been feasible - it had about 20k transistors IIRC and a few hundred more should have been doable. I am fairly certain this would have worked but I'm not completely sure, it depends on if that addition would have complicated multiplexing and/or internal bandwidth demands, but the 68000 ran at 7MHz at the time, so it doesn't seem too difficult to me, armchair designer.
Thanks for the article! It's always nice to see AROS and Amiga get some love. :)
Achschully AROS m68k can be helpful for playing your old Amiga games in an otherwise open source way. You don't have to buy or pirate the official Kickstar ROM images if you use an AROS m68k ROM instead. But on the other hand, realistically you would probably pirate that old Amiga game to begin with, it's not like you have your old floppies lying around and if you did, you'd need a floppy drive to read them anyways...
Dieshot of Agnus:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9f/CBM_8370...