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My RiscPC |
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The specification is:
RiscPC 610
The computer has since been expanded thus:
The first thing I did was remove the lid. Now, you'd expect that from me - but I have an excuse. I had hardware to add.



In the picture, you can see the ARM710 card on the upper left. Next to that is the DMA network
connector (the flat white connector). Then you can see the VRAM, it is the thing that looks like
a SIMM sat completely upright. Follow it towards the logical front and you'll see the original
16Mb SIMM at a 45-degree angle. Carry on and just before the power wires you'll see the latter
16Mb SIMM, also at a 45-degree angle.
In the space in front of the ARM710 card, it is the IOMD which basically takes care of loads of
hardware I/O issues.


# Modefile written by !MakeModes version 0.26 (14th December 1994) file_format:1 monitor_title:Presario 1410 DPMS_state:2 # 2048 x 768 (60Hz) startmode mode_name:2048 x 768 x_res:2048 y_res:768 pixel_rate:130000 h_timings:272,288,32,2048,32,16 v_timings:6,29,0,768,0,3 sync_pol:0 endmode # EndI have many more modes. Loads of them, but I have only selected the common ones to be included in the menu, and I've bumped the refresh rates as high as I can. Why have flicker when a little extra fiddling can gain you a useful 10Hz in refresh rates? Then again, I can see a number of florescent tubes - especially when out of beat with themselves - so maybe this means more to me than a typical user?
What is very cool is the system can be gamma corrected. Mine is visually gamma'd to the environment of my bedroom at three o'clock in the morning. This is like the Matrix. It isn't something I can really explain to you, you have to be shown. Preferably showing you a monitor that has a grey-style desktop (ie, most of them) with a nice colour picture. You'll agree, it is nice grey, with a colour picture. Then I either load the gamma correction, or switch on another monitor with the gamma correction set up. You'll see it has slightly more contrast, it looks brighter but somehow darker, and my god, the first one was so red it is unreal. So on my monitor, the grey is grey. Proper grey. Not reddish grey. And the red, green, and blue are all seperately corrected so it is visually perfect. Why? Not because it is necessary for my use of the machine, but because it can be done. And hell, if it can be done then it should be done. It took me all of two days to get totally used to a correct display where colours look correct. Now most PCs I look at look terrible. But Macs don't. What does that say to you? Uh-hu, me too. :-)
There are four (ARM) processors available:
There are four versions of the operating system:

The image (is a gamma-corrected for my printer driver, that why it might look a little bright)
shows my usual setup. It is 1024x768, though I tend to use 800x600. I like it, and it is nice to
know if I need more room I have a selection of larger modes available. Things are clear and
readable (I am myopic).
You can see my QuickVoy internet toolbar. Telnet and ftp are not available, so I am off-line,
though the telephone in green tells me that too (it goes red when on-line).
My most used things are down the right, pinned to the backdrop.
FYEO (For Your Eyes Only) is displaying one of the pictures of Willow from my website.
The PC card is running Windows 3.11.
The taskmanager is showing the application use of memory. I have 17Mb still free.
Loaded, but not in use, is my usual web browser - it's the little planet Earth icon.
Also there is trusty Edit, the basic file editor for which I wouldn't use ANY other
system without. It's the blue pen.
Printer drivers for my DeskJet (a turbodriver - very fast printing) and my faxmodem are
loaded.
All of the rectangles on the bottom left/centre are harddisc partitions/harddiscs except for :0
which is the floppy. I like partitions. :-) Don't be fooled into thinking it's the same
disc. You are looking at three harddiscs on two different filing systems. One of the strengths
of RISC OS is they can be individual (idefs::arabella.$, or adfs::4.$) or you just
click and they all look the same.
The font manager is one of the major strengths of RISC OS, and is why it is making tracks in the set-top-box internet market. Acorn was mostly bought out by Pace (as in satellite decoders and set-top-boxes) and they bought into a great asset in the fontmanager alone. Of course, a processor that doesn't even get hot when running flat out, and a powerful operating system that fits into a few megabytes in its entirety are also benefits too. But the font manager rocks. It makes it possible to use fonts in crappy displays (like a television set!), and it provides sharp intelligent anti-aliasing. Recently (well, three or so years) the font manager has been able to fully anti-alias over a background which is... way cool. As for the rest of it, we've had it for well over a decade.


Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying RISC OS is the OS to end all OSes. It has many flaws, like a
total lack of inter-process protection. The OS positively invites me to drop to SVC mode and
screw with its insides, and I can play merry hell with the memory tables with a few simple
commands typed into BASIC.
Why? Because it is an OS written with a hacker mentality. It was intended for use as a multi-user
OS just as much as Windows was intended to be plugged into the internet. Ie, it just wasn't.
But it shows amazing innovation. When you consider that Acorn not only designed the OS, they
designed the processor, the support chipset, and the computers that they're running their OS on.
It's amazing, and will never cease to spew forth shame on the American corporate
giants that throw money and manpower at OS development issues and still get their asses
kicked by the likes of Linux. Shame for not having proper anti-aliasing. Shame for TrueType
fonts. Shame for Internet security so poor that the nmap utility rates many Windows95 boxen as
"Trivial joke". Shame for the Melissa/LoveBug virus, and shame to those who still
trust MicroSoft (third time lucky, eh guys?). Shame for megalithic operating systems that consume
resources almost as fast as you buy them. Shame for releasing W95 without the ability to even
change modes.
But most of all, extreme kudos to American Corporate Assholes for being so god damned
frivolous with system resources that I can pick up a dirt-cheap 10Gb harddisc for coming on to
spare change, and thanks for making big SIMMs cheap. And thanks for simply existing, so I can
look at my RISC OS machine and no that for all its faults, it makes sense. And it won't try and
tell me how it thinks I should run my world. And, just, thank God or Hecate or whoever for the
fact that I do not need to use Office 2000 or any version of Word.