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Risc PCwas a range of personal computers launched in 1994 byAcornand replaced the precedingArchimedesseries. The machines had a unique architecture unrelated to IBM PC clones and were notable for using the Acorn developedARMCPU which is now widely used in mobile devices.[3][4]
Developer | Acorn Computers |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Acorn Computers,Castle Technology[1] |
Release date | 15 April 1994 |
Discontinued | 11 November 2003[2] |
Operating system | RISC OS |
CPU | ARMv3/ARMv4 |
Graphics | VIDC20 |
Dimensions |
|
Predecessor | Archimedesseries |
Successor | Phoebe,Iyonix PC,A9home |
Related | A7000 |
At launch, the original Risc PC 600 model was fitted as standard with an ARM 610, a 32-bit RISC CPU with 4KB of cache and clocked at 30MHz. CPU technology advanced rapidly in this period though and within only two years a DECStrongARMcould be installed at 233MHz which was around 8 times faster.[5]
The machines ran theRISC OSoperating system which has a windowed cooperative multi-tasking design. Unusually for a PC of the period the O/S was stored inROM,which enabled a relatively fast boot time.
In contrast to most contemporary IBM clones, the machines supported multiple processors as a standard feature. Secondary (or "guest" ) CPUs did not need to be ARM based and could be an entirely different architecture. It was possible to add anx86CPU which enabled use of operating systems includingDOSandWindows 95.Cards could often be added to other machines of the era to run DOS software but more usually these would implement the majority of an IBM PC clone on the card. The Risc PC required only the addition of the relevant CPU with some interface logic.
Alternate operating systems ran concurrently with RISC OS in a window. Applications from both operating systems could run at the same time in a similar fashion to avirtual machinewith data shared between them. While now a ubiquitous technology, this was a less common feature in 1994 and more usually only one operating system would run at once on a single PC.
The Risc PC had a novel case design where additional chassis, known as "slices", could be stacked on top of each other, expanding the height of the machine. Up to six additional slices could be stacked, each containing additional drives or expansion cards (known as "podules" ). At the time the IBM clone industry was standardised around the PCI bus, but Acorn used its own bus implementation that was not compatible and required its own unique expansion cards. The machines did use the then industry standard IDE orSCSIdrives found in contemporary PCs.
Acorn discontinued production of the Risc PC in 1998 after a corporate reorganisation butCastle Technologycontinued manufacturing the machines until 2003 and subsequently then produced their own similar designs. RISC OS is still available after becoming an open source product.[6]
Technical specifications
edit- CPU:Dual-processor slots, one host processor and one guest processor.
- Host processors:
- Guest processors:
- Memory type:Two 72-pin FPMSIMMslots, supporting a maximum memory size of 256 MiB.
- Video subsystem:VIDC20controller, with optional dual-port VRAM up to 2 MiB.[9]
- Expansion:Eurocard-sizedPodulesupport in common with Archimedes-series machines. The Risc PC also offers DMA support in the first two podules on the bus. Third parties produced similar cards.
- Operating system:RISC OS,stored in 4 MiB ROM (RISC OS 3.50 shipped on 2 MiB ROMs) supplemented by disc-based components.
- Fitted as standard:
- RISC OS 3.50 (Risc PC 600)
- RISC OS 3.60 (Risc PC 700)
- RISC OS 3.70 (StrongARM Risc PC)
- RISC OS 3.71 (StrongARM Risc PC J233)
- RISC OS 4.03 (Kinetic Risc PC)
- RISC OS 4, RISC OS Select, RISC OS Adjust and RISC OS 6 are available fromRISCOS Ltdas a replacement for the Acorn-implemented versions.[10]
- RISC OS 5 fromRISC OS Openwith the CPU running in 32-bit mode.
- Linux– no longer supported.[11]
- NetBSD[12]
- Fitted as standard:
- Case:Designed by industrial designerAllen Boothroyd[13]of Cambridge Product Design (designer of the BBC Micro case). Custom plastic-based design with a 'slice' feature which allows extra case modules to be added to increase internal expansion space. Each slice adds two podule bays at the rear, and twodrive bays(one 3.5-inch, one 5.25-inch) at the front, covered by a retractable flap to hide cosmetic inconsistencies in hue. Some slices were internally sprayed with nickel paint to meet electromagnetic and radio emissions regulations.
- CD-ROM drive:Optional extra, offering limited compatibility withmultimediaPCCD-ROMs.[14]
- Ports:RS-232serial, parallel,PS/2keyboard, Acorn mouse, headphone audio out,DE15VGA,network (optional).
- Additional configurations:
- Hydra multi-processor development system from Simtec. This plugged into the front processor slot and propagated the two original slots from the standard Risc PC, adding five extra slots, four being used by processor cards (these being the existing ARM610 or ARM710 cards at that time) with one slot accepting a static RAM card acting as a cache or shared memory. The Hydra card provided arbitration logic to manage the multiprocessor functionality, avoiding the need for each processor card to have such logic (as was the case with the 486 processor card which had an ASIC for this purpose), thus providing the hardware basis of a multiprocessing solution for the Risc PC. Simtec were considering Taos and Helios as potential operating systems to make use of the card.[15]
- Dimensions:117 (182 for two centre-sections) × 355 × 384 mm (H×W×D).
Use
editThe Risc PC was used by music composers and scorewriters to run theSibeliusscorewriting software.[16]
Between 1994 and 2008, the Risc PC andA7000+were used in television for broadcast automation, programmed by the UK company OmniBus Systems: once considered "the world leader in television station automation" and at one point automating "every national news programme on terrestrial television in the United Kingdom".[17]The Risc PC, in the form of the OmniBus Workstation, and a customised version of the A7000+ built into a 19-inch rack mount unit, known as the OmniBus Interface Unit, were used to control/automate multiple television broadcast devices from other manufacturers in a way that was unusual at the time. In 2002, OmniBus products were "in constant use worldwide at nearly 100 broadcasters" including the BBC and ITN.[18]: 2
Timeline
edit- 1994 – Risc PC 600 launched, featuring a 30 MHz ARM610 CPU.[4]
- 1995 – 40 MHz ARM710 CPU upgrade and Risc PC 700 model launched.[4][19]
- 1996 – 200 MHz StrongARM CPU upgrade released, offering a five-fold increase in raw processing power compared to the ARM7 used in the previous high-end machines.[20]
- 1997 – Acorn launch Acorn J233 StrongARM Risc PC, featuring an uprated 233 MHz model of StrongARM and including Browser and Java software.[21]
- 1998 –Castle Technologyacquire the rights to continue to market and produce the Risc PC during the breakup of Acorn Computers.[22]
- 2000 – In May, Castle Technology reveal the Kinetic Risc PC range which included a faster processor card with onboard memory.[23]
- 2001 – Viewfinder Podule, AGP adapter allows the use of IBM PC clone AGP graphics cards (e.g. a range of ATI Rage and Radeon).[24]
- 2003 – Castle Technology announce the end of production and sale of the Risc PC.[22]
Risc PC 2
editAcorn set about designing theRisc PC 2,later renamed to Phoebe 2100 – a design with a 64 MHz front-side bus,PCIslots, and a yellowNLXform-factorcase.[25]Slated for release in late 1998, the project was abandoned just before completion, when Acorn's Workstation Division was closed. Only two prototypes were ever built, and one was publicly displayed for historical interest at the RISC OS 2001 show inBerkshire,England.[26]The remaining cases were bought by CTA Direct who sold them off to the public.[27]
After Acorn
editIn 2003 it was confirmed that no more Risc PCs would be produced.[22]However RISC OS computers based on other ARM processors machines have been manufactured by companies since this date.
- Castle Technology–Iyonix PCbased on theIntel XScaleARM processor and PCIbus
- Advantage Six–A9homebased on theSamsungS3C2440 ARM processor
- RiscStation–R7500based on the ARM7500-FE processor
Significantly better performance has been reached on the aged Risc PC design by using the newer 203 (and later 236) MHz StrongARM CPU, using third-partyvideo cards,overclocking,and having specially-designed CPU cards withRAMlocated upon them to sidestep the speed bottleneck of the slow system bus.
Limitations
editThe 16 MHzfront-side busis usually recognised as being the most significant fault of the computer; and the arrival of the (five times faster)StrongARMprocessor in 1996 meant that the Risc PC had aCPUsignificantly faster than the computer had been designed for. Acorn had originally expected ARM CPUs to progress from the 30 MHz ARM6 to the 40 MHz ARM7, and then onto the ARM8 cores, which at the time were clocked at around 50–80 MHz. In 2000, Castle released "Kinetic", a new StrongARM processor board with its own onboard memory slots augmenting main memory, reducing the need to negotiate the slow front-side bus for memory accesses.
The podule bus on the Risc PC can achieve a maximum data throughput of approximately 6100 KByte/s. It is 32-bit and Risc PC predecessors have a 16-bit bus.[28]For comparison, thePCI bus,which was available in systems at the time of the Risc PC's introduction, is over 20 times faster. The transfer of 650 MB would take 2 minutes via podule, compared to 5 seconds via PCI.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Acorn Computers Ltd (12 October 1998)."Acorn announces distribution deal with Castle Technology for RISC based products".Press release.Acorn Computers Ltd. Archived fromthe originalon 6 May 1999.Retrieved6 January2011.
(October 12th 1998), Cambridge, UK-Acorn announced today that it has completed negotiations with Castle Technology for them to distribute Acorn products.
- ^Mike Williams (11 November 2003)."Risc PC to Cease Production".Newsgroup:comp.sys.acorn.announce.Usenet:[email protected].Retrieved30 August2019.
- ^"Acorn launches the Risc PC"(PDF).Developers' Newsletter No. 33 – April 1994.Acorn Computers.30 April 1994.Retrieved26 January2018.
... on Friday April 15th...
- ^abc"Chris's Acorns: Risc PC Computers".Chris Whytehead. 2009.Retrieved26 January2018.
- ^"RiscPC processors - ARM 610, ARM710 and StrongARM".retro-kit.co.uk.Retrieved11 September2023.
- ^"RISC OS Open: Welcome".riscosopen.org.Retrieved10 September2023.
- ^Penman, Danny (15 April 1994)."Computers: System that holds the right cards".The Independent.London.Retrieved6 September2011.
The modular design of the new computer allows a PC 486 processor to be added using a card...
- ^"Used Acorn 586 ACA57 Risc PC IBM 5x86C 100MHz Second Generation PC Card".eBay.Retrieved8 November2017.
IBM 5x86C 100MHz Second Generation PC Card
- ^"APDL RiscWorld".Application Note 254.Acorn Computers.9 June 2003.Retrieved30 August2019.
- ^"Chris's Acorns: RISC OS Ltd".Chris Whytehead. 2009.Retrieved26 January2018.
- ^"ARM Linux Acorn Overview".ARMLinux. 2009.Retrieved13 August2009.
- ^"NetBSD/acorn32".NetBSD. 2009.Retrieved13 August2009.
- ^Burley, Ian (June 1994)."Acorn RISC PC 600"(PDF).Personal Computer World.Retrieved30 August2013.
- ^Lambert, Andy (20 October 1995)."Trading on misguided loyalties?".Times Educational Supplement.Retrieved10 November2011.
Acorn has been pressed to give its users access to Windows Multimedia PC CDs... there are still doubts about full compatibility.
- ^"Simtec multi-processor board arrives".Acorn User.December 1995. p. 9.Retrieved1 April2021.
- ^Bourgeois, Derek (11 November 2001)."Score yourself an orchestra".The Guardian.Retrieved10 May2011.
Many composers bought an Archimedes simply to have access to the program.
- ^Nightingale, Julie (5 January 1999)."Radio ham makes the TV news".The Guardian.Retrieved31 March2022.
- ^RISC OS Promotional Brochure(PDF).RISCOS Ltd. 14 August 2002.Retrieved31 March2022.
- ^Barlow, Richard (December 1995)."ARM710 upgrade".Acorn User.p. 51.Retrieved15 November2021.
- ^"Chris's Acorns: ART StrongARM CPU".Chris Whytehead. 2009.Retrieved26 January2018.
- ^Whytehead, Chris."Acorn J233 StrongARM Risc PC".
- ^abcWilliams, Chris (11 November 2003)."Castle bids farewell to Risc PC".Drobe.Retrieved30 August2019.
- ^Bailey, Alasdair (9 May 2000)."Castle reveal Kinetic to the press".The Icon Bar.Retrieved13 August2009.
- ^"Viewfinder 2 revealed".Drobe.19 January 2002.Retrieved30 August2019.
- ^"Clan Newsletter August 1998".Acorn Computers. August 1998.Retrieved19 August2009.
- ^"Risc PC 2 at RISC OS 2001".Drobe.2001.Retrieved13 August2009.
- ^Goodwin, Richard (12 August 2000)."Phoebe cases on sale".The Icon Bar.Retrieved19 August2009.
- ^Hill, Andrew; Williams, Chris (2 June 2004)."Podule Bus review".Drobe.Retrieved30 August2019.