Retro meeting, CZ and 1080p video on AmigaOS 4 with A1222
I didn't expect to have any time to write a blog post in June (same as May and April), but as it turned out I did, so here I am!
There were plenty of other Commodore machines around too, C64, C128, Amigas and even Commodore PC systems:
For me, back in the day, I mostly saw Commodore Colt PC's - the later ones I was not really familiar with so much, so it was good to see some of these later models too.
This case below really reminds me a little bit of the Amiga 4000 desktop case:
Here is some more Commodore PC's:
Commodore Vic20 and C64's were everywhere:
A lot of people are not using real floppy drives on their C64's anymore it seems - cartridges, tape cart, SD2IEC or 1541UltimateII carts abound.
Commodore C64C models too - not just bread bins:
Commodore Amiga 500 and the A500 Mini system:
It was a great night and I had a great time.
If you haven't been and you are in Adelaide, head along and take a look!
Shortly after the meeting, I then travelled to Czech Republic again for work for much of May, and so I had little time to spend on my computers during May as a result.
I had 17 hours and 10 minutes of staring at this screen on Qantas from Perth to London to keep me occupied, while seated extremely uncomfortably in Economy as usual...noice cancelling headphones are critical!
Also add to that another 4 hours transit in Perth, 3 hours Qantas flight first from Adelaide, 4 hours transit in Heathrow, then another 2 hours on British Airways from London to Prague. 30 hours travel in total.
I was working very hard on this trip, block-booked all day every day with meetings and training sessions at the company headquarters located in Prague.
On the weekend, I managed a brief break to visit a restaurant I really wanted to visit in Prague - called Hoxton Burgers.
Why I hear you ask?
Probably closely followed by "seriously what has any of this got to do with computers"?
Hold on, explanation is incoming.
This restaurant is half owned by the one and only Tim Simenon, the retired musician responsible for Bomb The Bass. He wrote great music from 1988's 'Into the Dragon' until 2014's 'In the sun' release. After this he retired from music and moved into food.
I am a big fan of all his Bomb the Bass albums, and many unreleased songs and vinyl only releases he did that I also have in my collection.
Tim Simenon opened a restaurant in Prague called Brixton Balls that ran until its closure in 2019, and then this new joint venture from 2023, located near I.P Pavlova metro station. By the way, what a great name for a station...Pavlova is the name of a popular Australian dessert. :-)
Tim Simenon also produced songs for lots of other artists, like Seal's 'Crazy', Adamski's 'Killer', Neneh Cherry, Depeche Mode and others too.
I tucked into one of Hoxton Burgers meals for lunch, and listened to lots of Bomb the Bass music while in his restaurant. I had hoped to meet Tim in person, but apparently he is only there in the evenings, and I didn't have the time to do that with my work schedule. But I was happy to just be there anyway.
Thanks for all the amazing music Tim. Your restaurant makes great burgers too.
On my return home in late May, I tried to make some time to work on the AmigaOne A1222 system.
Continuing on from my previous post looking at the A1222 system, I proceeded to load lots of software on to the system, using OS4Depot.net and also standalone websites like AmigaAmp.de which has the AmigaAmp music player.
I ran into an issue with UADE: assign error below on the installation, which I assigned to the RAM disk extracted folder location.
Here you can Start AmigaOS or start Linux if you have it installed. I showed how to do that a long time ago here and later here showing Amiga emulation on it. Note that this linux distribution is no longer updated, so the version I tested is the last version you can run on A1222 - newer versions dropped PowerPC SPE builds.
Next was the puzzle game Ami-Ingenious. Haven't played this game in years, having covered it in this blog a long time ago.
I have a lot of AmigaOS 4 games on my AmigaOne X1000 and X5000 systems. It is much easier to copy the games across to the A1222 rather than downloading them all again.
As a kickstarter backer of the Tower 57 game, I paid for the AmigaOS 4 version of the game in addition to the Windows/Mac versions released with the game. I enjoy playing it on the A1222 too:
I should mention that the recently updated commercial released Heretic II (Hyperion) and Quake II (Alinea) games for AmigaOS 4 do NOT work on the A1222 as yet. They reportedly work fine on X1000 and X5000 systems but I have not bought them to try yet - just a warning for A1222 owners if you are thinking about it...
The issue is that modern 3D games that rely on FPU operations need to have SPE AmigaOS 4 builds of the program that support using the FPU emulation on the CPU on the A1222.
I also tried out FinalBurn Alpha for AmigaOS4 by HunoPPC, which to my surprise worked surprisingly well for playing various emulated arcade and other console system games on the A1222.
I prepped a test spreadsheet in Excel on my Mac Pro to try out with Ignition:
After the installation completed, I tested some classic Amiga games, and they work well on the A1222:
I also tested some newer ECS demos, and they ran well also - double clicking on the demo in AmigaOS 4 with RunInUAE present means it automatically launches it into the UAE emulation:
I could in theory transplant the current BIOS chip for the newer version enabling the RX cards to work in the Sam460CR.
For the Sam460CR it has no SATA ports on the board itself - so it needs the PCI SATA card to provide the SATA ports for the hard disk and DVD drive.
Doing this saves me time referring to the manual or the microscopic port descriptions on the board itself.
I removed the old SATA drive for the Sam460CR containing the AmigaOS 4.1 build for it, and put the SSD in its place. The other drive is a very old MorphOS build I did on the Sam460CR when it was new - I covered that in this blog here and later here dual booting MorphOS with AmigaOS 4.
My A1222 has no backplate, so sadly there is an obvious hole in the back of the MIDI case where the ports appear. Hopefully they will sell a backplate for it in the future so I can tidy this up.
I then tried out DV Player and to my surprise it immediately played back 1080p videos perfectly, something it couldn't do when using the old southern islands chipset Radeon graphics card.