For the first time in many years, the Amiga will finally have a modern, advanced and powerful new PPC technology, which will mark a whole new beginning for the Amiga, after 25 years from the time Amiga was introduced for the first time to the public with Amiga 1000...
There has been many years of darkness for the Amiga in term of a modern up-to-date hardware to run the ever increasingly improvement of the AmigaOS, but 2010 ends the year of these darkness of outdated poor Amiga hardware..
While some PC-stubborn Windows-lovers might argue about the Amiga not using new technology like DDR3,
SATA3 and USB3, AmigaOne X1000, to not mention
SAM460ex, will still be the most advanced Amiga hardware that have ever seen the light, especially
in the Amiga scene, and they will for the first time provide things like DDR2, PCI-e, SATA2 and USB2,
among others..
In reality, there seem to be little difference between version 2 and 3 of DDR, SATA and USB, also according
to the information found from Google, and from people
with great knowledge of these components. What makes a noticeable difference of version 2 and 3, is speed..
Here is where it will become interesting. The Nemo-motherboard of AmigaOne X1000 is believed to be
housing the extremely powerful and advanced PA6T
PPC CPU from P.A Semi, which is a true 64-bit RISC
PowerPC-processor with a lot of impressive features,
and can simply run in 32-bit RISC mode, which is ideal
for any versions of AmigaOS4, until there will be a 64-bit SMP AmigaOS sometime in the future. The PowerISA 2.04 architecture of this moderboard is extremely advanced when considering it is using DDR2, PCI-e x16,
Gigabit Ethernet, SATA2, USB2 and other goodies, and
with the XMOS co-processor Xena, the combination is a perfect match of a powerhouse well balanced in price
and performance for a futuristic Amiga dekstop system!
A-EON have made the perfect choice of deciding the final spesifications for the new AmigaOne X1000 to be the first new High-End Amiga desktop computer platform!
1.8Ghz Dual-Core PowerISA 2.04 compilant PPC CPU
(which is definitely the PA6T), 2GB DDR2 SDRAM,
500GB SATA2 with AmigaOS 4.1 pre-installed,
an ATI Radeon HD 4xx0 card (based on RV700),
7.1 HD Audio and many other amazing stuffs, are
just the perfect beginning of a new start for the Amiga!
Ok, now to the main point of this topic: Think carefully of this. Not only will several developers of software, games and general hardwares will be able to make support for the new A1-X1000 and SAM460ex, but Hyperion Entertainment will be able to fully support new technology in AmigaOS as they appear...
It's not unthinkable that Hyperion Entertainment and their OS4 Development Team will be able to use both an
A1-X1000 and SAM460ex to make full support of new technology like DDR2, SATA2, PCI-e, USB2, SMP-support,
HD-support, special Xena-support and afterward include Java-support, new graphic subsystem and improved 3D features in AmigaOS4 and beyond..
This is why A1-X1000 and SAM460ex are perfect as the
first modern and powerful Amiga-systems for ages!
In a couple of years, there will be other and greater Amiga hardware based on the idea of A1-X1000 and SAM460, but then probably be using an even more advanced PPC technology that supports DDR3, SATA3,
USB3 and will bring other new technolgy and improvement to the Amiga hardware scene again..
Who knows? Perhaps then AmigaOS4 has reached such a stage being able to support all these technologies that it will be very easy for Hyperion Entertainment to finally introduce a 64-bit SMP AmigaOS that will run on any hardware, even newer PPC-technology that might be using DDR3, SATA3, USB3 and whatever might be out there in a couple of years time...
That's why A1-X1000 and SAM460 define a whole new beginning for the Amiga. A beginning that will finally let the Amiga form its' future for real, and making life much easier for developers like Hyperion Entertainment and many others!
The end of the tunnel is getting lighter and lighter, beginning from the summer of 2010 and going on forever into the eternity! Mark my words, as they are very true..
Written by:
Helgis, Norway