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114 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
114 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
[← Home](../README.md) · [Overview](README.md)
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# Amiga History & Chipset Generations
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## Origins (1982–1985)
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The Amiga was designed by Jay Miner's team at Amiga Corporation (originally Hi-Toro), beginning in 1982 under the codename **Lorraine**. The primary design goal was a low-cost personal computer with dedicated custom silicon handling graphics, audio, and DMA — freeing the CPU for application code. Commodore Business Machines acquired Amiga Corporation in 1984, incorporating the technology into what would ship as the **Commodore Amiga 1000** in July 1985.
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The core insight was the **coprocessor paradigm**: three custom chips (Agnus, Denise, Paula) operate concurrently with the M68000, driven by a shared DMA bus arbitrated by Agnus. This allowed the Amiga to demonstrate color animation, digitised speech, and multitasking simultaneously — capabilities competitors would not match for years.
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---
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## Chipset Generations
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### OCS — Original Chip Set (1985–1990)
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| Component | Part Numbers | Role |
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|---|---|---|
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| **Agnus** | MOS 8361 (PAL), 8367 (NTSC) | DMA controller, Copper, Blitter, address gen |
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| **Denise** | MOS 8362 | Display: sprites, bitplanes, color decode |
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| **Paula** | MOS 8364 | Audio DMA (4 channels), disk I/O, serial I/O |
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Key characteristics:
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- **1 MB Chip RAM** maximum (512 KB in early A1000/A500 configs)
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- 6 bitplanes → 64 colors (EHB mode) or 4096 (HAM)
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- 8 hardware sprites (16px wide, 2bpp)
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- Copper coprocessor: 2 registers, WAIT/SKIP/MOVE instructions
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- Blitter: 3 source channels + destination, minterm logic, line mode
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Machines using OCS:
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- A1000 (1985) — first production Amiga
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- A500 (1987) — high-volume consumer model
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- A2000 (1987) — big-box, Zorro II expansion
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---
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### ECS — Enhanced Chip Set (1990–1992)
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| Component | Part Numbers | Role |
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|---|---|---|
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| **Super Agnus** | MOS 8372A | Agnus + 2 MB chip RAM addressing, BEAMCON0 |
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| **ECS Denise** | MOS 8373 | Denise + productivity modes, BPLCON3 |
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| **Paula** | MOS 8364 (unchanged) | Same as OCS |
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Key enhancements over OCS:
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- **2 MB Chip RAM** with Super Agnus (1 MB or 2 MB Agnus variants exist)
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- Productivity/multiscan display modes (VGA-compatible timing)
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- `BEAMCON0` register for programmable sync signals
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- `BPLCON3` for border blank, sprite control extensions
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- Super Agnus: larger copper/bitplane DMA window
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- Gary chip on A3000: bus controller, DMA, auto-config
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- **Gayle** chip on A600: IDE, PCMCIA interface, interrupt routing
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Machines using ECS:
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- A3000 (1990) — 68030, SCSI, ECS, Zorro III
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- A500+ (1991) — enhanced A500, 1 MB chip, ECS
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- A600 (1992) — compact, IDE disk, PCMCIA, Gayle
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---
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### AGA — Advanced Graphics Architecture (1992–1996)
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| Component | Part Numbers | Role |
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|---|---|---|
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| **Alice** | MOS 8374 | Super Agnus successor: 64-bit bus, FMODE |
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| **Lisa** | — | Denise successor: 8-bit palettes, chunky assist |
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| **Paula** | MOS 8364 (unchanged) | Same as OCS/ECS |
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Key enhancements over ECS:
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- **32-bit color registers**: 24-bit palette (256 colors, HAM8)
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- **256 color registers** (COLOR00–COLOR255)
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- HAM8 mode: 262,144 simultaneous colors
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- **64-bit blitter bus** via `FMODE` register (1x/2x/4x word transfers)
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- **BPLCON3 / BPLCON4**: sprite palette bank, bitplane bank select
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- **DIWHIGH**: extended display window for overscan
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- `FMODE`: configures DMA fetch width for blitter and bitplanes
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- **68030/040** CPUs with MMU and FPU
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- **Gayle** chip on A1200: IDE + PCMCIA (different pinout from A600)
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- **Ramsey** chip on A4000: 32-bit SIMM controller
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Machines using AGA:
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- A1200 (1992) — budget AGA: 68020, Gayle, PCMCIA
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- A4000 (1992) — premium AGA: 68030/040, IDE, Zorro III
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- A4000T (1994) — tower, SCSI, Zorro III
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- CD32 (1993) — game console, AGA, CD-ROM
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---
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## AmigaOS Version Timeline
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```mermaid
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timeline
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title AmigaOS Kickstart Timeline
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1985 : Kickstart 1.0 (A1000)
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1986 : Kickstart 1.1
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1987 : Kickstart 1.2 (33.180)
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1988 : Kickstart 1.3 (34.5) — most cloned
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1990 : Kickstart 2.0 (36.x) — new Shell, ASL, ReAction preview
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1991 : Kickstart 2.04 (37.175) — A500+ standard
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1992 : Kickstart 3.0 (39.x) — AGA support
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1993 : Kickstart 3.1 (40.x) — final Commodore release
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2002 : Kickstart 3.9 (Hyperion/Haage&Partner)
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2021 : Kickstart 3.2 (47.x) — Hyperion new-generation
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```
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---
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## Key References
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- **ADCD 2.1** — Amiga Developer CD, version 2.1 (OS 3.5 era): http://amigadev.elowar.com/read/ADCD_2.1/
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- **Hardware Reference Manual** (3rd ed.): `Hardware_Manual_guide/` on ADCD
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- **AmigaMail Vol. 2**: `AmigaMail_Vol2_guide/` on ADCD — developer newsletter with deep hardware/OS articles
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- Haynie, Dave — *Amiga Hardware Reference Manual* (Addison-Wesley, 1991, ISBN 0-201-56776-8)
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- Dewar, R. & Smosna, M. — *The Amiga User Interface Style Guide* (Addison-Wesley, 1992)
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