Tuesday, 29 January 2019

New Computer Rooms in 2019

Hi all, and welcome to my first blog post for 2019. I hope you all had a great Xmas and New Year.

As mentioned in my last blog post in late December 2018, I have been very busy over Xmas and New Year moving house!

This of course meant packing up all my computers including my beloved Amiga systems (and everything else of course!) and setting up from scratch in a new home.


Over the past long weekend I finally made some progress on the new computer rooms in the new place. I am very happy to say I have more than one computer room now! :-)

For those who have been through this (packing up an over-full computer room and setting up again), you would know it is a serious amount of work! You have my respect!

Here is the last photo I took of my old computer room in December 2018 prior to packing it all up:


Looking back at it now I am so amazed I managed to fit everything into this room.

Needing to keep a computer running while packing made for some tricky packing but I managed it..

Previously this Ikea cupboard was filled with software and the top of it covered in screens and computers I couldn't set up in the room due to lack of space.


After we moved house and I unpacked the rest of the house, I could then start work on building my new computer rooms in the new house. One of the key criteria of the new place is that it needed more space for my computers, and I certainly have that now!

I now have three rooms to work with, each one is the same size as the original room I was using in the old house for everything!

One room is for the modern systems, one exclusively for Classic Amiga systems, and the other for "everything else" including the AmigaOne NG systems. I may move the Amiga NG systems into the modern room depending on space requirements - we'll see.

To start with I worked on building the modern room (not pictured). Following that, the Classic Amiga room was next on the list and of most interest for this blog!

Some problems presented themselves quickly, like a lack of desks, lack of network connectivity between rooms, lack of power boards and lack of speakers...when they were in one room I needed much less equipment.

So I got some ethernet over power devices to connect up the three rooms, and connect them to the network and internet in the modern room. I also bought a bunch of speakers and desks...

Anyway, I got to work assembling my old desks and disk drawers which I plan to use in the Amiga room.

I even found my old dining table during the move and decided to re-use it in the Amiga room to save money on desks since I had to spend quite a bit upfront on this stuff (not to mention the house)!


I added my Amiga30 poster to stamp this as an Amiga room, and loaded up my drawers filled with thousands of Amiga floppy disks.


Since my Amiga 1000 had little love in the old place (no room to set it up), I decided to get it running first, along with the Amiga 2000!


Here is the Amiga 2000 up and running again. Something is wrong with the mouse port though. I can click left and right mouse buttons but the mouse does not move on screen. I tried three different working mice and no go.


I can use the manual Amiga mouse workaround on the Workbench screen in the meantime. You can do this by holding down the left Amiga key and cursor keys to move it around and LeftAlt+Left Amiga to left click, etc.

Now is not the time to fix it, so I just got the mod music going on the A2000 and moved on to the next task!

Here is the Amiga 1000 and Amiga 2000 running side by side. I added the ram expansions and two external floppy drives to the Amiga 1000.


Interesting thing I found while doing this is that the Amiga 1000 wouldn't boot any disks with the external disk drives connected together. If I connected each drive one at a time to the Amiga 1000 it worked fine! Strange! 

Anyway, I worked out that one of the external floppy drives caused the problem when it was the first external drive. When I changed it so it was the last drive, everything worked fine! Weird, as the Commodore 1010 has no toggle switch for on/off, etc. Anyway, it works now so I am happy with that!

I promptly got distracted playing demos on the Amiga 1000 for a bit - which is good as I wanted a small break:


Next up is unpacking and building the Amiga 500 and A4000T:


The Amiga 500 has been my focus of late with plenty of blog posts recently on my work on it, with the upgrades and AmigaOS 3.1.4 installation covered, amongst others.


Here it is, the expanded Amiga 500 up and running and working perfectly.


I left some space on the right for the Amiga 1200/Amiga 600. I don't have enough screens for them all right now, so I plan to connected the A1200 via DVI and the A500 via VGA to the two inputs on the screen and switch them as needed in the meantime.

I was planning on doing the Amiga 4000T next but got a bit distracted setting up the CDTV and Amiga 1200 instead:


 One of the reasons for the distraction was the arrival of the recently released boxed Amiga games Powerglove reloaded and Tiger Claw from RGCD for the Amiga 500, CDTV and CD32!


I previously used the ADF version on the gotek when I looked at this game last year on the blog, while waiting for the boxed one to turn up. Unfortunately for me the floppy disk version I got has a read/write error on it :-(

I unpacked and setup the CDTV so I could try out the CD version, which works great:



Tiger Claw also has a CDTV/CD32 version included, which I fired up on the CDTV.

Part of the reason of the positioning of the CDTV and CD32 on the disk drawer is because the CDTV and CD32 discs are in the top left drawer just below it! Easy to access:


The CD32 was working ok on initial test, but when I opened the lid after testing below, the bracket snapped! :-(


Despite this, things are starting to fill up nicely in the Amiga room:


I was going to show a shot from the Amiga 1200 but it appears to have a problem since the last time I used it. It powers on (lights showing) but nothing else. No booting and no insert disk screen. Holding the mouse buttons down on boot yields nothing..I'll have to look at it later.

Next I got to work on the Amiga 4000T setup, which uses a dual display, one for the RTG Voodoo3 PCI card, and one for the native output using an Indivision AGA output:


The system is working, but still has a problem with the data partition (SFS) which decided last year to become unreadable! I need to fix this too! Classic Amigas - everytime you move them you get problems..well, at least for me. YMMV!

Anyway, I moved on to setup the Amiga 4000D. This system has long been in storage as I had no room to set it up. It is nice to finally be able to set it up to use it again:


I am pleased to report it survived storage and the move just fine and works perfectly.


I also hooked up the Amiga 2000, Amiga 4000T and Amiga 4000D to the internet using a network switch I connected in the room to the power over ethernet device. I took the opportunity to download some new releases from Aminet while there:


With that done, the Amiga room is mostly built (in it's initial form anyway!) Phew! Really glad to have it done at last - some more completed photos:


My biggest happiness with the new room is finally being able to use all the Amiga systems at any time, without having to pack up a system, rewire and unpack another one.



I realise that many other Amiga people have much bigger and more complete collections than I do, but I am very happy with the systems I have. I am not hunting for any more. I just wanted to be able to use all the ones I have today!


With the Amiga room now done, I turned my attention to the "everything else" room, which includes the NG AmigaOne systems.

I used all of my previous desks in the modern room and Amiga room, so I had to buy new desks for the other room. I went cheap for these desks, as I don't need fancy desks - just functional. I found these cheapies from Officeworks for under $100 each. I got three to start, but will need more!


As I said, these desks are not fancy. But I have to stick to a budget for these:


Here are the three desks installed. I will add another one later on, but I need to unpack the systems first to make room for it!


Initially I set up the Commodore 64, FM Towns and Commodore Plus/4. The Plus/4 is another victim of lack of space in the old place, rarely seeing use. Now it will be permanently set up! :-)


I also use a switchbox to switch the Intellivision FPGA, Sega Megadrive FPGA, C64, Plus/4 and PC Engine (not yet installed in the photo below) to the screen:


Unfortunately I only have one video cable for the C64 so I have to swap it with the Plus/4 when I want to use it. I will try to find another video cable for the Plus 4 later on:


Next up is the AmigaOne X1000. I also started the setup of the IBM Pentium 200MMX PC - as it uses PS/2 my plan to is to use the PS/2 KVM switchbox I was using in the old place to switch between the Minimig, Chameleon64 and IBM PC on it's screen to save some space and also because all of them need PS/2 keyboard and mice to operate and I only have one set of those!


It is great to have the AmigaOne X1000 up and running.

This X1000 setup (like the old place) is using a 5 port HDMI switchbox and audio switcher so I can connect HDMI devices with audio out (like SNES Mini, NES Mini and Switch) to one audio switch and screen, and use the other position for the X1000 and other NG Amigas.


Here is the setup with the SNES Mini and NES Mini installed. I also connected the X1000 via a small network switch to the ethernet over power that goes to the modern room. I added the Nintendo Switch to this as well later on (not shown in photo).


There is plenty of work still to be done but I wanted to get a blog post out in January so you could see what I have been up to - I have been so busy!

Hopefully things will start to settle down in February as I finish the rooms and can actually do some new stuff with my Amiga systems! Thanks for your patience!


Saturday, 15 December 2018

AmigaOS 3.1.4 on A500

Today for my last blog post for 2018 I am taking a quick look at the installation of the recently released AmigaOS 3.1.4 by Hyperion Entertainment on my Amiga 500.


The amazing thing here is that this is the first upgrade for Classic AmigaOS since v3.9 Boing Ball 2 back in 2001!

The new Hyperion Entertainment v3.1.4 2018 release is in fact an upgrade to the Commodore released Workbench 3.1 released back in 1993, rather than the AmigaOS v3.5 and v3.9 versions released in 1999 and 2000 by another company called Haage & Partner.

I bought my v3.1.4 release from Alinea Computer.

This 3.1.4 release also includes an updated 3.1.4 kickstart rom, which needs to be physically installed in the Amiga 500.


You can register your kickstart rom registration number on Hyperion Entertainment's website to get access to the rom file (for soft kicking on your Amigas if you don't want to use a physical kickstart rom). You can also get the adf files of the Workbench v3.1.4 disk set to load up on the gotek, and some new icons created for the 3.1.4 release too!

Update 16/12:18: Some requirements to be aware of is that this release requires more than 512k memory to work. So this rules out base model Amigas that have no expanded memory installed. It does apparently work fine on 68000 CPU systems. Hyperion Entertainment says in their FAQ document with the download package (from their website) that the actual memory usage requirements are:

0.6 MB just to boot + 0.5 MB for loading ROM modules + 0.9 MB for free
memory. So really, it is 2MB required. Keep this in mind.

Instructions are included on how to install the kickstart rom in each Classic Amiga model supported by this release. Note that this won't be installable on CD32 or CDTV, probably due to the differences in the roms to support auto booting CD's, Audio CD playback menus, etc. (unless you are happy to lose those features!)

Anyway, I set to work unscrewing my Amiga 500 again for another hardware upgrade!


Here you can see the original 1.3 kickstart rom installed - next to the 2MB chip ram upgrade Ace2 I installed recently:


After my problems with my chip extractor last time, I went out and bought a brand new one which I am pleased to say works much better! The kickstart rom chip came out perfectly first time:


Here is the new 3.1.4 kickstart rom in place:


It feels pretty good to have a kickstart rom upgrade for the first time since 1993!


Next I powered on the A500 without any attached devices except the floppy drive. Success!


Close up of the new Kickstart insert disk screen, showing the new 3.1.4 kickstart version 46.143, and a boing ball in place of the old checkmark, similar to the kickstarts on NG AmigaOS4.1 FE.


I then attached my ACA500 back onto the A500. Here is where I needed to do some configuration work before I could go much further.

The ACA500 CF card boots Workbench 3.1, which will not work properly with the new rom until I install the new Workbench 3.1.4 onto the CF card.

I also need to avoid using the soft kick 3.1 rom option in the ACA500, as I want it to use the onboard 3.1.4 kickstart rom instead. So I needed to configure a custom profile, which I did as Profile #02. I set the options as below:


Having set the configuration as I needed to, I then saved the configuration as Profile 02:


I next powered off, and set the DF0 selector to use the external floppy drive instead of the gotek. I could then boot the Workbench 3.1.4 Install disk to get the installation to the CF card underway:


So this is the first boot of Workbench 3.1.4 on my Amiga 500, using the Install disk:


The Workbench and Work partitions are on the Amiga CF card in the ACA500, and the PC0 is the PC FAT32 formatted CF card in the other slot on the ACA500.

The gotek is using a A1000 kickstart disk adf so that it can't boot (in case you were wondering).

I then started the Workbench 3.1.4 installation, which works identically to the old Workbench 3.1 installations:


Ready to start the installation proper:



The Workbench 3.1.4 installation then detects my existing Workbench 3.1 installation and offers to upgrade it:


Of course I want to proceed with this! Next it backs up some of the old files no longer needed to the Workbench:OLD drawer:


The next step says it will delete some "old files no longer needed", without specifying what they are! You can manually step through this bit to make sure you are not deleting anything important. I decided to throw caution to the wind on this occasion and proceeded to let it delete what it thought it needed to:


The installation then proceeded as per a normal Workbench install, prompting for the various disks as usual:


It is somewhat nostalgic and kinda cool to be installing a new Amiga operating system from floppy disk in 2018! Here the floppies are all laid out ready for me to swap in as requested:



The installation warns me that it has detected an 030/040/060 CPU (from the A1200 accelerator attached to the ACA500) and I should ensure the appropriate libraries are installed for it before rebooting.


For an 030 accelerator there is no specific libraries I am aware of. This warning normally applies to 040 and 060 accelerator cards. So I didn't do anything further and proceeded anyway.

Update 16/12/18: I have been informed on Facebook by Robert (cheers mate) that actually there *IS* a 68030 specific bug fixing library called mulib available on aminet here that should be installed as part of the installation. Apparently this addresses a bug in the EC030 without an MMU installed, which applies to me since I have a A1200 accelerator with an EC030 installed. You learn something every day! 

I have downloaded it and transferred by PC formatted CF card to the Amiga 500. I then extracted and installed the update and now the warning message on boot regarding this point (as below) goes away. 


The Mulibs install takes a while and needs a reboot once completed - I installed as a novice user and it installed everything without further prompting from me.
 

Anyway, back to the original installation now!

The installation is now finished:


I then rebooted from the CF card in the ACA500 and very soon my new upgraded Workbench 3.1.4 appears.


I see it has maintained my MagicWB colours and icon settings, and as expected it has blown away my Dopus 5 workbench replacement installation.


I get rid of the backdrop first of all to uncluttered the workbench, never did understand why that was included in Workbench!


That done I took a look around the drawer structure and everything appears as I would expect. Workbench 3.1.4 changes are mostly under the hood.


I plan to do a deep dive on the new features and updates in v3.1.4 in 2019 but for now I am glad that it is up and running on my Amiga 500.

Update 18/12/18: I downloaded the optional icon pack and bonus wallpapers from Hyperion's website after registering my kickstart rom serial number. Because the A500 is limited to 16 colours on the workbench, the new icons don't look that great (they do look ok in 16 colours though) as I think they are really intended for a RTG or AGA screen with 256 colours+. I will use them on the A2000 and other Amigas later on. 


I'll leave the MagicWB icons for the A500 for now as they look great with a small number of colours available for the workbench.

I plan to add Workbench 3.1.4 and kickstart roms to my A600, A1200, A4000D and A2000 too in due course! I bought additional copies for each machine.

I hope you have enjoyed my blog this year, and I look forward to do more blogging in 2019.

Please note that I will be going on holiday soon and moving house in the new year, so all my Amigas will be packed up and will not be accessible for some time from now. This is why this blog entry is a lot shorter than I originally planned, as I wanted to get it out before I packed up.

I expect to resume blogging as soon as I am set up again with my Amigas in my new place. I am not sure exactly when that will be but I will try to get it done asap.

In the meantime, I wish you all a Merry Xmas and Happy New Year, hope you continue enjoying your Amigas (Classic or NG) and see you again in 2019!