Atom
The Acorn Atom is a home computer made by Acorn Computers Ltd from 1980 to 1982, when it was replaced by the BBC Micro. The Micro began life as an upgrade to the Atom, originally known as the Proton.
The Atom was a progression of the MOS Technology 6502-based machines that the company had been making from 1979. The Atom was a cut-down Acorn System 3 without a disk drive but with an integral keyboard and cassette tape interface, sold in either kit or complete form. In 1980 it was priced between £120 in kit form, £170 ready assembled, to over £200 for the fully expanded version with 12 KB of RAM and the floating point extension ROM.
The minimum Atom had 2 KB of RAM and 8 KB of ROM, with the maximum specification machine having 12 KB of each. An additional floating point ROM was also available. The 12 KB of RAM was divided between 1 KB for the zero page, 5 KB available for programs, and 6 KB for the high resolution graphics. The zero page was used by the CPU for stack storage, by the OS, and by the Atom BASIC for storage of the 27 variables. If high resolution graphics were not required then 5½ KB of the upper memory could be used for program storage.
Médias
Bezel
Cover3d
Document
Hardware
Logo
Manual
N.C.
Theme
N.C.
Video
Wheel
Games for this system
Cylon Attack is a pseudo 3D space shooter played from a first-person perspective and clearly based …
None
None
Informations
Resolutions must match the following format:
[H.Res.]x[V.Res.] [V.Freq.]
Examples:
320x224 50.12
1280x720 60
286x228 59.1245
Language
You want to help the community ?
All the medias were created by the HFSPlay community. We are always looking for help to create quality content.