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A9home

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A9home
A9home front, showing power button, speaker sockets and USB ports
DeveloperAdvantage Six
ManufacturerSimtec Electronics
Release dateMay 2006 (2006-05)
Operating systemRISC OS
CPUSamsung S3C2440, ARM920T, ARMv4[1]
Memory128 MB SDRAM, 8 MB VRAM
Storage40 GB hard disk
PredecessorRisc PC, Iyonix PC
SuccessorTouch Book, ARMini

The A9home was a niche[2] small-form-factor desktop computer running RISC OS Adjust32. It was officially unveiled at the 2005 Wakefield Show,[3][4][5] and is the second commercial ARM-based RISC OS computer to run a 32-bit version of RISC OS. When the Iyonix PC was withdrawn from sale, the A9home remained the only hardware to be manufactured specifically for the RISC OS marketplace.[6]

Details

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The A9home was smaller than the Mac Mini and housed in cobalt-blue aluminium casing, measuring 168 mm × 103 mm × 53 mm in size.[7] The machine runs on a 400 MHz Samsung ARM9 processor, has 128 MB SDRAM of main memory and 8 MB VRAM and houses an internal hard disk of 40 GB. On the front, it features two USB 1.1 ports, a microphone and a headphones socket. On the rear, it has two USB 1.1 ports, two PS/2 ports, 10/100 BaseT network port, a RS-232 serial port and a power connection socket. Like the Mac Mini of 2009 and earlier, it is powered by an external PSU (5 V, 20 W). Furthermore, it has a power/reset switch, a status/health indicator and a drive activity indicator LED. The A9home is not designed to be internally expanded.

The A9home could use a program called Aemulor to emulate older 26-bit applications. This was originally developed for Castle's Iyonix PC.[8]

In April 2006, Advantage Six Ltd announced that they were focussing on connectivity in the run-up to that year's Wakefield Show. At the show, they demonstrated integrated Bluetooth.[9] Although the A9home was officially released for purchase by end users, its custom version of RISC OS 4 remained unfinished. As of 2013, RISCOS Ltd closed after failing to release any information in 2012 about when or if the OS will become feature complete.

History

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Rear view, showing connectors

In 2004, RISCOS Ltd privately began work on a version of RISC OS that supported 32-bit addressing modes found on later ARM architectures, RISC OS Adjust (Adjust 32), which is compatible with current ARM processors and designed for both embedded and desktop forms. The first, and so far only, machine to make use of the 32-bit version of the OS is the Advantage6 A9home. It was released in May 2006 after a 12-month Beta testing process,[10] although the current build of Adjust 32, namely RISC OS 4.42, is a prerelease and no final version of the OS has yet been released.[11] It was intended to be the first in a series of machines, with others running Linux.[12]

Both 26- and 32-bit builds of new RISC OS 4 releases can now be compiled from the same source code,[13] but will have to be modified to run on each individual machine supported, as the OS has no HAL at present. Instead it has a hardware-abstracted kernel, which allows specific code to be substituted for each platform supported.[14]

Other configurations

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The A9home was the retail version of the A9, for OEM customers was the A9 also available in a half-width single rack unit (1U) rack mountable ruggedised case, "A9RM" and as a wall/bulkhead-mountable unit with integral 8.4 in (21 cm) TFT touchscreen, GPS and GSM/GPRS, "A9Loc". These were marketed from about 2004 through 2009.[15]

References

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  1. ^ "Samsung 2440 Integrated Module Specification". Simtec Electronics. Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2024-09-18.
  2. ^ Halfacree, Gareth (October 26, 2012). "Otellini predicts ARM's Transmeta-like fate". bit-tech. Retrieved October 26, 2012.
  3. ^ Loli-Queru, Eugenia (2005-05-21). "Wakefield RISC OS show report (live)". OSNews. Retrieved 2011-06-28. [...] this weekend's RISC OS show. So far seen there is the A9 Home machine, which runs RISC OS on an ARM9 processor, VirtualRiscPC for MacOS X [...]
  4. ^ Mellor, Phil; Duffell, Andrew (22 May 2005). "Wakefield 2005 Show Report". The Icon Bar. Retrieved 20 September 2006.
  5. ^ timothy (2015-05-22). "AdvantageSix Promises a Tiny ARM-based Computer". Slashdot. Retrieved 2011-06-30. Drobe, one of the leading RISC OS news websites, is reporting that AdvantageSix have displayed an in-development version of their forthcoming A9home system.
  6. ^ Holwerda, Thom (2008-09-29). "Iyonix Range Taken Off the Market". OSNews. Retrieved 2011-06-28. Iyonix [...] taken off the market [...] This leaves Advantage6 as the only manufacturer of RISC OS hardware with its A9Home computer.
  7. ^ Mellor, Phil (22 May 2005). "Photo of Mac mini and A9home". The Icon Bar. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  8. ^ Mellor, Phil (11 May 2005). "AemulorA9 released". The Icon Bar. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  9. ^ Duffell, Andrew (3 April 2006). "A9 gets bluetooth". The Icon Bar. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  10. ^ Williams, Chris (6 May 2006). "A9home on sale from CJE Micros". Drobe. Archived from the original on 2016-08-30. Retrieved 2019-08-30.
  11. ^ Chris's Acorns - Advantage Six A9home
  12. ^ Proven, Liam (2005-11-22). "New RISC OS machine coming soon". The Inquirer. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-27. The A9 Home will be the first in a line of A9 machines: others will run Linux and offer different capabilities.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. ^ "RISCOS Ltd Press Release 03/02/2006". RISCOS Ltd. Retrieved 2011-03-28. [T]he major reason for moving over to the 32 bit neutral source for RISC OS 4 was to enable the production of a unified source that could build versions for both Risc PC generation computers and newer computers such as the A9 and Iyonix.
  14. ^ "RISC OS Select 4 changes". RISCOS Ltd. Archived from the original on 2013-01-04. Retrieved 2011-03-28. Hardware abstraction [...] much of the hardware driven by the kernel in earlier versions of the OS is now handled by discrete driver modules [...]
  15. ^ "Advantage Six announce an addition to the A9 series". Promotional web site. Advantage Six Ltd. Archived from the original on March 27, 2009. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
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