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Amiga Walker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Amiga Walker (1996).

The Amiga Walker, sometimes incorrectly known as the Mind Walker, is a prototype of an Amiga computer developed and shown by Amiga Technologies, a subsidiary of Escom, in late 1995/early 1996. Walker was planned as a replacement for the A1200 with a faster CPU, better expansion capabilities, and a built-in CD-ROM. The Walker was never released; Escom and Amiga Technologies went bankrupt, and only two (three) prototypes were made.[1][2][3]

The case is unique and radically different from computers before it. The intention was also to make the motherboard available without the case so users could put it into a standard PC case. There were a number of other potential case designs of different sizes, the Walker motherboard could fit all of them; this allowed for expandability tailored to the user's requirements.[4]

When the Walker was announced, it was the subject of much discussion (and ridicule) within the Amiga user community, centering on the unconventional case design.[citation needed]

Technical information

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Specifications

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The Amiga Walker motherboard.
  • CPU:
    • Motorola 68030/33 MHz (in the prototype version)
    • Motorola 68030/40 MHz (compared to 68020/14 MHz in A1200)
  • Chipset: AGA
  • Memory:
    • 1 MB Kickstart ROM (compared to 512 kB in the original Amiga 1200)
    • 2 MB Chip RAM
    • 4 MB Fast RAM (only in the production version)
  • Drives:
    • internal CD-ROM
    • 1.44 MB internal floppy drive
  • Realtime clock onboard
  • Additional:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Amiga Walker". Nicholas Blachford. Retrieved 2008-11-26.
  2. ^ "Amiga Technologies: Walker". Big Book of Amiga Hardware. Retrieved 2024-07-03.
  3. ^ "Walker". Magazine AmiagOS et MorphOS. Retrieved 2024-07-03.
  4. ^ "The Walker concept". Amiga history guide. Archived from the original on 2009-01-13. Retrieved 2008-11-26.
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