• The name "Acorn Archimedes" is commonly used to describe any of Acorn's contemporary designs based on the same architecture.
  • Acorn developed the ARM chip in the 80s for their Archimedes. Most instructions took one cycle, making it faster than the 68000, which required 4 or more.
  • Acorn Archimedes adı, Acorn'un aynı mimariye dayanan çağdaş tasarımlarından herhangi birini tanımlamak için yaygın olarak kullanılır.
  • Acorn Archimedes is a family of personal computers designed by Acorn Computers Ltd in Cambridge. It was released in June 1987. It used RISC OS, RISC iX...
  • Commenting on the show, Crash magazine reported that “despite whiz-bang demos of Acorn’s Archimedes” the 8-bit machines were not dead.
  • In 1990 Acorn managed to combine the new ARM3 processor into the Archimedes. The A540 model was expensive, £2495 (ex VAT), but very very fast.
  • The Archimedes, first released in 1987, was Acorn's 32-bit successor to the popular BBC Micro.
  • Acorn released two families of Archimedes computers: Both had a 2-part case, a 3.5″ 800K floppy drive, an external keyboard, and a 3-button mouse.
  • Acorn Archimedes. Documents. General. archdocs.txt. Tom's Archimedes docs (from Arculator).
  • Image for the Acorn Archimedes platform. The Archimedes was the first RISC home computer. There were three series, the 300, 400 and 500 which shared...