RISC OS News on Drobe
RISC OS Search
containing
"Regarding Drobe, are they [incompetent], simply biased or is it company policy[?]"
Welcome back guest  |  Login  |  Register Saturday 17th May 
Login

drobe.co.uk
About Drobe
RISC OS News
Drobe Features
Alternatives
Bookmarks
Riscos.org.uk
Auctions
Events (shows)
AU issues
Tech Material
Wallpaper
Movies
File archives
SH eBooks
FAQs
Changelog

Interact
Forums
Online chat
Your webspace
BBC Emu(games!)
User gallery
RSS news &
comments
Submit news
Contact us

Quick Links
Open directory
Nutshells
ANS archives
ArcSite
RO Repository
Announce
RISCOS Ltd.
Castle

NTK
The Inquirer
The Register
OSNews
Slashdot
Google

Alternatives
NetBSD
ARM Linux
Iyonix Linux

Found Apps
 RISC OS Software !Avalanche
 RISC OS Software !Darts
 RISC OS Software !CFuncAnal
 RISC OS Software !TranTIFF+
 RISC OS Software !Dustbin
 RISC OS Software !NurseW
 RISC OS Software !Tally
 RISC OS Software !VideoLog
 RISC OS Software !USBKick
 RISC OS Software !Spr2Jpeg
Recent users
AJW is a RISC OS User AJW
inchiquin is a RISC OS User inchiquin
Animal is a RISC OS User Animal
flypig is a RISC OS User flypig
gunner is a RISC OS User gunner
Zini is a RISC OS User Zini
mfraser is a RISC OS User mfraser
VinceH is a RISC OS User VinceH
winterjaeger is a RISC OS User winterjaeger
andretim is a RISC OS User andretim


Why donate?

Serving: 15GB
Fuel: caffeine
5 users online
74 guests
248 active accts 24327 comments

Webstats

 
RISC OS News Feature
BBC, Master Flash memory interface invented
Published: 17th Aug 2004, 23:25:27GMT  Source: drobe.co.uk
By Chris Williams
Page 1 of 1
Kiss those 40 track drive monsters goodbye
Photo of the GoMMC kitWhilst taking a break from engineering hardware for the 32bit realm of Acorn hardware, John Kortink has now designed GoMMC: a Flash memory interface for BBC and Master Acorn computers.

John said in his announcement, sent out over the weekend: "[GoMMC] allows storage of any number of floppies (harddisks to follow) on an MMC (MultiMedia Card). Individual floppies can subsequently be selected (by name) and accessed just as before, via the usual (albeit slightly patched) filing systems. Up to 1 GB of storage is currently possible, and transfer speeds are in the region of 80 to 130 KB/sec."

The fact that an old school 40 track ADFS floppy can hold 160K puts the above speed into context. GoMMC works by plugging a custom designed interface into an available sideways ROM socket, and you can also order a GoMMC unit from John (whilst stocks last).

Links
GoMMC website

Related articles
25th anniversary of BBC Micro TV series
BBC BASIC turns 25
BBC Micro ARM7 co-processor available

This article has been linked to, or is available in the following formats:  
 
 
 
 
 
[Printable] [Digg this] [Blog search]


guestx 
18/8/04 1:55PM
Very nice! But how about a cartridge (Master, Electron) which provides USB ports? USB devices with Mass Storage support could be great fun on the 8-bit platforms - like a Domesday filesystem reimplemented with hindsight and using established technology!
egel(valued user) 
Face
18/8/04 3:12PM
A cartridge is a bad idea because not all 8-bit Acorn computers have cartridge slots but all (can) have sideways ROM sockets. And why make another big ?disk? solution when there is already one. The next gadget that would be nice would be something to fill that space like a Ethernet card or a port of Contiki http://www.sics.se/~adam/contiki/ .
Fuzzy(valued user)www 
Face
19/8/04 12:05PM
1GIG storage in a beeb, cor the poor machine won't know whats hit it :-) So when is the XScale upgrade coming?
guestx 
19/8/04 5:15PM
In reply to egel:
"A cartridge is a bad idea because not all 8-bit Acorn computers have cartridge slots but all (can) have sideways ROM sockets."

It's true that all 8-bit Acorn computers can have sideways ROM sockets, although I imagine that various issues of the Electron don't have them without expansion, but the attraction with a cartridge is that you wouldn't have to mess around with fragile components. That said, people do seem to get off on opening up their machine and sticking ROMs in.

And as for a USB interface being a "disk solution", what about the possibilities for networking over USB with Ethernet adapters, as well as using USB printers and scanners?
 

Top Tip

Forums

You can discuss subjects of interest and ask questions in our forums area.
 
Headline news
Wakefield 2008 show photos
28th Apr 2008

Wakefield 2008 show live news
26th Apr 2008

Who would want an A9home PDA?
24th Apr 2008

RISC OS 6.10 available to Select subscribers
24th Apr 2008

Gallery photo
Older news
Animation and typing applications really released
24th Apr 2008

Wakefield 2008 show preview
22nd Apr 2008

R-Comp unveils new PDF authoring package
22nd Apr 2008

NetSurf bags GBP10K investment from Google
21st Apr 2008

Apple Mac VirtualRiscPC leaves beta
20th Apr 2008

Blu-ray disc burn breakthrough
14th Apr 2008

PDF import support for ArtWorks
13th Apr 2008

Wakefield 2008 show theatre line-up revealed
13th Apr 2008

Animation software collection falls into R-Comp's hands
9th Apr 2008

Features
A9home: two years on
4th Dec 2007

A9home DIY laptop: first pictures
1st Dec 2007

Software hosted by Drobe: Your guide
5th Nov 2007

 

Top | Design and concept © Fudgecake Design, 1999 - 2001. Content © The Drobe Team, 1999 - 2008. 
Click here for more information and terms and conditions.