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Atom with BBC Basic

  1. Game infos
  2. Parent and Clones
  3. Sound
  4. Driver
  5. Inputs
  6. Controls
  7. Display
  8. Configurations
  9. Roms list
  10. Chips list
  11. Categories
  12. History
Download atombb.zip (0 B)
Snapshot

Game infos

Description Atom with BBC Basic
Name atombb
Manufacturer Acorn
Year 1982
Runnable yes
System arcade /
Number of players Non-arcade
Added to MAME .148u3
Romset size 0 B
Romset file files
Romset zip 0 B
Genre Computer

Parent and clones

Parent atom : Atom (1979)

Sound infos

Sound_channels 1

Driver infos

Driver status good
Driver emulation good
Driver color good
Driver sound good
Driver graphic good
Driver cocktail
Driver protection
Driver savestate yes

Inputs infos

Input service no
Input tilt no
Input players 1
Input buttons
Input coins

Controls infos

type ways minimum maximum sensitivity keydelta reverse
keyboard no

Display infos

type rotate flipx width height refresh pixclock htotal hbend hbstart vtotal vbend vbstart
raster 0 no 320 240 50

Configuration

name tag mask
Artifacting
Name Off
Value 0
Default no
Name Reverse
Value 2
Default no
Name Standard
Value 1
Default yes

ic31:artifacting
3

Roms list

console name bios size crc md5 merge sha1 region offset status optional
arcade bbcbasic.rom 16384 79434781 4a7393f3a45ea309f744441c16723e2ef447a281 basic 0 good no
arcade mos.rom 4096 20158bd8 5ee4c0d2b65be72646e17d69b76fb00a0e5298df ic22 0 good no

Chips list

name tag type clock
Filtered 1-bit DAC speaker audio
M6502 ic22 cpu 1000000
Speaker mono audio

Categories

History


Computer published 40 years ago:

Acorn Atom (c) 1979 Acorn Computer, Limited.

- UPDATES -

In late 1982, Acorn released an upgrade ROM chip for the Atom which allowed users to switch between Atom BASIC and the more advanced BASIC used by the BBC Micro. The upgrade was purely to the programming language; the Atom's graphics and sound capabilities remained unchanged, and hence, contrary to some pre-release beliefs, the BBC BASIC ROM did not allow Atom users to run commercial BBC Micro software, since nearly all of it took advantage of the BBC machine's advanced graphics and sound hardware.

- STAFF -

Case designed by: Allen Boothroyd

- CONTRIBUTE -

Edit this entry: https://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=34775&o=2