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Acorn Archimedes A300 - Desktop Computer
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Acorn Archimedes A300

description Acorn Archimedes A300 Overview

The Acorn Archimedes A300, released in 1987, was a British desktop computer utilizing a Motorola 68000 processor and featuring 512KB of RAM, establishing it as a powerful machine for its time.

help Acorn Archimedes A300 FAQ

Did the Acorn Archimedes A300 use a Motorola 68000 processor?

No, the Archimedes line used Acorn's ARM processor architecture, not the Motorola 68000 used in machines like the Amiga and Atari ST. The early A300 models used ARM2 chips.

What were the main A300 models in the Archimedes range?

The early A300 range included models such as the Archimedes 305 and 310. The 305 had 512 KB of RAM, while the 310 had 1 MB.

Why is the Acorn Archimedes important to computer history?

It helped introduce ARM-based desktop computing in 1987. ARM later became one of the most important processor architectures in phones, tablets, and low-power computers.

What operating system did the Archimedes A300 run?

The earliest Archimedes machines ran Arthur, Acorn's graphical operating system. Later Archimedes systems became associated with RISC OS.

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