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    BBC Micro on Retropie & Pi3?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    bbc micro
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    • J
      jamesbeat @BuZz
      last edited by

      @BuZz said in BBC Micro on Retropie & Pi3?:

      Looking at a BBC port has been on my todo list for way too long. I'm a big fan of the machines and should definitely prioritise it (maybe I should spend less time on the forum, replying to retropie emails, and more time coding).

      It does stand to reason that there should be a BBC emulator in Retropie.

      Not trying to give you extra work (the Retropie team has already done so much for this community) butI think it would be really popular.

      While it wasn't the most widely sold of the 80's home micros, something like 85% of all schools in the UK had at least one.
      There are a LOT of people in the UK who were exposed to these machines as children.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • J
        jamesbeat @backstander
        last edited by

        @backstander said in BBC Micro on Retropie & Pi3?:

        @BuZz

        (maybe I should spend less time on the forum, replying to retropie emails, and more time coding)

        You should probably just clone yourself and have one of you do the forum and the other one do the programming and then (so you don't get bored) after a while you and your clone can switch!

        This seems reasonable.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • mediamogulM
          mediamogul Global Moderator @backstander
          last edited by

          @backstander

          You should probably just clone yourself and have one of you do the forum and the other one do the programming

          That never plays out well. Ultimately you'll discover that the clone is evil, which will lead to a frantic situation where both are pointing to each other as being the imposter. Take it from me, it just ruins your day when you find out that you shot the wrong one.

          RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

          caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
          • caver01C
            caver01 @mediamogul
            last edited by

            @mediamogul said in BBC Micro on Retropie & Pi3?:

            @backstander

            You should probably just clone yourself and have one of you do the forum and the other one do the programming

            That never plays out well. Ultimately you'll discover that the clone is evil, which will lead to a frantic situation where both are pointing to each other as being the imposter. Take it from me, it just ruins your day when you find out that you shot the wrong one.

            Symbolic link then? Wait. That won't get any extra work done.

            My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

            mediamogulM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • mediamogulM
              mediamogul Global Moderator @caver01
              last edited by

              @caver01

              Symbolic link then? Wait. That won't get any extra work done.

              Come on now. That's just an offensive stereotype against symbolics.

              RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • BuZzB
                BuZz administrators
                last edited by

                Trust me - you don't want a clone of me :-) Poor @herb_fargus would have two people calling him up drunk!

                To help us help you - please make sure you read the sticky topics before posting - https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                mediamogulM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • mediamogulM
                  mediamogul Global Moderator @BuZz
                  last edited by

                  @BuZz

                  I can only imagine the blackmail material you two must have on each other.

                  RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

                  herb_fargusH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • herb_fargusH
                    herb_fargus administrators @mediamogul
                    last edited by herb_fargus

                    @mediamogul we have been discussing a mailing list or chat of sorts outside of the perpetual hangout window Jools and I have, might be nice for others to be the target of his drunk dialing!

                    Also for the record I have been pestering Jools for the beeb since 3.0, he's probably sick of me asking by now. Though I have no doubt eben Upton would be thrilled.

                    If you read the documentation it will answer 99% of your questions: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/

                    Also if you want a solution to your problems read this first: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                    • S
                      spmbrown
                      last edited by spmbrown

                      The BBC Micro (the original Models A, B, etc.) was created at the request of the BBC as a public education project. There was controversy, in-fighting, the usual whining about how the TV licence fee was being spent and a lot of arguments about who/what company should make the hardware - microcomputer, to support the programme.

                      Acorn Computers won the contract and (skipping a lot of detail here) produced the BBC Micro (the Atom was first, the Electron was a cut down, lower cost version and there was the subsequent Master version).

                      The Raspberry Pi Foundation were paying homage to the BBC Micro when they named the original Pi computers Model A & B.

                      A BBC Micro running BBC Basic was used to design the first ARM instruction set. Acorn the company went on to produce the Archimedes machines and (again, skipping all the detail) was later renamed ARM Holdings and produced the Advanced RISC Machine architecture.

                      Any of you who have a mobile (cellular) phone, made by Apple, Motorola, Samsung or whoever, have an ARM powered computer in your pocket and that is the modern iteration of the BBC Micro.

                      The Micro:bit is another of the BBC's efforts at "educating" kids/the world about programming computers.

                      You may not have heard of it but the standout game developed fot the BBC Micro was Elite. The inspiration and reference for all modern space trading RPG games.

                      pjftP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • dankcushionsD
                        dankcushions Global Moderator
                        last edited by

                        my mum had a bbc micro (she still does somewhere! a big master unit with 2 drives etc). she was a teacher, and they were pretty standard components of most UK classrooms in the 80s/early 90s. in fact, i seem to remember my high school still using them as late as the late 90s!

                        it was my first exposure to games/computers, but i don't have that much nostalgia for it. i loved repton but i replayed that not so long ago. it's a classic that has a weird following in the chess community due to the nature of the puzzles.

                        i wouldn't mind going back to play a game called 'spellbinder' which was a sort of dungeon/adventure game that completely confused me when i was 7!

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • S
                          spmbrown @backstander
                          last edited by

                          @backstander Do you have a mobile phone? It probably has an ARM processor.

                          A BBC Micro running BBC Basic was used to design the first ARM instruction set. Acorn, the company that manufactured it was later renamed ARM Holdings and produced the Advanced RISC Machine architecture. Almost all current mobile phones, the Raspberry Pi itself and countless other products are the latest versions of the BBC Micro.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • J
                            jamesbeat
                            last edited by

                            When the BBC was looking for a computer for their Computer Literacy Project, Sinclair were also trying to win the contract.

                            There is an excellent dramatized version of this battle between Acorn and Sinclair called 'Micro Men' (it's on youtube)

                            B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                            • B
                              backstander @jamesbeat
                              last edited by

                              @jamesbeat
                              I'll have to check out "Micro Men"! I didn't realize that ARM processor came from the BBC Micro. Now I wonder what the Raspberry Pi will be when it grows up?

                              Also @mediamogul is right! Cloning yourself is a bad idea! I almost never turns out good in the movies (I'm thinking of the movie The Prestige]!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • FruitybitF
                                Fruitybit @jamesbeat
                                last edited by

                                @jamesbeat I use a pi2 and risc os to run the BBC emulator and it works perfectly! It won't run on a pi3, so older hardware comes in handy here. Elite, Space Adventure, hehe re-living the long old days:)
                                Plus it's all small files/os so you can get away with a tiny sd card for just about all of it:)

                                J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • J
                                  jamesbeat @Fruitybit
                                  last edited by jamesbeat

                                  @Fruitybit said in BBC Micro on Retropie & Pi3?:

                                  @jamesbeat I use a pi2 and risc os to run the BBC emulator and it works perfectly! It won't run on a pi3, so older hardware comes in handy here. Elite, Space Adventure, hehe re-living the long old days:)
                                  Plus it's all small files/os so you can get away with a tiny sd card for just about all of it:)

                                  I'm sure that's great (in fact running on riscos is probably much better than running it in Linux).

                                  The trouble is, that won't solve the problem of getting it running on Retropie.

                                  I'm trying to make my dream setup here - a nice old PC case, old keyboard and mouse (all in pristine condition mind you), turn it on and be presented with a menu showing all of my old computers.

                                  Retropie is perfect for this - it is a great menu system.

                                  The last thing I want is to have to open up the case and swap the card around if I want to use a BBC Micro - it would ruin the effect.

                                  Beebem works perfectly on the PC that I use for my main Retropie console hooked up to my TV.

                                  I just hope it works ok on a Pi3 too.

                                  I'm kinda doing things backwards - I'm using a PC as my console and a Raspberry Pi as my computer :D.

                                  There's a good reason for this though - N64 is spectacular on my PC based console, and using a Raspberry Pi to emulate my computers means I can use an older (and smaller) case that couldn't keep a modern PC cool.

                                  caver01C FruitybitF 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • caver01C
                                    caver01 @jamesbeat
                                    last edited by caver01

                                    @jamesbeat I restructured my apple2 setup using advmess so that it is a bit more modular with config files. This will allow me to use different .rc files for each disk image, but more importantly, I can try other system roms like the BBC micro easily and make adjustments without messing up my apple2 setup. I may give it a shot tomorrow.

                                    My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • caver01C
                                      caver01
                                      last edited by

                                      Well, it's working, but I don't really know what to do next. I have a handful of disk images as suggested above, but launching them gets me to this screen. Maybe my setup isn't quite right yet. . . But clearly the micro is running in advmess:

                                      alt text

                                      My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                      herb_fargusH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • herb_fargusH
                                        herb_fargus administrators @caver01
                                        last edited by herb_fargus

                                        @caver01 did you launch the game eg:

                                        CHAIN "SNAPPER.IMG"

                                        From my notes here when I first tested:

                                        https://github.com/RetroPie/RetroPie-Setup/issues/210#issuecomment-174157574

                                        If you read the documentation it will answer 99% of your questions: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/

                                        Also if you want a solution to your problems read this first: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                                        caver01C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • caver01C
                                          caver01 @herb_fargus
                                          last edited by

                                          @herb_fargus no, i didn't do that. Is CHAIN a command I need to learn? Snapper.img? Was that just your example image file? I tried to load TheHacker.zip I think.

                                          My 4-player cocktail style cabinet built as a custom "roadcase"

                                          herb_fargusH J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • herb_fargusH
                                            herb_fargus administrators @caver01
                                            last edited by herb_fargus

                                            @caver01 yeah snapper is a Pacman clone, just an example. I only got it to work with ssd files and img files but I think that may have been determined by the launch script, might be different for tapes etc. I imagine .zip isn't supported or has to be extracted I'm not super familiar with AdvMESS outside of my tests though by your not knowing of the chain command I imagine you never owned a beeb ;)

                                            If you read the documentation it will answer 99% of your questions: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/

                                            Also if you want a solution to your problems read this first: https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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