home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: hgomez@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (Humberto L. Gomez)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Picasso II
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.graphics
- Date: 20 Jan 1994 19:00:59 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 261
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <2hmkdb$jb4@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: hgomez@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (Humberto L. Gomez)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: hardware, graphics, 24-bit, Zorro II, commercial
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Picasso II 24bit retargetable graphics board for Amiga 2000, 3000,
- 4000.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: Over the years, there has been much discussion
- and debate on USENET about the meaning of the term "retargetable
- graphics" or "RTG". In this review, Humberto Gomez uses the term
- "RTG" as it is found the Picasso II documentation. Mr. Gomez
- quotes from their manual:
-
- "The term RTG means - No more CHIP RAM BLUES. The Picasso II RTG
- emulator has been designed so that it uses no Chip RAM for its
- emulation. Following Commodore WB4.0 guidelines, the Picasso II
- on-board blitter which supports drawing speeds up to 30 megabytes per
- second can use the RTG to let programs able themselves to run on the
- board instead of the ECS graphics or AGA."
-
- Mr. Gomez felt strongly about using the term "RTG" in his review,
- even though its use here may be controversial or disputed, so we
- agreed to leave the review as-is and put this disclaimer at the
- top. - Dan]
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- This is a 24-bit graphics board that fits inside an Amiga 2000,
- 3000, 4000. It is RTG (Retargetable Graphics), and it is a Zorro II card.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Village Tronic/ Expert Services
- Address: 7559 Mall Road
- Florence, KY 40142
- USA
-
- Telephone: (606) 371-9690
- Fax: (606) 282-5942
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- It lists for $599.99 (US). But most places sell it for $449.99
- (1 MB version) and $499.99 (2 MB version).
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- HARDWARE
-
- At least 2 megs of Fast RAM required.
-
- Monitor? Well it really helps if you have a MultiSync
- monitor if you do not own a 3000. A 3000 uses the
- deinterlacer and can use all resolutions on a regular SVGA
- Monitor. You only need one monitor, but it has to be at
- least SVGA... not RGB.
-
- It works on a 68000, but a faster processor is recommended.
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- AmigaDOS 1.3 or higher. Works with AmigaDOS 2.0 and 3.0.
-
- Under 3.0 I have experienced some problems. Screen dragging
- jerks, and then also the pointer sometimes gets stuck on the
- menus. A call to the company verified some problems with
- 3.0 screen drawing routines, and the company is working to
- correct the problem. These 3.0 problems are very minimal
- and due to software, not hardware.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- Amiga 3000, 2 megs Chip RAM, 4 megs Fast RAM
- 250 meg hard drive.
- AmigaDOS 2.0 and 3.0.
-
- INSTALLATION
-
- The board installs in an Amiga Zorro slot.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: If you are not comfortable opening up your
- Amiga, then you should have the work done by an authorized Amiga
- service center. Opening your Amiga yourself may void your warranty,
- and careless work may even damage the machine. - Dan]
-
- The software installs using the Commodore Installer utility. It is
- very easy to do.
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- I am very happy with this board. First of all, it fits into a Zorro
- II or Zorro III slot. The board itself is Zorro II. The back of the board
- contains two 15-pin jacks. One of these is for the Amiga output that goes
- into the card. The other is for a cable (supplied) going from the card to
- the monitor. Requiring only one monitor, the card auto-switches between its
- display modes and the Amiga's. This switching is transparent to the user.
- You just use the Amiga as you would normally do. If an Amiga screen is in
- the front and a Picasso screen in the back, then you just use the screen
- depth gadget as usual, and the board switches to the Picasso screen.
-
- All Picasso resolutions are available to all programs that let you
- select a screen mode. For those programs that don't let you select a screen
- mode, then the Picasso includes a Change Screen Commodity that goes into the
- WBStartup drawer (AmigaDOS 2.0 and higher). This commodity pops up every
- time a program is used that does not use a Picasso resolution. The commodity
- gives you the ability to select a Picasso screen for the program to use.
- This is useful for ASDG's Art Department Professional (ADPro) and other programs
- that always appear in lo-res.
-
- ADPro savers are included, along with other graphic programs so that
- you can save your images to the Picasso II board for immediate displaying in
- any of the resolutions.
-
- Resolutions include 640x400 with 16 million colors, 800x600 with 16
- million colors (with 2 megs installed), 1280x1024 with 256 colors, and many
- others. Anything higher than 800x600 may be displayed with 256 colors. But
- I noticed in ADPro, all of these resoltuions had the ability to display
- 64,000 colors with no problem. Many intermediate resolutions are also
- available.
-
-
- IMPORTANT
-
- AmigaDOS 3.0 is required to select resolutions that have more than
- 16 colors. If you do not have 3.0 ,then this board will only give you the
- ability to display up to 16 colors for your programs, unless it is a graphic
- program that can dump the image directly to the board like ADPro. But
- ProPage, DPaint IV, and all other programs that let you select screen modes
- will give you only up to 16 colors in the resolutions supplied.
-
-
- ADDED BONUS
-
- The Picasso turns your pointer into a professional hi-res pointer.
- Actually your pointer will reflect the resolution that you select. So if you
- select 800x600, then your pointer resizes for that resolution.
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES ('+' means like, '-' means dislike)
-
- + I like the ability to use my Amiga programs using the Picasso II
- board resolutions. Under AmigaDOS 3.0, I opened up a 256-color ProPage
- screen at 1280x1024, and it displayed all pictures with their colors
- correctly. Very impressive.
-
- + You can choose the colors using the Palette Preferences program
- supplied by Commodore and see all the colors swirl.
-
- + Includes a 24-bit screen blanker that draws lines in 16.8 million
- colors.
-
- + The autoswitch feature is really nice.
-
- + It uses the Picasso memory for displaying Picasso screens, leaving
- all of your Chip RAM alone.
-
- + It includes TV PAINT JR. Graphic viewers are included for display
- GIF, IFF, MPEG, and JPEG pictures using the Picasso board.
-
- - Minor problems with the screens in 3.0. They wont drag correctly
- and the pointer sometimes gets stuck at the menus.
-
- - The manual is not user-friendly. Information is not very clear and
- it does not explain things very well. It looks like it is photocopied, not
- professional.
-
- - Some of the programs supplied are in German, not English.
-
- - It requires AmigaDOS 3.0 to select more than 16 colors in the
- resolutions for programs such as ProPage, DPaint, and others.
-
- - TV Paint JR always says it does not have enough memory for UNDO
- buffer, even if you install a full two megs on the board.
-
- [MODERATOR'S NOTE: I suspect that TV Paint Jr. is limited by the
- amount of RAM in the Amiga, not just on the Picasso board. - Dan]
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- GVP's EGS Spectrum ranks slightly higher in my book. Although this
- board is very hard to find with 1 meg on it, the full two megs gives you
- higher resolutions than the Picasso II board does. It also autosenses
- whether you have a ZorroII or Zorro III machine and uses whichever one your
- machine has for better throughput. No problems with AmigaDOS 3.0 experienced
- yet with this board.
-
- Besides that, the boards compare well. They both autoswitch, and
- they both are RTG. But in my opinion, the EGS is a better board than the
- Picasso. But the EGS Spectrum is also more expensive.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- Already mentioned. Mostly due to software. The company is working
- on an update of its libraries to let them function correctly under AmigaDOS
- 3.0.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- Although friendly with regards to my question, they seemed
- unknowledgeable. I asked what advantages are there to having 2 megs on the
- board and they just did not know. They did not know of specific AmigaDOS 3.0
- problems, just that there were some. The board packaging also shows an
- AmigaDOS 3.0 A3000 Workbench screen with 256 color pictures, but the
- representative I spoke with said that 3.0 is not fully supported.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- Depends where you buy it. 30 days from my sales firm, 1 year from
- the company.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- If you can afford the EGS Spectrum, then buy that board. But if you
- can't then the Picasso II will take you beyond AGA graphics to workstation
- resolutions at a minimal price. It performs fairly well, and updates of the
- software are planned so that the bugs with AmigaDOS 3.0 will be resolved. An
- Amiga with a Picasso II outdoes any SVGA 80486's that I have ever seen. It
- outdoes an Amiga 4000 in graphics capabilities, and all the screens can use
- the Picasso II board . It is a very good, highly impressive product. It is
- a must to own one if you want to get out of the old age of Amiga display
- capabilities and go forth to the higher, faster, more-color resolutions of
- the future and today.
-
-
- RATING SCALE
-
- GVP Spectrum: 9.5 out of 10
- Picasso II: 8.5 out of 10
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- The opinions of this review are solely mine based on the performance
- of the products mentioned. Everyone is free to make their own opinions and
- compare this review. This is a public domain review.
-
- Humberto L. Gomez
- hgomez@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Send reviews to: amiga-reviews-submissions@math.uh.edu
- Request information: amiga-reviews-requests@math.uh.edu
- Moderator mail: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu
- Anonymous ftp site: math.uh.edu, in /pub/Amiga/comp.sys.amiga.reviews
-