Commodore Amiga

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page contains a lot of unreferenced claims about keyboard switches

The Commodore Amiga is a computing platform, introduced by Commodore in 1985. It has lived a bleak life since Commodore went bankrupt in 1994. The classic Amiga used the Motorola MC680x0 family of processors and a custom chip set which gave it good graphics and sound capabilities (for the time) at a low cost. Its proprietary operating system had a windowing system and was one of the first for home computers to have preemptive multitasking. This is an input device wiki, so the focus of this article is Amiga keyboards and mice.

Amiga keyboard layout

There have been Amiga keyboards both in US-ANSI layout as well as several ISO layouts for German, UK, Swedish/Finnish etc.

ANSI keyboards have a backwards-L ("Big-Ass") Return key and a small Back Space key. ISO keyboards have not only one additional letter/symbol key but two: one next to left Shift and one next to a vertical Return key. The Amiga-ISO layout also has a small Back Space key.

The layout has both a Ctrl key and a Caps Lock key to the left of 'A'. on the home row. The (only) Ctrl key is not used in many programs. It is used mainly in terminal emulators and in Micro Emacs which shipped with the OS.

All Amiga keyboards have had a Caps Lock key with a LED in it to indicate Caps mode.

To the right of the main typing area are cursor keys. Above them are Del and Help keys. Shift-arrow are used to get to move the cursor to beginning of line, end of line, page up and page down, so special navigation keys for these tasks were not needed. There are two Alt keys, both functioning as second-level Shift (like the Alt Gr key on PC, or the Option key on Macintosh), on the bottom left and bottom right corners of the main typing area.

Above the main typing area, there is an Esc key and ten function keys.

All Amiga keyboards except the one in the Amiga 600 have also a numeric keypad. Starting with the Amiga 2000, the numpad has had + - * / and left and right parenthesis.

Amiga keys

Left Amiga key as seen on a Amiga 2000 keyboard, made by Cherry

What makes the Amiga keyboard layout stand out the most are the 1.25 wide Amiga keys at each end of the space bar. Each Amiga key has a italicized A legend, as in the Amiga logo. The right Amiga key is drawn in outline.

The left Amiga key is used as a command key for the user interface: controlling windows, swapping between windows and workspaces ("Screens" in Amiga terminology). In some ways, it worked like the Windows key works as a command modifier for Windows on PC keyboards.

The right Amiga key is used as a command key for applications, much like like the Command key on Macintosh.

The Amiga keys could also be used for emulating the mouse. Amiga + arrow moved the mouse pointer. Left Alt + left Amiga = left click, right Alt + right Amiga = right click.

Commodore Amiga keyboards

In chronological order:

Amiga 1000

There is a storage area for the keyboard under the Amiga 1000's case where it could be stored when not in use.

The keyboard layouts were more compact than later full-sized Amiga keyboards. The cursor keys were in a star instead of an inverse-T.

Three variations have been spotted:

1. Mitsumi miniature mechanical. The switches are known to be quite fragile, and could break if a keycap is removed. There are nibs on the 'D' and 'K' keys. This type is more common.[Citation needed]

2. Mitsumi standard mechanical[1]

3. Cherry G80-0777, manufactured by Cherry in West Germany. Cherry MX switches. Double-shot Cherry key caps with scooped 'F' and 'J' keys.

Red A symbol on the left Amiga key. Outlined A symbol on the right Amiga key. Amiga keys are 1.25 units wide and Alt keys are 1.5 units wide. Del, Num Lock and Caps Lock in a row on the numeric keypad. Esc and Help in a column above the cursor keys.

There have also been unconfirmed reports of an early type of Amiga 1000 keyboards with Alps switches.

The connector is 4P4C, specific to the Amiga 1000. The pins are 1:+5V, 2:Clock, 3:Data, 4:Ground. [2]

Amiga 2000

The Amiga 2000 is perhaps the Amiga model that has had the most revisions. Different revisions have had three different types of external keyboards.

1.

Cherry G80-0904 with Cherry MX switches and double-shot keycaps

Early models have the Cherry G80-0904 with Cherry MX Black switches and double-shot ABS keys. It can be easily spotted because unlike other Amiga keyboards, there are gaps between the Amiga keys and the space bar. The function keys are also only one unit wide.

2. NMB Hi-Tek linear "space invader" switches, around 55 cN and short key travel. The Amiga keys are black. There is a rivet that can be seen in the gap in-between the Del and Help keys. On some NMB keyboards, the left Amiga key has a Commodore logo on it instead of an italicized A. Some keyboards have switches with yellow sliders, others white.

3. Mitsumi hybrid switches. Tactile with rubber sleeves and blue sliders. The keys were made from ABS and yellowed more easily than the earlier Cherry keys. Mitsumi keyboards can be told apart from NMB keyboards by the decimal point on the numpad not being aligned with the 0 key symbol's baseline, but being higher up.

The connector is a 5-pin DIN plug. The pins are 1:Clock, 2:Data, 4:Ground, 5:+5V. Pin 3 in not used. [3]

There have been reports that very early Amiga 2000s would have had a different connector.

Amiga 1500, Amiga 2500

Late models of the Amiga 2000. Mitsumi keyboards.

Amiga 500 (+)

The keyboard is built into the computer case, but the controller is on the keyboard. Like the Amiga 2000, the Amiga 500 has also come in different revisions.

Early models have NMB Hi-Tek "Space Invader" switches like the Amiga 2000 keyboard.[4]

Most Amiga 500s have Mitsumi hybrid switches. Unlike the Amiga 2000, these are linear with a coiled spring and a black slider with a somewhat mushy landing.

Amiga 3000 (T)

External. Tactile Mitsumi hybrid switches with a rubber sleeve like the latest Amiga 2000 keyboard but a more distinct landing like the Amiga 1200 keyboard. The keyboard case had been updated with stripes on top resembling the cooling vents on the Amiga 500.

The connector is the same DIN-plug as for the #Amiga 2000

Amiga CDTV

Basically a black version of the Amiga 3000 keyboard. The connector is special for the CDTV: a 5-pin mini-DIN with pinouts: 1:Ground, 2:Data, 3:Clock, 4:+5V, 5:Keyboard sense (connect to +5V).[3]

Amiga 1200

Built-in keyboard with controller on the motherboard. Linear Mitsumi hybrid switches with white sliders and a less mushy landing than on previous keyboards.

Amiga 600

Built-in keyboard with controller on the motherboard. Linear Mitsumi hybrid switches like the Amiga 1200.[5]

More compact layout that omitted the numeric keypad. The other keys on the right are laid out as on the Amiga 1000, except for cursor keys who are now laid out in an inverse T at the bottom right corner.

Amiga 4000 (T)

Similar to the Amiga 3000 keyboard. The case is white (not beige) and has (yet) another connector.

There have been reports of two different keyboards, with different feel.

The connector is a 6-pin mini-DIN with pin-out: 1:Data, 3:Ground, 4:+5V, 5:Clock. Pins 2 and 6 are not connected. [3]

Amiga CD32

Anthracite case and keys with black modifiers, plus the "Amiga CD32" logo.

The connector is the same 6-pin mini-DIN as for the Amiga 4000, except that the keyboard port also doubles as a serial port. Pins 2 and 6 are used for RS-232 transmit and receive, respectively.[3]

Other Amiga Keyboards

There were third-party kits for converting Amigas with built-in keyboards into towers.

AmigaOne

The AmigaOne platform used PS/2 keyboards and mice.

Amiga Infinitiv Keyboard

The Infinitiv kit from Micronik allowed an Amiga 1200 to be turned into a minitower system with an external keyboard enclosure.

Keyboard adapters

All Commodore Amiga keyboards use the same wire protocol, but there are different connectors and pinouts. Several third-party adapters between different Amiga connectors have been produced. Pin-outs are described under the heading for each particular keyboard above. Note that the CDTV keyboard's pinout is special, and not compatible with the Amiga 4000's even though both have mini-DIN.

The Amiga 500 has a serial cable connected to the motherboard and can be adapted or rebuilt to use an external keyboard. The Amiga 1200 and 600 have serial communication only between components on the motherboard, so any adapter would have to be a controller or emulate a matrix, respectively.

External keyboard to Amiga

  • The Lyra is a converter that allows a PS/2 keyboard to be connected to an Amiga. There is a version for the Amiga 1200 and a version for Amiga 2000/3000/4000/CDTV/CD32.
  • The PC-Key is an interface device for the Amiga 1200 and 600, allowing them to use an external Amiga keyboard or a PS/2 keyboard.

Amiga keyboards to USB

The options below require more or less hacking.

  • The Keyrah is a controller that replaces the motherboard in the Amiga 600 and 1200 (also the Vic 20, Vic 64 and 128). It has two digital joystick ports and USB out. Joysticks are emulated as key presses.
  • AMIGA 500/1000/2000 Keyboard Interface. Firmware for an Arduino Leonardo, allowing an external Amiga keyboard to be connected via USB to a modern computor.
  • [EzHID Amiga Keyboard Firmware http://ezhid.sourceforge.net/amikbd.html] for the Cypress' EZ-USB (AN2131) chip. The firmware has support for other input devices.

Mouse

All Amiga models came with a two-button ball mouse to be plugged into the first of two male DB-9 ports. Those two ports were also used for Atari-compatible joysticks and other peripherals.

If the right button is pressed a menu bar appears at the top of the screen. A menu item is selected by releasing the right button when hovering the pointer above it. Releasing the mouse button elsewhere cancels. Third-party utilities were available that replaced (or complimented) the menu bar with a pop-up menu underneath the mouse pointer.

A Amiga mouse can contain minimal logic - each sensor inside the mouse gets one or more direct wires inside the mouse cable, with +5V and Ground shared between components. The same 9-pin DSUB ports can also used be for Atari-compatible digital joysticks, analogue paddles and light pens, but there is no identification protocol. An Amiga mouse does not work on the Atari ST, but building a passive adapter is straightforward: lines have to be crossed. Some third-party mice contain a switch to change between Amiga and Atari usage.

Gallery

Amiga 2000 Mitsumi variant

References

  1. geekhack — Amiga 2000 Cherry Keyboard
  2. Amiga 1000 Keyboard - HwB on Hardware Book.info. Retrieved 2013-10-13
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Amiga Keyboard Pinouts on l84.net. Retrieved on 2013-10-13
  4. Amibay — Help Key and white "space invaders" switch
  5. Eski Bilgisayarlarım — Amiga 600

See also

External links