DraCo

Boot logo

The DraCo, also known as DraCo Vision in one of its later models, was a non-linear video editing workstation created by MacroSystem Computer GmbH in 1994, based on the Commodore-Amiga platform.

History

In Germany, a group of Amiga hardware developers, working for what was called at that time MS MacroSystem Computer GmbH, started to deal with the fact that Commodore was going bankrupt and the supply of Amigas would eventually dry up, finishing their commercial venture. So in 1994 MacroSystem took the decision of building an Amiga clone geared towards affordable digital video. The task was accomplished in a period of nine months by a group of sixteen people. After four months they already had a booting prototype. In their design, they cleverly integrated, and then, slightly modified most of the hardware devices they already sold in the past, in this new NLE computer.[1]

Pricing

The price of the DraCo was about 14,990 US dollars, but a lot cheaper in Europe.

Hardware

Central processing unit

The CPU card, called Eltanin, was based on the Warp Engine Amiga accelerator board. It featured a 68060 processor with FPU and MMU at 50 MHz and on some special models it used a 68040.

Memory

DraCos had a unified memory architecture which gave them a competitive advantage over Amigas, as they are not limited by the 2 MB chipmem that Amigas can reach. If DraCos are queried on the chipmem they have, they display the video card´s framebuffer size (usually 4MB). The Eltanin card contains four 72 pin simm sockets to hold up to 128 MB of ram.

Custom chipset

Unlike traditional Amigas, DraCos lack the Amiga custom chipset, and so they rely on software APIs that retarget many hardware functions.

Busboard

The computer bus had some peculiarities. The Rastaban was a passive busboard full of expansion slots (much like S-100 busboards). It had 5 Zorro II Amiga compatible slots, and three DracoDirect slots. There was also a special cpu slot for an Alpha processor, that was never released. Zorro II slots offered a fair degree of Amiga compatible hardware options. On the other side, the DracoDirect slots provided faster speeds and 32 bit transfers, as they were merely created by exposing the majority of the microprocessor signals in those slots.

Graphics

The graphics card, was a slightly modified Retina Z3 now called Altais, that used the DracoDirect slot instead of the Zorro III slot, as it provided faster transfer rates. It was supported by the Operating System by the then new CyberGraphX retargetable graphics subsystem.

Sound and Video capture

The soundcard and framegrabber (Toccata and Vlab Motion cards) were optionals, and were eventually built together in a standalone DracoDirect card called Dracomotion.

Storage

DraCos featured a Fast SCSI II interface to provide fast disk access with minimum cpu usage (transfer speeds were approximately 9 MB per second). An internal 50 pin and an external sub D 25 pin connectors were both present. The scsi interface and its custom logic were built into the Eltanin board.

Casing

The case was a standard PC AT one, later replaced by a "cube" shaped one, which provided more space, better shielding and improved PSU. The marketing goal behind this case change, was to give potential customers the perception, by its different shape, that the machine was not an ordinary PC.

Software

On the software side, it ran AmigaOS 3.1, and had a full range of applications and utilities that came as a bundle. Curiously, it used original Amiga 3000 kickstart ROM, along with a different setpatch command which did some extensive patching of the ROM when booting. It used a custom, but otherwise powerful software to manage digital video editing. It was called MovieShop (latest version is MovieShop 5.3 BETA 3 from June 13, 2000), and was really flexible, so much that many studios adopted it as their primary editing suite.

Resources

Devices

Libraries

The end of the DraCo

MacroSystem sold and supported DraCos up to the year 2000. They were not a commercial success. But as a smart company strategy, they redesigned the DraCo to produce a more affordable system, so was the successful Casablanca, now called Casablanca Classic, born.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/12/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.