Latest changes
- Fix for uninitialized value by micko
- [Z80DMA]: small log fix by angelosa
- Added new cart dump [anondumper] by incog
MESS supports both BeBox main models
These systems require full keyboard emulation to work correctly. At startup, full keyboard emulation mode is enabled by default. Whilst in full keyboard emulation mode, some key associated functionality may be disabled (like the ESC key for EXIT). The keyboard emulation mode is toggled using the “Scroll Lock” key (by default).
Different RAM configurations are possible for the bebox and bebox2 in MESS. You can switch between them, changing the -ramsize parameter. At command line, you simply have to add -ramsize ram_value, where ram_value can assume one of the following values
8m 16m 32m (default)
The emulation of this system is Preliminary.
The BeBox was a dual processor PC, created in 1995 by Be Incorporated to run their own operating system, BeOS.
BeBox hadware was based on a dual PowerPC 603 CPU running at 66 MHz (later 133 MHz). The motherboard was not really innovative but featured a large range of Input/Output ports, including IDE and SCSI HDD interfaces, standard PC card slots, MIDI, audio, infrared ports plus a special GeekPort for hardware experiments.
The Be Operating System was also developed from the ground up. It aimed to be an alternative to the “Heavy weight” Windows and Mac OS's. BeOs was a clear and clean multi-processor (up to 8), multi-threading, multi-tasking, GUI-based operating system, optimized for digital media management.
The first BeBox machines were mainly intended for use by software developers, and BeOs was delivered with Metrowerks CodeWarrior and C++ languages. But, in spite of its numerous advanced features, the BeBox never met the success expected by its designers, mainly because it was not compatible with other OS and application widely used in the computing industry.
In 1996, BeOs was ported to Apple PowerPC machines but Apple eventually preferred the NeXT basis for its future Mac OS X. Two years later, BeOs ran on Intel machines.
In January 1997, the production ceased.
Nowadays, although marginal, BeOs is still alive, and new releases and updates are regularly announced by the BeOs community.
It's a digital and analog I/O and DC power connector, 37-pin connector on the ISA bus. It consists of:
(info based on various Wikipedia pages)