RAMWorks IIII Kit: Difference between revisions

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The RAMWorks IIII Kit is a user assemblable project based on the AE RAMWorks III card.  The design allows for 4Megs of AUX RAM in the IIe as compared to the RAMWorks III 3 Meg limit.
The RAMWorks IIII Kit is a user assemblable project based on the AE RAMWorks III card.  The design allows for 4Megs of AUX RAM in the IIe as compared to the 3 Meg limit on the RAMWorks III.


It was conceived, created, and designed by Henry of [[ReActiveMicro]] and released for sale to the Apple II Community on June 10th, 2016.  The original PCB bore the "UM" Ultimate-Micro logo till it's rerelease in 2017.  The project was technically a collaborative effort with UltimateApple2.
It was conceived, created, and designed by Henry of [[ReActiveMicro]] and released for sale to the Apple II Community on June 10th, 2016.  The original PCB bore the "UM" Ultimate-Micro logo till it's rerelease in 2017.  The project was technically a collaborative effort with UltimateApple2.
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== History / Project Revisions ==
== History / Project Revisions ==
The RAMWorks IIII Kit v1.0 project was released for sale to the Apple II Community on June 10th, 2016. At the date of release ReActiveMicro was still in the process of setting up and testing their new Store and Wiki. So the project became a "collaborative" release with UltimateApple2 in order to have Kits available for delivery at KFEST 2016.
In December 2015 Henry had an idea to make a “kit” form of the RAMWorks III card but with 4Megs of RAM.  This project would accomplish several goals.  One is to move the RAMWorks design from 256k x 1bit DRAMs to more economical and more dense options such as those used on the 8Meg RAM Card project (4Meg x 4bit).  The project would also be the starting “proof of concept” design for the RAMWorks Ultimate project which would be 16Megs and have built in RGB - as a "fully loaded" RAMWorks III from AE was offered.  Since the project is planned to be in kit form, this allow it to be sold for use at the SolderFEST session at KFEST 2016and thus generate funds and PR.
 
The RAMWorks IIII Kit v1.0 project was released for sale to the Apple II Community on June 10th, 2016. At the date of release ReActiveMicro was still in the process of setting up and testing their new Store and Wiki. So the project became a "collaborative" release with UltimateApple2 in order to have Kits available and for delivery at KFEST 2016.


Up till August 2016 the Ultimate-Micro.com Store was the only vendor who distributed the project. Then as part of ReActiveMicro.com's full return from hiatus with their new Store and Website release they took over sales and distribution to better serve and support the Apple II Community. At this time the PCB was also revised with the ReActiveMicro logo.
Up till August 2016 the Ultimate-Micro.com Store was the only vendor who distributed the project. Then as part of ReActiveMicro.com's full return from hiatus with their new Store and Website release they took over sales and distribution to better serve and support the Apple II Community. At this time the PCB was also revised with the ReActiveMicro logo.


On May 20th, 2017 ReActiveMicro re-released the RAMWorks IIII Kit as v1.1 at a new lower price and with now matching SOJ to DIP Adapters.  The v1.0 version had green Adapters and the PCB was blue.  Now all parts are blue.
On May 20th, 2017 ReActiveMicro re-released the RAMWorks IIII Kit as v1.1 at a new lower price and with now matching SOJ to DIP Adapters.  The v1.0 version had green Adapters and the PCB was blue.  Now all parts are blue.  The rerelease date could have been sooner however other projects took priority.  Also, at this time no other vendor is offering a 'full card' solution.  Kits will also be available once again for SolderFEST at KFEST 2017.
 
 
== The Name: IIII vs. IV ==
Why “IIII” and not “IV”, or To V or Not To V: As in keeping with Roman tradition since Roman Numerals are used, the “IIII” is called “A Watchmaker’s Four”.  Originally, it was common to use IIII to represent four, because IV represented the Roman god Jupiter, whose Latin name, IVPPITER, begins with IV.  The subtractive notation which uses IV instead of IIII has become the standard notation only in modern times.  Also we used IIII because it's easily recognizable as four.  IV involves a little math. Yes, it's just one simple subtraction operation, but keep in mind that we have found there are people who place an order don’t even bother to read the item’s listing, and perhaps the RAMWorks IV would be confused as medical equipment and we would be responsible for a few Community member’s death.
 
 
== v1.1 Differences ==
The RAMWorks IIII Kit v1.1 has some slight differences from v1.0.  First, the project is now Open Source under the [[License#Open_Source|ReActiveMicro Open Source]] license.
 
 
 
== Project Design Files ==
The following design files are released under the [[License#Open_Source|ReActiveMicro Open Source]] license.

Revision as of 06:44, 21 May 2017

The RAMWorks IIII Kit is a user assemblable project based on the AE RAMWorks III card. The design allows for 4Megs of AUX RAM in the IIe as compared to the 3 Meg limit on the RAMWorks III.

It was conceived, created, and designed by Henry of ReActiveMicro and released for sale to the Apple II Community on June 10th, 2016. The original PCB bore the "UM" Ultimate-Micro logo till it's rerelease in 2017. The project was technically a collaborative effort with UltimateApple2.

Project Status: Complete. In production. Actively sold by ReActiveMicro.

Support: Post on the Discussion page (link above) or email ReActiveMicro Support.

Sales: Visit the ReActiveMicro Store.


History / Project Revisions

In December 2015 Henry had an idea to make a “kit” form of the RAMWorks III card but with 4Megs of RAM. This project would accomplish several goals. One is to move the RAMWorks design from 256k x 1bit DRAMs to more economical and more dense options such as those used on the 8Meg RAM Card project (4Meg x 4bit). The project would also be the starting “proof of concept” design for the RAMWorks Ultimate project which would be 16Megs and have built in RGB - as a "fully loaded" RAMWorks III from AE was offered. Since the project is planned to be in kit form, this allow it to be sold for use at the SolderFEST session at KFEST 2016and thus generate funds and PR.

The RAMWorks IIII Kit v1.0 project was released for sale to the Apple II Community on June 10th, 2016. At the date of release ReActiveMicro was still in the process of setting up and testing their new Store and Wiki. So the project became a "collaborative" release with UltimateApple2 in order to have Kits available and for delivery at KFEST 2016.

Up till August 2016 the Ultimate-Micro.com Store was the only vendor who distributed the project. Then as part of ReActiveMicro.com's full return from hiatus with their new Store and Website release they took over sales and distribution to better serve and support the Apple II Community. At this time the PCB was also revised with the ReActiveMicro logo.

On May 20th, 2017 ReActiveMicro re-released the RAMWorks IIII Kit as v1.1 at a new lower price and with now matching SOJ to DIP Adapters. The v1.0 version had green Adapters and the PCB was blue. Now all parts are blue. The rerelease date could have been sooner however other projects took priority. Also, at this time no other vendor is offering a 'full card' solution. Kits will also be available once again for SolderFEST at KFEST 2017.


The Name: IIII vs. IV

Why “IIII” and not “IV”, or To V or Not To V: As in keeping with Roman tradition since Roman Numerals are used, the “IIII” is called “A Watchmaker’s Four”. Originally, it was common to use IIII to represent four, because IV represented the Roman god Jupiter, whose Latin name, IVPPITER, begins with IV. The subtractive notation which uses IV instead of IIII has become the standard notation only in modern times. Also we used IIII because it's easily recognizable as four. IV involves a little math. Yes, it's just one simple subtraction operation, but keep in mind that we have found there are people who place an order don’t even bother to read the item’s listing, and perhaps the RAMWorks IV would be confused as medical equipment and we would be responsible for a few Community member’s death.


v1.1 Differences

The RAMWorks IIII Kit v1.1 has some slight differences from v1.0. First, the project is now Open Source under the ReActiveMicro Open Source license.


Project Design Files

The following design files are released under the ReActiveMicro Open Source license.