London Show, Sat 29th October 2016
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Bryan Hogan (339) 589 posts |
The RISC OS London Show This year’s RISC OS London Show is now only four weeks away. It’s looking like being another bumper show! Just a few of the things to look forward to are: - The new Micro One from Ident Computer There will also be a full set of theatre presentations. Keep an eye on the show website for the latest news: http://www.riscoslondonshow.co.uk/ |
Bryan Hogan (339) 589 posts |
Reminder that the show is this coming Saturday! Excellent preview here – http://www.riscository.com/2016/london-show-looms/ |
Matthew Phillips (473) 719 posts |
Sine Nomine Software will have updated map data and a new version of RiscOSM available at the show. If you have old SD cards which we supplied to you previously, bring them in for a discount off the new map data. Please remember the adapter as well as the micro-SD card! We will also be showing ImpEmail at the London Show for the first time since we added the facility to take input from CSV files. If you need to send bulk mailing by e-mail, come and see what it can do. |
Chris Evans (457) 1614 posts |
In addition to our launch at the show of PhotoDesk 3.14 see here for details, attendee’s can also see our newly launched ‘pi-topRO’ The first RISC OS portable computer since Acorn’s A4 (launched in 1992). Full details here |
Steffen Huber (91) 1949 posts |
OpenPandora? AI Touchbook? Connect-the-Pi-to-a-Motorola-Lapdock? |
Chris Evans (457) 1614 posts |
You have a point and we still do offer our LaPi & PandaRO so may be the statement needs some qualifying! The OpenPandora and AI Touchbook were AFAIK never sold as a packaged RISC OS solution and at least one customer of a LaPi has now bought a pi-topRO. I can’t recall his exact words but it was along the lines that it was because it was a proper laptop. My next task is to precis the above into under 20 words for catchy headline! |
Glen Walker (2585) 469 posts |
I must say it is a very tempting proposition compared to my would-be-hacked Pi based desktop system! |
Steffen Huber (91) 1949 posts |
“Some say, the pi-topRO is the best thing since the launch of Acorn’s A4 in 1992.” Less than 20 words, not sure about the catchiness :-) |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
EPIC NEW RISC OS LAPTOP Headlines need to be short and attention grabbing. So a mere six words and straight to the point. Don’t make it any longer than it needs to be. And when you have worked out what you want to say, rewrite a headline half that size. Once you have people’s attention, they can read the blurb. It’s grabbing attention that’s the hard part. The word “epic”, of course, is a trendy word that is frequently misused. Such as this example. ;-) The headline works without it, but prefixing with such a word helps to lend a sort of “larger than life” mystique in the fewest letters possible. I mean, one doesn’t care that there is a new laptop style machine, one cares that there is this specific new laptop style machine. Grab the attention with the headline, then use the blurb to big up why it is “epic”. Start with a simple bullet list of all the reasons the machine rocks. More details and nerdy stuff can wait until page two. And you might want a photo that doesn’t look like a piece of cardboard from a box from China (a quick pass with some black poster paint?). ;-) Every word has a purpose, there is nothing extraneous. 1 For DavidS – that expression is from a Ronson wood stain (seal?) advert, that was advertised by cleverly stating what it was and then saying “exactly what it says on the tin”; something which is a bit of a meme… |
Chris Evans (457) 1614 posts |
Brilliant Rick! Did you used to be a copywriter in a previous life? |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts | |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
Just last week I was looking for a Pi case with room for an SSD, and was amazed to not find any. I’m glad to see that something is available after all! |
Glen Walker (2585) 469 posts |
Cool! Although I can’t see much on twitter…will there be a full product page on the RISCOSbits website or is it just for sale at the show…? |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
Mmm. A photo of the inside would have been better. But maybe that’s just me. ;-) Hopefully somebody will have an after-show report out soon for those who didn’t go… |
Matthew Phillips (473) 719 posts |
Various show photos tweeted here: https://twitter.com/hashtag/riscoslondon?src=hash Thanks for another well-organised show folks! |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
From the show site: 2016-10-25 – Another new exhibitor, Bitshifters, will be showing off some amazing Teletext demos, including a YouTube video converter! |
Matthew Phillips (473) 719 posts |
Ah yes, I saw that running and wondered what it was. |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
I, um, have pretty much never used twitter before1 (don’t even have an account). What I got was a small jumble of things (maybe three screenfuls?) with three photos from the show below some photos from last year (Paul Fellows, for instance), and then more stuff from last year (nice bruise there, Vince). Then suddenly a BigTrak (yikes! I remember those!) from 2012. 1 Once, a few years ago, when this site was not working, I thought to look on their twitter and they said they knew so I didn’t bother saying “hey, it’s broke!”. That’s my one and only prior experience with tweets. As you might have guessed, I’d find it horribly annoying to make a decent message the size of an SMS… |
Rick Murray (539) 13806 posts |
Used to write the unofficial (and extremely sarcastic) school magazine. Unlike Frobnicate where I could waffle for as long as I felt, I was constrained by the memory size of the Beeb plus only being allowed to print (photocopy) to a single page, or two if 1 dump. Candidates: jettison, delete, disgorge, eliminate, remove, expunge, omit, drop, discard, extirpate… You get the idea. Shortest words: dump, omit, drop. Best phrasing: omit. Best sense of action: dump. |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
At the top, click on “Latest” (which will in turn take you here). |
RISCOSBits (3000) 139 posts |
It wasn’t on sale at the show, merely on show! It’s a bit expensive as far as Raspberry Pi cases go, being about £100 for the case alone. Add in £50 for a reasonable mSATA (it stalls during boot without one) and £30 for a Pi and it’s not a cheap system. Although still around the same price as other cased non-RISC OS Raspberry Pi media units out there which may or may not work with RISC OS (Five Ninja’s Slice anyone?). It’s worth noting that the mSATA is connected to the USB bus, so doesn’t offer radical speed improvements over a USB drives, although it does SEEM faster – I’ll benchmark it later and post the results. Are people still interested in a Pi-based machine at that kind of price? |
RISCOSBits (3000) 139 posts |
There’s a picture of the insides here There is a set of custom connectors to attach USB, HDMI and power to the ‘motherboard’ |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
I would say that people prefer software today, or hard+soft solution, as hardware is non proprietary, and available on several websites (even this case). Other subject: |
RISCOSBits (3000) 139 posts |
It fits nicely inside a podule slot on a RiscPC or in a PCI slot in more modern hardware! I realise that’s not what you meant! With additional software and configuration, it can be as operationally integrated as the PC-Card. But it is not a co-processor in the traditional Acorn PC-Card sense. |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
If it’s PCI, no. If it’s PCIE and with support for Titanium… You have a potential first buyer :) |
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