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{{Operating-system-stub}} Category:Acorn Computers Category:Acorn operating systems

Chris's Acorns

Discussion at User talk:Xymmax

Article references

Misc

General journal/magazine refs

BBC Micro

RPCEmu

BYTE

Potential articles for reference. Also need to check Drobe and research printed copies of Micro User, Acorn User, Archive, etc.

Note: Academic journals should be grouped together some time, for someone with access to a university library to look into!

PCW

Sibelius

Education

Photos

Spellings Computer Services

End of Acorn Workstations

  • "Interesting Times"
  • "Acorn: The Future"
  • "The Big Rescue Plan"
  • RISC User 11/10
  • "Acorn Ex Xemplar"

Xemplar

Element 14

  • RISC User 11/10
  • "Acorn launches Element 14 Ltd"

ARM

  • RISC User 11/7
  • "Acorn to sell its ARM stake"

ANT

Cogwheel

Acorn clones

  • RISC User 11/6
  • "Taking the MEDIcation"
  • RISC User 11/7
  • "Designs on the Medi"
  • "MicroDigital Meditations"

RISC OS

Acorn Cybervillage

RISCOS Ltd

  • "RISC OS:The Future"

ROOL shared source initiative

Qercus

Castle

  • "King of the Castle"

A9

ARMini

NC

  • "The Making of the NC"
  • "MATRIX Multiplication"
  • RISC User 11/6
  • "The NC Examined"

Online Media

Oregan

Acorn (2006)

Vintage

TBA Software

Computer Concepts

GUI

Windows on ARM

(Elite - unrelated to RISC OS)


Raspberry Pi

Acorn Computers

Steve Furber

Andy Hopper

Olivetti Research Labs

Books

Shows/events 2000-2003

Relevant pages

Interesting external sites

Test


CTL

Castle Technology Ltd.
Company typePrivate
IndustryComputer software, Computer hardware
FoundedFramlingham, UK (June 4, 1993 (1993-06-04))
FounderJohn Ballance, Jack Lillingston, Peter Wild
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Jack Lillingston, Co-founder and Managing director
John Ballance, Co-founder and Chief technical officer
ProductsIyonix PC, Risc PC, RISC OS 5
Websitecastle-technology.co.uk
  • I think that Iyonix is a separate company, and therefore won't be listed as a subsidiary.
  • Also, we could do with including a replacement for this official image, as it's presumably not free. (There are also five photos on the current website, but I can't see the article becoming long enough (in the short- to medium-term) to warrant a photo for each machine.)
  • Include PNG of Iyonix logo.

RISC OS

Logos

While under Acorn's ownership, the identity of RISC OS was integral to that of Acorn itself.[1] Previously, RISC OS used the Acorn nut device as its representative symbol[1], but that trademark (or a derivative of it) had subsequently been registered by Aristide & Co Antiquaire De Marques.[citation needed] After Acorn's demise, there was a need to establish a specific visual identity by way of a new logo.[1]

RISCOS Ltd's RISC OS 4 already had its own logo, a 3D cube.[1] Therefore, a new logo was designed by Richard Hallas, a former editor of RISC User magazine.[citation needed] His design was created with the intention of satisfying all of the following conditions:

  • It should be graphically simple, but yet have a complex enough shape to be recognisable at a glance.
  • It should be simple enough to be usable purely as a shape in monochrome, but with a more attractive complementary colour version.
  • It should be visually interesting when viewed at a large size, but still recognisable even if used at extremely small sizes (such as in the corners of file icons).
  • It should be usable in isolation or in combination with other text, just as the Acorn Nut could appear either on its own or at the end of the word 'Acorn'; in which case it must form an appropriately balanced whole.
  • It should be a regular shape which can easily be used within other designs and which is not greatly affected by questions of angle or perspective.
  • In its colour form, it should make use of few colours in order to avoid over-complexity, have impact, and be capable of being printed with spot colours for limited-colour printing. Notably, there was a flat green version of the Acorn Nut as well as the nice, shaded 3D version.
  • Whilst the question of being an abstract design isn't a problem (lots of logos are abstract), it should preferably be a fairly even shape; not too tall or thin. The Acorn logo was taller than it was wide, but only by a little; the Apple logo is more or less square in terms of its bounding box; the Windows logo is a rotated rectangle with roughly 4:3 proportions. These are all harmonious, flexible shapes.
    — Richard Hallas, 'Rebranding RISC OS' article, on RISCOS Ltd's website[1]

Table of logo variants

Note: The full table may ultimately be migrated elsewhere during the process of moving this draft to WP:NS0. It's included here to see how it looks and hangs with the rest of the section/article.

Standard Graphical Graphical (spot colour)
3D (colour) File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen std 3d col preferred.svg File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen graph 3d col full.svg File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen graph 3d col spot.svg
2D (colour) File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen std 2d col.svg File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen graph 2d col full.svg File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen graph 2d col spot.svg
2D (monochrome) File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen std 2d.svg File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen graph 2d mono.svg File:Riscos logo generic cogwheel gen graph 2d mono.svg

Ref

Norcroft

Different referencing styles/advice

About template

Extraneous links testing.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Hallas, Richard (2001). "Rebranding RISC OS". RISCOS Ltd. Retrieved 2011-03-14. [...] which of course was wholly appropriate while Acorn itself was the sole producer of RISC OS-based systems. Cite error: The named reference "rebranding risc os" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).