Jon (From Amiga Disrupt) - Vampire 4 - Stand Alone - First Impressions
https://retromodsblog.wordpress.com/2020/01/28/a-look-at-the-vampire-v4-stand-alone-fpga-first-impressions
Thanks for the link.
I was glad to read this review about the V4SA, but disappointed to see that again the Vampire solution ultimately sold to the public is half baked and not really ready.
The review specifics confirms all the many problems and disappointments I have already experienced myself using the Vampire 500v2 and Vampire 600v2 building systems around them. Especially the lack of documentation, dodgy SD card reliability and performance, annoying CF card setup, dodgy SAGA HDMI support needing to be precisely calibrated for each individual HDMI screen, no network support and lack of modern USB device support. I covered these in my blog also.
While these Vampire 4SA problems are disappointing to the reviewer, it is no surprise to me. These known issues have been unresolved for a long time. From the outside, it seems the Vampire team have overstretched themselves trying to support too many systems at once, and struggling to provide a unified feature set that works properly.
Vampire 500/600/1200 cards plugged into Classic Amigas need beefy psu, and fully recapped systems to run properly, otherwise they are highly unstable in my experience. I have lost two Amiga systems because of Vampire cards. Even without those problems, they still have plenty of other issues as documented above.
Vampires running Core 2 are still what I consider a Classic Amiga accelerator expansion card, running on top of and using the Amiga hardware. With Gold core 3 and later, where they emulate the display and other chips (eg. AGA output on an ECS machine via HDMI RTG onboard), it is no longer an expansion since it is totally bypassing the Amiga custom chips.
Running the Vampire standalone is logical in that situation with the latest core, as it is no longer really using the Amiga hardware anyway.
As I have said before, Vampire is cool tech, and it does allow us to run Classic Amiga applications a bit faster than before. But only newly developed software designed to take advantage of the faster processor speed of the vampire and RTG will genuinely improve the functionality of the system. And there is not much of that right now, and I struggle to see where the new software will come from.
Of course I am biased as a beta tester of AmigaOS4, but I prefer supporting the genuine NG Amiga systems, running new versions of PPC AmigaOS 4.1FE Update1, PPC MorphOS 3.12, x86 AROS etc, which have genuine new functionality and performance. The A1222 cost-wise compares favourably to the Vampire 4SA, and can do a lot more than just run Classic Amiga software from 30 years ago a little bit faster than before....and the X5000 is another level beyond that, opening up even more capabilities and speed.
None of these systems, including NG Amigas will ultimately ever compete with modern systems on price or performance, and before people point that out, I am well aware of it. Your modern PC, Mac or tablet (and mine) will easily outperform any of them.
The interesting part is seeing how the current NG AmigaOS 4/MorphOS/AROS is developed into, the new features and functionality opened up on our favourite platform, with genuine new software already taking advantage of them, and not just emulating old software from 30 years ago.
That said, whatever Amiga people prefer to use it up to them of course! Playing with all Amigas (NG, FPGA, emulated or Classic) makes me very happy indeed and all have their moments!
This is just my 2c, as someone keen to see the Amiga genuinely move forward.
Catcha,
Epsilon