Domino Graphic card 1 Mo: 160$ including shipping in the US
******* PRICE DOWN *********
$140 including shipping in the US
***************************
Domino was produced by Village Tronic, today famous for Picasso II/II+ and Picasso IV, but it was distribute by X-Pert Computer Services.
This is an extremely rare video card for the Commodore Amiga 2000, 3000, or 4000.
The Domino board itself is a bit to big for Amiga3000 and Amiga4000, as it was made with the Amiga 2000 in mind. If you remove the card mounting rails, it can be made to fit nicely.
-> I'm using it on my Amiga 4000 however without any problem
Domino can be used in any Amiga with 68020+, a free Zorro II slot and OS 2.x for the original Domino workbench emulating or EGS and 3.x for Picasso96 or Cybergraphics. You would need at least a 68020
Domino
Company X-Pert Computer Services / Village Tronic, Germany
Date 1992
Amiga A2000, A3000, A4000
Interface Zorro II
Autoconfig ID 2162 / 1,2 - 2167 / 1,2
Both the original Domino workbench emulation and EGS/CGX/P96 all needs it.
It's based on the mighty Tseng Lab ET 4000
This card is supported by the Mac emulators EMPLANT and FUSION, as well as various other graphics programs and environments (such as EGS and Picasso 96).
-> I'm using it with an emplant card
Also the card has the very rare option video pass-through connector
-> The switcher-chip allow you to switch between RTG mode and native mode.
If you have a scandoubler card with a VGA output, you connect it to the Domino
It allow you to use only 1 monitor whatever the resolution you are using!
Here is a video of the pass-through on my system: click here
For more detailed information including driver software: click here or you can use Picasso 96 (This is what I'm using on my Amiga)
******* PRICE DOWN *********
$140 including shipping in the US
***************************
Domino was produced by Village Tronic, today famous for Picasso II/II+ and Picasso IV, but it was distribute by X-Pert Computer Services.
This is an extremely rare video card for the Commodore Amiga 2000, 3000, or 4000.
The Domino board itself is a bit to big for Amiga3000 and Amiga4000, as it was made with the Amiga 2000 in mind. If you remove the card mounting rails, it can be made to fit nicely.
-> I'm using it on my Amiga 4000 however without any problem
Domino can be used in any Amiga with 68020+, a free Zorro II slot and OS 2.x for the original Domino workbench emulating or EGS and 3.x for Picasso96 or Cybergraphics. You would need at least a 68020
Domino
Company X-Pert Computer Services / Village Tronic, Germany
Date 1992
Amiga A2000, A3000, A4000
Interface Zorro II
Autoconfig ID 2162 / 1,2 - 2167 / 1,2
- RTG graphics card
- the card has a standard ISA connector with a PC display card plugged into it
- Tseng Labs ET4000
- 1 MB RAM
- six predefined screen modes
- 1280×1024 87 Hz interlaced, up to 16 colours from a 18 bit (262144) palette
- 1152×900 60 Hz, up to 256 colours from 18 bit
- 1120×832 65 Hz, up to 256 colours from 18 bit
- 1024×768 70 Hz, up to 256 colours from 18 bit
- 800×600 72 Hz, up to 32768 colours from a 15 bit (3276
palette - 640×480 81 Hz, up to 32768 colours from 15 bit
- notes
- socket for monitor switcher
- video pass-through connector
- HD15 VGA connector
- CyberGraphX 2, Picasso96, EGS and custom drivers
- supported by NetBSD and OpenBSD
Both the original Domino workbench emulation and EGS/CGX/P96 all needs it.
It's based on the mighty Tseng Lab ET 4000
This card is supported by the Mac emulators EMPLANT and FUSION, as well as various other graphics programs and environments (such as EGS and Picasso 96).
-> I'm using it with an emplant card
Also the card has the very rare option video pass-through connector
-> The switcher-chip allow you to switch between RTG mode and native mode.
If you have a scandoubler card with a VGA output, you connect it to the Domino
It allow you to use only 1 monitor whatever the resolution you are using!
Here is a video of the pass-through on my system: click here
For more detailed information including driver software: click here or you can use Picasso 96 (This is what I'm using on my Amiga)
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