![]() | |
![]() Iyonix front, showing drives (CD-RW, floppy disk), power button, reset button, LEDs, USB ports | |
Developer | Castle Technology |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Castle Technology |
Release date | 22 October 2002 (2002-10-22)[1] |
Discontinued | 30 September 2008 (2008-09-30)[2][3][4] |
Media | CD-RW,floppy disk |
Operating system | RISC OS,Linux |
CPU | ARMv5XScale |
Graphics | Nvidia video card |
Predecessor | Risc PC,A9home |
Successor | Touch Book,ARMini |
Website | iyonix |
TheIyonix PC was anAcorn-clonepersonal computer sold byCastle Technology andIyonix Ltd between 2002 and 2008. According to news siteSlashdot, it was the first personal computer to use Intel'sXScale processor.[5] It ranRISC OS 5.[6]
The Iyonix originated as a secret project byPace engineers in connection with development ofset-top boxes (STBs),[citation needed] and has been noted as a successor to theRiscPC.[7] Pace had a licence to developRISCOS Ltd's OS sources for use in the STB market. The Iyonix was developed under the code nameTungsten and usesRISC OS 5, which is a version of RISC OS that supports ARM CPUs with 32-bit addressing modes. The sources and hardware design were subsequently acquired by Castle, who developed them into the final product.[8] Castle continued to keep the project a secret, requiring developers to sign anon-disclosure agreement. Information was distributed to such developers via a confidential section of the website.[9] Customers were occasionally able to buy the computer as abare bones system for self-assembly.[10]
After speculation on theusenet newsgroups, a website for the hardware was spotted in mid October 2002.[11] Units first went on sale in December 2002.[12] Prices started from £1249.[13]
Castle ceased production of the Iyonix after the July 2006 introduction in the UK of theRoHS Regulations. The design was not compliant[14] and Castle did not redesign the Iyonix. Sales continued for another two years via a newly established company, Iyonix Ltd, which enabled Castle itself to circumvent the regulations.[8]
On 25 September 2008, Castle announced that production of the Iyonix had ceased and that new units would no longer be available to order.[15]
Features include:
It was the first time substantial changes had been made to the platform since the release of theRisc PC in 1994. All interim machines had been built on the ARM7500system on a chip, which was widely regarded as a single-chip Risc PC. (It incorporated the memory controller, video, sound, IO and CPU logic of a Risc PC, leaving only memory and disc interfacing to be added.)
The presence of PCI and USB capabilities, as well as the retained "podule" bus, attracted comparisons to Acorn's abortedPhoebe PC; however, such comparisons should be tempered with Phoebe's proposed feature set, which retained VIDC and 26-bit mode, and although Phoebe was intended to be capable ofSMP configurations, its proposed shipping configuration had been for one SA110 CPU.
A huge blow to the already small RISC OS market and community: Castle Technology has announced that the Iyonix range of ARM-based RISC OS computers will be taken off the market after 30th September.
IOYONIX Ltd would like to announce that from the 30th September 2008 it will not be possible to order an IYONIX computer.
"Drobe, the leading RISC OS portal, has reported the release of Iyonix, the first desktop computer to use Intel's XScale processor.
RO5 [...] appeared at the end of 2002. [...] put together a new, 32-bit ARM machine, the Iyonix.
The Tungsten developer Web site was used to distribute information to developers [...] Everybody involved in the Tungsten project, as it was known, had to sign a strict Non-Disclosure Agreement [...]
Castle are once again selling DIY Iyonix motherboard kits, allowing users to save cash by building Iyonix computers themselves. [...] exactly like the DIY kit they offered in October.
A quick browse to Castle's website shows a link to Iyonix PC -- what's this? [...] It seems that the rumour mill that was bandied around on Usenet recently has some reality behind it. [...]
The computer's motherboard will require a costly resdesign in order to meet the requirements of the new RoHS rules, especially to meet the low-lead levels in the PCB solder, say contacts close to Castle.
Castle Technology has announced that the Iyonix range of ARM-based RISC OS computers will be taken off the market after 30th September.
The Iyonix is a standard ATX motherboard with an nVidia graphics card [...]