Manufacturer “Black Belt Systems”
1 expansion in database
external framebuffer
- shares the RGB display with the Amiga - it can even display both on a split screen
- when HAM-E detects a special display-line signature (magic cookie) in a 640 pixels wide screen, then converts it to one that is half as wide with twice as many colour bitplanes
- a side effect of sharing the screen is that this signature data can be seen as a couple of slim lines of garbage at the top left side - they can be eliminated by using an overscan screen on which they are above the visible screen area
- register mode:
- analogous to the Amiga lo-res mode, whereby a hardware colour register controls the colour of each individual pixel
- up to 256 colours from a 24 bit palette
- supports colour cycling
- extended HAM mode:
- similar to the normal Amiga HAM mode
- uses compression techniques to achieve 18 bit colour form 8 bits of data
- diminishes precise control over individual pixel colour
- HAM-E Plus includes hardware antialiasing
screen modes
- HAM-E: 384×480 (overscan NTSC), 384×560 (overscan PAL)
- HAM-E Plus: 768×480, 768×560
notes
- supplied with Image Professional image processing and paint program
- direct support for NewTek's 21 bit DigiView buffers
- supported fileformats: IFF24, IFF, HAM, RGB8 and RGBN, Targa, GIF, Dynamic HiRes
- compatible with external genlocks, but a special shielded cable is required to improve performance
- plugs to the 23 pin video port, the RGB port is passed through
- an 8" × 10" unit with external power supply
Advert (US)
1991-04 Advert (US)
1991-05 Advert (GB)
1991-07