| | Details | |------------------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------| | OS Version | AmigaOS 3.10 (rare interim release) | | Target Hardware | Commodore Amiga 600 (A600, A600HD) – MC68000 7.14 MHz, ECS chipset | | ROM Version | V39.106 (Kickstart 3.10) – also known as "Kickstart 39.106" | | Release Date | Early 1992 (March–May) | | Preceded by | AmigaOS 2.04 (Kickstart 37.175 / 37.299) | | Succeeded by | AmigaOS 3.1 (Kickstart 40.xx, 1994) |
A new ROM is useless without the matching Workbench. You need the (6 floppies or ADFs).
One afternoon, a knock at the door startled her. She opened it to find a boy about twelve, rain spattered on his jacket, clutching a battered joystick. "My dad told me to find anyone still tinkering with old things," he said. "He said they make better futures." He stepped inside, startled by the glow. When he saw the amigaos310a600rom’s city, his face folded into a map of astonishment. He spent hours there, feeding the machine lines of dialogue about rockets he had not yet built. The ROM replied with a set of schematics for a toy that would teach him patience.
While Kickstart 2 was stable, it lacked the polish, features, and sheer usability of the later Kickstart 3.1 found in the big-box Amigas (the A1200 and A4000). For the A600, the "official" 3.1 ROM was elusive, often requiring hardware patches or specific, hard-to-find chips.
: 3.1 offers improved handling for ReTargetable Graphics (RTG) and is the minimum requirement if you plan to move toward even newer versions like AmigaOS 3.2 or 3.9 later on. New Datatypes : It introduces native support for
: Occupies the $F80000 to $FFFFFF memory space.