Why did Acorn's A3000 have red function keys? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)What role did the BBC have in the development and marketing of Acorn Archimedes computers?What role did the BBC have in the development and marketing of Acorn Archimedes computers?

Right-skewed distribution with mean equals to mode?

List *all* the tuples!

Can a non-EU citizen traveling with me come with me through the EU passport line?

What is the musical term for a note that continously plays through a melody?

If Jon Snow became King of the Seven Kingdoms what would his regnal number be?

do i need a schengen visa for a direct flight to amsterdam?

Is a manifold-with-boundary with given interior and non-empty boundary essentially unique?

Why is black pepper both grey and black?

How do I mention the quality of my school without bragging

How to motivate offshore teams and trust them to deliver?

How much radiation do nuclear physics experiments expose researchers to nowadays?

Why is "Consequences inflicted." not a sentence?

What do you call a plan that's an alternative plan in case your initial plan fails?

Can inflation occur in a positive-sum game currency system such as the Stack Exchange reputation system?

I need to find the potential function of a vector field.

What LEGO pieces have "real-world" functionality?

Why aren't air breathing engines used as small first stages

If 'B is more likely given A', then 'A is more likely given B'

Is the address of a local variable a constexpr?

Diagram with tikz

Is it ethical to give a final exam after the professor has quit before teaching the remaining chapters of the course?

Gastric acid as a weapon

How to find all the available tools in macOS terminal?

How to recreate this effect in Photoshop?



Why did Acorn's A3000 have red function keys?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)What role did the BBC have in the development and marketing of Acorn Archimedes computers?What role did the BBC have in the development and marketing of Acorn Archimedes computers?










11















Acorn's line of ARM-based Archimedes computers was common in UK schools in the 1990s, and many classrooms had an A3000, A4000, or A5000 computer.



The function keys of the A3000 were a distinctive red colour:



Image of A3000 with red function keys(image from Wikimedia Commons)



The A4000, and A5000 (pictured), had dark grey function keys, similar to PC keyboards:enter image description here(image from Wikimedia Commons)



Why was the A3000's keyboard so colourful by comparison?










share|improve this question




























    11















    Acorn's line of ARM-based Archimedes computers was common in UK schools in the 1990s, and many classrooms had an A3000, A4000, or A5000 computer.



    The function keys of the A3000 were a distinctive red colour:



    Image of A3000 with red function keys(image from Wikimedia Commons)



    The A4000, and A5000 (pictured), had dark grey function keys, similar to PC keyboards:enter image description here(image from Wikimedia Commons)



    Why was the A3000's keyboard so colourful by comparison?










    share|improve this question


























      11












      11








      11


      1






      Acorn's line of ARM-based Archimedes computers was common in UK schools in the 1990s, and many classrooms had an A3000, A4000, or A5000 computer.



      The function keys of the A3000 were a distinctive red colour:



      Image of A3000 with red function keys(image from Wikimedia Commons)



      The A4000, and A5000 (pictured), had dark grey function keys, similar to PC keyboards:enter image description here(image from Wikimedia Commons)



      Why was the A3000's keyboard so colourful by comparison?










      share|improve this question
















      Acorn's line of ARM-based Archimedes computers was common in UK schools in the 1990s, and many classrooms had an A3000, A4000, or A5000 computer.



      The function keys of the A3000 were a distinctive red colour:



      Image of A3000 with red function keys(image from Wikimedia Commons)



      The A4000, and A5000 (pictured), had dark grey function keys, similar to PC keyboards:enter image description here(image from Wikimedia Commons)



      Why was the A3000's keyboard so colourful by comparison?







      acorn archimedes a3000






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 11 at 9:46









      Wilson

      12.6k558145




      12.6k558145










      asked Apr 10 at 11:36









      KazKaz

      2,616945




      2,616945




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          17














          The red function keys were a carry-over from the days of the BBC's Computer Literacy Project.



          The first computers made for the BBC by Acorn, the Model A and Model B featured red function keys:
          Image of BBC Micro Model A/B
          These red keys were a feature of all "BBC" computers, including the subsequent BBC Master series.



          The first machines of Acorn's Archimedes line were the A300 and A400 series. The A300s had red function keys, as they still carried BBC branding. The A400s weren't BBC branded, and thus didn't have the red keys.



          If you look closely at the top-right corner of the A3000's keyboard (see image in the question), you'll see the logo of the "BBC Microcomputer System" next to the A3000 logo. The A4000 and A5000 weren't marketed as BBC machines, and thus, like the A400 series, they weren't allowed to have red function keys.






          share|improve this answer























          • Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

            – Tommy
            Apr 10 at 13:26











          • @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

            – Kaz
            Apr 10 at 13:52






          • 3





            I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

            – alephzero
            Apr 10 at 15:27











          • 105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

            – JdeBP
            Apr 10 at 17:18







          • 4





            @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

            – JAB
            Apr 10 at 18:19











          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "648"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );













          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fretrocomputing.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f9638%2fwhy-did-acorns-a3000-have-red-function-keys%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          17














          The red function keys were a carry-over from the days of the BBC's Computer Literacy Project.



          The first computers made for the BBC by Acorn, the Model A and Model B featured red function keys:
          Image of BBC Micro Model A/B
          These red keys were a feature of all "BBC" computers, including the subsequent BBC Master series.



          The first machines of Acorn's Archimedes line were the A300 and A400 series. The A300s had red function keys, as they still carried BBC branding. The A400s weren't BBC branded, and thus didn't have the red keys.



          If you look closely at the top-right corner of the A3000's keyboard (see image in the question), you'll see the logo of the "BBC Microcomputer System" next to the A3000 logo. The A4000 and A5000 weren't marketed as BBC machines, and thus, like the A400 series, they weren't allowed to have red function keys.






          share|improve this answer























          • Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

            – Tommy
            Apr 10 at 13:26











          • @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

            – Kaz
            Apr 10 at 13:52






          • 3





            I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

            – alephzero
            Apr 10 at 15:27











          • 105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

            – JdeBP
            Apr 10 at 17:18







          • 4





            @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

            – JAB
            Apr 10 at 18:19















          17














          The red function keys were a carry-over from the days of the BBC's Computer Literacy Project.



          The first computers made for the BBC by Acorn, the Model A and Model B featured red function keys:
          Image of BBC Micro Model A/B
          These red keys were a feature of all "BBC" computers, including the subsequent BBC Master series.



          The first machines of Acorn's Archimedes line were the A300 and A400 series. The A300s had red function keys, as they still carried BBC branding. The A400s weren't BBC branded, and thus didn't have the red keys.



          If you look closely at the top-right corner of the A3000's keyboard (see image in the question), you'll see the logo of the "BBC Microcomputer System" next to the A3000 logo. The A4000 and A5000 weren't marketed as BBC machines, and thus, like the A400 series, they weren't allowed to have red function keys.






          share|improve this answer























          • Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

            – Tommy
            Apr 10 at 13:26











          • @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

            – Kaz
            Apr 10 at 13:52






          • 3





            I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

            – alephzero
            Apr 10 at 15:27











          • 105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

            – JdeBP
            Apr 10 at 17:18







          • 4





            @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

            – JAB
            Apr 10 at 18:19













          17












          17








          17







          The red function keys were a carry-over from the days of the BBC's Computer Literacy Project.



          The first computers made for the BBC by Acorn, the Model A and Model B featured red function keys:
          Image of BBC Micro Model A/B
          These red keys were a feature of all "BBC" computers, including the subsequent BBC Master series.



          The first machines of Acorn's Archimedes line were the A300 and A400 series. The A300s had red function keys, as they still carried BBC branding. The A400s weren't BBC branded, and thus didn't have the red keys.



          If you look closely at the top-right corner of the A3000's keyboard (see image in the question), you'll see the logo of the "BBC Microcomputer System" next to the A3000 logo. The A4000 and A5000 weren't marketed as BBC machines, and thus, like the A400 series, they weren't allowed to have red function keys.






          share|improve this answer













          The red function keys were a carry-over from the days of the BBC's Computer Literacy Project.



          The first computers made for the BBC by Acorn, the Model A and Model B featured red function keys:
          Image of BBC Micro Model A/B
          These red keys were a feature of all "BBC" computers, including the subsequent BBC Master series.



          The first machines of Acorn's Archimedes line were the A300 and A400 series. The A300s had red function keys, as they still carried BBC branding. The A400s weren't BBC branded, and thus didn't have the red keys.



          If you look closely at the top-right corner of the A3000's keyboard (see image in the question), you'll see the logo of the "BBC Microcomputer System" next to the A3000 logo. The A4000 and A5000 weren't marketed as BBC machines, and thus, like the A400 series, they weren't allowed to have red function keys.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Apr 10 at 11:50









          KazKaz

          2,616945




          2,616945












          • Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

            – Tommy
            Apr 10 at 13:26











          • @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

            – Kaz
            Apr 10 at 13:52






          • 3





            I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

            – alephzero
            Apr 10 at 15:27











          • 105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

            – JdeBP
            Apr 10 at 17:18







          • 4





            @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

            – JAB
            Apr 10 at 18:19

















          • Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

            – Tommy
            Apr 10 at 13:26











          • @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

            – Kaz
            Apr 10 at 13:52






          • 3





            I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

            – alephzero
            Apr 10 at 15:27











          • 105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

            – JdeBP
            Apr 10 at 17:18







          • 4





            @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

            – JAB
            Apr 10 at 18:19
















          Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

          – Tommy
          Apr 10 at 13:26





          Petty quibble, apologies. Re: "weren't allowed to have", do you think that's in the sense of the actual legal agreement with the BBC and not appearing to try to co-opt the brand for unauthorised machines, or merely in the sense of Acorn management giving instructions to Acorn designers that it's time for the company to move away from that association?

          – Tommy
          Apr 10 at 13:26













          @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

          – Kaz
          Apr 10 at 13:52





          @Tommy, I'm afraid I don't know. I've asked a question about the BBC's involvement in the Archimedes line at retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/9644

          – Kaz
          Apr 10 at 13:52




          3




          3





          I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

          – alephzero
          Apr 10 at 15:27





          I don't know the specifics of this case, but designers can get very protective about color schemes. The international courier company UPS owns the copyright on "the color brown", for example. My own multinational employer has a 20-page document defining exactly what color to paint anything that might have the company logo on it!

          – alephzero
          Apr 10 at 15:27













          105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

          – JdeBP
          Apr 10 at 17:18






          105-key keyboards are still available in this style.

          – JdeBP
          Apr 10 at 17:18





          4




          4





          @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

          – JAB
          Apr 10 at 18:19





          @alephzero trademark, not copyright. Other people can still use that specific shade of brown as long as they aren't engaged in courier services.

          – JAB
          Apr 10 at 18:19

















          draft saved

          draft discarded
















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Retrocomputing Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid


          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fretrocomputing.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f9638%2fwhy-did-acorns-a3000-have-red-function-keys%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Wikipedia:Vital articles Мазмуну Biography - Өмүр баян Philosophy and psychology - Философия жана психология Religion - Дин Social sciences - Коомдук илимдер Language and literature - Тил жана адабият Science - Илим Technology - Технология Arts and recreation - Искусство жана эс алуу History and geography - Тарых жана география Навигация менюсу

          Bruxelas-Capital Índice Historia | Composición | Situación lingüística | Clima | Cidades irmandadas | Notas | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegacióneO uso das linguas en Bruxelas e a situación do neerlandés"Rexión de Bruxelas Capital"o orixinalSitio da rexiónPáxina de Bruselas no sitio da Oficina de Promoción Turística de Valonia e BruxelasMapa Interactivo da Rexión de Bruxelas-CapitaleeWorldCat332144929079854441105155190212ID28008674080552-90000 0001 0666 3698n94104302ID540940339365017018237

          What should I write in an apology letter, since I have decided not to join a company after accepting an offer letterShould I keep looking after accepting a job offer?What should I do when I've been verbally told I would get an offer letter, but still haven't gotten one after 4 weeks?Do I accept an offer from a company that I am not likely to join?New job hasn't confirmed starting date and I want to give current employer as much notice as possibleHow should I address my manager in my resignation letter?HR delayed background verification, now jobless as resignedNo email communication after accepting a formal written offer. How should I phrase the call?What should I do if after receiving a verbal offer letter I am informed that my written job offer is put on hold due to some internal issues?Should I inform the current employer that I am about to resign within 1-2 weeks since I have signed the offer letter and waiting for visa?What company will do, if I send their offer letter to another company