The AAA chipset (Advanced Amiga Architecture) was intended to be the next-generation Amiga multimedia technology designed by Commodore International. The original Amiga (1985) The Amiga is a family of home/personal computers originally developed by Amiga Corporation as an advanced game console. ... Commodore is the commonly used name for Commodore International, a West Chester, Pennsylvania based electronics company who was a vital player in the home/personal computer field in the 1980s. ...
It was slated to include numerous technologies. The only firm details were:
32-bit data bus
It would include a DSP chip for sound production called 'Mary', that would provide 8 16-bit audio channels
Chunky graphics mode provided by custom chip 'Monica'
A new custom chip called 'Linda' that would speed up video bandwidth
Commodore became bankrupt before designs were completed. AAA was never produced, though it was much talked about in the trade press. Numerous plans for purchasing Amiga and salvaging the technology came and went after Commodore's demise; all of them included the realization that for the Amiga to stay competitive, the development and release of AAA would have to be one of their overriding goals. As time dragged on after Commodore's bankruptcy, this became more and more important. The term DSP, when used by itself, can refer to: The sterilisation process Dry Sterilisation Process for the cold and fast sterilisation of surfaces. ... The Amiga flicker fixer does the exact opposite of what a typical pc scan converter does. ... A Blitter (acronym for BLock Image TransferrER) is a chip that specialises in bitmap data-transfer using bit blit methods. ...
PC technology eventually moved so far beyond the AAA specification that even in draft form, AAA was legacy technology.