C-64 Diehards Relive History 466
Sunfish writes "The Daily Herald has a short article about a Commodore Exposition held this past weekend in the Chicago area. 'This is probably the geekiest of the geekiest,' admitted conference organizer Dave Ross. How has the C-64 influenced computing in today's world? I'd like to know how many Slashdotters 'used' to own and code for one of these relics, and was it more fun than C++ or VB?" I hope 2003's event will get a wrap-up the way 2002 does on the Expo home page.
The C64 was the best (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The C64 was the best (Score:2)
Re:The C64 was the best (Score:2)
Re:The C64 was the best (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep. Me too. Largely because the Programmer's Reference Manual included detailed chapters on each of the major chips inside, as well as a full schematic of the entire computer, which I actually took the time to understand completely. I was not a very good programmer back then, so I mostly played games, but I felt I really understood the system. When I replaced it with an XT clone a few years later, I never really felt
Re:The C64 was the best (Score:2)
I think nowadays people are handed a complex system which is understood by those who designed it and have seen it evolve, but is not intuitive to newbies. Of course computers are hard to use if you don't know why anything does what it does!
With a simple system like the C64, i
Re:The C64 was the best (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems like getting hired as an office worker no longer requires computer skills. Lots of the people that use these things at work have absolutely no clue.
I think everyone that uses a PC should learn the very basics.. and every company should teach them. Spending a little cash for basic computer training will save a lot in support calls in the future.
Like the 80s (Score:2)
Good times... good times...
Will be thinking about slashdot this way in 20 years?
Davak
Naaah. (Score:3, Funny)
I for one will not be getting nostalgically misty-eyed about first posts, Anonymous Cowards, or Score:-1, Trolls.
Fuzzy feelings...commie! (Score:2)
Remember the demo-type programs that ran on each one, slamming all the others?
Debates about color text modes vs. player-missle support?
Disk drive speeds?
Sound chip quality?
Good times.
Amen, my 80's loving brother (Score:2)
Yes, good times indeed.
BTW, haven't seen you in a while... how's practice with you these days (I've got a new ER job... I'm liking it)
Remember it for what it was. (Score:2, Interesting)
About four years ago I realized MACE still existed, and was having a meeting, again, in Southfield. I drove out to it -- figured somehow I should for old times sake. Boy, was it a sorry thing. About six people in a l
Re:Remember it for what it was. (Score:2)
I was a member of EACH (Edmonton Atari Computer Hobbiests) back when we got an Atari 400. I loved that machine and everything else I worked with around then, and have occasionally thought about digging it out of my parents' basement to get it running again (and maybe even moving some of the tapes/floppies onto something that could be read by an emulator) for the sake of nostalgia. However, actually use the thing? No thanks! AtariWriter was brilliant in its day, but looking up every font
C-64 web (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.dreamfabric.com/c64/ [dreamfabric.com]
Davak
Re:C-64 web (Score:2, Informative)
--Atari die hard
Using libraries is cheating :) (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Using libraries is cheating :) (Score:2)
Re:Using libraries is cheating :) (Score:2)
Re:Using libraries is cheating :) (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Using libraries is cheating :) (Score:2)
I got you beat. I remember typing in the entire "Super Star Trek" BASIC program that was listed in an issue of Creative Computing (mid-80's). Looking at it in a web browser on a 1280.1024 screen makes it seem tiny, but it seemed monstrous as a 13 year old when I typed it in by hand.
No typos either if I recall
Everyone, sing along! (Score:2, Funny)
my Commodore 64!
I sing with it, write with it,
figure my path to flight with it,
my Commodore 64.
I rate with it, create with it,
telecommunicate with it,
my Commodore 64.
I adore my 64,
my Commodore 64!
Dude (Score:2)
Dude, anything is more fun than coding in VB.
And yeah, the C-64 was great, some of the first programs I remember writing:
An English to Jive translator.
A 'Car-Wars' RPG car generator.
Those were the days...
Re:Dude (Score:2)
Guess I wasn't the only one to do that,then ... first on my C64, then on my Apple //c.
Even started my own Car Wars "game" ... then Origin promptly released Autoduel, and there wasn't much fun left in it for me back then.
Music (Score:4, Interesting)
The SID chip introduced many people into synth music. I have a bias for electronic music now as a result.
Some useful links:
http://remix.kwed.org
http://www.hardsid.com
Re:Music (Score:2)
I would tape songs for more mobile playback and label them "Computer Music." Later, friends would see and either think it would be Atari 2600 sounding or WAY fringe.
"Hey, that's pretty cool sounding! Kinda weird, but cool. What album is that from?"
-Ducky
"Uh... it's not. It's the theme song to Arkanoid for the C64." Ah, Galway, Hubbard, absolutely amazing. The days I spent in front of sideditor found in part 3 of "All About the Commodore 64, volume 2" by Crai
Re:Music (Score:2)
Re:Music (Score:2)
-- Joe
geekiest of the geekiest? (Score:2)
Re:geekiest of the geekiest? (Score:2)
Now we need to get some Perl zealots to figure out the Perl insults and it will be complete.
Re:geekiest of the geekiest? (Score:2)
$_=~s/($!).+?($@[-1])/yomama/g;
Unfortunately it's really difficult to tell whether such a piece of Perl is an invective, a quote from Sarge in "Beetle Bailey" or a regular expression that parses an HTML file. In fact, this is Perl, so it could be all three.
obtopic: I never had a C-64. I had by turns a TRS-80, several Apple IIs and an Atari 800. I really wanted a C-64 though, mostly because I had a Commie friend who had a copy of "M.U.L.E.", which I thought was a great
Re:geekiest of the geekiest? (Score:2)
Pretty much it was Doom III on the C=64. Of course my memory may be fading - but it still kept me coming back for more. I can still hear that music in the back of my head when the voices aren't talking.
Geeks maybe, weirdos Yes (Score:2)
Count me out. I'll be signing up for the Ham Radio thing down the hall next year instead.
LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2)
Re:LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2)
This blue screen was sure nice and the floppy's sound was soothing like a mill-wheel...
But sooner or later you wanted to learn your second command:
RUN
Re:LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2)
oh the marathon sessions of Yie Ar Kung-Fu, Bomb Jack, WizBall etc.
Re:LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2)
load"*",8,1
Re:LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2)
Better than that was the FastLoad cart from Epyx. Type $ for directory. type /filename to load. type _filename to save. Commodore-RUN/STOP to load *. I still have one of those carts somewhere...
Re:LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2, Informative)
It was a wildcard so say you have a "Aone" "Bone" you could just go "A*" to load "Aone", but remember it matches the first one so if your dir listing went
"Atwo" "Aone" it would load "Atwo" (Of course it's been a while since I did this, but I think this is correct")
Re:LOAD "*",8,1 (Score:2)
I've used it too (Score:2)
I did... (Score:2)
Daniel
Hell yeah. 8Bit programming rocks it out. (Score:2, Interesting)
I still covet, and hack around on my Oric-1, although its easier to get most of the development work done with an emulator.
Does 'vi' and an emulator count for 'still fun', or do you have to actually use the box? Dunno, maybe thats a hardware war I shouldn't get involved in, heh heh
My mommy wouldn't buy me a C64 :'( (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:My mommy wouldn't buy me a C64 :'( (Score:2)
Job assistance (Score:3, Funny)
"Well, Mr. Ross, we've seen from your resume that you've done quite a bit of Java, C++, Perl, Python, and even C#..."
"I have, yes."
"There are some additional, special qualities we're looking for..."
"I did used to program BASIC on my C64 back in the day."
"Welcome to the company, Mr. Ross."
Re:Job assistance (Score:2)
I got hired as a sysadmin the next day. Didn't know s*** about IBMs or DOS. But I had a computer a
More fun than VB? (Score:5, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodore_BASIC_pr
Re:More fun than VB? (Score:2)
So where the hell is my C-64 -> VB.NET conversion tool?
The C64 was definitely more fun (Score:3, Interesting)
1) The C64 hardware was pretty much the same for every machine. This means that whatever neat hack you'd come up with, and believe me, there's a lot of them, it would work on just about any machine.
2) The system was relatively simple, so you could understand it without thousands of pages of reading.
3) If you didn't like something, be it BASIC, the Kernal, or anything else, it was a simple job to flip out the ROM and replace it in the underlying RAM with whatever you'd want.
4) While the graphics weren't great, it's better than most other systems at the time. The sound was almost certainly a cut above, too.
5) The C64 was extremely well documented, by amateurs, for amateurs. The documentation you'd find on it, and there was plenty, was easy to understand and chances are, if you wanted to know how to do something, someone had wrote an article or a few on exactly that. I still have well over a hundred books on C64 programming on a shelf. I haven't used them in awhile, but they're there. They cover just about every topic in programming you'd ever want. Oh, and the development tools for the C64 were inepensive. Just copy one of the free assemblers from someone else. Many flavors of development tools were freely available.
Simply put, it's a programmer's dream.
Re:The C64 was definitely more fun (Score:2)
I had a Commodore 64 for four years in the 1980's as it was all that I could afford at the time. The CPU cost $200 and the 5 1/2 inch disk drive also cost $200.
The best things about the C-64?
- Flip the power switch and it was on! No boot time.
- It was documented. Computer Gazette magazine published lots of programs and guides. They published books also on the firmware. The chips and the connectors were well documented. (and the chips were in sockets so when you blew them up by your mistak
Oh yeah, I had one (Score:2, Funny)
Then, I got the big daddy. With a cassette tape drive.
Also fun was going to the mall, typing
10 print "F*** YOU";
20 goto 10
run
and watching the idiot at the store try to figure out how to stop it.
True C64ers know what the ";" did at the end of line 10.
Re:Oh yeah, I had one (Score:2, Funny)
What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do? What did it do?
Re:Oh yeah, I had one (Score:2)
poke53280,0
poke53281,1
poke646,0
the horror...the horror...
Basic Programming in the modern world (Score:2, Funny)
C64 (Score:2)
When I blew up my PC and couldn't afford to fix it for a week, I spent a week in front of an old telly and a C64. I grew up with an Amiga, Sinclair Spectrum and C64, but I didn't have the resources to program anything beyond little BASIC games between the ages of 7 and 11.
So, this was back in 2000. I'd only been using x86 PCs for a month, and felt that it was all a bit anti-intuitive and over-obfusticated to just play around with. To this 15 year old nerd, a machine reference book and asm compiler coupled
I adore my 64 (Score:4, Interesting)
Learned to realign a 1541 disk drive. Learned to solder in reset switches, waited the longest 4-6 weeks of my life for my Action Reply Mk 5 Professional, only to replace it with a Super Snap Shot 7 a month later. First A/D converter (Covox Voice Master), first video scanner, first stolen long distance phone call.
For better or for worse, no piece of technology has had a greater effect of my life. By the end I had two systems, three 1541 5.25" drives, and two 800k 3.5" drives. 15 year old bliss.
Re:I adore my 64 (Score:2)
About the only problem I ever had with the C64 was 40 column width, I switched to a 128D, and used DESTerm for true Ansi. Kept the 128 Longer than I should, and finally upgraded to an Amiga. 16 color Ansi, Zmodem resume, scroll back history. Fidonet and lots of WWII BBS's, and fidonet email, and lots of multi-line BBS's.
Then I got on the net for Aminet, started hanging out on IRC i
First Computer I ever had (Score:2, Interesting)
Many years later, I look back on the C-64 with fond memories. I'm a college graduate now (phi beta
I learned to program on my C64 (Score:2, Interesting)
Eventually I was tracing the program flow before typing it it, picking out superflous routines (I was lazy, wouldnt type 4 pages of carefully formatted print statements for a goofy instructions scene).
I eventually moved on to compilers and assembler (Blitz! basic kicked ass) on it. I held on to it
I remember when they arrived in the shop... (Score:2)
We had a long waiting list of customers who wanted them.
Problem was, they arrived with pretty well *no* software to sell with them... it wasn't for another couple of months that software titles started arriving.
Then the problem was that these software titles were recycled VIC20 programs ported to the C64. They were buggy as hell and total crap. Except 'jumpman' which w
Compute! and the C=64 (Score:4, Informative)
The C64 was one of the first machines I'd ever used to go online. The Atari/C=64 wars were pretty amusing (I had both though!). There were also hundreds of little demos that you could load. Almost all of them took advantage of quirks of the hardware -- songs, digitized voices, animations. One of my favorites was a graphing application that drew 3D functions on the screen. They took sometimes hours to draw stuff that would be real-time today, but I'd spend hours just waiting for them to finish.
Re:Compute! and the C=64 (Score:2)
"Commodore User", wasn't it? (Later to become "CU Amiga".)
It was still a pain!
I think "mouse wrist" and carpal tunnel syndrome are just latent symptoms from those Good Old days of computing. When computing became boring (mice, GUIs, Teh Intarweb...), people started noticing their ailments.
Re:Compute! and the C=64 (Score:2)
An old, roting box.
This box is filled with something equally as old, but not quite as roted.
Filled with something that my wife has tried to get me to toss numerous times, but I'd sooner toss her ass out than what's in this box.
It is a collection of about 30 Compute! magazines and perhaps 50 Run! magazines.
I'd like to open the bidding at $5,000.
Ahhh, Commodore programming (Score:3, Interesting)
I originally got the Commodore Plus/4, a computer that would have been a slightly enhanced C64 except... no backwards compatibility. So, wanting to use my computer, but not being able to run games on it, I got into programming. I later got a C64 too, which was a much better gaming box, but even more difficult for programming than the Plus/4 was.
A few items to give you a feel for what programming the C64 was like...
You could program in BASIC, Assembly, or get a third party compiler of some kind. BASIC was by far the most approachable of these for the newbie. The BASIC interpreter was in ROM, so as soon as you turn on the computer, you could just start typing in code. The downside to it being in ROM, however, is that you are stuck with that version of the language.
Being interpreted, Commodore BASIC was pretty slow stuff. For anything where execution speed makes a difference (like a game), Assembly was the way to go... the 1 MHz CPU didn't really handle the overhead of an interpreter well.
Commodore BASIC programs were horridly unstructured. GOTO everywhere, dependent on line numbers (and yet lacking a command to renumber your program if you run out of numbers). BASIC had the usual PRINT, IF .. THEN, and such, but doing anything nontrivial required using POKE (write directly to memory) and PEEK (read directly from memory) to access magic locations in memory. You could write directly to the screen buffer or color palatte, for instance as well as other more obscure locations. There was also a SYS command to execute machine code starting at a specified address, which was used for kernel system calls or jumping to ml subroutines.
While the Plus/4 had BASIC commands for things like drawing lines on the screen or making music, the C64 did not. Get used to the PEEK/POKE/SYS stuff described above if you want your program to do anything like that.
The floppy drive, while interesting in that it had a CPU of comparable power to the main computer, was notoriously slow. Whereas with computers these days temp files, swap space, running commands from a disk, and such are ubiquitous things, on the Commodore, I/O had to be kept to a minimum or you could forget about any kind of speed. The Unix "everything is a file" philosophy wouldn't have worked too well on this platform.
This wonderful Commodore BASIC was written by a then little-known company named Microsoft.
More fun than C++? (Score:2)
Fun things to do at the mall (Score:2)
It was so much cooler though when you could do something like:
10 print chr$(int(205.5+rnd(0)));: goto 10
Yes, true geeks appreciate that more than the F*U thing.
For the record, I still have three working C64's, a couple of 1541's and a huge stack of floppies (that have since been saved on CD via X1541 and StarCommander).
Anyone that was around back then might even remember me... Fantasy of Newage.
I miss those days. Not so much the Sprint
The C64 Days (Score:2)
I still have one at home, sitting in a box, with the various robotic kits I managed to integrate with it. Ahhhh, glory days.
Shameless Plug (Score:2)
I loved my C64. It was a big part of my life from ages 14 to 18 or so. It's how I learned to "hack" or "code" -- or whatever it is I get paid for these days. It was so limited that you had to use real creativity to milk fun out of it. It was mor
My first "real" computer (Score:2)
Moving up to the C-64 was the Big Time! I taught myself Basic and then quickly moved on to 6502 assembly.
Spent months decoding the kernel ROM, then moved on to cracking copy-protection routines in the 1541.
Ultimately I was burning my own custom kernel ROMs, with the cassette stuff taken out, and a DOS wedge (remember @$ to get a DIR?) installed.
Ah, memories!
Frodo and the N-Gage (Score:2)
My C64 Memories... (Score:2)
I bought my C64 when I was about 12. It was summer and I bought it from a garage sale. It was probably about 1986-87 or so, and it was a few years after their hayday. Anyhow, it was broken from the garage sale, and I remember the only thing you could do on it was play frogger with a cartrigde. (Wouldn't load basic correctly). I was a poor kid from a poor family, I had been enthralled with computers for years, but thought it was a pipe dream. But this was my chance. We took it to a local shop and
Bought Mine at Toys-R-Us... (Score:2)
Of course, I spent more buying a 1541 drive and a Commodore monitor (all the better to see those cute little sprites),
Eventually, I wrote a Commodore Basic program of, maybe, 2000 lines to collect, "analyze" and report on results from a local newspaper survey. Iirc, the paper loved the results, but I had no way of know
Development Then and Now (Score:2)
I attended the Vintage Computer Fair and found myself wondering aloud: Why can't software development be as simple as it was back when these machines were state of the art?
To get a program running on a C-64, you simply typed in:
10 PRINT "HELLO, WORLD!"
20 GOTO 10
RUN
And that was it! Real programming, available instantly.
Now, to write a program that employs Best Practices, you need to write code that:
And Real Windows, in 1985! (Score:2)
Just after I graduated, I found out about a new program called GEOS. This was perhaps the greatest hack in computer history - an entire graphical windowing environment that ran on the C64 - with apps for word processing, spreadsheet, real bitmap
C Power (Score:2)
I also programmed it in C, using the C Power compiler. It was a solid compiler, produced the highest performance code of any language I used (but I never wrote assembler for 6502). It's main flaw was that it did not support longs (32 bit ints).
I was just starting to do music via MIDI with it when it died.
However, I remember enough of it to recall how limited it was. Not all memories are f
C-64 and 300 baud modem (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, my primary objective for my C-64 was to gather and play games. That meant a 1541 5.25" floppy drive. That was the loudest, slowest piece of computer equipment ever manufactured. If I could manually scribe the bits on the disk with a writing utensil while reading the data from screen, I would beat that 1541.
The quest for games also meant BBS searches, wardialing, etc. Then I discovered MCI codes. Soon I was dialing BBSs in New York, Arkansas, Chicago. All of the country. I started by making printouts, but then I quickly remembered the numbers. Ever since, phone numbers have always stuck in my head. I remember my home phone number from every place I've lived since those days. Twenty years and probably fifteen different residences.
Of course, the FBI paid me a visit. That ended that. But I had a nice collection of games before it was all said and done, and the IBM PC and its clones had become the standard.
Beach Head. Raid Over Moscow. Infiltrator. Fourth & Inches. Microleague Baseball. Karateka. Ultima I, II, III, and IV. One-on-One. Flight Simulator. Just to name a few. I loved that beige box with a keyboard.
did you have the 1200/75 switch? (Score:2)
c64 RULED (Score:2)
When you go from 5 year old Atari2600 games to C64 games like Bruce Lee, life is bliss.
There's some fun on a C64 that simply can't be recreated as it was an important tech boost.
New 3d games don't give the fun you found in different C64 games. Back then, anything was possible, but we now know every game falls into a genre.
Anyone know about that one game where you were in a radioactive shelter, and had to hack robots above land. It was 3d, and black with green lines to
C64 a tinkerers machine (Score:2)
Nice memories... (Score:2)
The other amazing thing was the number of BBSs that ran on C64s, with their 1200 bps floppies.
Logo (Score:5, Interesting)
They brought in the 3 guys who developed the SID and VIC chips and let us ask them questions, but wouldn't tell us their names, for fear of poaching. It was kinda humerous.
When I later had trouble debugging some interrupt routines, they made a special 6510 chip for me, since they owned the fab MOS Techology that made the chips (the 6510 is a 6502 with 8-bit IO at location 0 and 1, which was a big pain for Logo since we used to be carefree about taking CAR and CDR of NIL internally...took me a month to root those out). The special chip had an extra pin that said whether the chip was fetching I or D, and then we bought a Nicolet-Paratronics 16-channel logic analyzer, and Commodore supplied us with a PET and a Basic program to run it. You clipped the logic analyzer onto the chip, ran the PET program, and said for example "Start looking when location 64 is written". The cool thing was that since the logic analyzer was always watching the data, and the PET did the analysis, you could set a breakpoint up to something like 256 instructions before your condition happened. That was the world's coolest debugger (and I've used them all from, ITS HACTRN to Lisp Machines to Scheme).
We asked for a feature to be put in the VIC chip to let you do splitscreen graphics/text mode, kinda like in the Apple II. The VIC guy said it could be done with an interrupt routine. I told him I didn't want any screen jitter, and he assured me it would work fine. It did, except in "doublecolor" mode, and the boundary between the two modes shifted. So I hacked around it a bit with some NOPS and got it mostly stable, and did what any normal programmer would do: I documented it as a feature, and called it the "Doublecolor Status Line" in the index and said, "This is normal and should be no cause for concern."
There was also a ".OPTION" command that was a controlled equivalent to PEEK and POKE described elsewhere in Basic, and it let me put in hack features that were cheap to add. So
My C64 code's still running! (Score:2, Interesting)
The thing was just terrible - a big centrally-mounted TV flashing day glow colors, ostensibily to get the attention of
"used' too? I still have one.. (Score:2)
While they may have sold more 64's, i think the atari's ( both 8 and 16 bit ) and 8 bit apples had more of a lasting impact on the computing world as a whole.
But thats just personal preference..
Don't forget the Commodore VIC-20 (Score:2)
Re:Don't forget the Commodore VIC-20 (Score:2)
I remember buying a VIC-20 in 1985 as a computer (I almost wrote PC as the terms are almost interchangable now) to tear apart and learn digital and microprocessor electronics on.
I read about a new powerful language called FORTH that was available for the VIC-20. The public library had the book 'Running FORTH' available. I read it and thought that it would be worth checking out on the VIC-20.
The only place to get FORTH for the VIC was at Toys=R=Us in the game cartridge department. It was stran
Oh you C64 latecomers (Score:2)
With a Microsoft Basic (Score:2)
Back when Assembly was cool... (Score:2)
Besides, there's nothing cooler than typing in an Assembly program masquerading as a Basic program, then executing the compiler via a sys command. I forget the name of the assembler, but that was a load of fun. I still have tons of code that I wrote laying around and I frankly don't understand a bit of it any more, but I remember the fun.
Then again, I remember spending something like 16 straight hours trying to finish o
My C64 was the first to teach me to Peek & Pok (Score:2)
I mostly wrote slightly-sluggish video games with my Super Expander [funet.fi] plugged in.
The world is in every way a better place for there not having been Flash when I was 13.
My C-64 Days (Score:2)
What about QuickBasic? (Score:2)
Not counting a TI 94/a that really didn't hold my attention much (hey, I was a really little kid at the time I was given it), a Tandy 1000 RL that I got when I was about 12 was my first PC.
While I had used Apple computers at school, and the TI 94/a before this Tandy, I still say it was the computer that finally sparked my interest in PCs.
I guess I'll admi
I got PAID to program on one of these! (Score:2)
It was back in the late 80s, when I was in college. I had a job with this little shop that sold mailorder sports handicapping software - for horse racing, football, basketball, baseball, etc. We ran on the PC, Mac, C64 and whatever the contemporaneous Atari was. Everything was written in BASIC (but no, it was *not* cross-platform).
Working on the C64 was definitely the most fun (fun being iterpreted rather arbitrarily) - I was used to working
How about posting before the expo! (Score:2)
Technology used to be so simple and finite. Now technology has gotten to the point that it is amazing that it even works at all. Imagine what could be done with a 2.4GHZ CPU, 4 GB of RAM, a 120GB HD, and upgraded sound and video on a C64.
Re:price (Score:2)
Re:Science fair project with Vic-20 (Score:2)
I'm sorry. Truly I am.
Re:I used to aspire to a C64... (Score:2)
I learned to program BASIC and touched assembler on those machines. With a friend, we wrote an entire adventure game, or so we thought--an endless stream of questions delivered in an entirely linear fashion.
Typing in stuff from SoftSide magazine got us hooked. Event
C-64 Power (Score:2)
I think that one game made me a gamer and interested in computers. Entering 20 page BASIC programs from the back of Family Computing made me interested in coding. (And debugging! Har!)
Anyone remember huge blocks of code like this?
200 DATA 200,45,45,342,4,6,0,0,0,45,3,45,3,56
210 DATA 316,85,27,5
Re:Fun yes if you can call assembler fun (Score:2)
As for frying girls, well we still had some wild parties and once (at least) a naked geek-girl did fall in the barbeque and another set her pubic hair on fire trying to do this stunt involving burning matches and genitalia that the blokes could do with much lest risk.
Re:can anyone answer tis one... (Score:2)
Ok, if I *DO* remember correctly, I really must go shoot myself because I will have finally figured out what piece of useless trivia has been clogging up my brain keeping Calculus out.
Re:If It wasn't for the C-64 (Score:2)
Tape was device 1, first disc typically 8.
Disc drives could be rigged (jumpers on 1541, switches on 1571/1541-II) to device 8,9,10,11.
The printer was 4 or 5 IIRC.
Re:C64 - What's it Good for? (Score:2)