First Commodore 64 LAN Party 224
Leif_Bloomquist writes "The world's first Commodore 64 LAN party was held at the Cincinnati Commodore Computer Club 2008 Expo last weekend, where the new multiplayer C64 game NetRacer was unveiled. The setup consists of up to eight Commodore 64s with Ethernet cartridges and a central server written in Java running on a PC. The game is also playable over the Internet."
high security? (Score:5, Funny)
Is New Zealand a terrorist country or something? I got this:
You are not authorized to view this page
The Web server you are attempting to reach has a list of IP addresses that are not allowed to access the Web site, and the IP address of your browsing computer is on this list.
Please try the following:
* Contact the Web site administrator if you believe you should be able to view this directory or page.
HTTP Error 403.6 - Forbidden: IP address of the client has been rejected.
Internet Information Services (IIS)
Technical Information (for support personnel)
* Go to Microsoft Product Support Services and perform a title search for the words HTTP and 403.
* Open IIS Help, which is accessible in IIS Manager (inetmgr), and search for topics titled About Security, Limiting Access by IP Address, IP Address Access Restrictions, and About Custom Error Messages.
Re:high security? (Score:5, Informative)
I think since the C64 event is in the USA that it blocks out foreign IP addresses. Try using a Web proxy from the USA and see if that works, or Use Tor [torproject.org] to connect to a USA Tor server.
I'll mirror the location of the event if you want information on it:
"05/26/2008: To pre-pay admission and table fee(s) for the C4 Expo, please Paypal your payments to cmdreclub@iglou.com.
When making payment, please ensure you put what you are paying for
in the comments field of the Paypal transaction.
The receipt for the Paypal transaction MUST be presented at the
admission desk in order to gain entrance to the Expo!!
Door Charges: $10/person or $15/family
Selling tables: $15/table or 3 for $35 (The hotel charges $10/table in addition for power usage.)
T-shirts: TBD
The Cincinnati Commodore Computer Club is proud to present the 3rd annual C4 Expo.
June 28-29 at the Drawbridge Inn
located at:
2477 Royal Drive
Fort Mitchell, KY 41017"
I think you can use that email address to ask them why they blocked your IP. Possible some IIS administration script that locks down security also blocked foreign IPs.
Re:high security? (Score:5, Funny)
I think I'm beginning to understand the Security issue [wikipedia.org].
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Talk about explosive web sites. :)
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I'm in Finland but I'm using OpenDNS. The site works fine.
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Hooray! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hooray! (Score:5, Interesting)
You haven't played Bard's Tale, Pirates!, or Donkey Kong, until you played them on the C64 using the tape drive. :)
Jumpman was great, but I liked a game called Wizard that let you design your own levels and your own spells on a custom floppy disk and challenge your friends to deathmatches on that. It was like Jumpman but you could throw fireballs or stop your enemies from moving, or become temporary invulnerable for a short while.
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Yes but (Score:5, Funny)
Were there any girls there?
Re:Yes but (Score:5, Informative)
Judging from the pics, there was at least one.
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Re:Yes but (Score:5, Informative)
At least one [wikipedia.org], probably. Maybe two. [robohara.com] :-P
FWIW, I have met Ms. Ellsworth at a Commodore Convention before. Her photo on Wikipedia does not do her justice. And besides that, she really knows her stuff when it comes to the Commodore.
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From Wikipedia: "at which point she moved to Walla Walla, Washington and attended Walla Walla College,". I'm sure it's an excellent center of C-64 learning, but...
Re:Yes but (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, hush. I'm sure it's just an homage to Amok Time:
http://img384.imageshack.us/my.php?image=16845670dh4.png [imageshack.us]
Re:Yes but (Score:5, Funny)
You must be new here.
Re:Yes but (Score:4, Insightful)
My God you're a sexist pig. Is it so horrible for a woman to dress up for an occasion? Especially when going to an event that's important to her husband? (Yes, that guy leaning over in the photo is her husband.)
Grow up and get a life, will you?
Re:Yes but (Score:4, Insightful)
How was that comment sexist? It would be pretty attention whoring for a guy to wear clothing with slightly risque holes in it too..
Re:Yes but (Score:5, Funny)
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Wish I Would Have Been There (Score:5, Interesting)
I have one of those rrnet ethernet devices for the C64. They are great fun. I tried to make a post to a phpBB and it took me about 40 minutes to navigate to the thread I wanted to post in, then it crashed. O sweet glory.
btw, http://www.c64web.com/ [c64web.com] is hosted on a c64.
Re:Wish I Would Have Been There (Score:5, Funny)
btw, http://www.c64web.com/ [c64web.com] [c64web.com] is hosted on a c64.
And after posting that on /., there is now one less functioning c64 in the world.
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That didn't take long. It must only be able to handle 64 simultaneous connections.
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6 bits should be enough for anyone
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Yeah, posting that link wasn't the brightest thing to do, nor was it very nice to whomever the owner of it is, unless it's the OP's own server and he wanted it to turn into a melted pile of goo.
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Yeah, a fully loaded 6510 puts out an awesome amount of heat. Not.
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Joke, I'd like you to meet my new friend Lost Race. Lost Race, meet Joke.
But it does... (Score:2)
So.... (Score:5, Funny)
Is that site painfully slow because it's been Slashdotted or because it's running on a C64 ;) ?
More importantly, what happens when a C64 gets Slashdotted, does it start chewing up tapes or melt or anything?
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Based on my past C64 experience, the power supply overheats and the system shuts down. I was always trying to look for a power supply that didn't overheat. Sometimes putting a glass of ice water on top of it helped it not overheat.
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Re:Wish I Would Have Been There (Score:5, Funny)
btw, http://www.c64web.com/ [c64web.com] is hosted on a smoldering heap of slag.
Fixed.
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PhpBB software is buggy, and sometimes when a web administrator tries to make mods to it, they end up making it buggier. Hence the crash.
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I have one of those rrnet ethernet devices for the C64. They are great fun. I tried to make a post to a phpBB and it took me about 40 minutes to navigate to the thread I wanted to post in, then it crashed. O sweet glory.
Wow. I guess you have a far lower threshold for fun than I.
Alternative to Vista? (Score:5, Funny)
Talk about retro! (Score:5, Insightful)
I did a lot of cool stuff on the 64 way, WAY back, using Forth (remember that language?).
Some computers will never die. No matter how old. LONG LIVE COMMODORE!!!!
Re:Talk about retro! (Score:4, Informative)
sadly, commodore of today is a shadow of its former self...
http://www.commodoregaming.com/pcshop/home.aspx [commodoregaming.com]
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Immortality (Score:2)
C64 certainly never will die, not as long as people enjoy playing those old games. But the hardware will wear out eventually, and nobody's making any more, so it's off to emulation land. Or do true blue C64 hackers sneer at emulators?
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Personally I'll stick with emulation, though the C-One looks like something it'd be fun to own, so maybe if/when they get something a bit less beta...
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I'm talking about a system, you're talking about a component. You might as well talk about the Ford Model A still being "made" because you can still get parts for it.
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There's always the C64 DTV...
That's based on a C64-on-a-chip, designed by Jeri Ellsworth... and has solder pads ready to go to add floppy drives and a keyboard.
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That's still not a complete system. "Computer on a chip" is still not a computer.
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I said it's based on the chip.
Take it out of the box, plug it into power and a TV, and you're running C64 games natively.
If you want to run stuff that didn't come with it, or use a keyboard or floppy drives, that's when you have to break out the soldering iron.
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C64 emulators run on a variety of platforms [zzap64.co.uk]. Most old gaming platforms have thriving communities of emulator users. Games are readily available online. Technically copyright infringement, but there's not a lot of enforcement, since the software has little or no commercial value.
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"Quite a bit" is probably an exaggeration, but you do have a point.
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Games are readily available online. Technically copyright infringement, but there's not a lot of enforcement, since the software has little or no commercial value.
But I would much rather buy my games then pirate them. Because unlike music what sells well with games determines what gets released more. (So if more RPGs are sold then FPS games, more RPGs will be made)
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I too prefer to pay for my software. But if owner doesn't even give me a chance to pay without making me pay for a lot of stuff I don't need, I feel no obligation to refrain from downloading a pirate copy. I shouldn't have to buy a Wii just to play an old C64 game.
Re:Amiga & Beyond (Score:2)
There's rumors of a new Commodore OS in terminal Beta.
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At last (Score:2)
Junis will be able to download that porn.
Re:At last (Score:5, Funny)
C64 porn? Sigh. Back to tits that look like they're made out of Legos.
Cluster of C64s (Score:2)
Re: Memes (Score:2)
How far can you strip Linux so it qualifies as "running" (crawling) on a Commodore?
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About this http://lng.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net] much.
Unfortunately, it seems like it's been abandoned since 2004.
Oblig. (Score:2)
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64K should be enough for anyone (16-bit addressing)
been there, done that (Score:4, Interesting)
I can say that I have actually done this before, back in the 80's. Not using Ethernet, as I don't think there were any Ethernet hardwares available at the time for the Commodore .. but I've done it. Wired several Commodores together, and played multiplayer games.
Re:been there, done that (Score:5, Interesting)
Back about 1986, I actually surfed the net on a Commodore 128.
The local community college got a spanking new server hooked up, and students were allowed to dial in in to get schedules, some class material, whatever. (I think it was still Arpanet back then, but it was years before World wide web)
Anyway, I logged in (at a whopping 1200 baud), looked around (After a bit of tweaking, Commodore had lowercase and capitals switched in ascii, plus none standard characters) and actually made it to a few net sites. (IBM, some national Community college site, a couple of others)
Wasn't interested, it was slower than most BBS's I could get to, had almost no graphics (and none that I could view), and no content I was interested in at the time, So I logged off and didn't get back to the net until 1998. Things sure changed in a dozen years!
Oh, I wasn't a student there, just heard about it and was curious. Online security? Some things haven't changed much!
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It's amazing how things change in 10 years. Back in the mid 1990's, getting access to the university from home required a 14K baud modem with PPP, with a university modem pool of two modems.
10 to 15 years later, and every student can just sftp or ssh to their university account through broadband internet. Some even have their own PC security cameras set up so they can watch their own room from anywhere on campus.
I'm happy for them (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm sure these guys (and gals?) had a ton of fun. I see a lot of comments of the "what a bunch of dorks"-kind. I don't think they're any more dorks than any person who has a hobby and likes to associate and share his experiences and passion with like-minded folks. Don't over think it - it's just socializing and fun, nothing else.
As for the C-64: I have several of 'em, and as soon as it becomes crystal clear which Ethernet card is the dominant (we're close) I'll be picking up one. I have networked weird stuff into my network already (Sony NEWS, Netwinder, old DOS PC/packet driver etc.) why not add one of my C-64s.
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I'm sure these guys (and gals?) had a ton of fun. I see a lot of comments of the "what a bunch of dorks"-kind. I don't think they're any more dorks than any person who has a hobby and likes to associate and share his experiences and passion with like-minded folks. Don't over think it - it's just socializing and fun, nothing else.
Call me a dork -- I have three C64's, two of which were purchased in the mid 80s. So I was collecting them before it was even cool to do so. They are among some of my most preciou
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I never touched an Amiga. But, I was always jealous of the kids with their IBM PC Jr's who submitted cool graphics programs for 3-2-1 Contact's magazine. There were no graphics primitives in C64 basic.
I remember the typical delay loop in C64 BASIC: FORD=1TO1000:NEXTD The fact that whitespace was optional always made things interesting to decipher.
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I remember watching a C= Xmas demo with some cute animations that was made up of text chars. As you know better than I most likely, the C= had a ton of graphics-ish text characters. By using them intelligently it was possible to do low-res graphics with them. But that's pretty tricksy stuff. Still, it ends up being at least as high resolution as GR on the Apple ][...
I had a C= 16 with no storage device, I didn't mess with that long. Then I got an Apple ][+ and later a whole series of Amigas. I got better, t
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I had a C-16, too. The sound sucked on that one, but programming in general was really easy, and they looked kinda cool, with the dark gray case and light gray keys.
Re: Loops! (Score:2)
My business management books say that FORD (Motors) went from 1 to 1000 on the quality scale in those years in response to competitive pressures.
Now Linux communities will FORK 1 kernal to 1000 distros.
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It's that time of the year? I mean, the Spectrum vs. Commodore flamewar ;o) Just kidding, but those do happen rather regularly on comp.sys....something-or-the-other. I used to have much fun reading those threads. Mostly because they were really in good spirit, in spite of all the flaming that was going on.
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I'm sure these guys (and gals?) had a ton of fun. I see a lot of comments of the "what a bunch of dorks"-kind. I don't think they're any more dorks than any person who has a hobby and likes to associate and share his experiences and passion with like-minded folks. Don't over think it - it's just socializing and fun, nothing else.
Normally I might have unloaded on the people in these pictures but I just came home from a holiday weekend camping trip at the local state park. After watching a bunch of slack-jawed dolts blowing their fingers off with fireworks for the last few days, pictures of garden-variety nerds actually make me happy.
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I like the idea of retro-programming 1980's home computers with the knowledge that we have now.
These machines had so much potential and so much style in the simplicity of the design of the system ie. keyboard + IO/ports + TV = computer.
I really wish that the manufacturers had been able to update their systems with current CPU's and graphics chips and still keep their operating systems, rather than everything being swallowed up by one OS maker.
Odd Thoughts: (Score:3, Funny)
* so I take it that no one could cough up the highest Crysis framerate figure? (yes, I know, I KNOW! ...but it seems to be all-to-common for LAN-goers to brag on framerates these days).
* Finally! I can bring my machine-du-jour and not have everyone stare at it funny because it's not a Windows box! (I always brought either a Linux box or a Mac).
* How d'ya taunt on chat in the thing? "'LOAD * 8,1' this, n00b!" doesn't quite have a ring to it, y'know?
* How many LED's and uber-liquid-cooling heatsink rigs can you jam into a C-64 case, anyway?
* Well, rebooting would still be just as common...
Unusual, but not a first... (Score:2)
We also used to access the Internet using a c64, but that's a story for another time.
Doesn't Anyone Miss the Commodore Pet? (Score:5, Interesting)
My first personally owned computer wasn't a C64, it was a Commodore Pet. That doesn't make me *that* much older than the C64 crowd, does it?
The Pet was also the first computer I ever used that booted itself when I turned on the power. My reward for turning on the the switch was a HELLO? prompt. All other computers I used at work before the Pet required me to enter a bootstrap program in binary before they would start the OS.
In Pet Basic one could do wonderfully fun things, especially with the character graphics. My kids loved the games I wrote. I don't recall ever buying any software for the Pet. Wrote it all myself. It was great fun.
For some strange reason, the Commodore Pet is always forgotten when people write about the pioneering PC days.
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I have a bunch of PETs still, certainly rugged beasties. I liked a lot of the games in that they were so simple they relied more on the user's skill (learned my angles and coordinates from many a PET game)
Also was one of the first home computers to play multi-computer games:
http://www.portcommodore.com/flashindex.php [portcommodore.com]
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All other computers I used at work before the Pet required me to enter a bootstrap program in binary before they would start the OS.
That would be PDPs you used at work then?
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At the ripe old age of 15, I developed a number of games for the PET and actually sold them through a company called "Instant Software" that was affiliated with Kilobaud Magazine (later "Microcomputing"). The $200-$300 US royalty cheques t
The Utter Geekery of this event... (Score:2)
With all due respect to the C64 (Score:2)
Spectrum too soon! (Score:4, Informative)
Hopefully we can do the same with the Sinclair Spectrum soon - I've almost completed the prototype ethernet card for the Spectrum. The prototype is working - I've had it connect to IRC, but there are some things to finish on the library and the board's CPLD.
Picture is here: http://spectrum.alioth.net/doc/index.php/Image:Itlives.jpg [alioth.net]
A C64 ... lan party? (Score:2)
A C64 lan party is a bit like doing a quarter-mile drag race with "big wheel" plastic trikes... funny for the first 30 seconds and then really stupid and boring for the next half hour until it's finally done.
Mark Twain (Score:2)
64KB enough for anyone (Score:3, Funny)
That proves that 64KB really ought to be enough for anyone.
Re:horrid site (Score:4, Funny)
Re: Validators (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe someone can run a browser through Acid3. I'm sure it will score beter than IE.
Re:Eh (Score:5, Funny)
Possibly one of the best uses of the Redundant mod tag I have yet seen.
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Wasn't that the regular captain Kirk?
Re: Screen Changes (Score:3, Informative)
25 Poke 53281,6
I stayed with Blue & Black Trim ever since.
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"Hey that's an awesome color scheme, how do I do that?"
"It's easy, just enter in 'SYS 64728'"
"Hey sweet, thanks for tha... HEY YOU JERK WHAT THE HELL, oh wait nevermind I'm back on now anyway"
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what is digg? Is it a game for the NES?