Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Other Annotations
A complete backup of old-computers.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
A complete backup of nationalrehab.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of creativesavingsblog.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of little6casino.net
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of zastroyka-uga.ru
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of namibia-tourism.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
A complete backup of www.silverscreenandroll.com/2020/2/12/21135865/lakers-vs-nuggets-final-score-lebron-james-anthony-davis-nik
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
only 16 KB RAM.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Lynx 48 was a competitor of the Sinclair Spectrum and the Oric 1. It was a good machine but its main problem was a lack of software. Several models were available with 48 KB, 96 KB or 128 KB RAM, and it was possible to reach 192 KB with on-board RAM expansions! There is even a monitor in the Lynx's ROM which allowed the user to write and OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The NEC PC 8801 was the successor of PC 8001. It offered fine colour graphics. It had an optional MS-Dos board. It was one of the fist, if not the first color CPM computer. It ran in three bootable modes: CPM, MS-Dos, and N88-Basic. The N-Basic would natively boot on OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUMTATUNG EINSTEIN TC-01OLIVETTI A5FUJITSU FM 11 EXPHILIPS VG 5000GRID GRIDCASE Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Welcome to old-computers.com, the most popular website for old computers. Have a trip down memory lane re-discovering your old computer, console or software you used to have. There are actually 1256 systems in the museum. SHOW ME A RANDOM SYSTEM ! The Sheen 2001 is one of the many systems "software OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Vector ship T-shirts! The Hit-Bit 55 was a classic MSX1 computer. It was very similar to the Hit-Bit 75. Its most distinctive sign was its flat but good quality keyboard. It was one of the few MSX with the Philips VG-8000 to have a low-cost keyboard. Unlike the HB-75, it hadonly 16 KB RAM.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Lynx 48 was a competitor of the Sinclair Spectrum and the Oric 1. It was a good machine but its main problem was a lack of software. Several models were available with 48 KB, 96 KB or 128 KB RAM, and it was possible to reach 192 KB with on-board RAM expansions! There is even a monitor in the Lynx's ROM which allowed the user to write and OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The NEC PC 8801 was the successor of PC 8001. It offered fine colour graphics. It had an optional MS-Dos board. It was one of the fist, if not the first color CPM computer. It ran in three bootable modes: CPM, MS-Dos, and N88-Basic. The N-Basic would natively boot on OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original Laptop Olivetti M10 in Microsoft 1983 Retro Computer with extras. $400.00. Olivetti M300-10 XP 2655 Vintage 386sx Computer w/ Keyboard. C $249.99. Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original 1st Laptop Olivetti M 10 OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM There were 128 semi-graphic symbols available. The Altos 686 appears to be the same machine as the 586, but with an 80286 processor. Altos also produced an 8-bit version of this system, called the ACS-580. Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system toOld-Computers.com
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PLUS 4 - C232/264/364. Among the Commodore news from the Summer CES 1984 was the renaming of the C=264 to Plus/4. This renaming came along with a slight change in the built-in software: you could not choose between many different programs anymore, but each Plus/4 was delivered with the 3-plus-1 software. The built-in software is not worth the OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Commodore 64C was simply the original C-64 repackaged in in a beige C-128 style case. Internally, Commodore integrated most of the hardware onto a single VLSI chip. The new model did not differ much from its predecessor, the only innovation was the flatter case, which made the keyboard (which had off-white keys) more ergonomic (it looked like the C128 case), not as high as than the old one OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Sorry, no software matches your search Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donate old-systems | FAQ: OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Amstrad PCW 9512 was a dedicated word processing computer. It was the successor to the Amstrad PCW 8512 and had the same basic characteristics. However, it corrected two of the main criticisms of the 8512: the low quality of the printer and the machine's non-business-like styling. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Colour Genie was the successor of the Genie 1, Genie 2 and Genie 3.It was intended to compete with the Tandy Color Computer although it was not at all compatible with its model (Z80 microprocessor instead of a Motorola 6809 in the CoCo) The graphic resolution wasn't as good as the CoCo, furthermore it was not possible to mix characters andgraphics.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!. C64 maze generator T-shirts!. Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts! OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Here is the Ormatu cartridge list, based on collective work found at Arcadia 2001 : Digital Archeology website. If you have more pictures or info, please help us improve this section : CS-201 - Soccer CS-206 - Alien Invaders CS-209 - Video Chess CS-211 - Breakaway CS-216 - Nibblemen CS-217 - Robot Killer CS-218 - Circus CS-219 - ParashooterCS-220 - Auto Race
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUMTATUNG EINSTEIN TC-01OLIVETTI A5FUJITSU FM 11 EXPHILIPS VG 5000GRID GRIDCASE Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Welcome to old-computers.com, the most popular website for old computers. Have a trip down memory lane re-discovering your old computer, console or software you used to have. There are actually 1256 systems in the museum. SHOW ME A RANDOM SYSTEM ! The Sheen 2001 is one of the many systems "software OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Vector ship T-shirts! The Hit-Bit 55 was a classic MSX1 computer. It was very similar to the Hit-Bit 75. Its most distinctive sign was its flat but good quality keyboard. It was one of the few MSX with the Philips VG-8000 to have a low-cost keyboard. Unlike the HB-75, it hadonly 16 KB RAM.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Lynx 48 was a competitor of the Sinclair Spectrum and the Oric 1. It was a good machine but its main problem was a lack of software. Several models were available with 48 KB, 96 KB or 128 KB RAM, and it was possible to reach 192 KB with on-board RAM expansions! There is even a monitor in the Lynx's ROM which allowed the user to write and OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The NEC PC 8801 was the successor of PC 8001. It offered fine colour graphics. It had an optional MS-Dos board. It was one of the fist, if not the first color CPM computer. It ran in three bootable modes: CPM, MS-Dos, and N88-Basic. The N-Basic would natively boot on OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUMTATUNG EINSTEIN TC-01OLIVETTI A5FUJITSU FM 11 EXPHILIPS VG 5000GRID GRIDCASE Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Welcome to old-computers.com, the most popular website for old computers. Have a trip down memory lane re-discovering your old computer, console or software you used to have. There are actually 1256 systems in the museum. SHOW ME A RANDOM SYSTEM ! The Sheen 2001 is one of the many systems "software OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Vector ship T-shirts! The Hit-Bit 55 was a classic MSX1 computer. It was very similar to the Hit-Bit 75. Its most distinctive sign was its flat but good quality keyboard. It was one of the few MSX with the Philips VG-8000 to have a low-cost keyboard. Unlike the HB-75, it hadonly 16 KB RAM.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Lynx 48 was a competitor of the Sinclair Spectrum and the Oric 1. It was a good machine but its main problem was a lack of software. Several models were available with 48 KB, 96 KB or 128 KB RAM, and it was possible to reach 192 KB with on-board RAM expansions! There is even a monitor in the Lynx's ROM which allowed the user to write and OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The NEC PC 8801 was the successor of PC 8001. It offered fine colour graphics. It had an optional MS-Dos board. It was one of the fist, if not the first color CPM computer. It ran in three bootable modes: CPM, MS-Dos, and N88-Basic. The N-Basic would natively boot on OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original Laptop Olivetti M10 in Microsoft 1983 Retro Computer with extras. $400.00. Olivetti M300-10 XP 2655 Vintage 386sx Computer w/ Keyboard. C $249.99. Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original 1st Laptop Olivetti M 10 OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM There were 128 semi-graphic symbols available. The Altos 686 appears to be the same machine as the 586, but with an 80286 processor. Altos also produced an 8-bit version of this system, called the ACS-580. Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system toOld-Computers.com
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PLUS 4 - C232/264/364. Among the Commodore news from the Summer CES 1984 was the renaming of the C=264 to Plus/4. This renaming came along with a slight change in the built-in software: you could not choose between many different programs anymore, but each Plus/4 was delivered with the 3-plus-1 software. The built-in software is not worth the OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Commodore 64C was simply the original C-64 repackaged in in a beige C-128 style case. Internally, Commodore integrated most of the hardware onto a single VLSI chip. The new model did not differ much from its predecessor, the only innovation was the flatter case, which made the keyboard (which had off-white keys) more ergonomic (it looked like the C128 case), not as high as than the old one OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Sorry, no software matches your search Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donate old-systems | FAQ: OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Amstrad PCW 9512 was a dedicated word processing computer. It was the successor to the Amstrad PCW 8512 and had the same basic characteristics. However, it corrected two of the main criticisms of the 8512: the low quality of the printer and the machine's non-business-like styling. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Colour Genie was the successor of the Genie 1, Genie 2 and Genie 3.It was intended to compete with the Tandy Color Computer although it was not at all compatible with its model (Z80 microprocessor instead of a Motorola 6809 in the CoCo) The graphic resolution wasn't as good as the CoCo, furthermore it was not possible to mix characters andgraphics.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!. C64 maze generator T-shirts!. Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts! OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Here is the Ormatu cartridge list, based on collective work found at Arcadia 2001 : Digital Archeology website. If you have more pictures or info, please help us improve this section : CS-201 - Soccer CS-206 - Alien Invaders CS-209 - Video Chess CS-211 - Breakaway CS-216 - Nibblemen CS-217 - Robot Killer CS-218 - Circus CS-219 - ParashooterCS-220 - Auto Race
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM There were 128 semi-graphic symbols available. The Altos 686 appears to be the same machine as the 586, but with an 80286 processor. Altos also produced an 8-bit version of this system, called the ACS-580. Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system toOld-Computers.com
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Gama. This was a Slovak Spectrum clone made by Didaktik Skalica Ltd. in communism times (1987). It offered 80 KB RAM. As all Z80A based computers, it was not possible to address more than 64k. So the Gama computers used a bank switching technique, with two 32k additional RAMs. There was even a LED on the case, which indicated if the RAMhave
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM A-32: 16K ROM 16K RAM. A-48: 16K ROM 32K RAM. A-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. B-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. Other differences were: A type did not have built-in joystick and serial ports. B type could works togewther with the Commodore VC1541 floppy drive unit (external software had to be load for this from tape). OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 1400 LT/FD/HD. TANDY 1400LT - SERVICE MANUAL. written by Tandy Radio-Shack. compiled/archived by Unknown. type of document : PDF. size : 10,7 MB. source : www.oldskool.org. Please click here if the link to the documentation is broken. TANDY 1400LT - QUICK REFERENCEGUIDE.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PV-2000. Also called "RakuGaki" in Japan, the PV-2000 is a very obscure japanese system released in 1983 at the same time of the PV-1000 gaming system. These two systems are not compatible with each other, as they have very different architecure. The PV-2000 is closer to MSX systems than to its little brother PV-1000. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM There were 128 semi-graphic symbols available. The Altos 686 appears to be the same machine as the 586, but with an 80286 processor. Altos also produced an 8-bit version of this system, called the ACS-580. Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system toOld-Computers.com
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Gama. This was a Slovak Spectrum clone made by Didaktik Skalica Ltd. in communism times (1987). It offered 80 KB RAM. As all Z80A based computers, it was not possible to address more than 64k. So the Gama computers used a bank switching technique, with two 32k additional RAMs. There was even a LED on the case, which indicated if the RAMhave
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM A-32: 16K ROM 16K RAM. A-48: 16K ROM 32K RAM. A-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. B-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. Other differences were: A type did not have built-in joystick and serial ports. B type could works togewther with the Commodore VC1541 floppy drive unit (external software had to be load for this from tape). OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 1400 LT/FD/HD. TANDY 1400LT - SERVICE MANUAL. written by Tandy Radio-Shack. compiled/archived by Unknown. type of document : PDF. size : 10,7 MB. source : www.oldskool.org. Please click here if the link to the documentation is broken. TANDY 1400LT - QUICK REFERENCEGUIDE.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PV-2000. Also called "RakuGaki" in Japan, the PV-2000 is a very obscure japanese system released in 1983 at the same time of the PV-1000 gaming system. These two systems are not compatible with each other, as they have very different architecure. The PV-2000 is closer to MSX systems than to its little brother PV-1000. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Commodore 64C was simply the original C-64 repackaged in in a beige C-128 style case. Internally, Commodore integrated most of the hardware onto a single VLSI chip. The new model did not differ much from its predecessor, the only innovation was the flatter case, which made the keyboard (which had off-white keys) more ergonomic (it looked like the C128 case), not as high as than the old one OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original Laptop Olivetti M10 in Microsoft 1983 Retro Computer with extras. $400.00. Olivetti M300-10 XP 2655 Vintage 386sx Computer w/ Keyboard. C $249.99. Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original 1st Laptop Olivetti M 10 OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM ALPHATRONIC PC. Triumph was originally Triumph-Adler - the merger company of the 2 typewriter manufacturers Triumph and Adler, to which Triumph (which also produced mechanical calculators and sewing-machines) was the bigger one. Later they got US-typewriter Royal merged into it and had the best years between 1975 and 1988, when they even build OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Senior Partner. This is a luggable IBM-PC compatible system. It tends to offer an all-in-one solution for the perfect 80's business man. Back in 1983 it was the first Japanese computer completely IBM-PC compatible (hardware & software). It has a built-in thermal OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Sorry, no software matches your search Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donate old-systems | FAQ: OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM There were 128 semi-graphic symbols available. The Altos 686 appears to be the same machine as the 586, but with an 80286 processor. Altos also produced an 8-bit version of this system, called the ACS-580. Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system toOld-Computers.com
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM In March 1951, The Eckert and Mauchly Computer Co. of Philadelphia delivered the UNIVAC 1 (Universal Automatic Computer) to the U.S. Census Bureau. The machine was put into service on June 14, 1951. It was retired on October 3, 1963 after 73,000 hours of operation. In the meantime, Remington Rand (now Unisys Corp.) sold 45 UNIVAC 1 machines to U.S. government agencies and private-industry. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Colour Genie was the successor of the Genie 1, Genie 2 and Genie 3.It was intended to compete with the Tandy Color Computer although it was not at all compatible with its model (Z80 microprocessor instead of a Motorola 6809 in the CoCo) The graphic resolution wasn't as good as the CoCo, furthermore it was not possible to mix characters andgraphics.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!. C64 maze generator T-shirts!. Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts! OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Lynx 48 was a competitor of the Sinclair Spectrum and the Oric 1. It was a good machine but its main problem was a lack of software. Several models were available with 48 KB, 96 KB or 128 KB RAM, and it was possible to reach 192 KB with on-board RAM expansions! There is even a monitor in the Lynx's ROM which allowed the user to write and OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Gama. This was a Slovak Spectrum clone made by Didaktik Skalica Ltd. in communism times (1987). It offered 80 KB RAM. As all Z80A based computers, it was not possible to address more than 64k. So the Gama computers used a bank switching technique, with two 32k additional RAMs. There was even a LED on the case, which indicated if the RAMhave
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM A-32: 16K ROM 16K RAM. A-48: 16K ROM 32K RAM. A-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. B-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. Other differences were: A type did not have built-in joystick and serial ports. B type could works togewther with the Commodore VC1541 floppy drive unit (external software had to be load for this from tape). OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The PC 6300 was in fact an Olivetti M24 sold under the ATT brand. Launched a few months after the presentation of six new UNIX super-micro and mini ATT computers (march 1984), the PC 6300 was the first ATT system to be IBM PC compatible. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PV-2000. Also called "RakuGaki" in Japan, the PV-2000 is a very obscure japanese system released in 1983 at the same time of the PV-1000 gaming system. These two systems are not compatible with each other, as they have very different architecure. The PV-2000 is closer to MSX systems than to its little brother PV-1000. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Introkit. Launched in 1976, the Introkit appeared to be very popular. It was the first affordable all-in-one computer everyone could acquire to know a bit about computers. The basic version was really minimalist: one SC/MP (or "Scamp") microprocessor, one 512-byte ROM containing a monitor program and 256 bytes of RAM for user's programs. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM 500 Series. Exxon Computer Division, a branch of the Exxon Oil Company, sold this computer in the U.S.A and Europe. This computer was built in 1982. The system is composed of CPU box, monitor, dual disk drives and a keyboard. It was delivered withe software on 5.2 disks, manuals, training materials. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Breakout T-shirts! Vector ship T-shirts! Made in the UK by Compukit in New Barnet, North London, the UK-101 was originally a copy of the Ohio Scientific Superboard II. Two years and various legal battles later the UK-101 became, technically, behind its erstwhile rival. You could buy the UK101 as a kit or as ready made for an extra fee. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM System I / II / III. CROMEMCO was founded in 1974 by two Stanford Students, Roger Melen and Harry Garland, who lived in the CRO thers MEM orial Hall dormitory on the Stanford campus. Eventually CROMEMCO needed space to receive visitors, and moved out of the dorm to Mountain View, and incorporated in 1976. Early products were cards forthe S-100
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Lynx 48 was a competitor of the Sinclair Spectrum and the Oric 1. It was a good machine but its main problem was a lack of software. Several models were available with 48 KB, 96 KB or 128 KB RAM, and it was possible to reach 192 KB with on-board RAM expansions! There is even a monitor in the Lynx's ROM which allowed the user to write and OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Gama. This was a Slovak Spectrum clone made by Didaktik Skalica Ltd. in communism times (1987). It offered 80 KB RAM. As all Z80A based computers, it was not possible to address more than 64k. So the Gama computers used a bank switching technique, with two 32k additional RAMs. There was even a LED on the case, which indicated if the RAMhave
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM A-32: 16K ROM 16K RAM. A-48: 16K ROM 32K RAM. A-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. B-64: 16K ROM 48K RAM. Other differences were: A type did not have built-in joystick and serial ports. B type could works togewther with the Commodore VC1541 floppy drive unit (external software had to be load for this from tape). OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The PC 6300 was in fact an Olivetti M24 sold under the ATT brand. Launched a few months after the presentation of six new UNIX super-micro and mini ATT computers (march 1984), the PC 6300 was the first ATT system to be IBM PC compatible. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PV-2000. Also called "RakuGaki" in Japan, the PV-2000 is a very obscure japanese system released in 1983 at the same time of the PV-1000 gaming system. These two systems are not compatible with each other, as they have very different architecure. The PV-2000 is closer to MSX systems than to its little brother PV-1000. OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original Laptop Olivetti M10 in Microsoft 1983 Retro Computer with extras. $400.00. Olivetti M300-10 XP 2655 Vintage 386sx Computer w/ Keyboard. C $249.99. Olivetti prodest pc128. $199.99. Original 1st Laptop Olivetti M 10 OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PRICE. Monochrome, 1 drive, 128 KB: $2400 - 2nd drive: $425 - 64K RAM: $90 - 10 MB HDD: $2195. Please buy a t-shirt to support us ! Ad. NCR PC4i VINTAGE COMPUTER 1985 DECISION MATE PC w/ MANUALS 5.25" FLOPPY DISKS. $599.99. Rare NCR PC4i OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM There were 128 semi-graphic symbols available. The Altos 686 appears to be the same machine as the 586, but with an 80286 processor. Altos also produced an 8-bit version of this system, called the ACS-580. Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system toOld-Computers.com
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM ALPHATRONIC PC. Triumph was originally Triumph-Adler - the merger company of the 2 typewriter manufacturers Triumph and Adler, to which Triumph (which also produced mechanical calculators and sewing-machines) was the bigger one. Later they got US-typewriter Royal merged into it and had the best years between 1975 and 1988, when they even build OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM Senior Partner. This is a luggable IBM-PC compatible system. It tends to offer an all-in-one solution for the perfect 80's business man. Back in 1983 it was the first Japanese computer completely IBM-PC compatible (hardware & software). It has a built-in thermal OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The printer was a 9 pins dot matrix, 100 cps. The P330 was the last product of the Philips Office computers series. Then Philips came with the mircro computers and later the IBM compatibele PC's. In 1992 the Philips computer line was ended. We need more info about this computer!
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The monitor works with the built in keypad and LEDs, or a terminal like the Teletype ASR33. It is possible to connect the KIM to a terminal via a dedicated serial port. Soon after release, Commodore Business Machines would buy out MOS Technologies and distribute the KIM-1 with a Commodore name on it. Bob Leedom reports : OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The Datavue Spark was one of the First Laptops Ever Made. It Featured a Powerful (Back Then) Intel 8088 with a clock Speed of 9.77MHz. It had a blue 5" x 10" screen (which was big for 1987) made by Epson that supported 16 shades of blueish grey. Plus, it was backlit, which made it very bright and readable. DOS could be run on this system, but OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM The BCS 2030 (BCS stands for Business Computer System) was a vast improvement on the the machine the Olivetti A5. The BCS 2030 Floppy disk version replaced the A6. The A6 being an A5 with a dual 128K floppy drives and still the 16 CPS printer. "The Audit A5, introduced in 1974, is an accounting system with the characteristics of a realcomputer.
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM : THE MUSEUM PV-2000. Also called "RakuGaki" in Japan, the PV-2000 is a very obscure japanese system released in 1983 at the same time of the PV-1000 gaming system. These two systems are not compatible with each other, as they have very different architecure. The PV-2000 is closer to MSX systems than to its little brother PV-1000.SEARCH
ZX81 T-shirts!
ZX SPECTRUM T-shirts! READY PROMPT T-shirts! ATARI JOYSTICK T-shirts! ARCADE CHERRY T-shirts! SPIRAL PROGRAM T-shirts! BATTLE ZONE T-shirts! VECTREX SHIP T-shirts! ATARI ST BOMBS T-shirts! C64 MAZE GENERATOR T-shirts! MOON LANDER T-shirts! COMPETITION PRO JOYSTICK T-shirts! ELITE SPACESHIP T-SHIRT T-shirts! PAK PAK MONSTER T-shirts! BASIC CODE T-shirts!BREAKOUT T-shirts!
VECTOR SHIP T-shirts! PIXEL ADVENTURE T-shirts! Welcome to old-computers.com, the most popular website for oldcomputers.
Have a trip down memory lane re-discovering your old computer, console or software you used to have. There are actually 1248 systems in the museum. SHOW ME A RANDOM SYSTEM !LATEST ADDITIONS
MATTEL ELECTRONICS Keyboard Component Sometime before the failed Aquarius home computer scheme was hatched by Mattel, the Intellivision team had attempted to expand Intellivision into the growing home computer market by turning it into a full fledged computer dubbed as the "Intellivision Keyboard Component", much in the same way Coleco was soon to do with their Adam computer. The unit featured a built-in cassette tape drive for loading and saving data. The Keyboard Component would plug into the cartridge slot on the Intellivision...RCA Fred 2
This Fred 2 computer is a prototype designed by Joseph Weisbecker, engineer at RCA. He already imagined several early computer designs before this Fred 2 model, such as the System 00 or the original Fred concept. Fred is rather a concept imagined by Joseph Weisbecker for educational computer able to play games. This concept emerged in several hardware versions through time. The first models could be dates as early as 1970 or 1971 ! Unlike the System 00 which used only small-scale digital T...BANDAI Arcadia
The Bandai Arcadia, is the same system as the Emerson Arcadia 2001 , but sold in Japan. Please see this entry for more detailed informations. The Arcadia 2001 clones includes : Advision Home Arcade (France), Bandai Arcadia (Japan), GiG Electronics Leonardo (Italy), Hanimex HMG-2650 , Leisure-Dynamics Leisure-Vision , Intercord XL 2000 system, Eduscho / Tchibo Tele-Fever, etc... It... BANDAI TV Jack 5000 The TV Jack 5000 from Bandai released in 1978 is one of the first cartridge based system from Japan. It's the equivalent of european and american systems like the Hanimex SD-050, Acetronic Color TV Game, Prinztronic Micro 5500, SHG Blackpoint, Binatone Cablestar, Radofin telesports, etc. There have been tons of systems like these. The TV Jack 5000, like all these systems, use cartridges based on General Instruments chipsets which offers different games on each chip. That'swhy all these sy...
OLIVETTI A5
Olivetti introduced a mainframe about 1960 which was called ELEA, then in 1965 the Programma 101 - which was probably the world's first real desktop computer. Then a little later they introduced the Audiotronic range of "office computers". The first was the A770, which was replaced by the A7. The A5 was the desktop version. The Olivetti Audit 5 or A5 was largely an electro mechanical computer. It printed via a golf ball typewritter mechanism at the astonishing speed of 16 character per second... TRIUMPH ADLER TA-1600 The TA 1600 system was introduced in 1983 at the CeBIT (which was only a part of the "Hannover-Messe" by that time). TA showed a few sample applications and the 1600 family in general. Triumph Adler's hardware included also the 1600/20-3 which was supplied with a permanent-swap-HDD-unit. This unit had a memory/storage capacity of 2 x 8 MB (Winchester technology). Triumph Adler said the system (the 1600) will fit the demand of medium-sized businesses, due to the facts that these companies w... MIDWICH Microcontroller Called the Midwich Microcontroller, this British computer was developped to provide a small desktop micro capable of running other equipment throug a variety of interface cards. In 1979 an Italian IC manufacturer designed and began to sell a single board micro system that could be expanded to a full system with a VDU, discs, etc. Called the Nanocomputer, it was manufactured by SGS Ates and one of the distributors in the UK was Midwich. The Nano was somewhat expensive and suffered from a numbe... RADIONIC Model R1001 This is an extremly rare TRS-80 Model 1 clone, based on an other clone: The Komtek 1 (from Germany). It's equiped with a Level II basic and powered by a Zilog Z80 cpu. _________ CONTRIBUTORS : Incog...BASF 7100
The BASF 7000 systems are professional computers from Germany. They seem to be based on the Microterm II Intelligent Terminal by Digi-Log Systems, Inc. There were several models in the 7000 serie....PERTEC PCC 2000
PCC 2000 is a professional computer released in 1978. It was designed in 1978 by Pertec, the company which merged with MITS by the end of 1976. The PCC is conceived as a monobloc machine, where the display and two 8" floppy disk drives are built-in the main case. The mechanical keyboard offers separated numeric and editing keypads. The system is powered by an Intel 8085 microprocessor and offers 64 KB RAM. The whole thing was apparently delivered with an extended Basic language, which has...RANDOM SYSTEMS
AI ELECTRONICS ABC 20 There were several models : 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 and 26 . The Model 2x was the successor of the ABC 10, which had a digital tape auxillary memory, supplied with DOSKET-T. A lot of languages were developed for these computers: - Dosket : Fortran IV, Basic, Cobol, Macro Assembler. - CP/M : MBasic, CBasic, Pascal, Cobol 80, Fortran 80, PL/3, etc. (AI DOSKET is the AI Electronics Operating System.)...THOMSON MO 6
The Thomson MO 6 was the successor of the Thomson MO 5 . This machine was widely used in French schools. It was compatible with the MO 5 and the other members of its family(TO 7 , TO 8 , TO 9
and TO 9 plus ). It has two versions of BASIC on ROM, one to be compatible with MO5 and BASIC 128 (both made by Microsoft). Almost all memory (10... VIDEO TECHNOLOGY LASER 200 / 210 The Laser 200 / 210 was sold worldwide under different brands (Dick Smith, Texet, Salora, etc...). Maybe the most popular of these "foreign models" was the VZ-200 sold by Dick Smith Electronics. The Laser 200 is the successor of the poor Laser 110 and was followed by the Laser 310 . It was a good choice if you wanted to buy a cheap computer for initiation....SHARP MZ 40K
MZ-40K was an ancestor of the Sharp MZ computers series. It was a single-board microcomputer in a plastic covered box. Sharp called it "Dr. Microcomputer (MAIKON HAKASE)". It was designed as a consumer electrical appliance and sold as a toy or a training tool for the first microcomputers fans. The MZ-40K had a built-in speaker and could play music automatically or become an organ, using the monitor keys. Software was included into the 4-bit CPU ROM and users could run several basic applicatio... CORVUS SYSTEMS Concept The Concept system was intended to be an individual diskless workstation operating within a Local Area Network (LAN). Each user could use the ressources of the computer and share both data and peripheral devices, including mass storage devices. The network connected computers offered some attractive cost advantages and allowed several people to work simultaneously on the same task. Users' data were shared through the Corvus OMNINET networking system which was the core product of Corv... SOCIÉTÉ OCCITANE D'ELECTRONIQUE OC2000
What a funky system ! This is a french system, made in Toulouse, south of France. Société Occitane d'Eléctronique often released systems (pongs, consoles and computers) with original 70's cosmetic design. It is software compatible with the Interton VC-4000 and "clones". This doesn't mean that it can use the Interton cartridges, as they won't fit, but the internal specs and software are the same. The CPU is the 2650A from Signetics and theVideo Controller...
MITS ALTAIR 8800
This computer was one of the first "home" computers ever made, it was sold as a kit, but for additional money, you could buy one fully assembled. It had no keyboard, the "program" had to be entered with the switches located on the front panel of the "computer", and as it didn't have video output (yet), the result was displayed via LEDs. Another computer which had almost the same characteristics was launched by IMSAI and was called IMSAI 8080 (seeboth in th...
PSION Organiser II
In 1986 Psion launched their second pocket computer, the Organiser II. Initially there were two models: the 8K RAM model CM and the 16K model XP. Both had a 32K ROM containing simplistic software, including a card file database, diary and clock. Less simplistic was the OPL programming language, a semi-compiled structured language allowing full use of the machine's features. It was this that principally guaranteed the machine's success. Later, the XP was upgraded to 3...SANCO TPC-8300
The Sanco TPC-8300 was made in Japan by Alps, the company that also made the famous mini 4-colour plotter-printer one found connected to numerous home computers and professionnal devices. Alps probably took part in the design of the Sharp PC-1500 . The appearence of the TPC-8300 was thus close to the PC-1500's although all the features of the computer were laid down by the French Sanco company. In spite of a 2-line display the computer had no success inFren...
BASIS BASIS 108
This professional computer was compatible with most of the hardware and software designed for the Apple II . It could run under DOS 3.x, but thanks to its second CPU, a Z80 processor, it could also run under CP/M. The Basis 108 had 128 KB RAM, (two switchable memory banks of 64k). Two 5"1/4 disk-drives (Apple compatible) could also be mounted inside the computer. In the picture, these are Apple Disk II drives. The Basis 108 was a good Apple IIcompatibl...
LATEST COMMENTS
JAMES
5/30/2020
NINTENDO Family Computer Keyboard The FAMILY BASIC ROM was actually created by the creators of the BOMBERMAN games HudsonSoft since most of the cartridges code wascreated by them.
Along with that FAMILY BASIC was quite unique compared to other versions since NES sprites are already preloaded in ROM Where as in other versions of basic you would be required to create a sprite byusing machine code
JAMES
5/30/2020
NEC PC 88VA
Yes this model of the PC88 series did get a port of the arcade hit R-TYPE and for the time it was probably one of the best home computer ports out their with full colour and FM stereo sound it was comparableto the Arcade.
JAMES
5/30/2020
NEC PC 88VA
Yes this model of the PC88 series did get a port of the arcade hit R-TYPE and for the time it was probably one of the best home computer ports out their with full colour and FM stereo sound it was comparableto the Arcade.
NIELS ROSKAM
5/29/2020
SPECTRAVIDEO SVI 738 - X'press P.-S.: What''s harder to find is a TV with a composite port to connect it to. And more specifically supports the low resolution.NIELS ROSKAM
5/29/2020
SPECTRAVIDEO SVI 738 - X'press Just last year I brought my 35 year old Spectravideo 738 X''Press from my parents attic to my home in Australia. Still in its original ''laptop'' bag, books, orginal floppies for CPM, MSXDOS, etc. Surprisingly it booted up without problem after all those years. I don''t think they make technology like it anymore.TONY LOGAN
5/29/2020
DATAVUE Spark
Hello, I would like to thank you for sharing this useful material. I appreciate reading it. What is more, the material provided here will be useful for a lot of peopleKNUT ROLL-LUND
5/28/2020
LITTON - MONROE OC-8880 I tried the TeleDisk images Alejandro Daniel Perez found. Unfortunately no success yet. I created real media with ms-dos on a 1.2MB 5.25" drive (has 80 track) and used DD 360K media, though it is not certified for 80 track. This seemed to go well, so far so good. The OC-8880 did respond with some more messages so it was trying. Loading, but didn''t like the floppy. From the sounds the drive may bebad.
I will try to find out if the floppies are ok on a different old computer. I will try to find out if the drive is bad, if it is an 80 track drive etc. In 1981/1982 80 track wasn''t that common. Two years later it was pretty common. BTW I will try mesuring what frequency the CPU has, and confirm ifsignals match Z80.
RANDOM SOFTWARE TITLES >> SHOW LATEST ADDITIONS ATARI KARTS (J9091E) Atari Jaguar compatible systems ATARI (PUBLISHER), MIRACLE DESIGNS (DEVELOPER) - 1995 game - kart - racingSUPER GOLF (03)
Epoch Super Cassette VisionEPOCH - 1984
game - golf - sport
AFTER BURNER COMPLETE (32X)(84507)
Sega Mega Drive compatible systemsSEGA - 1994
game - plane - shoot them upWATERGATE CAPER
Arcade
NUTTING ASSOCIATES - 1973game - mind games
MAZE WAR
IMLAC PDS systems
COMPANY UNKNOWN - 1973 game - 3d - first person shooter - maze THE CASTLE (G-1046) Sega SG-1000 compatible systemsASCII, SEGA - 1986
game - platform
JET FIGHTER
Arcade
ATARI - 1975
game - dogfight - duel - plane - shoot them upBEDLAM (VT3305)
Vectrex
GCE - 1982
game - shoot them up - vector graphicsHUSTLE
Arcade
GREMLIN - 1977
game - eat them all - snake game ALIEN VS PREDATOR (PROTOTYPE) Atari Jaguar compatible systems REBELLION (DEVELOPER) - YEAR UNKNOWN game - first person shooter - prototype SAFARI HUNTING (G-1002) Sega SG-1000 compatible systemsSEGA - 1983
game - hunting - jungle - mazeASSEMBLER
Compucolor
COMPANY UNKNOWN - YEAR UNKNOWN application - assembler - programming language CHECKERED FLAG (J9007E) Atari Jaguar compatible systems ATARI (PUBLISHER), REBELLION (DEVELOPER) - 1994game - car - racing
DIRTY LARRY - RENEGADE COP(PA2077)
Atari Lynx
ATARI - 1992
game - beat 'em up - platform - police RAGING TURTLE (PC/SD-204)SD-2xx systems
SEL - 1982
game - maze - turtleRANDOM ADVERTS
INTERACT
Home Computer SystemMULTITECH
MPF-1/65
SHARP
MZ-3500
SEGA
Master System
LEMZ
Agat
COMPUKIT
UK-101
EXELVISION
EXL 100
ROCKWELL
AIM 65
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
TI 99 / 4A
UNITRON (GERMANY)
2200
COMPAQ
Portable
NEC
PC 6001
EPSON
PX 8 / HC-88 / GenevaXEROX
8 / 16
VECTOR GRAPHICS
Vector 1
SOUTH WEST TECHNICAL PRODUCTS CORPORATION6800
FRANKLIN
ACE 100
PANASONIC
JD series
SORD
M-100ACE
ATARI
1200 XL
NORTHSTAR
Horizon
OLIVETTI
M20
CROMEMCO
Z-2
TIMEX / SINCLAIR
2068
Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donateold-systems | FAQ
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York Internet)-
Loading...
Details
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0