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  grobinette Premium,MVM join:2001-01-27 Springfield, VA clubs: | Commodore 64 And it seems like just yesterday.. | |
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 |   LiamJunket Premium join:2002-03-03 Ocean City, NJ
·Comcast
| Re: Commodore 64 said by grobinette :And it seems like just yesterday.. My 1st home computer eons ago was an 8k Commodore PET. The 1st of many, many home PCs. | |
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 |  |   jgkolt Premium join:2004-02-21 Lakewood, OH clubs: | Re: Commodore 64 Can't say I dabbled with the 64 but I did have the 128. It was the first pc I ever got onto the internet with. Anyone remember cp/m too? -- 3 free for you/3 free for me: Free Stock Trades : PM Me | |
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 |   astokes
join:2000-08-11 Bangor, ME | Yes C64, then onto an Amiga after that happy days. I even overclocked my Amiga with some soldering skills hehe | |
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 |  |   en102 Canadian, eh?
join:2001-01-26 Valencia, CA 1 edit | Re: Commodore 64 I've had both... C64 and Amiga 500. I actually purchased a kit to allow it to run AmigaOS and DOS (machine ended up with 2 BIOS). -- Canada = Hollywood North | |
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 |  |   TScheisskopf World News Trust
join:2005-02-13 Belvidere, NJ | Was that the 68000 to 68010 hack? I did that one. | |
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 |   Persona Premium join:2004-07-07 Gravenhurst, ON | Man, I was a relative luddite back then, getting excited about being able to afford my own VCR! | |
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 |  ammer
join:2005-11-04 League City, TX | Ahhhh C64, 300 Baud modems, Color64 BBS's, California Games. What more could a 10 year old want back in the day. | |
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 |   Air WAV
join:2000-09-16 Saint Louis, MO | Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy...yep, the memories. -- »700mhz.net
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 |  |   PolarBear The bear formerly known as aaron8301 Premium join:2005-01-03 Riverside, WA
·CableOne
| Re: Commodore 64 said by Air WAV :Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy...yep, the memories. I spent EONS trying to figure that game out! (Having never watched the shows or read the book, I had nothing to go on.) Took me like two weeks just to get past the bulldozer without getting hit in the head with a damn brick. | |
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 |  |  |   KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK
·Cox HSI
·AT&T Southwest
| Re: Commodore 64 Can you say....
Elite M.U.L.E. Paradroid Delta Racing Destruction Set Raid over Bungling Bay Ghosts N Goblins International Karate The Last Ninja Wizball
Games may have better graphics these days.... but they aren't better then these (and many other) Classics!
The C-64 kicked (and still) kicks ass. -- "Regulatory capitalism is when companies invest in lawyers, lobbyists, and politicians, instead of plant, people, and customer service." - former FCC Chairman William Kennard (A real FCC Chairman, unlike the current Corporate Spokesperson in the job!) | |
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 |  |  |  |   PolarBear The bear formerly known as aaron8301 Premium join:2005-01-03 Riverside, WA | Re: Commodore 64 Indeed, I agree. | |
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 |  |  |  |   Thespis I'm not an actor, but I play one on TV. Premium join:2004-08-03 Keller, TX | I'll add Wasteland to that list. Took about 10 minutes to load from floppy; ah, the anticipation! | |
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 |  |  |  |  Radioman991
join:2001-09-24 Dayton, OH | M.U.L.E ! I was thinking about that game last night! I had it for the old Super Nintendo too! It's still stored in my mom's basement...thought about going over and getting it..... | |
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 |  |  |  |   dogtech Let Us Build It
join:2002-06-08 Toledo, OH | I so LOVED my Commodore 64.!!! I miss it! | |
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  cableties Premium join:2005-01-27 Newtown, PA | Vic 20 amiga 500 Timex Sinclair TRS-80 with cassette Osborne Orange (Franklin) Apple ][+ and ][e with 64K !!! PC/XT and PC/AT and PS/2 60 Targa cards! | |
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  LiamJunket Premium join:2002-03-03 Ocean City, NJ
·Comcast
| Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs
»www.pcworld.com/article/id,14039···cle.html
Hackers have succeeded in breaking into the computer systems of two of the U.S.' most important science labs, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Tennessee and Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico.
In what a spokesperson for the Oak Ridge facility described as a "sophisticated cyber attack," it appears that intruders accessed a database of visitors to the Tennessee lab between 1990 and 2004, which included their social security numbers and dates of birth. Three thousand researchers reportedly visit the lab each year, a who's who of the science establishment in the U.S.
"Because of the sensitive nature of this event, the laboratory will be unable for some period to discuss further details until we better understand the full nature of this attack," he added. Less is known about the attacks said to have been launched against the ORNL's sister-institution at Los Alamos, but the two are said to be linked.
The ORNL is a multipurpose science lab, a site of technological expertise used in homeland security and military research, and also the site of one of the world's fastest supercomputers. Los Alamos operates a similar multi-disciplinary approach, but specializes in nuclear weapons research, one of only two such sites doing such top-secret work in the U.S.
»www.abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/Techno···7&page=1
A "sophisticated cyberattack" has been detected at Oak Ridge National Laboratory over the last several weeks, and authorities suspect the hackers are based in China.
Investigators have not been able to determine whether the attacks came from government or private entities in China.
Other federal labs, including Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico and California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, have also been targeted in the scheme. Given the targets, I suspect this is the Chinese government trying to hack in and not common criminals. -- Internet News My BLOG My Web Page
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 |   Jeffrey Bye George, 1937-2008 Premium join:2002-12-24 Huntington Station, NY clubs: | Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs Is anyone else besides me terribly disturbed at what sort of adversary China will be in 20 years? | |
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 |  |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA | Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs Hopefully they will be our friends, cause they look mighty scary now Check out thier coastlines sometime on google maps, its unbelievable. | |
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 |  |   NY Tel Always 180 Degrees Out-of-Phase Premium join:2004-04-09 Smithtown, NY
·VOIPo
| said by Jeffrey :Is anyone else besides me terribly disturbed at what sort of adversary China will be in 20 years? Yes but I think you are way off. It won't take 20 years for them to become adversarial unfortunately. | |
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 |  |  |   OldschoolDSL Premium join:2006-02-23 Indian Orchard, MA | Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs China and The US will go to war. This is the third time China as been into our nuke program and/or defense systems. Their army has been growing out of control for 10yrs. Friends? With friends like this, who needs enemies? | |
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 |  |  |  |   NY Tel Always 180 Degrees Out-of-Phase Premium join:2004-04-09 Smithtown, NY
·VOIPo
| Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs said by OldschoolDSL :China and The US will go to war. This is the third time China as been into our nuke program and/or defense systems. Their army has been growing out of control for 10yrs. Friends? With friends like this, who needs enemies? Yup. Agreed. | |
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 |  |  |  |   mrchris We don't miss you Bush Premium join:2002-10-01 North Babylon, NY
·Optimum Online
| said by OldschoolDSL :China and The US will go to war. This is the third time China as been into our nuke program and/or defense systems. Their army has been growing out of control for 10yrs. Friends? With friends like this, who needs enemies? What exactly am I supposed to see on China's coastlines? | |
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 |  |  |  |  |  BosstonesOwn
join:2002-12-15 Everett, MA clubs: | Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs The destruction of the oceans and coastline | |
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 |  |  |  |  |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA
·Cruzio Internet
4 edits | Last time I looked, they had seawalls along thier coastlines. Its unbelievable because thier coastline is HUGE, and the amount of work is staggering.
I couldnt see very good detail on google maps, they could be fish farms. It doesnt matter what they are, the scale is amazing. Id like to see some close up pictures, but I cant find any. It didnt go so well last time we fought »en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_···eservoir »en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Task_Force_Faith The only kind of war with china would be big bomb throwing, which would be unfortunate for the whole world. | |
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 |  |   PolarBear The bear formerly known as aaron8301 Premium join:2005-01-03 Riverside, WA
·CableOne
| said by Jeffrey :Is anyone else besides me terribly disturbed at what sort of adversary China will be in 20 years? Yes. And here we are blowing all we got on a pissant-of-a-country like Iraq.
FYI, I DO support our country, so please flame lightly. | |
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 |  |  |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA
·Cruzio Internet
| Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs said by PolarBear :said by Jeffrey :Is anyone else besides me terribly disturbed at what sort of adversary China will be in 20 years? Yes. And here we are blowing all we got on a pissant-of-a-country like Iraq. FYI, I DO support our country, so please flame lightly. And dont forget getting our asses kicked in Afghanistan. -- Do ye, quieting in your bosoms your strong hearts, Who of many good things have had your fill even to surfeit, With what is moderate nourish your mighty desire; for neither will We yield, nor shall you have all else as you wish. Solon | |
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 |  |  |  |   PolarBear The bear formerly known as aaron8301 Premium join:2005-01-03 Riverside, WA
·CableOne
| Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs said by gaforces :And dont forget getting our asses kicked in Afghanistan. Indeed. | |
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 |  |  |   AnonChina
@verizon.net
| Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs Actually I call horse sheite...
China will not fight the US. No, they will BUY it.
Pay attention children, we are the most powerful nation because of our BUYING power.
Guess what happens when you elevate 60% of the worlds population from third world status to first world status?
Gawd... you techno wennies are so naieve | |
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 |  |   KrK Heavy Artillery For The Little Guy Premium join:2000-01-17 Tulsa, OK | Thanks to US, and now Europe getting in on the Act, China will be the next world Superpower. Economically, militarily. Meanwhile the USA will be broke and unable to pay it's military (AKA Soviet Union breakup days). | |
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 |  |  |  apollo80
join:2002-01-31 Richmond, VA
| Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs I remember reading an article about the Chinese military absolutely freaking out when the US drove jeeps and tanks in downtown Baghdad just three weeks to the day the US went into Iraq a few years ago.
Their generals didn't think the US could do what they did that quickly and efficiently. Because of this, they began to reevaluate their military strategy in case of war.
They feared if the went into Taiwan to invade, which is something they could very well do (WW III , anyone?) the US would be able to defend Taiwan with her navy and air force alone because of how efficient the military is.
Whole new strategies, at that point, were being considered.
Right now China has the ability to launch nuke missiles from her mainland and hit Alaska, Hawaii, or the US western seaboard, but that's as far as she can go from her homemland. All of this because of Clinton assisted missile tutorials. The Chinese had problems sucessfully launching missiles, and Clinton permitted US companies to go in and say, "No, you're doing X wrong. Here, do it THIS way..." This is also the reason China recently put a man in orbit and launched a missile into space destroying it's own antiquated satellite.
China has advanced some 20 years in the 1990's because of our help.
No, I'm not barking at Dems here. So no flaming. I'm just stating the facts.
China's military has more people in it than the entire population of the US.
Only problem is...how are they going to get HERE to the US? Their navy is small, but they are investing in growing it.
Nonetheless, their military buildup is insane.
I'm betting they will march through Asia and Europe and just try to nuke the US. Their form of world domination.
If anyone is familiar with history, during the Korean War, when China pushed the UN forces back into South Korea and almost into the sea, the US said, "Back off, or we'll nuke you."
The Chinese response: "OK, so we lose a few million people."
When the Chinese military launched a satellite killer missile, there was no response from the Chinese government for a LONG time, while the world demanded what was going on.
Two possibilities:
1. The Chinese government doesn't care.
2. The Chinese government was in the dark and the military did their own thing.
Either scenario is scary. | |
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 |  |  |  |   Jigsaw Stardust We Are Premium join:2000-10-21 Cleveland, OH
·Cox HSI
| Look at how fast China is growing.Its going to come to a head soon.What i mean by come to a head is Pollution that will make love canal/Valdez oil spill look like nothing.They are on there way to it.Watch in the coming years you will see it. -- "It's called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it."-George Carlin
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 |  |  |  |  |  jholdren
join:2004-04-02 Kent, WA
| Re: Chinese hack their way in to US nuke labs If China were to attack us, they would wreck their own economy. We are their biggest purchaser of cheap products. All that western $$$ is being used to expand their economic base. Basic rule - never piss off your biggest customer.
On the other hand, if something huge happens, and the US starts limiting/boycotting goods marked "Made in China", then I can see some sort of military action.
But it will take something huge. We have already pretty much forgiven them for poisoning our pets, and coating all of our children's toys with lead paint. All in the name of getting access to cheap products. | |
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  Dominokat "Hi" Premium join:2002-08-06 Boothbay, ME clubs: | It's Friday??? In that case, I need a beer. | |
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 |   PolarBear The bear formerly known as aaron8301 Premium join:2005-01-03 Riverside, WA
·CableOne
| said by Dominokat :In that case, I need a beer. I've moved on to Caribou Lou. | |
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  furlonium Computer Over? Virus equals Very Yes?
join:2002-05-08 Bethlehem, PA
| Commodore 64? "It's also the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Commodore 64, so remember to get down with your bad selves and enjoy a game of Archon or two."
Sure, right after I'm done playing Halo 3 on my 52" HDTV  | |
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 |  See 8 replies to this post |
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  LiamJunket Premium join:2002-03-03 Ocean City, NJ
·Comcast
1 edit | Fiber-optic chips promise multi-core with huge speeds
»news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071206/tc_···ing_dc_1
IBM (IBM.N) says it has made a breakthrough in converting electrical signals into light pulses that brings closer the day when supercomputing, which now requires huge machines, will be done on a single chip.
In research published in the journal Optics Express, IBM said it had reached a milestone in the quest to connect hundreds or thousands of processing cores on a tiny chip by eliminating the wires required to connect them.
The semiconductor industry is evolving multi-core chips that take up less space than multiple single-core chips but they are extremely power-hungry and produce large amounts of heat, factors that are holding back improvements in computing power.
IBM's Cell processor which powers the Sony (6758.T) PlayStation 3 -- one of the most advanced chips there is today -- has nine cores, or "brains."
Using light instead of wires to send information between the cores by using a silicon Mach-Zehnder electro-optic modulator can be as much as 100 times faster and use 10 times less power than wires, IBM says.
The new modulator IBM has developed is 100 to 1,000 times smaller than previously demonstrated comparable modulators, IBM said on Thursday, paving the way for significant reductions in cost, energy and heat while increasing bandwidth.
"Just like fiber optic networks have enabled the rapid expansion of the Internet by enabling users to exchange huge amounts of data from anywhere in the world, IBM's technology is bringing similar capabilities to the computer chip," IBM's lead scientist on the project, Will Green, said in a statement.
"We believe this is a major advancement in the field of on-chip silicon nanophotonics." So there is still more speed that can be gotten out of silicon chips when paired with photonics. -- Internet News My BLOG My Web Page
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 tmc8080
join:2004-04-24 Floral Park, NY
| We can say.. At least 25 years ago we could say that part of the manufacture, quality control, or packaging was U.S. based. Can't say that today, more like 100% asia sourced, along with 88% of the U.S. economy. God help us with ordinary U.S. citizens had to make their stuff.. they wouldn't know how and would be falling all over themselves to try. | |
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  LiamJunket Premium join:2002-03-03 Ocean City, NJ
·Comcast
| Virtual flirts trolling chat rooms gathering info
Russian chat rooms are suffering from an invasion of software bots that have been trained to flirt as a way to gather personal info from real live chatters. »www.news.com/8301-13860_3-983113···-1_3-0-5
A program which can mimic online flirtation and then extract personal information from its unsuspecting conversation partners is making the rounds in Russian chat forums, according to security software firm PC Tools.
The artificial intelligence of CyberLover's automated chats is good enough that victims have a tough time distinguishing the "bot" from a real potential suitor, PC Tools said. The software can work quickly too, establishing up to 10 relationships in 30 minutes, PC Tools said. It compiles a report on every person it meets complete with name, contact information and photos.
Among CyberLover's creepy features is its ability to offer a range of different profiles from "romantic lover" to "sexual predator." It can also lead victims to a "personal" Web site, which could be used to deliver malware, PC Tools said.
Robot chatters are just one type of social engineering attack that uses trickery rather than a software flaw to access victim's valuable information. Such attacks have been on the rise and are predicted to continue to grow. LOL. I wonder what happens when 2 virtual flirters try and get info out of each other? -- Internet News My BLOG My Web Page
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 |   botflirt
| Re: Virtual flirts trolling chat rooms gathering info i thought the tag line was the best part "That bot fatale only wants you for your data" clever and funny. | |
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 |   gaforces United We Stand, Divided We Fall
join:2002-04-07 Santa Cruz, CA | They visit each others websites ... and make baby bots. | |
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 Gizmo_piper
join:2007-11-25 | What about the Vic-20 days! I miss my Vic-20 and playing online via CompUServe. Use to play Treasure Island via text on my 1200 baud modem!!! The good ole days! | |
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 |  |
 |  |  Gizmo_piper
join:2007-11-25 | Re: What about the Vic-20 days! Yep, had the tape drive as well. Loved it! | |
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  PetePuma How many lumps do you want Premium,MVM join:2002-06-13 Arlington, VA
| c64... Funny, I just went out a few weeks ago and got a 1571 disk drive and a XE/XM1541 cable to pull files off of old disks. Funny to look at code I wrote (and games I played) in 1985. Some of the former is better than what I can write now, and it's my job! -- Fight fire with water. | |
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 |  |   PetePuma How many lumps do you want Premium,MVM join:2002-06-13 Arlington, VA
| Re: c64... Just bad naming:
»sta.c64.org/xe1541.html
It's a parallel-to-Commodore interface that can then be used to read disks (actually using an XM1541 cable and the "opencbm" tools on Sourceforge to read disks. Very neat.) | |
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 Kord
join:2006-10-27 | Dont Forget Pearl Harbor | |
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  ArchAngel21x MacFan Pro Premium join:2001-10-28 Lincoln, NE
·Internet Nebraska
| Playing More WoW Tonight Right now I am level 58 and level 70 seems so far away. By the way, you can kill horde guards without getting flagged by using reflective shield. It's awesome =D -- Proud owner of a Mac Book & iPod Touch (8 Gig) | Mac Rumors | Apple Store | |
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  romulus
@hubspan.com | OT The question is, how do I hook my C64 to my DSL? | |
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 Gizmo_piper
join:2007-11-25 | Operation Just Cause Don't forget Operation Just Cause in 89 | |
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 |   Subaru 1-3-2-4 Premium join:2001-05-31 Greenwich, CT clubs: | Re: Operation Just Cause lol yeah Commodore... look who is still selling computers now :P
haha sorry the Commodore was just a wee bit before my time but I can take jabs at it :P | |
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 |   Jigsaw Stardust We Are Premium join:2000-10-21 Cleveland, OH
·Cox HSI
| said by Gizmo_piper :Don't forget Operation Just Cause in 89 United States invasion of Panama my buddy(who just got out of school in 88 with us) got his first battle star serving there. -- "It's called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it."-George Carlin
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 |  |  Gizmo_piper
join:2007-11-25 | Re: Operation Just Cause Picked up my first combat jump! | |
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 |   tektron w'zup duck? Premium join:2005-01-30 O Fallon, MO | Re: POKE a PEEK What's really sad is I still remember those two pokes.
LOAD "*",8,1 SEARCHING FOR * ?FILE NOT FOUND ERROR READY. >. | |
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 |  braclark
join:2006-09-01 Rowley, MA | It's been a long time since I've peeked or poked 53280 or 53281 | |
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  BryanC1968
join:2003-06-10 Elkins, WV
·Verizon Online DSL
·Suddenlink
| Commodore 64 My 1st computer was a used Commodore 64 I bought from a friend and hooked up to our living room TV. No tape drive or floppy drive.
I would spend hours typing in BASIC code for a game or some other program from one of my COMPUTE! Magazines I subscribed to... Only to play the game or use the program for a little while and then lose the whole thing when I had to turn it off to go to bed... I would start the whole process all over again the next night...
I taught myself BASIC programing from those COMPUTE! Magazines... I later bought a used tape drive then a floppy drive...
My 2nd computer was a New Commodore 128 I saved up for and bought my senior year in high school and used with a portable black & white tv, and later buying a color RGB Monitor
Boy those were the days... | |
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 |   swinn
join:2001-02-16 Clarksville, TN
| Re: Commodore 64 Compute! was a great magazine. I also spent hours typing in the source code for games. The machine code programs were tedious and one mistake would cause the whole thing to not work but it was fun. I still have my C64 in working condition as well as all my floppies. Every so often I'll pull it out and play Jumpman Jr.
I agree, those were the days  | |
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 |  |   SuperJoker
join:2005-11-21 Yermo, CA
·Verizon Online DSL
·Verizon west (ex G..
1 edit | Re: Commodore 64 said by swinn :Compute! was a great magazine. I also spent hours typing in the source code for games. The machine code programs were tedious and one mistake would cause the whole thing to not work but it was fun. I still have my C64 in working condition as well as all my floppies. Every so often I'll pull it out and play Jumpman Jr. I agree, those were the days I typed in the one for Flying down the Death Stars trench, Took Me 3, Maybe 4 days or so. I'm glad Your floppies are readable still, I had some die on later computers, No I never owned a C64, An Amiga sure(1000, 3000 & 4000) sure. Lots of peeks and pokes all in Atari Basic. And yeah those were the days, Games were more serial back then, Always what was around the next corner or the next screen.  -- (25.92GHz crunching for SETI with the PC Perspective Killer Frogs) | |
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 |  |   djrobx
join:2000-05-31 Valencia, CA
·PHONE POWER
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T CallVantage
·Time Warner VOIP
·RoadRunner Cable
2 edits | Compute! was sick... er, was the bomb... er, wait back then it was "totally rad". I had subscriptions to it and Family Computing. The Compute! programs were way more advanced, I learned a lot about PC graphics programming from them. I didn't have a Commodore though, we had a PC. I wanted a Commodore for the games, but the PC made me learn to write my own. Remember the checksums Compute! had next to the lines of code so you could be sure you typed it in right? LOL.
It's amusing to think two decades later on a brand new machine, I can still fire up a copy of GWBASIC.EXE, go into SCREEN 1 and mess around with those awful CGA palettes and write memory directly to segment &HC800 to put pixels on the screen. 64 bit Vista or XP *finally* axes those compatibility layers. But we're still a few years away from 64 bit being standard!
LOL, I just tried "Screen 1" in VMWare on my Mac Pro and it completely confused it. Interestingly, screen 2 (mono 640x200) works.
I miss the BASIC programming days! | |
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  nizbit Learn to Swim Premium join:2003-09-20 Grainy | C64-Best Game Ever Seven Cities of Gold. God I loved that game. | |
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 |  See 6 replies to this post |
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 mikenolan7 Premium join:2005-06-07 Torrance, CA
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·RoadRunner Cable
| 25 years ago I was running computer aided design software on PDP-11's. They kept us in dark, cold computer rooms. The rooms were dark so we could actually see the CRT's, and the PDP-11's sat in there right with us, so the entire room was air conditioned to keep the machines cold. We had a keyboard, a set of 7 knobs that translated and rotated the wireframe models and zoomed in/out. We didn't have a mouse, we had a "light pen" that you poked at the screen with to select lines from the wireframe model. That was the latest, hottest stuff available at the big Aerospace Companies at the time.
Four or five workstations ran off of each PDP-11 and all day long you would hear the groans go up from different parts of the room when the PDP-11's took their turns crashing, losing all the work that four or five people had done for the last hour or two. My shoulder still aches in bad weather from poking that damn light pen into the screen hundreds of times a day. Those were the days, weren't they? | |
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 |  |   NwkEWR Exile is NOT Immigration Premium join:2002-04-10 Newark, NJ | Re: 25 years ago Isn't that a late 70s album? I could swear that Lionel had gotten rid of the 'fro by '82 and was sporting Jerry curls then. | |
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 |   mrchris We don't miss you Bush Premium join:2002-10-01 North Babylon, NY | I was only 7.5-8 months old  | |
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 |   alphaman77
join:2001-12-21 Arvada, CO
| I was lucky and did all of my work on a IBM 3081 and soon after the the Vax 6500, 6600 and finally the Vax Alpha. The stupid IBM double density drives also had a nasty tendency to crash the platters during batch processing and we would be done two to three days at a time. Talk about a pain in the ass.
I still have all of my great Commodore stuff ranging from the SX-64 to the Amiga 500. Even have an old super Pet with the dual disk drives. | |
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 |   alphaman77
join:2001-12-21 Arvada, CO
| I was lucky and did all of my work on a IBM 3081 and soon after the the Vax 6500, 6600 and finally the Vax Alpha. The stupid IBM double density drives also had a nasty tendency to crash the platers during batch processing and we would be done two to three days at a time. Talk about a pain in the ass.
I still have all of my great Commodore stuff ranging from the SX-64 to the Amiga 500. Even have an old super Pet with the dual disk drives. | |
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