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Remember All That Time Spent Programming Your NES?

William Shatner for Commodore VIC-20

Apple II Game: Lode Runner (1983 Brøderbund Software)

Full Throttle Remastered - Teaser Trailer

poolcleaner says...

Updated graphics look great! I don't get the beef, but then again I grew up on Atari and Commodore 64 graphics. Graphics ain't really mah thing.

The Monster 6502 is a giant version of a famous microchip

bobknight33 says...

I taught myself machine code the commodore Vic 20 and used the Rockwell Aim 65 and the PET computer in collage which also used the 6502.

After collage I went into medical field service and never looked an another line of code.

Fond memories.

Old computers did it better!

ulysses1904 says...

I miss my Commodore VIC-20. Got it in 1983 and learned how to program in BASIC with 3.5 kb of RAM. Backed up programs onto cassettes. Spent many hours playing Radar RatRace.

CRASH: The Year Video Games Died

SDGundamX says...

The years after the crash but before the appearance of Nintendo were Golden Years for my brother and me. We were picking up cartridges for our Intellivision for a dollar a piece (or less) at retail stores and sometimes for free at local garage sales. I know our game library was over 50 games at one point, which as kids we never would have been able to afford if not for the crash.

We also switched to PC gaming. My dad received one of the very first laptops (with an LCD screen) from his job and I managed to get Bard's Tale up and running on it. Some of my friends went the Commodore 64 route.

So after the crash, we never stopped gaming, really, and just transitioned to the NES when it came out. But of course games became more expensive then. We gave up on owning anything but the most popular games (Mario, Zelda, etc.) and instead would swap games with classmates to try out other stuff. Mom and pop used games stores also popped up around that time and usually we could trade in an old game for a new one with an out-of-pocket expense at around $5, which was around my weekly allowance at the time and let me get a new game once a week.

The Cure - Just Like Heaven

World's First $9 Computer

AeroMechanical says...

Yeah, but that isn't the purpose of these. They tried that with OLPC and it was a good design but there were much more helpful ways to spend money to help third world children and it didn't really work out for a variety of reasons. These are, at best like the Raspberry Pi, intended for poor and middle-class western kids, to give them a 'hackable' platform that encouraged learning about how computers work (like the Commodore 64s and BBC Micros of old). Ideally, they would be distributed to public school students. Cheap is important, but not if it means you forgo the 'hackable'-ness.

But also my advice was really more intended for those here, who would be buying something like this to mess around with for DIY stuff.

Sniper007 said:

Education for someone in a third world country isn't necessarily re-writing the assembly code. It is just enjoying using the computer. Learning to type. Learning how a mouse works. Making something beautiful. Writing a paper for school. From there, curiosity and fun will do the rest.

GTA V: PS4 / PC / C64 Comparison

GTA V: PS4 / PC / C64 Comparison

VS runs in an Atari 2600 emulator. (Wtf Talk Post)

G.I. Joe - 8 Bit Cinema!

oritteropo says...

There was actually a 1985 G.I. Joe Commodore 64 game from Epyx:



It was open ended, and, from what I recall only loosely based on the movie... but it's an interesting comparison to this animation.

Stupid mistake causes helicopter to crash on takeoff

Family Feud - Size Matters!



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