RETRO COMPUTERS SıRLARı

retro computers Sırları

retro computers Sırları

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[Editor’s Note: I recently asked Steve Wozniak via email about why the original Apple II did not support lowercase letters. I could have guessed the answer, but it’s always good to hear the reason straight from the source.

sdlkjf lkjsdflk says: December 28, 2020 at 3:07 pm What does the speed of this CPU mean for some retro games which require a “turbo button” because they run too fast on anything faster than an 8088 at 4.77mhz? There was never a 300mhz 486 back in the day. I yaşama only imagine how fast one of those games would play on this. Seems like if you really want the retro hardware you should just stick with the real retro hardware. Things like caps don’t often go bad on these. The biggest sorun of old retro 386/486 boards is the damn NiCad batteries many of these used for the RTC/CMOS back in the day before the Dallas RTC/CMOS/Battery modules or just a plain old coin cell started to be used.

In most cases, you should be able to find replacements. It's derece uncommon to see some laptops that use standard 2032 coin cell batteries. Alternatively, you gönül find third-party alternatives on eBay or Amazon.

"It’s a special item helping to tell a story of British innovation in the 1980s and 90s, and it shows how computing is integral to education right up to the present day."

Another thing is, don’t junk the drive that’s in it, even if it is an “easily replaceable” IDE.. particularly if it’s a 2x speed. For why, is that with the initial MPC standard, software companies seemed to think 2x was gonna be standard forever… so made multimedia titles and games that are kinda synched to that loading rate. What this means is, the disk spins steadily, the content plays steadily, it’s a reasonable experience (Given they might have been reaching a bit with the tech of the day) however, stick an 8x or 16x drive in and it’s going zeeeep zeeeep *power down* *stall* zeeep zeeeep *power down* *stall* all the way through the content and yah, it can load the next 16 seconds in 2 seconds but it özgü to spin up for a second to do it, which is a stuttery mess.

The CRT itself is salvaged from an old video conferencing system and while it’s never been used before, it wasn’t recently made. To get the proper videoteyp inputs for this old display, the Game klan needed to be converted to LCD first, kakım some of these modules have video output that yaşama be fed to other displays.

No one’s paying anyone a salary to make incremental tweaks to the performance of the arcade version of Bionic Commando

What this means is, you’re derece tricking a processor into believing it’s something else, you’re setting it up to run that way from the start.

The progress made last time was to implement the communications protocols and to get the reception system to think it was connecting to the server. Now, we need to move beyond that.

The people who run this store are frauds. Bought a pair of basketball shoes, size 9.5. On that day you could chose the size. It took 4 days before they shipped the shoes. I checked back to ebay and saw the show sizes no longer applied to my shoe.

You've got a couple of options, though. You kişi buy another of the same machine you're restoring and cannibalize it for components.

Old PCs, and really all vintage micros are niche enough that if you want to get into any of them, it behooves you to do vintage computers a bit of research first and figure out what you *really* care about. Start with emulation. You honestly might find that’s good enough, and it may even be more like what you remember than what you actually had.

While looking for 95LX software around 1997 (according to the file dates, although it’s very possible I grabbed them earlier), I went on CompuServe and downloaded a passel of shareware games, amusements, and utilities that were designed specifically for the HP 95LX. Many of them were programmed by David K. Goodman, and they mostly date from 1991 and 1992.

A MiSTer system kişi theoretically run software from the NES to the Neo Geo, to the Apple II or Acorn Archimedes, and deliver responsive, near-birli-dammit accurate performance next to what you’d get from the actual devices.

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