Retro Computing Thread - Speccy, C64, Atari ST, Amiga, DOS PC, Amstrad, BBC Micro, and other wonderful machines from 25+ years ago

Ginger Piglet

Burglar of Jess Phillips MP
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Jun 13, 2016
I still have my old Atari STE which I hop onto from time to time. Been autodidacting myself 68000 assembly language to see if I can produce a worthwhile and fun game in it, well, in a mixture of that and high level languages. In fact, the other weekend I wrote an assembly routine which allows you to connect a Jaguar controller to one of its ports and read input from same, of which I was inordinately proud.

I have to say, though, it's a sign of just how bloated modern software is when my Windows 10 box (Ryzen 1600, GTX 1080 Ti, 16 GB RAM, 1 TB SSD) takes visibly a lengthy amount of time to boot up, load Windows, do the logon noise, demand a password, load a user profile, set up the desktop, pop open common productivity applications, etc. while my veteran grey slab (8 MHz Motorola 68000, blitter chip, 4 MB RAM, 512 MB hard drive equivalent) fires up, takes a few seconds to determine what memory is installed and what drives are connected and you're straight to a usable desktop and you can be writing killer riffs in Quartet within seconds.

Who else is autismal enough to have their old 8- or 16-bit systems still on the go or occasionally dip into same? If so, let's reminisce and sperg together. You know you want to.
 
I still have my old game boy, writing in assembler was really fun. I only made hello world though. The biggest problem I found is getting an adapter for the cartridge, some dude made his own, which just shows how basic things were back then.
 
Pretty fucked up that Deluxe Paint has never really been topped. Even worse seeing who owns the rights to it :mad:
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
 

Attachments

  • deluxe paint.jpg
    deluxe paint.jpg
    104.5 KB · Views: 202
I have my 15 year old PC in the basement that I'm thinking about making operational again.
We'll see how that goes.
Same. I have an old Windows XP with a Pentium 4 in it and I plan on making it a DOS computer, even has a floppy drive. Good thing I can burn floppies on my Linux rig, along with anything disk based. I have another XP in the basement, but I dunno what it has.
 
What's the PC?
Some dell that I had specially ordered from them. I think with monitor and printer it came to about $1,500 in 2004.
I'll take pictures when I get to it.
The basement has partially flooded a couple of times, and I unfortunately placed the tower on the floor, so it may not even boot.
We'll see.
 
Now that computers have become tainted with all kinds of bullshit, I don't regret a second I spent with them in their innocent state, growing up and witnessing their evolution in the wild and free cyber-frontier. What a magical time and place the 80s-2005s were. Probably one of the best times to be alive in history.
So much beautiful shit was made and happened that no one will ever care about again... All gone... Like tears, in rain.
 
728591


The BBC Micro gave me my first ever gaming experience when I was still basically a toddler. Not a game I played back then but Elite always comes to mind these days as being a game that was way ahead of its time (released in 1984) and was on the BBC Micro.

BBC Micro had some nice colors too.

728595

728596

728597
 
I had one of those Amigas that was a giant keyboard that you connected to a television.

Believe it or not, I mainly used it for word processing (which I didn't have much need of in elementary school, and I could get away with handwritten reports as late as middle school). The only games I played for it were Where in the World is Carmen San Diego and Tetris.

It also had a text-to-voice editor that frankly puts Microsoft Sam to shame. Good times.
 
I keep winUAE installed just to play K240 occasionally. It's strange to me that noone else has thought of making a completely randomized 4x game which can be won or lost within an hour.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gator Young Henning
Oldest "computer" I own is a Philips G7000 from 1978. I call it a computer because it has a keyboard(the worst one ever) and it says "computer" on the box. In other places it was called the Magnavox Odyssey 2.

The box is in decent shape all things considered. The packing material/styrofoam on the inside is gone though.
728868


Bunch of games as well, nine I think.
728869
 
Back