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Old computers

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    #11
    Originally posted by SimonMac View Post
    I was a late comer to the game, my Amstrad CPC 464 is still in the loft somewhere, if only I knew then what I know now about Lord Sugar and his scum tendencies!
    To be fair, the CPC range were very good for the time. Knocked spots off the Dragon 32, IMHO

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      #12
      Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
      To be fair, the CPC range were very good for the time. Knocked spots off the Dragon 32, IMHO
      Scrolling was a f*cker though!

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        #13
        Originally posted by doodab View Post
        .. Still have my casio programmable graphing calculator though )
        Me too - My 12 digit solar powered Casio, a big chunky looking thing that will probably last for decades.

        and my dozen or more slide rules.
        Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

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          #14
          Originally posted by Churchill View Post
          Scrolling was a f*cker though!
          Sideways, do you mean? Yes, one of my colleagues had a lot of hassle with the sideways scrolling playing area with fixed control panel on Action Force because of weirdness in the video circuitry. In the end he was able to get it working by setting one of the registers of the 6845 CRTC to some ludicrously out-of-range value, which somehow caused it to pick up on the new values written to the display address registers pointing at the control panel bitmap.

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            #15
            Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
            Sideways, do you mean? Yes, one of my colleagues had a lot of hassle with the sideways scrolling playing area with fixed control panel on Action Force because of weirdness in the video circuitry. In the end he was able to get it working by setting one of the registers of the 6845 CRTC to some ludicrously out-of-range value, which somehow caused it to pick up on the new values written to the display address registers pointing at the control panel bitmap.
            Yep.

            Sometimes it was better to use software sprites to simulate things like parallax scrolling as in "Short Circuit".

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              #16
              Actually, I've still got my Sinclair Cambridge Programmable, which used a 4-bit instruction set.

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                #17
                Got rid of all the old kit over the years but still have a Sparc 5 lying around somewhere.
                Me, me, me...

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
                  Actually, I've still got my Sinclair Cambridge Programmable, which used a 4-bit instruction set.

                  I had the Sinclair Enterprise Programmable. There were a few games in the "General Finance and Statistics" program library - Moon lander, supertanker and an electronic dice program.

                  If you powered on the calculator while holding down certain key sequences there were some rather strange effects. One of them was like a countdown timer that just kept decrementing digits. Not sure it was a test sequence or even whether it had anything that sophisticated built in.

                  Not a bad toy though ;-)

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by Churchill View Post
                    Jesus, I bet the evenings just fly by!

                    Anyone for 3D Monster Maze?
                    Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyone

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                      #20
                      Still got my Microtan 65 - and some of the soldering iron burns from building it.
                      World's Best Martini

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