Z80 Assembly programming for the Amstrad CPChttps://www.chibiakumas.com/z80/AmstradCPC.php
consoles and 16 bit computers, so died out relatively quickly. CPC 464/664/6128 CPC+ / GX4000 Cpu 3.5mhz Z80 3.5mhz Z80 Ram 64k+ (576k max) 64k+ (576k max) Screen Ram 16k 16k Reso
How to start with CP/Mhttp://www.retrotechnology.com/dri/howto_cpm.html
CP/M-68K on 68000 based computers.) 8080/8085/Z80 computers of the 1970's and 80's can be found; check this part of my document about old and new CP/M computers. A popular option
T3X.ORG cpnc/indexhttp://t3x.org/cpnc/
Amstrad NC100 Notepad Computers CP/NC is a CP/M -compatible operating system for the Amstrad NC100 Notepad Computer. It is based on Russell Marks's ZCN operating system, but focus
T3X.ORG indexhttp://t3x.org/
cards and mainframe computers. All source code from the book is in the public domain. Write Your Own Retro Compiler Study the complete source code for a self-hosting compil
The Giant List of Classic Game Programmershttps://dadgum.com/giantlist/index.html
teams, including home computers (like the Atari 800 and Apple II), consoles (like the Atari 2600), and arcade coin-ops. It also includes early, non-8-bit, mainframe games. The def
Synchronet BBS Listhttp://www.synchro.net/sbbslist.html
Amstrad BBS Amstrad Computers BBS Dedicated Amstrad BBS for CPC, PPC, PCW and all Amstrad computers through the ages. Enthusiasts, 8bit fans, gamers and Amstrad PC lovers all welc
gbZ80 Assembly programming for the Gameboy and Gameboy Color'shttps://www.chibiakumas.com/z80/Gameboy.php
work like they do on computers like the CPC Graphics are not just 'bytes' in a memory address... The screen is made up of a 'Tile Layer' and a 'Sprite Layer' To explain Tile
Homehttps://www.ricomputermuseum.org/
Restoration Supercomputers Symbolics 3630, S/N 60031, P/N 365800-2-1 Symbolics 3645, S/N 10147, P/N 365000 Texas Instruments System 1500 TI 990/10 & 990/12 Valid SCALDsystem V
Visit: Tuesday-Friday Noon-4PM; Saturdays 10 AM - 5 PM; Sundays Noon - 4 PM
Learn Multi platform 68000 Assembly Programming... By Magic!https://www.chibiakumas.com/68000/
on our processor, some computers use them for operating system calls... for example on the AtariST TRAP #13 is effectively a bios call, and depending on your hardware, you may nee
John Elliott's homepagehttp://www.seasip.info/
site are dedicated to computers and/or operating systems which unkind people might describe as obsolete : Sinclair Spectrum items: A section on Jet Set Willy , including an editor
PCs and clones - MCbxhttp://oldcomputer.info/pc/
(or almost compatible) computers and sold under different names. PC became popular in offices, homes and industrial systems. Its architecture oriented around ISA bus was expandabl
Media and storage - MCbxhttp://oldcomputer.info/media/
Early mainframe computers had only punched tape/cards permanent memory. To read computation results you had to take the tape and feed it to teletype manually (for example early BE
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