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
The Oldskool PC Carnival Sideshowhttp://www.oldskool.org/shrines/carny
low-cost home computers at the time, most had a cartridge slot. I can just imagine the development meeting: "Atari, Timex, Texas Instruments, Commodore--they've all got cartridge
http://www.oldskool.org/demos/misc/demoquot.txthttp://www.oldskool.org/demos/misc/demoquot.txt
disks INSIDE their computers, and jumping down from windows onto cars and so on! :) Almost like a movie, but it was reality - many years ago! The golden years. I couldn't have wri
Floodgap - Softwarehttp://www.floodgap.com/software/
DOS, Amiga and Atari computers. Includes linker utilities, documentation, and support for Rockwell CMOS and Western Digital '816 variants. GPL open source. HuePl: A Perl Utility f
Welcome [New Breed Software]http://www.newbreedsoftware.com/
), classic computers (like the Amiga and Atari 8-bit ), mobile devices (such as the Nokia Maemo tablets and Sharp Zaurus PDA), and handheld and home video game cons
Cowgod's Chip-8 Technical Referencehttp://devernay.free.fr/hacks/chip8/C8TECH10.HTM#00E0
DREAM 6800, and ETI 660 computers are a few examples. These computers typically were designed to use a television as a display, had between 1 and 4K of RAM, and used a 16-key hexa
XKeyCapshttps://www.jwz.org/xkeycaps/
fact that the crummy computers I had to use still didn't have this basic utility that my 128k Macintosh had in 1984, I hacked it together, taught it about the four or five keyboar
unusedino.de/cwhttp://www.unusedino.de/cw/cwtool.html
on modern Macintosh computers. c1541 (part of VICE), http://www.viceteam.org/ Allows access to or creation of D64 and G64 image files. For example c1541 -format
The Retrocomputing Museumhttp://www.catb.org/retro/
Reduced Instruction Set Computers? Well, here is the concept taken to its logical extreme — an emulator for a computer with just one (1) instruction (Subtract and Branch if
A museum of archaic computer languages
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2839.txthttps://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2839.txt
diverse types of computers over potentially hostile communication links. Since 1981, the Kermit Project at Columbia University has expanded the protocol, developed communications
6510 Assembly programming for the Commodore 64https://www.chibiakumas.com/6502/c64.php
one of the most popular computers of all time, although limited to just 64k, it rivalled its competitors with hardware sprites and scrolling, its 6510 CPU is a 6502 with built in
C-Kermit UNIX Platformshttps://www.kermitproject.org/unix.html
to different kinds of computers, a rare feature in those days. Since then it has evolved to be a large family of OSs, both open and proprietary, that taken together are one of the
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