Brad Templeton's Home Pagehttps://www.templetons.com/brad/
Kinnernet, DLD, Computers Freedom and Privacy, Foresight Nanotechnology conference and various others. (I have lots of frequent flyer memberships.) Other interests include music,
TI99/4A Treff 2015http://stephen.shawweb.co.uk/treff/
I first met computers at work in 1969, typing in data and enquiries to a remote terminal for an IBM360- no vdu, just a printer and keyboard. My leisure interests included games an
A presentation made October 2015 to the European TI99
A List Of Games By Trans People Before 2010https://dotmaetrix.neocities.org/classictranslist
(1989, Various home computers) Developed by Rebecca Heineman. Originally intended as a Bard's Quest game but rights issues got in the way Dragon Dive (2003, Gamecube) Kotori Yoshi
Computer Demos - The Story So Farhttps://mlab.taik.fi/~eye/demos/
work in the organizers' computers. The biggest demo parties are: Assembly (held in Finland on July-August) The Party (held in Denmark few days before New Year) The Gathering (held
An overall introduction to computer demos,demo scene and related issues with lots of links to further information
DL's Favorite Web Links Pagehttp://www.doylelynch.com/links.shtml
Places to purchase computers and computer stuff. A Piece of the Net That's right! Go to my own business site to find who I recommend for purchasing computer equipment. Computer So
My Favorite Web Links and Web Sites I like to visit when I surf the net!
OS-9 Frequently Asked Questionshttps://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~pruyne/os9faq.html
to large multiuser minicomputers. Originally developed for the 6809 microprocessor, OS-9 was a joint effort between Microware and Motorola. The original version of OS-9 (OS-9 Leve
The Dockhttp://koshka.love/links.html
designed for older computers. It works as a proxy for DuckDucKGo, and strips search results down to text and basic HTML, removing all of the bloat that would make older computers
A hand-curated website directory containing links to over 250 (largely Web 1.0
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
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
How to run adventure games - SPAGhttp://www.spagmag.org/archives/howtorun.html
and Windows personal computers. The software and filenames given as examples are usually PC-specific. However, most of the information in this document is relevant to users of oth
PDD's Adventure Pagehttp://pdd.if-legends.org/
down to old 8-bit computers and handhelds like the Psion Palmtop. The TADS page (Mike Roberts) Another TADS page (Neil K. Guy) The Inform page (Graham Nelson et al.) The Hugo page
The page for classic text adventure aficionados. Covers Scott Adams, Brian Howarth, Infocom, Level 9, Magnetic Scrolls and more.
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