If my new fling (RPi) could be dedicated to C64 emulation – seriously, I would show up at one of my old friends house and ask him if he wanted another go at Raid on Bungeling Bay or The Last Ninja… I have built much better rigs over the years, but the C64 is my first and best love – no way around it. My Father-in-Law still has a working C64 in his basement that has been modified slightly to run packet relay traffic over shortwave – I love to get on it and bang around still (40 column CRT display and all). I could lay down a few hundred lines of basic and have that little computer doing all sorts of magic tricks! My love came from the following:ġ) my C64, cartridges, and joysticks all fit in my backpack and could go to a friends house so that I could play games with them.Ģ) I knew basic before I was in third grade and was working on mastering LOGO and Simon’s Basic before my grade school tech teacher even knew what the acronym meant – I was the smartest kid in grade school and had no regrets that I wasn’t invited to swap baseball cards with the cool kids.ģ) This was before any Google, Gopher, or any other search engines – I had to LEARN everything that I typed in. OK, so the C64 was my first love – I had my first one when I was 6 and have never loved or learned a computer better than my C64. And most users today are in that group: the C64 is the hobby. This started to change on the C64, the first computing platform to have so many applications. Ratger, you bought that computer AS your hobby. It’s not always obvious if you weren’t around in computing in the 8-bit days, but for much of that era, you didn’t buy a computer to, say, do your taxes or edit photos or support some other hobby. There are guys out there who know every peek and poke, who read 6502 machine language in hex, and really aren’t looking for more than that. A single person really can learn just about everything there is to know about the C64. The allure of the C64 and other vintage machines to their fans is often that lost simplicity. Posted in Raspberry Pi Tagged c64, commodore, commodore 64, emulator Post navigationįolks are emulating a C64 to have access to a C64… sure, there are better ways to go if your goal is understand the some of the workings of the Raspberry Pi.īut as points out, even the Raspberry Pi, very simple and basic by modern computer standards, has complex hardware. Thanks to, head of PCB development at Commodore Business Machines for the lead. If you’re just warming up to the Commodore world, you’ll definitely want to know the real story behind the C128. They also plan to have hooks for more modern technology to include Ethernet, GPIO and expansion RAM.Ī video demo of the emulator can be found below. The goals of the project include an HDMI and composite compatible video output, SID based sound, Sprites and other notable Commodore features. We find that the number of working units is diminishing as age and the laws of entropy and physics take their toll.Įnter the Commodore Pi, an emulated Commodore 64 operating system for the Raspberry Pi. Jump forward to today and it’s a generation later. Come to think about it, that’s the description of Minecraft! Speaking as a former Commodore Business Machines (CBM) engineer the real surprise for us is the ongoing interest and devotion to an era typified by lumbering 8 bit machines and a color palette consisting of 16 colors. It’s no secret that Commodore users love their old machines with the Commodore C64 being chief among them with 27 Million units sold worldwide.
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