I bought the ZX Spectrum Next and
immediately started using CP/M on
it. There was always something
magical about technology in the
past, which modern stuff never
managed to capture. Bit like using
this really :-)
Agreed! That's why I like connecting via my Atari 8bit computers. I'm
here now on my Atari 800 (stock except for the Fujinet). Even for ANSI boards, I prefer to connect with my 486 when possible.
I bought the ZX Spectrum Next and
immediately started using CP/M on
it. There was always something
magical about technology in the
past, which modern stuff never
managed to capture. Bit like using
this really :-)
Agreed! That's why I like connecting via my Atari 8bit computers. I'm
here now on my Atari 800 (stock except for the Fujinet). Even for ANSI boards, I prefer to connect with my 486 when possible.
Had an idea today... I know the Commodore 64 is back. My first
computer was a TRS-80 CoCo2. I thought it would be cool to
take one and convert it to a keybaord for a modern machine.
:-)
That took me on a rabbit trail looking at vintage stuff.
Turns out there's a way to do it - using an Arduino
as a converter.
telnet://bbs.roonsbbs.hu:1212 <<=-
| Sysop: | Chris Crash |
|---|---|
| Location: | Huntington Beach, CA. |
| Users: | 629 |
| Nodes: | 8 (0 / 8) |
| Uptime: | 43:07:59 |
| Calls: | 10,920 |
| Files: | 5 |
| Messages: | 575,917 |