Jari Fredriksson wrote:
On 16.12.2009 18:15, Benny Pedersen wrote:
On ons 16 dec 2009 16:49:52 CET, Charles Gregory wrote
On Tue, 15 Dec 2009, Chris Hoogendyk wrote:
Marc Perkel wrote:
http://www.vintage-computer.com/asr33.shtml
There was actually a time when I had one of those in my house.
For your amusement:
I still have my old Commodore 64 and 1541 drive sitting in the basement.
my commodore 128 have basic 7.0 copyrighted from microsoft, i bet bill
gates have seen one of them with a reu 1750 and sayed the final words of
640k ram ougth to be enough for anyone :)
i still have 8bit computers that works, and also cpm where i have
pascal, fortran, autocad wordstar, you name it, best of all it works !
I still have my Nokia MikroMikko I with 64 kilos RAM and Intel 8085
processor (8-bit). CP/M 2.2 with Cobol, Fortran, Pascal, C, MS-Basic
(both compiler and interpreter), WordStar and Multiplan and the Basic
game "Keke" (a Rosberg formula one "simulation" ;))
Still works. If it had a NIC and TCP/IP I would use it.
The oldest Ka9Q code for CP/M has a TCP/IP stack in it, you can get it
from here: http://www.gaby.de/ecpmlink.htm
More goodies on this issue here:
http://www.retrotechnology.com/dri/cpm_tcpip.html
It will talk out the serial port, but you can then setup an old Cisco
2501 as a router between it's serial aux port and it's ethernet port to
get on the Internet.
Ted
Now it's
useless. If it worked, I'd port Firefox for it ;)