You mean the triple post?wackyman465 wrote:That's how I got the double post, then...
retro PC's
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Triple.wackyman465 wrote:That's how I got the double post, then...
As an old C64-user (got my first Elite for that; later switched to an Atari ST) have to vote for it. It's also very nice for learning some basics of programming. And it teaches you not to waste Megabytes after Megabytes. If you have eight flags to set which may either be 'yes' or 'no', you can squeeze them into 1 Byte!
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BTW: If you notice that you have made a double / triple / quadruple post: There is this handy [X]-button directly next to theJohnnyBoy wrote:wackyman465 wrote:What are these ancient relic devices...?wackyman465 wrote:What are these ancient relic devices...?I wondered how wackyman got such a high post-count so quickly. Now I know...wackyman465 wrote:What are these ancient relic devices...?
- and the [edit]-button.
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I know about the "X" button, but where is my double / triple / quadruple post?Commander McLane wrote:BTW: I you notice that you have made a double / triple / quadruple post: There is this handy [X]-button directly next to the (quote)- and the [edit]-button.
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He was quoting you quoting the wacky-one - I think the X-button nudge was aimed at his wackiness...
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
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I remember I had a C64, my friend Neil had a rubber keyboard speccy and my other friend Graham had an Amstrad 464.
Looking back on it now it feels like the classic TWTWTW (TW3) "upper, middle, lower class" sketch. Of the three machines mine had the most memory, the most colours, the best sound - but games were difficult to "back up" - and peripherals were stupidly expensive (I remember my parents paid £299 for the C64 in the early 80s and then another £50 just for the C= Datasette otherwise you couldn't load or save anything!).
Then my other friend "Watty" got an Atari 800XL and I was almost impressed....
Looking back on it now it feels like the classic TWTWTW (TW3) "upper, middle, lower class" sketch. Of the three machines mine had the most memory, the most colours, the best sound - but games were difficult to "back up" - and peripherals were stupidly expensive (I remember my parents paid £299 for the C64 in the early 80s and then another £50 just for the C= Datasette otherwise you couldn't load or save anything!).
Then my other friend "Watty" got an Atari 800XL and I was almost impressed....
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
Can't possibly agree with that. The CPC series may not have been any great shakes, but the PC1512/1640 models were immensely popular. I had a 1512 (which I upgraded to a massive 640k memory!!!!!!!!) and ran it, problem-free, for years. I actually miss the freedom of DOS. Oh, and it ran Elite without a single graphic glitch.Wolfwood wrote:Amstrad was never very big. They made some noise, but those feeble cries were drowned by the bigger and better home computers.0235 wrote:well, that solves that, i was thinking about geting an amstrad, but maybe not
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And don't forget the Amstrad PCW8256! Computer, keyboard, screen, floppy disc drive, printer, OS and word processing software for £399. Its appearance in 1985 sure as hell shook the computer market up a bit...
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