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blakespot

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Fungus-inspired Linux hack gives Amiga a Doom-only brain

theregister.com
4 points·by blakespot·11 months ago·0 comments

Init Hello 2025 Conference Gallery (System Source Computer Musem)

flickr.com
2 points·by blakespot·12 months ago·0 comments

Watched 'Lion, Witch, Wardrobe' last night – centaurs looked freakishly long

oldbytes.space
2 points·by blakespot·last year·0 comments

Doom Didn't Kill the Amiga (2024)

datagubbe.se
62 points·by blakespot·last year·116 comments

Desktop Icons of Yore

datagubbe.se
7 points·by blakespot·last year·0 comments

A history of the microcomputer industry in 300 adverts

nosher.net
2 points·by blakespot·last year·0 comments

I spent 18 years in the Linux console

eugene-andrienko.com
217 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·143 comments

Tinkerer brings this retro-futuristic Mac concept to life

cultofmac.com
2 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·1 comments

Brief History of Haptic Computing

medium.com
2 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·0 comments

It Is Now Legal to Hack McFlurry Machines (and Medical Devices) to Fix Them

404media.co
2 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·1 comments

Midnight Rendezvous with Telix: Musings of a BBS Junkie

brodieworld.com
1 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·0 comments

Boris Vallejo and the pixel art of the demoscene

marincomics.com
495 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·118 comments

Valve appear to be testing ARM64 and Android support for Steam on Linux

gamingonlinux.com
3 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·2 comments

Sony's Breakthrough Color TV [video]

youtube.com
2 points·by blakespot·2 years ago·1 comments

comments

blakespot
·last year·discuss
Yep, I was lucky. We were a middle-class family and my mom and dad did support my extreme passion in computers. I went through a huge amount of systems.

Here's the list: https://bytecellar.com/the-list

I would buy one, love it, read about another and finally put the first in the newspaper for sale ( https://bytecellar.com/2019/05/08/computer-classifieds-datin... ) and move to the next, with funds added in by my parents to cover the different. I was very lucky in that! (The link shared shows actual scans of the newspaper ads I ran, selling some of the systems back in the '80s.)
blakespot
·last year·discuss
Yep, one of the first games that really needed a chunky pixel video memory layout (which the Amiga lacked). Amiga's planar arrangement was perfect for platformers, which was the target of the Amiga gfx hardware design.
blakespot
·last year·discuss
Most of my friends were gaming on consoles at the time. I very much preferred the Amiga (I also had Atari STs during this time) to consoles perhaps mainly due to the ability to use RGB monitors with a proper RGB signal. It was at best composite back then on the consoles of the era - in the states anyway (we didn't have SCART as an option). I know I'm odd here, but that was a major factor -- but also the fact that I used the Amiga for much more than gaming. I BBSed heavily, generated hundreds of images with paint programs, programmed on it, and then there was enjoying scenedemos as a huge part of my use.

Most people in the user group I was in back then (ALFA - Amigoid Life Form Association) were NASA engineers who used them as cheap and capable alternatives to the UNIX workstations they worked with at NASA (which was local, Hampton, VA). Many of these guys were older and didn't game at all.
blakespot
·last year·discuss
Indeed, I got my first Amiga in October 1985 - I believe it was the first Amiga sold in Virginia (U.S.) and one of the first ever sold - period.

https://bytecellar.com/2020/10/27/looking-back-on-35-years-a...

I remember those extremely early days, which were filled with slow releases, I must say - but it was a singular experience, playing with that hardware. I left and came back with an Amiga 2000 in 1988 and that was a great time - a peak time to be an Amigoid.

1992 does seem late for a first Amiga - and a 500; I had an A1200 in '92.

I still have two Amigas that I use often (1000, 2000 '020) and a PowerPC "Amiga," that I rarely power on.
blakespot
·2 years ago·discuss
I gave Linux on the desktop a good shake once, back in 1994. I installed Debian from a dev branch that came on 15 floppies. I was running it on an AMD 5x86 160 with 24MB RAM and had a lovely 17-inch (unusual for the time) trinitron display from Nokia. I used it for about 4 months, then went back to Windows 95.

https://bytecellar.com/2015/07/16/that-time-i-ran-linux-on-t...

An interesting hitch was that I needed to purchase a commercial X-Window system to get color from my Tseng ET-4000/W32p graphics board. XFree86 would not hit the modes I wanted. It cost $99. Here is the manual:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/blakespot/5665910382/
blakespot
·2 years ago·discuss
This is a great look at the creation of the Tinitron aperture grille CRT. My preference for aperture grille over shadow mask technology cannot be overstated. Once I got my first aperture grill display (a Nokia 447Xi with a Trinitron tube) in the early '90s, I never went back.

I still have my 19-inch Sony G420 that I use almost daily.