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kryptonomist

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Full-size Amiga A1200 retro gaming system comes armed with modern HDMI port

tomshardware.com
3 points·by kryptonomist·9 months ago·3 comments

GPD WIN Mini – 7-inch gaming clamshell handheld (2024)

gpd.hk
2 points·by kryptonomist·2 years ago·0 comments

DBASE Classic

dbaseclassic.com
3 points·by kryptonomist·2 years ago·1 comments

Replica of Penny's Computer Book from Inspector Gadget (Arduino Nano ESP32)

instructables.com
1 points·by kryptonomist·2 years ago·0 comments

comments

kryptonomist
·5 months ago·discuss
According to users of the Kaypro II from that time, it was a very robust machine. It was even used on the 1984 Paris Dakar edition.
kryptonomist
·7 months ago·discuss
So, LZEXE was written on an Amstrad PC1512 (of course in 8086 assembly).
kryptonomist
·8 months ago·discuss
One of the best pieces of advice about software engineering as well.
kryptonomist
·9 months ago·discuss
"The A1200 is essentially a Linux single-board computer running emulation, possibly one of the UAE (Ultimate Amiga Emulators) that have been around for decades. What makes The A1200 different from just building your own with a Raspberry Pi is that we get a full-sized recreation of the Amiga 1200, and that includes a working keyboard. "
kryptonomist
·last year·discuss
One great musician to listen to during late coding sessions.
kryptonomist
·last year·discuss
"Can we use a distributed database instead? If the answer is ‘Yes’, why go for blockchain at all? Indeed, blockchain is slower and more resource-intensive."

The key factor when assessing a blockchain project is indeed to see what is the advantage of a blockchain vs a usual database.

Most of the time, there is none. Worse, cost of a blockchain is more expensive as pointed by the article.

And you still need an authoritative registry somewhere if there any physical item involved.

In addition to that, blockchain projects faces another business issue: to be really decentralized, you have to lose control of what you put on the blockchain, which is hard to conceive for a private company.
kryptonomist
·last year·discuss
From at I remember, at least in Europe, it's only from 1994-1995 that you could start thinking having a better proposition with a PC than with an Amiga/Atari ST. In order to surpass what you had on an Amiga 500/600 in terms of games, your needed at least a small 386 VGA.

Before that, the only way to get a configuration at the same price was typically some Amstrad PC (typically the popular PC1512), far less capable in terms of graphics and music.
kryptonomist
·last year·discuss
We often hear about the seminal Popular Electronics magazine, but interesting to see that some others have had also a huge influence.

The Radio-Electronics TV Typewriter magazine is also mentioned by Steve Wozniak while working on the Apple I.
kryptonomist
·last year·discuss
To be honest, I find it sometimes pleasing, like when introducing some new programming libs:

https://developer.apple.com/tutorials/swiftui-concepts/explo...
kryptonomist
·last year·discuss
French readers are blessed with Abandonware Magazines and more than 20k scanned magazines: https://www.abandonware-magazines.org/
kryptonomist
·2 years ago·discuss
Glad to see those valuable principles written, even if it seems we are heading in the complete opposite. At least we can try to apply them on our side business.

These were also true in the early ages of aviation:

“Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.”

― Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
kryptonomist
·2 years ago·discuss
Yes, the Coursera title was "Cryptography I", so I was expecting another part, but ten years after, I still do not see any. A great course anyway.
kryptonomist
·2 years ago·discuss
As a regular user of this wonderful archive.org project, I found it a pitty that no agreement could be found with editors such as Hachette regarding old books.

Without archive.org, it seems no money at all was made from them. A subscription to access these old books would be a win-win, with a part redistributed to editors. Access could be made from archive.org or why not, directed to a frame in editor websites.

Same for old magazines which are really appreciated by the retrocomputing community.