from 1541 Ultimate Forum:
This a short preview of the 1541U case for the 1541 Ultimate board. These photographs are taken from prototype number 1.
Next week I should get prototype number 2 which should be the final product. This is the revised design based on your needs and requests. Enjoy.
source: Loriano Homepage
From Homepage: There have been some problems with the site (mid february, 2009). Due to some kind of spam robot, the site crashed and was rather badly messed up a few days ago. All content is still intact though, as far as I understand.
It seems that some of the plugins were abused in some way, so I have been forced to remove the discussion plugin from the site. I think there may also be some problems with access rights, so please let me know if you encounter any kind of trouble.
source: codebase64.org
C64 Pixel Art by Digital Sounds System
source: noname.c64.org
C64 Pixel Art by Leon/Chorus, Resource, Singular
source: noname.c64.org
C64 Pixel Art by Carrion.
source: carrionpixels.wordpress.com
Here’s yet another entry for the 1K games category. This time round it is Container for the Commodore C64.
Game Description:
Collect the containers before your energy runs out.
source: minigamecomp.org.uk
C64 Pixel Art by Gheymaid Inc.
source: noname.c64.org
Pretty nice labyrinth clone.
download prg+source here: noname.c64.org
from: Petscii Forums “PETSCII.COM”
I held off on announcing uIEC/SD availability until I had some stock (impatient folks, you know who you are , but I do now have some stock 90 units).
Since uIEC shares the same firmware (kudos to Ingo Korb, who does not get enough recognition for this fine piece of code) as the recently announced SD2IEC, I’ll spare everyone rehashing the similarities and just note the differences:
Features:
- uIEC/SD is currently the smallest known CBM drive (1.5″ x 1.5″ by 0.3″). Perfect for embedding in your favorite machine, drive, or calculator (shout out to Tone007, who stuffed one in a CBM pocket calculator)
- uIEC/SD shares the same 128kB Atmel AVR 8-bit microcontroller as the rest of the uIEC line. With 51kB used for firmware, there’s plenty of room left for the future.
- uIEC/SD comes complete for use with IEC connector and power supply cassette port connector. VIC/64/C128 users can simply plug the wires in and use. (SX64/+4/C116/C16 users need to source 5V elsewhere, let me know before purchasing if you’d like an alternate connector)
- Although not yet defined for use, uIEC/SD offers an additional switch line and programmatic LED for future use.
- uIEC/SD not only supports SD and SDHC cards, but either SD or SDHC cards can also be used for updating the firmware (new feature, older firmware update software only supports SD cards)
source: petscii forums uIEC gallery
Forth, the Language.
Forth is a different language. It’s aged and a little weird.
What’s cool about it? It’s a very low-level and minimal language without any automatic memory management. At the same time, it easily scales to become a very high-level and domain-specific language, much like Lisp. Compared to C64 Basic, Forth is more attractive in almost every way.
It is a lot more fast, memory effective and powerful. Compared to C, specifically cc65, the story is a little different. It’s hard to make a fair comparison. Theoretically Forth code can be very memory efficient, and it’s possible to make Forth code that is leaner than C code. But it is also true that cc65 code is generally much faster than Forth code.
download: noname.c64.org
wikipedia: forth

David Haynes DLH’s Commodore Archive has updated his page.
- Hardware – JiffyDOS Installation Guides. Missing are 64, 64c and 128D. Originals provided by Chris Ryan
If anyone has these please contact me. Also a good copy of the User Manual is needed.
SX-64, C128, 1541, 1541-II, 1571, 1581, BlueChip BCD, Enchancer 2000, FSD-2, MSD SD-1 & SD-2
- Magazines – Added torrent for Family Computing (67 Issues)
- Books – The Official GEOS Programmer’s Reference Guide (BANTAM, 484 pages). This replaces the old scan that did not have OCR. I included the CMD Addendum at the front (17 pages)
source: DLH Commodore Archive
Triad’s back and kicking in the new year with something that we’ve had cooking for quite some time… As a little tribute to the genius of Amiga musicians, dalezy and I have dragged our personal favourite synthtunes kicking and screaming off the Amiga and onto the c64′s lovely SID chip for your enjoyment!
download: noname.c64.org
SJLOAD is a C64/C64DTV software fastloader. Its main difference from normal fastloaders is that it only works with Jiffy-enabled drives and uses the Jiffy protocol. This makes it handy for people who have a Jiffy-enabled drive (also new hardware such as SD2IEC) but do not want to make the hardware changes necessary for exchanging the C64 kernal.
SJLOAD speed is a bit higher than normal Jiffy since SJLOAD uses the same protocol but a different implementation (it disables the VICII during load etc.). With an SD2IEC, SJLOAD is about 15% faster than a normal Jiffy kernal.
SJLOAD is loosely based on VDOS (1986) by Edward Carroll. However, the fast loading routines have been replaced completely by 1570.
download: picobay.com/dtv_wiki
Commodore 64 Porting from the original Amiga game by Ocean.
download the latest build here: pushover64
forum thread: ready64.org
Make Waves is a command line utility to make sinus waves for demos and such.
Each wave is composed of one or more discrete waveforms, which can be created independently. You can make waves that represent a full sine wave, any half of it or a quarter. You can also set a range between 0 and 255 to get suitable values for example to position sprites at the correct height.
You are also able to set a variable length for each wave up to 256 bytes.
download: noname.c64.org
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