CartographPC is a Windows application created to assist in designing tile-based datamaps. This devtool serves as a companion piece to our C64 native Cartograph devtool.
The original purpose of CartographPC was to enable us to take nice screenshots of our datamaps without having to take four or six screenshots of smaller windows and piece them together.
CartographPC has since grown into a full editor with the benefit of being able to load datamaps created on the C64 directly into memory and edit, save, and move them back to C64 without much hassle.
It works by creating datamaps using tilesets created on C64 with the old, but popular, ultrafont editor. Datamaps can have dimensions of 1 to 255 tiles horizontally and 1 to 127 tiles vertically. CartographPC allows the user to create a datamap as small as 40×25 tiles (one screen) and up to 255×127 tiles.
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Sorry, this entry is only available in Italian.
Title: SX64ual Healing
A Fucking awesome C64 Multicolor picture by Archmage.
source: noname.c64.org arthak.net
Autopsy:
Today i picked up a Commodore Amiga 2000 (Revision 4.5) in good working condition with Keyboard and Mouse.
I have removed the battery and thoroughly cleaned the PCB in that area. I noticed that the PCB is pretty delicate when trying to unsolder. The solder mask becomes damaged when exposed to too much heat for too long, and probably one would easily kill leads unless being extremely careful. Maybe the board’s age adds to it.
from Wikipedia:
The A2000, also known as the Commodore Amiga 2000, was released in 1986. Although aimed at the high-end market it was technically very similar to the A500, so similar in fact that the A2000B revision was outright based on the A500 design.
What the A2000 had over the A500 was a bigger case with room for five Zorro II proprietary expansion slots, two 16-bit and two 8-bit ISA slots, a CPU upgrade slot, a video slot, and a battery-backed clock.
It should also be noted that, like the Amiga 1000 and unlike the Amiga 500, the A2000 came in a desktop case with a separate keyboard. The case was more PC-like than the A1000 – taller to accommodate the expansion cards and lacking the space beneath for the keyboard.
source: wikipedia
From the Yape homepage:
Exactly 10 years has passed since the first public alpha (or rather: WIP) of Yape saw the light of day. It is just as unbelievable as it can get… sheesh.
It started off as an attempt at a more intelligent disassembler when I realized how much fun it really is to learn the hardware AND C++ programming at the same time while dealing with my all time favourite hobby.
I thought this anniversary would be also a nice opportunity to abandon the rather clumsy versioning I have been following in the past. Anyway I have not got much time to make a long rant here, so you will be spared :-)
v1.0 compared to v0.86 are as follows:
- 32-bit and automatic bitdepth option in fullscreen mode (8 bit full screen mode might be slow under newer Windoze’s)
- Copy & paste to/from the clipboard now respects upper/lower case mode.
- Partially implemented 48 bps mode of the T6721A speech LSI.
- G64 image support is no longer read only (yay, at last)
- Reading from open address space.
- Plenty of bugfixes (drive, TED, autostart, monitor etc.)
source: yape.homeserver.hu
USB-64 – Turning Commodore 64 into a USB host for Mass Storage Drives.
The prototype uses two devices:
- A cartridge to provide software and commands to operate the USB device.
- A user-port device that interfaces with the USB stick.
With the proto-type it is possible to transfer files at 1.2 kB/s (serial) or 9.5 kB/s parallel.
source: luigidifraia.com
This demo is really good. The song is probably one of the best i have ever heard in my life.
source: noname.c64.org
ACID 64 Player Pro is the sequal of Acid 64 Player and is a cycle based Commodore 64 music player designed for playing SID tunes on sound cards/devices that have a real SID chip (6581/6582/8580) on board like the HardSID cards and HardSID 4U USB device.
ACID 64 emulates the MOS 6510 micro processor, the 6526 CIA chip and partially the 6569 VIC chip to run the code of a SID tune and it controls the SID chip on the device for playing the Commodore 64 music.
What’s new in version v3.0.4:
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aceCommander128 for Commodore 128 is a file manager for standard drives, also supports 64HDD,IEC-ATA,1541Ultimate SD-DCA, CMD hardware.
aceCommander128 Supports real-time-clock used by 64HDD or CMD hardware.
source: commodore.host.sk
This is a new version of the Java SidPlayer (Command line & Gui Interface).
This Java applet should work on Mac OSX, Linux and Windoze.
Download here the latest Beta Version (Live Installer).
source: jsidplay2.sourceforge.net
Onslaught / Wrath Designs / Vandalism, bring you the 53th issue of the Vandalism News.
source: noname.c64.org
CBM-Command is a disk manager for the Commodore 64 / Commodore 128 / Commodore VIC20 / Commodore C16 computers. It is written like Norton Commander or Midnight Commander, but is much simpler due to the target platforms. Both the C128/C64/VIC20/C16 have their own native version of the application.
Release Notes – Version 1.7 Release Candidate – 2010-08-19
New Features:
- Realtime statistics on file copy and disk image operations.
Changes:
- Fixed bug where disconnecting the drive set as default for the left panel would cause CBM-Command to freeze.
- Fixed bug where using a long name for a created D64 would cause CBM-Command to always treat the drive as a 1581.
- Fixed bug where the name input dialog for creating a D64 had junk in it.
- Other bug fixes that I cannot remember right now.
source: cbmcommand.codeplex.com
Manosoft has released a new version of his C64SD.
The Italian developer Damiano Colombari based the C64SD design on the already existing SD2IEC solution.
The major differences from the previous one are the aluminum box and a female IEC connector for connect external Floppy Drive or other devices.
Click here for the Video Demostration.
source: c64sd.roxer.com c64wiki sd2iec c64wiki sd2iec firmware
Sorry, this entry is only available in Italian.
Autopsy:
I bought one month ago a AtariMax 8MBit Cartridge for Atari that had the wrong label on it, it is a 1mbit in place of a 8mbit.
This is a free replacement 8mbit cartridge from Steven J.Tucker (AtariMax).
Many Thanks Steven.
source: atarimax.com
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