In 1980 Commodore introduced a new 6502 based $299 home computer called the VIC-20. http://oldcomputers.net/vic20.html
It was essentially a version of the Commodore PET that plugged into a TV set. For the price there was nothing like it. It had Commodore BASIC built-in, color and sound, a joystick port, and a cartridge expansion slot. It didn't have graphical sprites, but it was still capable of video games and it cost about half the price of an Atari 400.
I wrote a lot of software for this machine at NEECO where I hung out. It didn't have full screen graphics, but you could program the graphics characters on the fly. It did have a very low screen resolution (22x23 text mode, 176x184 graphics mode) and it only came with 3.5K of available RAM out of the box, but we were very used to limited memory back then.
Compute! magazine had some really great software listings for this machine, like a graphics character editor for example and a machine code monitor. Just type it in and go. :-)
Showing posts with label PET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PET. Show all posts
Saturday, May 5, 2007
The VIC-20
Labels:
6502,
atari 400,
Commodore,
compute magazine,
graphics,
machine code,
NEECO,
PET,
vic-20
Sunday, April 22, 2007
NEECO, a computer store
In the late seventees a computer store named NEECO moved from Springfield, MA to Needham, MA where I lived. I'm sure it was my brother Ernie who first brought me to the store. It was at least a two mile walk from our house, but we were in the habit of walking farther than that just to go to You-Do-It Electronics on the edge of town, so this was really nothing to us.
NEECO was to become a central influence in my life for a couple of years. What a store it was. I have many memories of the place.
When I first started visiting the store there were the following models I can remember:
NEECO was to become a central influence in my life for a couple of years. What a store it was. I have many memories of the place.
When I first started visiting the store there were the following models I can remember:
- Apple II
- Commodore PET and CBM 8032
- Intertec Superbrain
- Hewlett Packard HP-85
- Atari 800 and 400
There was usually something fun running on each machine, especially the Apple and Atari computers. They also had a magazine rack and lots of software for sale.
I spent a lot of time there. Sometimes I was helpful to the people running the store, but I think they sometimes wish I was somewhere else. I owe them a debt of gratitude at least. ;-)
Labels:
Apple,
Atari,
CBM,
Commodore,
computer,
electronics,
Hewlett Packard,
Intertec,
NEECO,
PET,
Superbrain,
You-Do-It
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