Anyone have one packed away they would part with?
Don't forget that blazing fast 300 baud acoustic coupler modem.Tailgate88 said:
You should have hit me up in 1983. I can still feel that sweet smooth keyboard and the power of all 16k of RAM.
Nostalgia...had one as a kid..played some games, did some programming, prank called people with the speech synthesizer and modem.HECUBUS said:
Yikes! My first job in semiconductors was working for TI when they were making the 99-4A. I thought it cost $2k to expand the memory to 16k. My inspiration to go EE. Decent money and easy (for a math/science nerd) degree.
Texas Instruments
Quazon Corp
Institute of Solid State Electronics TEES
Motorola Inc
Trimedia Technologies Inc
Freescale Semiconductors
Intel
AMD
A long strange 42 year trip it has been. I would never have imagined anyone would want a 99-4A 40 years into the future. Must really like TI Invaders.
92Ag95 said:
Commodore, still bitter about being ousted by TI from the personal calculator market, came back with a vengeance and sunk their battleship.....the flagship C64 was the nail in the coffin.
I'll take it in exchange for your favorite libation. Did he pitch the C64 or is it still with everything?Burdizzo said:92Ag95 said:
Commodore, still bitter about being ousted by TI from the personal calculator market, came back with a vengeance and sunk their battleship.....the flagship C64 was the nail in the coffin.
We had a C64. I don't recall the details, but it died early on. My dad replaced it with the Commodore Plus/4 which he thought was going to be an upgrade because it had some pre installed business apps. I think there was a basic word processor, spreadsheet, and maybe even a rudimentary database. As is so often the situation, the disk drive we used with the C64 was not compatible with the Plus/4, and my dad didn't want to spend another $400 (a lot of money in 1984) on another floppy disk drive. So we had no way to save any of the stuff we did. Consequently the Plus/4 went unused, and then a year later I went off to A&M.
The Plus/4 was so anemic that one reviewer said is should have been called the "C64 Minus 60"
My mom cleaned out some stuff a few years ago and gave me the box that had all the Commodore stuff in it. I think it is still in my garage. It may even still have the Montgomery Ward pricetag on it.
Free to a computer collector if anyone wants it.
There's an extra one over here. Would need to test it out to make sure it still works though. How urgently are you talking?92Ag95 said:
Anyone have one packed away they would part with?
Not urgent.....not concerned with testing and/or repair...I can do that.The Fife said:There's an extra one over here. Would need to test it out to make sure it still works though. How urgently are you talking?92Ag95 said:
Anyone have one packed away they would part with?
I say extra because my kids actually like using the one that's already plugged in with a bunch of educational carts left over from when my mom was a teacher. She was the only one who used any of it when she retired, so she ended up with everything.
Thanks. Will probably have to re-cap it but that's the part I like.Burdizzo said:
My loss is your gain, plus I get some space back in the garage. I have no idea if this works. Been sitting in the hot garage for a few years. Pretty sure the FDD doesn't work with the Plus 4
Found the receipt too. It was on sale $100 off.
Purchased February 13, 1985
Interested. Sent you a PMThe Fife said:
I'm back home and turns out there are four of these things complete/new in box.