First Commodore 64 LAN Party
Leif_Bloomquist writes "The world's first Commodore 64 LAN party was held at the Cincinnati Commodore Computer Club 2008 Expo last weekend, where the new multiplayer C64 game NetRacer was unveiled. The setup consists of up to eight Commodore 64s with Ethernet cartridges and a central server written in Java running on a PC. The game is also playable over the Internet."
Is New Zealand a terrorist country or something? I got this:
You are not authorized to view this page
The Web server you are attempting to reach has a list of IP addresses that are not allowed to access the Web site, and the IP address of your browsing computer is on this list.
Please try the following:
* Contact the Web site administrator if you believe you should be able to view this directory or page.
HTTP Error 403.6 - Forbidden: IP address of the client has been rejected.
Internet Information Services (IIS)
Technical Information (for support personnel)
* Go to Microsoft Product Support Services and perform a title search for the words HTTP and 403.
* Open IIS Help, which is accessible in IIS Manager (inetmgr), and search for topics titled About Security, Limiting Access by IP Address, IP Address Access Restrictions, and About Custom Error Messages.
The reason girls and Windows users don't understand UNIX is because all the documentation is in Man files.
I urgently await Jumpman deathmatches!
http://twitter.com/OLDTELEGRAM
Were there any girls there?
Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
I have one of those rrnet ethernet devices for the C64. They are great fun. I tried to make a post to a phpBB and it took me about 40 minutes to navigate to the thread I wanted to post in, then it crashed. O sweet glory.
btw, http://www.c64web.com/ is hosted on a c64.
Vista must be pretty bad if people are switching to C64.
I did a lot of cool stuff on the 64 way, WAY back, using Forth (remember that language?).
Some computers will never die. No matter how old. LONG LIVE COMMODORE!!!!
Ruby Neural Evolution of Augmenting Topologies
Is that site painfully slow because it's been Slashdotted or because it's running on a C64 ;) ?
More importantly, what happens when a C64 gets Slashdotted, does it start chewing up tapes or melt or anything?
C64 porn? Sigh. Back to tits that look like they're made out of Legos.
Table-ized A.I.
I can't work out who's geekier. The guys holding C64 lan parties or you running websites through the W3 validator...
Possibly one of the best uses of the Redundant mod tag I have yet seen.
Back about 1986, I actually surfed the net on a Commodore 128.
The local community college got a spanking new server hooked up, and students were allowed to dial in in to get schedules, some class material, whatever. (I think it was still Arpanet back then, but it was years before World wide web)
Anyway, I logged in (at a whopping 1200 baud), looked around (After a bit of tweaking, Commodore had lowercase and capitals switched in ascii, plus none standard characters) and actually made it to a few net sites. (IBM, some national Community college site, a couple of others)
Wasn't interested, it was slower than most BBS's I could get to, had almost no graphics (and none that I could view), and no content I was interested in at the time, So I logged off and didn't get back to the net until 1998. Things sure changed in a dozen years!
Oh, I wasn't a student there, just heard about it and was curious. Online security? Some things haven't changed much!
The U.S. really needs an English to Wisdom dictionary.
My first personally owned computer wasn't a C64, it was a Commodore Pet. That doesn't make me *that* much older than the C64 crowd, does it?
The Pet was also the first computer I ever used that booted itself when I turned on the power. My reward for turning on the the switch was a HELLO? prompt. All other computers I used at work before the Pet required me to enter a bootstrap program in binary before they would start the OS.
In Pet Basic one could do wonderfully fun things, especially with the character graphics. My kids loved the games I wrote. I don't recall ever buying any software for the Pet. Wrote it all myself. It was great fun.
For some strange reason, the Commodore Pet is always forgotten when people write about the pioneering PC days.