PC Historian Finds Puzzling Game Diskette Image
This past weekend, Trixter — a self-proclaimed IBM PC historian — picked up some old software for his archive. What he didn't count on was a couple of additional Avantage titles that had never been released into the wild. If this weren't enough of a find, one of these titles provided Trixter with an interesting puzzle: the diskette for Mental Blocks is apparently hand-formatted to work on both C64 and IBM (on a single side, not the "flippy disks" of old). Quite an interesting little piece of history.
With a tiny magnet, flipping 1's and 0's.
It's just another case of corruption on an 8088 ;-)
(If you know Trixter, then you know what I'm talking about ... http://www.oldskool.org/pc/8088_Corruption )
Not only that, but on a 3.5" floppy too!
LOL, ok that KB, not MB.
>It's been now about 25 years but I still have parts of the C64 ROM's memorized.
>There was a time that I knew pretty much what every byte in the 64k(*) of memory was for cold without needing a reference manual.
I have SYS 64738 that part of my memory a long time ago.
Pfft. Real programmers just think really hard, choosing the proper universe such that electrons happen to tunnel at just the right place and time to affect the magnetizer.
Even better ones choose the universe in which the atoms of the proper hard disk spontaneously tunnel into just the right configuration from across spacetime.
Can you be Even More Awesome?!
That was the first game that I pirated... after I bought it.
The copy protection was so messed up that the only way I could get a copy of the game that was reliable was a cracked copy. But I didn't want a pirated diskette, so I had the cracked copy written over the original gold-labelled floppy.
I clicked on the story thinking he had found some kind of strange Goatse image embedded in the disk. I was very disappointed.
Thank you for that. I'll never be able to look at the spindle hole of an 8" or 5.25" disk the same way again.
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
So that person's claim to fame was using ISOBuster to save an "optimized" ISO ?
Wow.
No really, I'm impressed. I mean, it took some serious cojones to actually click that checkbox.
-Billco, Fnarg.com