You should read the article before commenting. This new system uses the radio waves from cell stations as a form of radar, tracking moving objects, ALL MOVING OBJECTS, not just phones.
"The SoftCard allowed the Apple II to run most of the CP-M programs that had originally been written for the IBM family of PCs."
CP/M was an 8 bit OS. The 16 bit IBM never ran CP/M, it might have ran CP/M86 at the start, certainly other early 16 bit machines like the ACT SIRIUS 1 came with both CP/M86 and MSDOS
You need one of theser -dtv-direct-to-tv-games.html
http://www.gadgets.co.uk/commodore-64-c64-compute
Screenshots and movies of the built in lightsynth from llamasoft are at http://www.llamasoft.co.uk/neon.php
I maybe on the wrong track but what time zone is slashdot working on?
You should read the article before commenting.
This new system uses the radio waves from cell stations as a form of radar, tracking moving objects, ALL MOVING OBJECTS, not just phones.
"The SoftCard allowed the Apple II to run most of the CP-M programs that had originally been written for the IBM family of PCs."
CP/M was an 8 bit OS. The 16 bit IBM never ran CP/M, it might have ran CP/M86 at the start, certainly other early 16 bit machines like the ACT SIRIUS 1 came with both CP/M86 and MSDOS
Here in the UK there have been age restrictions on computer games for ages. Even my latest purchase for the N64, Perfect Dark, has an 18 certificate.