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- THE JOYSTICK C-64 IS COMING!
- by Robert Bernardo
-
-
- [DAVE'S FORWARD]: This is probably the
- most exciting news ever for the C=
- world! I received this email from
- Robert today - October 26 - and rushed
- it onto the issue. Read on...
-
-
- The C64 DTV is coming your way on
- November 26! How has this information
- been corraborated? The creator of the
- device told me so!
-
- C= ladies and gentlemen, may I
- present to you the creator of the C64
- DTV 30-games-in-one joystick...
-
- Jeri Ellsworth.
-
- In a long phone call tonight, Jeri
- revealed to me that Tulip/Ironstone
- has given permission to reveal some
- details (but not all) of this
- reincarnation of the beloved C-64.
-
- So much information to sort...
- well, here goes.
-
- Designers/engineers/troubleshooters
- of the C64 DTV - Jeri Ellsworth,
- Jason Compton, Adrian Gonzalez,
- Robin Harbron, Per Olofsson, and
- Mark Seelye. Heroes all!
-
- Production details - 250,000 C64 DTV's
- have been produced or are in
- production at the Mammoth Toys
- factory, one hour outside of Hong
- Kong. Presently, only NTSC units
- are being built. 30,000 units are
- going to the warehouse of QVC, the
- television shopping network.
-
- Vendor details - QVC has the exclusive
- rights to sell the C64 DTV until
- the first of the year. (After the
- first of year... unknown) QVC will
- start selling the units on
- November 26. On that first day,
- QVC will advertise the DTV as
- "Today's Special Value", which
- means an ad for it will be shown
- once an hour. Estimated price -
- $25 US, though QVC will set its
- own price. Unknown whether QVC
- will sell the DTV from the QVC
- website.
-
- Note: QVC is looking to sell the DTV
- against a backdrop of a classic C64
- keyboard and original boxes of the
- DTV-included games (see below). If you
- have good-looking boxes of the games,
- then let it be known, and your boxes
- can show up on TV!
-
- DTV game details - All games have been
- legally obtained and modified for
- use in the DTV. Games are from
- Epyx, Hewson, and others.
-
- The games include: Championship
- Wrestling, Cyberdyne Warrior,
- Cybernoid, Cybernoid II,
- Eliminator, Excelon, Firelord,
- Gateway to Apshai, Impossible
- Mission, Impossible Mission II,
- Jumpman Jr., Paradroid, Pitstop,
- Pitstop II, Ranarama, Silicon
- Warrior, Speedball, Summer Games,
- Supercycle, Sword of Fargoal,
- Tower Toppler, Uridium, Winter
- Games, World Karate Championship
- A, World Karate Championship B,
- Zynaps, (games split out from
- others) bull-riding, flying disc,
- sumo-wrestling, and surfing.
-
- DTV details - Exterior color unknown,
- though pre-production models were
- black. Two firebuttons, four
- function buttons. Battery-powered,
- using four double-A batteries.
- Lifespan of batteries in the unit
- -- long (Jeri says that she has
- used hers for 5 hours without any
- sign of the batteries weakening.)
- Composite video-out. Paper box, no
- plastic "blister" pack. No second
- port for connecting another
- joystick. Warranty unknown at this
- point.
-
- Nitty-gritty details - The DTV board
- is roughly the size of a playing
- card ([!!!!] -Ed). Under what
- looks like 3 blobs of epoxy on the
- board lies a custom ASIC chip that
- is just .35 microns tall. The 6
- volts of battery power is
- regulated down to 3.3 volts on the
- board. Jeri emphasizes that the
- ASIC is very compatible in terms
- of being a C64.
-
- The DTV is hard-coded to run at 1
- mhz. The unit has 128K RAM and 2
- meg of ROM. 256 colors available
- on-screen. Single SID sound with
- the 3 voices and "volume" mixed
- externally. The solder pads are
- there on the board; in other
- words, enterprising hackers can
- solder on a serial port in order
- to connect a Commodore-compatible
- drive and can attach a PC
- keyboard.
-
- Other details - Jeri spent hundreds of
- hours developing the ASIC for the
- C64 DTV. In her quest to get it
- just right, she traveled to China
- and stayed there for a week,
- making daily journeys between her
- hotel in Hong Kong and the Mammoth
- Toy factory, working usually until
- 10 at night. While in China, she
- tired easily of the food. The
- people with whom she had contact
- spoke English well. Many women had
- top engineering positions at
- Mammoth Toys.
-
- She also went to Thunder Bay,
- Ontario, Canada for a few days to
- partner up with Robin Harbron, who
- worked on converting the games for
- the DTV.
-
-
- Psyched to buy a C64 DTV,
-
- Robert Bernardo
-
- Fresno Commodore User Group
- http://videocam.net.au/fcu
-
-
- [DAVE'S AFTERWORD]: I am really
- excited, and have put aside $50 to get
- two as soon as they hit the tube.
- First of all, the games are some of
- the coolest ever created for any
- computer. But more to the point -- can
- you imagine a C-64 that fits in the
- palm of your hand?
-
- That's right! That tiny board is
- exactly what one would need to build a
- laptop. Or perhaps a C= PDU. The
- possibilities are endless.
-
- I have had my concerns with Tulip/
- Ironstone, but they are now there with
- the legal power to make such things
- happen. Not so long ago, no one dared
- consider such a project because no one
- knew who had the intellectual
- properties and would come out of the
- woodwork to scotch everything.
-
- But the real excitement -- and the
- real hero -- is Jeri Ellsworth. Over
- the last several years, while
- struggling to get the C1 up, running,
- and commercially viable, Jeri has
- learned a lot. Like how to get such a
- project off the ground!
-
- So, three cheers for Jeri (and her
- Commodore Cohort) for getting this
- ready and on QVC in a very timely
- manner. I remember when 1984 was
- dubbed the "Commodore Christmas." We
- now have another one -- exactly 20
- years later!
-
- DMM
-
-
-