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- ME AND MY COMMODORE
- by Gaelyne Gasson
-
-
- The first Commodore I ever used
- was a VIC-20 that belonged to a friend
- of mine. I even went out and bought a
- tape of my own so that I could use
- their word processor for my journal. I
- just kept the tape in my purse.
-
- I wasn't too keen on the large
- cartidges for it though, but when my
- brother offered his VIC-20 for sale
- (as he was 'upgrading' to the IBM PCjr
- <snigger>) I jumped at it. My oldest
- son and husband spent many hours
- playing Frogger and having a ball with
- it.
-
- We went to a computer club meeting
- and everyone was talking about either
- the Amiga or the C64 and I think we
- were talked into the C64 the following
- Christmas. That, and I really didn't
- want to buy a game machine when I
- could buy a 64 and be able to use it
- for both games and for more practical
- things like my writing. The following
- Christmas we got a deal on another,
- older C64 and an additional disk drive
- plus boxes of games and software. It
- was all used, but all a heap of fun to
- go through. We found some real gems
- and with two drives I could use GEOS
- much more easily.
-
- Then I discovered bulletin boards
- and traded a B&W TV for my first 1581
- drive. That was excellent, and from
- the Fidonet CBM echos we learned how
- to add JiffyDOS to it and gave it the
- toggle switches for the drive numbers.
-
- I actually had to borrow money
- (something I NEVER do) in order to get
- my hands on a C128. At the time I was
- writing for BBS Magazine and there was
- a possible job for me in doing some
- work on the 128 and so I felt I needed
- it for my employment. And the other
- reason I desperately wanted a 128 was
- to see what that Rod Gasson fellow had
- created with his offline mail reader.
- At the time there wasn't a C64 program
- available to do the same, and I really
- wanted to see what he'd created.
- Especially since I'd given him a lot
- of ideas on how I thought such a
- program should work.
-
- I was in awe! And I loved the 128
- dearly. It was great that it could use
- both C64 and it's own mode. I even
- tried CPM once or twice but it didn't
- do it for me. I had to leave my C128
- behind when I came to Australia, but
- my oldest son still has it and every
- once in awhile mentions he'd like to
- sell it on eBay but hasn't got around
- to it yet. I think he's as sentimental
- about it as I would be.
-
- My Australian C128D isn't in the
- best of shape, but it's not going
- anywhere, and still has the name
- 'Ismael Cordeiro' taped to the side of
- it. Ismael was on the CBM Fidonet echo
- and he and Rod used to have the most
- pedantic of conversations. Meanwhile,
- Ismael recently wrote to me that he
- was packing up his Commodore gear but
- was keeping his copy of TIFCU as a
- reminder. I was so touched. He's
- credited in the book for technical
- information on UNIX and Desterm.
-
- My favourite add-on for the
- Commodore was the RAMlink. The hard
- drives I had over time (two of them)
- were OK but often gave us grief and
- CMD was never able to find the problem
- with them and that just added more
- frustration to the mix. But my RAMlink
- rarely caused me any hassles and
- provided for a silent yet wonderfully
- powerful computer experience. And so
- fast too.
-
- GG
-
-
-