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- ME AND MY COMMODORE
- by Mike Paull
-
-
- Dates are approximate because i'm
- not sure exactly which year I got my
- 64...
-
- 1982/83 I was introduced to computers
- by a neighbourhood friend's brother.
- He had a Z80 based kit computer he
- built. I had a games console that had
- a BASIC cartridge and started typing
- in programs for it. Got sick of it's
- limits pretty soon. Went to High
- School and found out about the
- "Commodore 64", saw one at K-Mart and
- started nagging parents.
-
- 1983/84 On my birthday I received a
- Commodore 64 and Data Cassette.
- Started with games (doesn't everyone)
- and then buying magazines, which
- started the typing in of games and
- other programs and sparked an interest
- in programming. My friend's brother
- and I had become good friends and he
- started helping me with questions on
- computers and electronics. One day he
- showed me how he could connect to his
- University computer. I was intrigued.
-
- When I got the Programmers
- Reference Guide (for Xmas, I think) I
- told him about it. He said with the
- info in it we should be able to
- connect his home made(!!) modem to the
- C64. I found a terminal program (VIP
- XL) and we started making some wiring
- mods to his modem. shortly afterwards
- we were connecting to his university
- account and the few local BBSs. He
- made the mistake of lending me the
- modem and leaving me with those
- numbers, I was hooked. Shame it took
- about three and a half minutes to load
- VIP XL from tape!
-
- 1985 Went to a huge PC show that used
- to happen every year, all the (then)
- major computer companies attended. Saw
- a company selling Commodore compatable
- disk drives and they were much cheaper
- than the 1541, so with a little
- nagging...... We walked away from the
- show with a SKAI-64 (Cardco CSD-1)
- disk drive and a box of 10 floppy
- disks.
-
- 1986 By this time I was heavily into
- the modem side of things. I was
- getting to know quite a few local
- C64'ers and was a regular on a number
- of BBSs. Eventually a group of us got
- together and formed our own little
- hacking group. I wrote a "wargames"
- style dialer and also started
- modifying C-Net 64 for a local BBS,
- for which I later became Co-SYSOP. My
- local hack of C-Net became popular and
- a few BBSs were running it, I was
- proud! <<<<MAD MAX>>>> was my alias
- and people knew it :)
-
- Pretty much the rest is a blur..
- With the hacking also came pirating.
- We were importing "warez" from the US
- and using computer networks (most of
- which don't exist anymore) to get free
- calls to the US so we could download
- stuff. I was writing BBS stuff,
- managing a local BBS, hacking,
- pirating, mailing and accumulating
- some great hardware.
-
- I had an SFD1001, two disk drives
- (1541 and Skai-64) and 2400 baud modem
- when most of my schoolmates had a 300
- baud modem and 1541. We were maxing
- our Commodores to the most and
- spending an aweful lot of time in
- front of the keyboard. My C64 ended up
- with a specially modified kernal that
- had regular, enhanced, graphics and
- monitor modes selectable by two toggle
- switches. I was also hooked on demos,
- collecting hundreds of them and
- listening to them through a stereo I
- had my c64 connected to.
-
- This craziness continued on until
- the early 90s when I grew tired of the
- C64 and bought a PC and I started
- winding down my C64 activities to the
- point where I no longer used it and
- gave it to my dad so he could learn
- computers. I continued hacking and
- logging into local BBSs and writing my
- own apps in QuickBasic, while my dad
- become computer savvy. After a while I
- gave up the BBSs and lost touch with
- all my old c64 friends except one or
- two :(
-
- Late 90s/early 2000 - Strangely enough
- my Dad kept the 64 when he outgrew it.
- It just went into the spare room.
-
- I was on the net now and seeing
- how there was a resurgence in C64
- activity including these new
- "emulators". C64S was the first I
- played with. That kind of reignited my
- interest in the 64 and so I made an
- X1541 cable, found a program called
- TRANS64 and turned all my old disks
- into .D64 images (no disks were ever
- thrown away or written over, good onya
- dad! )
-
- And now thanks to my dad I still
- have my original C64. Thanks to Ebay,
- I have also been able to get back some
- of the hardware I lost like the
- SFD-1001 and a whole lot more!
-
- MP
-
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