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These days, if you want to code a game for the original Nintendo Entertainment System, it’s about as easy as downloading an assembler, firing up Notepad, and running the ROMs ... card for the ...
Using an 8-bit 6502 microprocessor running at 1 MHz and an 8-bit bus, it ran the Apple DOS and ProDOS operating systems. AppleSoft BASIC was built in (in a ROM chip). With a Z80 microprocessor ...
And loading them onto the Apple II Plus would be a lot less of a problem if I had the CFFA3000, a card created by Rich Dreher that allows Apple II systems to boot from a compact flash card or a ...
In this case, the Macintosh ROM: In 1980, a company called Franklin Computer produced a clone of the Apple II called the Franklin Ace, designed to run the same software. They copied almost every ...