64 pointsby rbanffy4 hours ago12 comments
  • mpweiher4 hours ago
    Wonderful! :-)

    Was going to comment that this reminded me of the old S-100 bus, and looking at the ads in Byte, and reading Chaos Manor, but obviously that couldn't be it, it had to be something else entirely, clicked and was pleasantly surprised.

  • sumtechguy2 hours ago
    Heh, not sure why but it makes me wonder if you could 'Ship of Theseus' something like that into a modern day desktop. By going thru the different eras of DIY compute.
  • vile_wretch2 hours ago
    I have a cassette copy of Microsoft Advanced Basic for the SOL-20 that I got in a box of "junk" (junk in quotes because it included a very rare early copy of Zork for the Apple II that paid for the box about 40x over) at an estate sale years ago. Need to figure out if I can get it to load in this somehow.
  • noncoml13 minutes ago
    Was the front end designed using Claude Design?
  • IFC_LLC2 hours ago
    Oh my. I've spent waaay too much time trying to figure out how does the Ladder works. Still was unable to play that one.

    And I won't even mention that I have no idea how to use ED.

  • MarkusQ4 hours ago
    It has IMSAI-8080!

    You don't get the satisfying tactile flick-click of the real thing, but still, for about 0.06% of us, this brings an enormous smile!

    :)

  • Narishma2 hours ago
    The UI is unreadable due to low contrast and tiny text.
  • NooneAtAll33 hours ago
    How do I... use this? There's no help button or anything
  • CamperBob23 hours ago
    Wish I could read the text but someone decided it was more important to use dark gray text on black and dark-green backgrounds because it looks all trendy and cool and shit.
    • 3 hours ago
      undefined
  • po1nt3 hours ago
    Thanks! Now I will procrastinate the whole day.
  • colordrops3 hours ago
    Holy crap! When I was a child, my father got me my first computer, and it had a bunch of dongles and red LEDs. I looked at it for a few minutes, and was like, what the hell am I supposed to do with this? My dad was an electrical engineer at a steel plant, so I had assumed it was some sort of industrial automation computer. But no, it was an Altair 8800.

    I couldn't figure it out so they just got rid of it. Wish I could go back in time and try again.

  • mikewarot2 hours ago
    Once you got the S100 box too full, you'd send it to my late friend Lloyd Smith's shop, DigiTek, where he would split the power bus, and add a second power supply to handle the load.