The Tandy 1000s have unique graphics hardware and sound hardware that was supported for a long time. The number of Tandy 1000s was so large that many games from prestige publishers released after 1984 would have support for Tandy 16-color graphics and/or Tandy 3-voice sound. While there were other graphics solutions which provided 16-color full screen graphics at a resolution of 320x200 pixels, only the Tandy 1000 series had any significant support in games. Additionally, the Adlib and other expansion sound cards did not get PC gaming support until September of 1988. During the lifespan of the Tandy 1000s, the system speeds were generally keeping pace with games, but by the end of the 1980s the 1000 line was not getting any faster, but games and applications were becoming increasingly demanding. In this article let's talk about the benefits and drawbacks of installing CPU accelerators in your Tandy 1000s.
Thursday, December 29, 2022
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Drive your Neo Geo Pocket Color to its Limits - The NeoPocket GameDrive
The Neo Geo Pocket Color may not have been a success against the Game Boy Color, but it did put up a fight against Nintendo's mighty handheld system. It had several innovative features for the time, a battery backed clock, a micro-switched 8-way thumbstick and hardware that was not held back by the need to maintain backwards compatibility with a large existing monochrome library. Unfortunately the NGPC only had 90 games released across all regions, so the library is a bit thin. Moreover it can be very expensive to buy many of the best games, some NGPC carts get real pricey. Enter the subject of today's blog post, the NeoPocket GameDrive Flash Cart.
Friday, December 2, 2022
So Many Floppies! - Late DOS/Early Windows Era Installations
The CD-ROM format continually promised to make floppy disks obsolete. First introduced in a usable form in 1986, the CD-ROM's 650MiB capacity was enormous when 1.2MiB 5.25" floppies were largest available removable media at the time and hard drives maxed out at around 50 MiB. While CD-ROMs were standard equipment on current PCs by 1995 and the principal method for software installation by that year, the PCs reliance on floppy disks for operating system installation lasted for much longer than anyone anticipated. How long you ask? Let's find out.