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Amiga Scene in the 1990's.
Photos of Finnish and Scandinavian Amiga scene and demo parties in the 90's by Ville "PrimeP" Hyvönen of CNCD.
Please tag or comment people you know in the photos.
PuxaO amor que mas te puedo decir..
creo que siempre te lo digo no me cansO nunca nunca de decirte...
te amo, se que es una palabra grande pero eso es lo que yo siento por ti...
te quiero tanto tanto.
Ella la que llena mi vida es la Veronica Lorena Vasquez te amo amiga
espero nunca pero nunca pase lo que pase separarme de ti
Te Amo! **
lAS amigas son como las estrellas
no siempre se ven pero siempre estan alli cuando las necesitas
feliz dia amiga
For more information about The National Museum of Computing , visit www.tnmoc.org
Please take a look at www.retrocomputers.eu for more info about my retro computer collection.
Here's a blast from (way back in) my past. A bit dusty, but still 100% functional.
I developed the AVT system, a hardware/software system for the Amiga computer in 1988...1989. The purpose of the system was to send, receive, store, load and manipulate images for frequency shift keying transmission and reception. In addition to supporting all (then) existing SSTV and FAX modes, the AVT introduced a new set, designed by yours truly, which were strongly interference resistant, as well as being synchronous instead of sync-based. You could lose up to half the incoming data, and the system could reconstruct the entire image from the remaining portions. The original system was built by me, for me, but proved of interest to the ham radio community, and eventually AEA picked up the design, I reworked it for them, and the result is as you see here.
I did the entire design. The interface uses a general purpose 68705 microprocessor for the low level signal processing; all signal processing code was written in 68705 assembler. As there was no 68705 assembler, I had to write one, for which I used Lattice C. The circuit design was done in Electron, a schematic capture system I wrote, also in C; and the PCB was laid out using a combination of Electron and Boardmaster, a PCB layout and routing system I also wrote in a combination of C and 68000 assembler. The Amiga side software for the AVT was written in 68000 assembler and Lattice C; nothing inline, strictly isolated functions. The CPU programmer for the 68705 was also a design of mine, although done years previous when working for another company. The AVT's machine code was sent to the CPU programmer using a programming utility I wrote (again in C.) Basically, the only pre-existing tools used that I didn't create myself were Metacomco's 68000 assembler, the Lattice C compiler, and Rick Stiles' UEDIT.
The AVT system won technical achievement of the year at the Dayton ARO gathering after its initial release. I still hear these on the air from time to time on 14.230 and 14.233 MHz, which gives me pause to smile a bit.
Canon EOS 50D [modified IR response in Hα range], Canon EF-S 18-55mm ƒ/3.5-5.6 IS zoom [ø58mm]; two shots, composed in WinImages, which, yes, was also a project of mine. :)
You can download my Amiga software here for free. No fees, adware, no malware, just archives of the original software distributions. Enjoy.
There's something sad about this ad. For someone like me who saw the desktop wave approach and crash over us, leaving the Commodores and Ataris bobbing in its wake, this ad seems filled with the faded wunder of digital magic and more quaint than a transistor radio.
Las monas y yo cualquier día antes de investigación. Foto por Claudito y su super cam reflex.
besapat, besaali, besaviv. ♥
Paradinha para o café, recebi visitas ontem
Marcia, costurando panos By Marcia e Cintia Mosaicos Maria João!!