kant explain wrote on 2023-09-27, 17:28:
If you were lucky enough to fall in with a hip 64 crowd back in the day. Or haunted bbs's, you'd quickly realize how much was being done with it, here in the US and abroad. For me the stuff Europeans were doing with it was especially remarkable. Odd little games and such. Tapping it's capabilities to the max. Compute mmagazine also had the cover disks. One had a house rotating all over the screen, albeit very slowly, exhibiting 3d programming.
BBSes? I'm curious, who in his/her right mind did use 40 char terminal programs? 🤷♂️
And if so, in which time frame did this happen?
Or were these special Commodore BBSes? Using PetSCII instead of ASCII ? Like Q-Link?
Or was an 80 character emulator being run (I know there's an Public Domain program that did simulate 80x25 in software on C64)?
Because, from what I know, 80x24 (+25th status line) was the defacto terminal standard (physical VT52, VT100 etc) and the C64 couldn't do that.
It's hard to imagine that generic BBS/mailbox systems limited themselves to menus in 40x25.
That's like what a RTTY/morse code keyboard had used in the 1970s or so. Or a ZX81/Timex 1000.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxXi8yCW8kM
Heck, the C64 alone couldn't even do proper Videotex, due to colour limitations (the national BTX service in my country required/demanded 480×240 @32 colours out of 4096 minimum; at same time. The Amiga 1000 could do that, while on its limits).
That's why an external BTX module with its own video output was sold to C64 owners (there were software-based decoders, yes, but they were semi-legal).
http://www.zimmers.net/cbmpics/ouser5.html
Edit: Comparison C64 software-decoder vs hardware-decoder ( source ).
The software solution is doing surprisingly well, but is missing colours, so proper rendering of pages isn't (wasn't) being guaranteed.
No idea if it got a license by the postal/telephone ministry that way. 🤷♂️
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On PC, not even EGA and plain VGA could do full BTX at the time (1980s).
The early SVGA cards capable of at least 640x400 in 256c did, however. They were available since February 1988, Afaik.
Or someone could use any other graphics hardware, if Windows 1.x or 2.x was used as a device driver.
And even Packet-Radio on amateur radio used 80x25 by default, if I'm not mistaken.
Because, the TNC devices used a serial connection and could work with any serial terminal, thus.
Including popular ones like VT-100 or an ordinary IBM PC running terminal.exe included with MS Windows.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6_PNpWEhNc
Okay, to be fair, BayCom's popular DigiCom system was based on a C64 and likely stuck to 40x25.
But it was quickly being superseded by the BayCom package for PC,
on which programs like Graphic Packet ran, in full VGA resolution, capable of 80x25.
Anyway, some things were before my time, so I'd like to apologize for my ignorance. 🙂
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