Ooo... I did not know there was an LGP30 version, and written in the
70s...who was doing Royal McBee dev 20.years after the machine was sold for
-ehemm- personal computing?
On Wed, Jun 19, 2024, 5:20 AM Christian Corti via cctalk <
cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:
> On Tue, 18 Jun 2024, Paul Koning
On Tue, 18 Jun 2024, Paul Koning wrote:
Interesting that the "40 years of Lander" article doesn't mention the
McDonald's in the GT40 version. A couple of the commenters refer to it;
It doesn't mention all the other versions that were written, for example
the LGP-30 version written in ACT-V
Interesting that the "40 years of Lander" article doesn't mention the
McDonald's in the GT40 version. A couple of the commenters refer to it; if you
were close enough the astronaut would walk over and order "two cheeseburgers
and a Big Mac to go". If you were right on, it would give you a
I ha e one for the Honeywell DDP 516 and that class of system on
vintagecomputer.net, extracted from papertape...search "lander" it
should.come up, feed it into simh.
Contact me if you successfully get it to work.
Bill
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024, 5:36 PM Lyndon Nerenberg (VE7TFX/VE6BBM) via cctalk <
> Fascinating - and there was a video game made by Atari called Lunar
> Lander which also tried to put a LEM safely on the surface.
At the U of Alberta in the graphics terminal room in the General
Services Bldg., next door to the I/O room (pick up and drop
off cards and printouts from the MTS
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 4:13 PM John Robertson via cctalk
wrote:
> Fascinating - and there was a video game made by Atari called Lunar
> Lander which also tried to put a LEM safely on the surface.
I loved that version when it came out when I was a kid. Sad most of
them disappeared (and were
First job was programming the “L” series machines. I imagine a Lunar Lander
game used up a lot of greenbar paper!
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jun 17, 2024, at 13:37, Mike Stein via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> "Lunar Lander games abound on every platform"
>
> For sure! I even have a copy on tape
"Lunar Lander games abound on every platform"
For sure! I even have a copy on tape somewhere for the Burroughs L
series machines, but unfortunately I'm not aware of any of those still
working; there was an L7xxx and also an L5xxx and L9xxx, but AFAIK
they're display only.
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024
> On Jun 17, 2024, at 4:00 PM, John Robertson via cctalk
> wrote:
>
> ...
> Forty Years of Lunar Lander <#>
>
> Lunar Lander games abound on every platform. Along with Tetris and Pac-Man,
> the game--in which your mission is to safely maneuver your lunar module onto
> the moon's
On 2024/06/17 12:26 p.m., Ethan Dicks via cctalk wrote:
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 1:53 PM Mike Katz via cctalk
wrote:
I remember running this program at school in the mid 1970's.
This runs on 4K Focal '69 without the extended functions enabled. So it
should run on a 4K PDP-8/L.
...
It was
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 1:53 PM Mike Katz via cctalk
wrote:
> I remember running this program at school in the mid 1970's.
>
> This runs on 4K Focal '69 without the extended functions enabled. So it
> should run on a 4K PDP-8/L.
>
> ...
>
> It was available as FOCAL8-81 from DECUS (Submitted
I remember running this program at school in the mid 1970's.
This runs on 4K Focal '69 without the extended functions enabled. So it
should run on a 4K PDP-8/L.
I think I might have actually run it on a 4K PDP-8/L with an ASR-33
Teletype sometime between 1972 and 1975. I know I ran it on a
Didn't know the source code had been released in FOCAL. I wonder if it
will run on a 4k pdp8/L.
One way to find out.
On 6/17/2024 4:38 AM, emanuel stiebler via cctalk wrote:
Interesting reading, as I believe, we all played it at least once :)
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