Links


My New Old Apple IIe Computer

charlieharrington.com

This computer represents to me the lost era of computer as appliance. I’m talking about “bicycle for the mind” type-of-stuff. When you still sat down and said, “I’m going to computer now.” Or, as in my childhood, “May I please go on the computer now, Mom, PLEASE?”

We’re much closer to cyborgs now, with our phones and watches and speakers and other do-dads. Computers are part of us. They’re attached to us, they’re in our pockets, they’re in our bags, they’re next to us when we go to sleep. You can’t escape them, and as a result, you’re no longer able to make an active choice about whether or not to use them.

Rebuilding James Bond's Apple IIc - A Software Forgery

youtube.com

There’s nothing cooler than a computer in a movie, and 1985’s A View To A Kill has a particularly cool Apple IIc. Join me as I forge this Faberge bit by bit, byte by byte. In this video I meticulously reverse engineer the application from the movie and recreate it on my Apple IIc using Applesoft BASIC and a variety of development tricks. No one was asking, but I sure delivered.

I love this recreation. I did some Applesoft BASIC in elementary school whenever I could get my hands on books for it.

Gigatron – TTL microcomputer

gigatron.io

The Gigatron TTL microcomputer is a minimalistic retro computer. It’s special in its own oddball way, because it has absolutely no complex logic chips in it, not even a microprocessor! Its CPU is built out of a handful of classic 7400-series ICs, colloquially known as the TTL logic series.

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How the Death of iTunes Explains the 2010s

theatlantic.com

What the idealized iPhone user and the idealized Gmail user shared was a perfect executive-functioning system: Every time they picked up their phone or opened their web browser, they knew exactly what they wanted to do, got it done with a calm single-mindedness, and then closed their device. This dream illuminated Inbox Zero and Kinfolk and minimalist writing apps. It didn’t work. What we got instead was Inbox Infinity and the algorithmic timeline. Each of us became a wanderer in a sea of content. Each of us adopted the tacit—but still shameful—assumption that we are just treading water, that the clock is always running, and that the work will never end.