HC90 Clone

Very jealous! Very cool.Mr.Nobody wrote: It's called 学习机 (a literal translation is learning machine or machine for learning ), many people of my age learned and studied basic computer skills on this thing, eg.typing English, typing Chinese(at the time it's a skill and took a lot of effort to master because of the complicated nature of Chinese characters) how to program in BASIC etc. Many developers launched their own products and cartridges in early 90s, the thing got rather popular at the time.1 year Later, some models had floppy disk drive included and the thing worked more like a real computer, even some PC RPG games were ported for the thing, several years later, Chinese famlies could afford real computers and officially, the computer age arrived. The role of this thing resembles the Commodore 64 in US, but not as culturally influential...
It's the way most home computers were! I'm still not totally sure I like the three-box arrangement, though some of the "fat keyboard" style could be very fat. Such as the Apple II, but that's a bit of an obscure one.
The Gateway AnyKey is a rubber dome keyboard :p .Game Theory wrote: My first keyboard and computer, my only one for 13 years. Hi-Tek switches. My strong preference for center legends (thank you 7bit) must come from this.
This was back in the cassette tape drive storage home computer days. Then got a Gateway AnyKey which was a macro programmable Alps.
My memory had indeed merged the Gateway Anykey with its successor Northgate OmniKey 101. Funny how memory works, or didn't work in this case:)Chyros wrote:The Gateway AnyKey is a rubber dome keyboard :p .Game Theory wrote: My first keyboard and computer, my only one for 13 years. Hi-Tek switches. My strong preference for center legends (thank you 7bit) must come from this.
This was back in the cassette tape drive storage home computer days. Then got a Gateway AnyKey which was a macro programmable Alps.
Dude that's so quaint!Mr.Nobody wrote:Here is how it looks like while running, although the video is recorded through an NES emulator called virtualNES. Here is the FDD model from another famous brand, if my memory is right this brand "Yuxing" is the first company brought FDD model into the market. The machine has a parallel printer port and a standard mouse port...kind of real deal back in the day![]()