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pacom2023:exhibits

PaCommEx Exhibits

Amiga 1000

The one that started the Amiga craze! It will be an upgraded A1000! A1000 courtesy of Luca Cappa

Amiga 2000 with 386 Bridgeboard and A-Max

Think the Commodore 128 had 3 computers in one?! Well, here's an Amiga that has 3-in-one!

This A2000 has been recently rebuilt with an Amiga 2000 Replica PCB and now has a 2 gig IDE drive (via SCSI-to-IDE), Amiga OS 3.1, a 68010 CPU at 7.14 MHz, 6 megs of Fast RAM, 1 meg of Chip RAM, a full complement of WHDLoad games and demos; an 80386 Bridgeboard running at 25 MHz, 2 megs of RAM shared with the Amiga, DOS 5.0, PC games; and an A-Max module with Mac OS 6.0 running a classic Mac apps/games. An amazing machine in this configuration! A2000 courtesy of Stephen Jones

Amiga 500 in Checkmate case

Nicely housed in a Checkmate 1500 Plus case, this is an Amiga 500 with OS 3.14 and a HC533 accelerator running a 68000 at 33 MHz. with 8 mb of Fast RAM and Super Denise. For the hard drive, there is an IDE-to-SD card adapter with an 8gb card plus a GoTek and original floppy drive. Checkmate A500 courtesy of Brian Schulteis

Amiga 1200

The A1200 being exhibited has a 68060 50 MHz. CPU, OS 3.9, 2 megs Chip RAM, 128 megs Fast RAM, and Arcade Game Selector II. A1200 courtesy of Robert Bernardo

Amiga 600

This modestly-upgraded A600 with Kickstart 3.2.1, OS 3.2, 2 megs of Chip RAM, 8 megs of Fast RAM, 2 gig CF hard drive, and Arcade Game Selector II. A600 courtesy of Robert Bernardo

Amiga 2000 with Vampire 500 v2+

This Amiga 2000 has a v8 motherboard with Vampire 500 v2 accelerator board and 128 megs of Fast RAM. A2000/V500+ courtesy of Luca Cappa

Vampire v4 standalone

Amiga-clone computer. The size of a small brick, the Vampire v4 is one of the fastest Amigas ever, sporting 512 megs of Fast RAM and running on Coffin OS or Apollo Core OS, basically Amiga OS-compatible with the Amiga chipset reimplemented in FPGA. Vampire v4 standalone courtesy of Luca Cappa

Amiga 600 with Vampire V600+

Like the Amiga 2000/Vampire 500 listed above, the Amiga 600/Vampire 600 has 128 megs of Fast RAM. Amiga 600/V600+ courtesy of Luca Cappa

Amiga CD32 with SX1

Here is a goodie… it's an Amiga CD32 with a Paravision SX1 expansion that gives 8 MB of RAM. CD32 courtesy of and Paravision SX1 courtesy of Luca Cappa.

Sam440ep

From ACube Systems of Italy, the Sam440ep is a PowerPC-based computer and runs AmigaOS 4.1. Sam440 courtesy of Bernie Innocenti

THEA500 Mini

From Retro Games Ltd. of England comes THEA500 (Mini), a small re-creation of the Amiga 500. THEA500 Mini runs the Amiberry emulator on an ARM-based computer. It has 25 games built into the system with hundreds more via USB, like those available at https://www.aminimiga.com/. THEA500 Mini courtesy of Robert Bernardo

THEC64 Maxi

From Retro Games Ltd. of England comes THEC64 (Maxi), a re-creation of the brown Commodore 64. THEC64 Maxi is Linux-based computer running a specialized version of VICE. It has 64 games built into the system with hundreds more via THEC64 Enhancer USB stick (from Ami64.com) and the Retro8Bit USB stick (from Retro8BitShop.com). THEC64 Maxi courtesy of Robert Bernardo

Commodore PET 2001 with MSD SD-2 drive

A later PET 2001, this one has a full-sized keyboard and upgraded ROM. The MSD SD-2 dual floppy drive is connected to the PET via an IEE-488 parallel cable. PET and MSD courtesy of Ryan Sherwood

European C128D

Not common over in North America, the European C128 has a plastic case, carrying handle, and 16K video RAM, making the machine more similar to a flat C128 and external 1571 drive rather than the metal C128DCR. European C128D courtesy of Luca

Commodore 64

Ah, your basic C64 with a C2N Datasette. System courtesy of Arlis K Studios

Commodore 128DCR

This is a C128DCR with Ultimate II cartridge, showing off C64 and C128-specific programs, like TRIANGULAR μOS 1.35. C128DCR courtesy of Ryan Sherwood

Commodore SX-64

This classic 25-pounder is touted as the world's first color transportable! SX-64 courtesy of Ryan Sherwood

Commodore Colt

Check out Commodore's version of the PC! This one has a hard drive problem. Commodore Colt courtesy of Ryan Sherwood

Commodore B128 with SFD-1001

This is another one of Commodore's forays into business computers - the unsuccessful B128. Included is the high-density, parallel floppy disk drive, the SFD-1001. B128 and SFD-1001 courtesy of Ryan Sherwood

Commander X16

The Commander X16 is a new computer inspired by the Commodore 64 and the VIC-20. It runs a 65C02 CPU at 8 MHz. with an enhanced KERNAL and BASIC 2.0, 512K ROM, 40K RAM for programs, and 512K banked RAM. The VERA FPGA provides graphics, sound, and SD capabilities. Commander X16 courtesy of Mark Redden and Joe Burks

Plus/4 and C16

These TED series Commodores come with a SD2IEC drive. Plus/4 and C16 courtesy of Robert Bernardo

Commodore 64 running C64 OS

This ordinary-looking C64 with 1541 disk drive and SD2IEC is not quite ordinary. It runs the new C64 OS v1.04! https://c64os.com/ C64 courtesy of Stephen Jones

Mega65's

The Mega65 is the modern replica to the mythical Commodore 65 which was never publicly released. The Mega65 has a full keyboard, C65 and C64 modes, a built-in 3 1/2“ floppy drive, HDMI out, a SD card slot, and acceleration up to 40 MHz.. One Mega65 courtesy of Dan Sanderson, the other Mega65 courtesy of Robert Bernardo

Ultimate 64

Not just an ordinary Commodore 64 in a breadbox, this is the Ultimate 64, a redesigned C64 made of modern components. See https://ultimate64.com This U64 comes in a new Kickstarter C64C case and has a MechBoard 64 with its Cherry Blue microswitches. U64 courtesy of the late Bogdan Macri of the Southern California Commodore & Amiga Network

"Free-Play" C64s and Amigas

There will be 3-5 C64 & Amiga systems plus a library of easy single and multiplayer games lined up and ready for attendees to use as free-play machines. C64's and Amigas courtesy of Rob Barlow

VIC-20

Before the C64, the VIC-20 was Commodore Business Machines' sales leader. This VIC-20 sports a SD2IEC with switchable RAM expansion. VIC-20 courtesy of Robert Bernardo

A.L.I.C.E.

A.L.I.C.E. (A Laptop Incorporating a Classic Experience) returns! It runs AmiKit X and Amiga OS 4.1 Final Edition, update 1. See the unboxing here: http://blog.retro-link.com/2017/10/unboxing-alice-laptop-incorporating.html

NABU PC

From the darkest corners comes the NABU PC, Canadian competitor when the Commodore 64 was king! It will be demoing RetroNet Cloud CP/M. See this rare computer in action! (Now we'll have to run CP/M on a C128 in order to compete!) NABU PC courtesy of Stephen Jones

pacom2023/exhibits.txt · Last modified: 2023/06/28 10:54 by 127.0.0.1