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The HP 95LX Palmtop PC (F1000A, F1010A), also known as project Jaguar, [8] is Hewlett Packard's first DOS-based pocket computer, or personal digital assistant, introduced in April 1991 in collaboration with Lotus Development Corporation.
GameShark is the brand name of a line of video game cheat cartridges and other products for a variety of console video game systems and Windows-based computers. Since January 23rd, 2003, the brand name is owned by Mad Catz , which marketed GameShark products for the Sony PlayStation , Xbox , and Nintendo game consoles.
The first iPAQ Pocket PC was the H3600 series, released in 2000. [1] It ran Microsoft's Pocket PC 2000 operating system, and featured a 240 x 320 pixel 4096-color LCD, 32 MB of RAM, and 16 MB of ROM. [2] [3] Compaq released a similarly-designed H3100 series Pocket PC in January, 2001. [4]
Display: Passive matrix color VGA (16 colors (640x480) high resolution, 256 colors (320x200) low resolution) RAM: 4 MB built-in (expandable to a maximum of 8 or 12 MB using an optional 4 MB or 8 MB Compaq branded module, or 20 MB using a third party 16 MB module) 256 KB video memory (512 KB exists in the system, but is not accessible by the GPU.)
Hardware revisions include the smaller Game Boy Pocket in 1996, and color screened Game Boy Color in 1998. [9] [1] 1,244 games released. [10] Was the best-selling handheld console until 2010 when it was surpassed by the Nintendo DS. [11] 1989 [1] 118,690,000 [12] [1] Atari Lynx: First handheld electronic game with a color LCD, [3] 3.5-inch ...
The Super Game Boy is a plug-in cartridge for the Super NES that allows Game Boy and black cartridge Game Boy Color games to be played on a television screen. It was released in 1994. The black-and-white games can be colorized by mapping colors to each of the four shades of gray making up the Game Boy's color palette.
On the front of the unit there two dials underneath the PC-speaker to adjust the brightness of the screen and the volume of the PC-speaker. The PC-speaker in the Compaq Portable 486 is unique in that there is a 3.5 mm audio input jack on the side of the unit to allow a third party ISA sound card to pass through its audio output to the PC ...
Only the Casio E-115, E-125 and EM-500 were Pocket PCs. All others were using the older "Palm-sized PC" operating system except for the BE-300, which ran a stripped-down version of Windows CE 3.0 and would not run any Pocket PC software and many applications written for Windows CE itself.