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Volo's rating system goes by five pipes or tankards to indicate a top tavern, five coins to mean high prices, and five daggers a dangerous place to hang out. [14] Locations and characters described in the book can be used as foundations on which proper Dalelands scenarios can be built. [ 14 ]
Although not technically a clone, Quadram produced an add-in ISA card, called the Quadlink, that provided hardware emulation of an Apple II+ for the IBM PC. [13] The card had its own 6502 CPU and dedicated 80 K RAM (64 K for applications, plus 16 K to hold a reverse-engineered Apple ROM image, loaded at boot-time), and installed "between" the PC and its floppy drive(s), color display, and ...
The Flight-Releasable Grapple Fixture (FRGF) is the simplest variation of the North American grapple fixture, it allows only for grappling and does not have any electrical connectors. [4] Its use began early in the Space Shuttle program and was developed from the Flight Standard Grapple Fixture (FSGF) by allowing the Grapple Shaft to be ...
Apple IIe with DuoDisk and Monitor II. Apple Computer planned to discontinue the Apple II series after the introduction of the Apple III in 1980; the company intended to clearly establish market segmentation by designing the Apple III to appeal to the business market, leaving the Apple II for home and education users.
US Introductory Price Processor Built-in RAM Best graphics Discontinued April 11, 1976 Apple I: Apple I: $666.66 6502: 4-8 KiB 40x24 characters monochrome September 30, 1977 June 1, 1977 Apple II: Apple II: $1298 4-48 KiB 280x192 6 colors June 1, 1979 June 1, 1979 Apple II Plus: Apple II: $1195 16-48 KiB 280x192 6 colors December 1, 1982 Apple ...
The original retail price of the computer was US$1,298 (equivalent to $6,500 in 2023) [18] [19] (with 4 KB of RAM) and US$2,638 (equivalent to $13,300 in 2023) (with the maximum 48 KB of RAM). To reflect the computer's color graphics capability, the Apple logo on the casing was represented using rainbow stripes, [ 20 ] [ 21 ] which remained a ...
Created Date: 1/13/2010 4:29:06 PM
The 1000 offered essentially all the important features of the PCjr -- and even the full-size IBM PC-- at a list price of only about $1000 ($999-$1200). It further included a keyboard vastly superior to the IIc or PCjr (normal-sized, full-stroke keys, with a full numeric keypad), and superior IBM PC compatibility -- superior even to IBM's own PCjr.