Our 48th meetup saw a few machines that had not been brought in before. For example, Sean brought in his NEC PC-98DO+, a machine that has PC-9801 and PC-8801 compatibility. The purpose was to get some games installed on the hard drive emulator, but we were ultimately only able to get one to play properly. ![]() ![]() Michelle was the bringer of the PC-9801 games, and boy did she ever bring the games. A precariously perched pile of PC-9801 playable games. All that in addition to her PC-9801 machine and dedicated monitor. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Tom brought in one of his MSX machines, this time the A1-WX, along with an eclectic selection of games to introduce to the group. ![]() ![]() ![]() Joseph brought in a PC-8801MC in a most unconventional case, working with Saburo to detail specifics of connecting it to an HxC floppy drive emulator. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sven enlisted some help from David with furthering progress on his ever-evolving Z-80 computer. This time they were trying to nail down a video sync issue that only appeared on some monitors. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Colin appeared for about ten minutes, then started to feel unwell due to the previous night’s antics and started to leave, but got engrossed in a conversation with Greg for about an hour just as he was about to step out the door. Greg, for his part, had brought in his MSX Turbo R with pro-gamer joystick. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() And Saburo found just enough time to work on his Casio PV-1000 console, modifying it to output composite video and audio instead of RF. It was a success after an initial mishap with audio, chalked up to a game of “which way is this pinout oriented?” ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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