Got it all for $30 shipped.
stripped Macintosh LC III (no floppy, PSU, and no hard drive or hard drive caddy) I'm planning on combining this with my other LC III with bad ROMs to …
The //e doesn't have an MMU. There are just soft switches, addresses in the $C03x range you hit to switch banks of RAM. Works the same as the Language Card on the Apple][.
Click…
68kMLADevelopmentby Dog CowSun, 13 Sep 2009 - 18:36
Anyone heard of LUnix? Unix on a C64 - page seems a bit old though. And uCLinux ideas might be helpful about getting around lack of MMU.
EDIT: Doh...didn't remember that LUnix ha…
The //e doesn't have an MMU. There are just soft switches, addresses in the $C03x range you hit to switch banks of RAM. Works the same as the Language Card on the Apple][.
About t…
Well personally, I prefer auto-inject drives, the way they grab the disk from you. With manual inject you have to pretty much shove the disk right down the thing's throat, which is…
You mean manual-inject? Nah, later production run LCIIs and LCIIIs had manual-inject floppy drives as well. My very first LCIII was built in October 1993 and has a manual-inject dr…
It was in an auction...I ended up getting the machine and parts for $15 all up...then $18 to get it shipped up from Sydney...yay for Australia Post.
As for official Apple RAM...it…
You mean manual-inject? Nah, later production run LCIIs and LCIIIs had manual-inject floppy drives as well. My very first LCIII was built in October 1993 and has a manual-inject dr…
About a week back I bought an LCIII and some other bits off a member on an Australian Mac forum I go on. Came through today, here's what I got:
- LCIII (manual inject), haven't po…
Anyone heard of LUnix? Unix on a C64 - page seems a bit old though. And uCLinux ideas might be helpful about getting around lack of MMU.
EDIT: Doh...didn't remember that LUnix h…
At a minimum, the pinouts have to be remapped. The first 20 pins of the Disk II & Disk III seem to be identical in function, suggesting that the 6 remaining Disk III pins a…
I am pretty sure that the Disk ][ connects to a set of pins on the back of the ///.The blue port all the way on the left is where it would go.
Click to expand...
Um, nope. That…