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Commodore 264 (Prototype)

  1. Game infos
  2. Parent and Clones
  3. Sound
  4. Driver
  5. Inputs
  6. Controls
  7. Display
  8. Dipswitchs
  9. Roms list
  10. Chips list
  11. Categories
  12. History
Download c264.zip (0 B)
Snapshot

Game infos

Description Commodore 264 (Prototype)
Name c264
Manufacturer Commodore Business Machines
Year 1984
Runnable yes
System arcade /
Number of players Non-arcade
Added to MAME .128
Romset size 0 B
Romset file files
Romset zip 0 B
Genre Computer

Parent and clones

Parent This game is the parent

Sound infos

Sound_channels 2

Driver infos

Driver status imperfect
Driver emulation good
Driver color good
Driver sound good
Driver graphic imperfect
Driver cocktail
Driver protection
Driver savestate yes

Inputs infos

Input service no
Input tilt no
Input players 1
Input buttons
Input coins

Controls infos

type ways minimum maximum sensitivity keydelta reverse
joy 8 no
keyboard no

Display infos

type rotate flipx width height refresh pixclock htotal hbend hbstart vtotal vbend vbstart
raster 0 no 336 216 50

Dipswitchs

Roms list

console name bios size crc md5 merge sha1 region offset status optional
arcade 251641-02 245 u19 0 nodump no
arcade basic-264.bin 16384 6a2fc8e3 473fce23afa07000cdca899fbcffd6961b36a8a0 kernal 0 good no
arcade kernal-264.bin 16384 8f32abe7 d481faf5fcbb331878dc7851c642d04f26a32873 kernal 4000 good no

Chips list

name tag type clock
Floppy sound iec8:c1541:uc4:0:525ssqd:floppysound audio 44100
M6502 iec8:c1541:ucd5 cpu 1000000
M7501 u2 cpu 894886
MOS7360 u1 audio 3579545
Speaker iec8:c1541:uc4:0:525ssqd:flopsndout audio

Categories

History


Computer published 35 years ago:

Commodore 264 (c) 1984 Commodore, Limited.

- TRIVIA -

When the first Commodore 264 (or C264 for short) prototype unofficially debuted at the Winter Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January 1984, the developers had obviously not yet agreed about the keyboard layout; some keys are unlabeled, the right shift key was missing, instead having a key which seems to be meant as a line feed key.

It was planned that when buying a C264, you could have chosen between these programs:
- 3 plus 1 (word processor, data base, spread sheet, windowing)
- Superscript (professional word processor)
- Magic Desk (word processor, data base, spread sheet, calculator)
- Logo
- Pilot
- Easycalc 264 (spread sheet)
- COM 264
- Financial Advisor

The C264 should then be delivered with the selected program built in. The remaining programs could only be used with cartridges for the expansion port.

The official presentation of the C264 series took place on the Hannover fair in 1984. Luckily, the developers didn't eliminate the right shift key in the final keyboard layout. The formerly unlabeled keys bear a label now: the key that used to be the left arrow key on the C64 and the VC20 says 'Esc', the key between '@' and '*' bears the English pound sign, and the key that was labelled 'SHIFT LOCK' on all 8-bit computers Commodore ever produced now says - guess what - 'SHIFT LOCK' :-) (must have been a hard decision between SHIFT and CAPS lock).

- CONTRIBUTE -

Edit this entry: https://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=61702&o=2