[Shotimes] OT - ISDN Anyone?

Jim and Debbie Leyden jndleyden@mindspring.com
Sun, 24 Aug 2003 12:33:11 -0400


Don,

That wouldn't have been the TI 99/4 would it?

I had one of those too!

Jim
'93 MTX



-----Original Message-----
From: shotimes-admin@autox.team.net
[mailto:shotimes-admin@autox.team.net]On Behalf Of Donald Mallinson
Sent: Sunday, August 24, 2003 11:54 AM
To: shotimes@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: [Shotimes] OT - ISDN Anyone?


Ron,

I don't think this is the one you were thinking about, but
Texas Instruments had an early computer with game carts.

I had this as my first "computer". I learned basic and word
processing on it, did letters for my business at the time on
a daisy wheel typewriter (Olympia, still have two of them!)
with perf paper.  I would start a 1000 letter job and go to
lunch, coming back an hour later with the job not quite done
and fanfold letters all over the floor!

The Texas instruments was a cool setup, with that expansion
box separate from the keyboard.  The game port was part of
the keyboard.

I had dual DSDD disk drives, the expansion memory (64k?  or
maybe the huge 128k?) and a couple of other things.

I advertised the thing for sale about 10 years ago when it
was old then, with about 20-30 games, an extra console and
all the other software on disk.  Got about $150 for it and
was called a sales genius by several people at the time, you
probably remember it, that might have been about the time
Prodigy fell through as the SHO site.  Wonder if that TI
computer/game thing is worth any more today?

we were all on the "cutting" edge of the consumer side of
computing then with the real computer geeks one step ahead,
as they are now (at least for me).

Don Mallinson

Ron Porter wrote:
> Mattel made the Intellivision.
>
> In fact, I have one sitting in my basement, with about 20 game cartridges.
>
> In the early '80s, the Intellivision was "the" game! It was rather pricey,
> as were the cartridges. I had been meaning on giving it away for years,
but
> I fired it up last year one time and it worked, so I'll just hang on to it
> for nostalgia!!
>
> I can't remember the main competitor to Intellivision, though. There was
one
> other game console out that was big at the time.
>
> Ron Porter
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: shotimes-admin@autox.team.net [mailto:shotimes-admin@autox.team.net]
> On Behalf Of Ron Childs
> Sent: Sunday, August 24, 2003 11:09 AM
> To: shotimes@autox.team.net
> Subject: Re: [Shotimes] OT - ISDN Anyone?
>
>
> My roomate at the time ('80 ish) had an Intellivision which I think was
> made by Magnavox. Sort of in-between Pong and Game Cube.  :-)
>
> -Ron
>
>
> --- George Fourchy <krazgeo@jps.net> wrote:
>
>>On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 15:39:30 -0400, Noah South III wrote:
>>
>>
>>>I do have an Atari 2600, although last time I plugged it in it didn't
>>
>>work.
>>
>>>Still have all my games for it too, wonder if I could sell them on
>>
>>e-bay?
>>
>>I remember back in the early '80s, or maybe it was 1980....Atari came
>>out with the
>>5200, which was really hot(!) at the time.  There was a space travel
>>game that
>>looked fairly interesting..you could hyperdrive to different parts of
>>the galaxy,
>>and you'd refuel at space gas stations spread all around.  Sort of Star
>>Trekish....
>
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