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| subject: | Re: Commodore history - The Commodore 128 by The 8-Bit Guy |
On Fri, 19 Oct 2018 08:51:09 -0000 (UTC), Martijn van Buul wrote: > > * Andreas Kohlbach: >> On 17 Oct 2018 21:05:34 GMT, Etienne von Wettingfeld wrote: > >>> It has an Assembler monitor, but I think Lucifer means two screens at once. >>> >>> It actually can, one using the 40 collumn mode and one the 80 character one. >> >> But not at the same time AFAIK. When you switch the mode the content what >> was displayed in the mode before just froze on the other display. > > Well, that depends on your point of view. There are a few gotchas: > > The 40 column screen used a video chip closely related to the one in the > C64. As such, it could only operate on 1MHz - if you wanted to use the > 128's higher clockspeed (a blazing fast 2MHz), you were forced to blank > the 40 colum screen and use the 80 column screen instead (as it used a > separate video chip which didn't have this limitation). > > So it did make sense to disable the 40 column screen, if the user switched > over to 80. This is assuming that the user didn't really have 2 monitors > to begin with, but only switched input source on their monitor - the 40 > column output would go to waste anyway. > > But that doesn't mean it couldn't be done to have both outputs active. In > fact, it was quite normal for software development. > > A random demo I found on the interwebs: > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2dcqkM-jeM Thanks for the information. I was watching a video on Youtube a while ago where the presenter showed how the 40 column froze when switching to 80 columns. I just took 20 minutes to find it but was unsuccessful. -- Andreas My random thoughts and comments https://news-commentaries.blogspot.com/ --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05* Origin: Agency HUB, Dunedin - New Zealand | FidoUsenet Gateway (3:770/3) SEEN-BY: 57/0 153/250 267/800 317/2 393/68 633/0 267 280 281 412 712/848 770/0 SEEN-BY: 770/1 3 100 340 772/0 1 210 500 @PATH: 770/3 1 633/280 267 |
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