Amiga.org
Amiga computer related discussion => Amiga Marketplace => Topic started by: Akira on January 18, 2008, 02:10:54 PM
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Sorry about the non-Amiga items, thirown in for those interested too.
I am selling everything I collected these years. I cannot hold on to the stuff anymore so everything must go!
Please find attached a list of stuff that probably is of your interest:
Computers
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* Amstrad CPC 6128 [UK PAL]
* Apple IIc [US NTSC]
* Apple Macintosh Classic II (80MB HD, 4MB RAM) [US]
* Apple Power Macintosh 8100/80 (2GB HD, 48MB RAM) [US]
* Drean Commodore 64 [AR PAL-N] (strange white keys with brown box version. NOT German Aldi)
* Commodore Plus/4 [US NTSC]
* Commodore DTV
* IBM 5140 Convertible PC [US]
* Panasonic FS-A1FM [JP NTSC-J] (MSX 2, 64K RAM 128K VRAM 1200baud modem)
* Sinclair 128K Spectrum +3 [UK PAL]
* CZ Spectrum [Spectrum 48k AR PAL-N version]
* Sony HitBit HB-201P [D PAL]
* Talent DPC-200 [AR PAL-N]
* Texas Instruments TI99/4A (White model) [AR PAL-N?]
* Texas Instruments TI99/4A (Silver early US model) [US NTSC]
* Timex Sinclair 1000 [US NTSC]
* Timex Sinclair 2968 [US NTSC]
Consoles
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* Atari 2600 (black&4sw) [US PAL-modded]
* Atari Lynx II [FR]
* Bandai Wonderswan Color [JP]
* Mattel Intellivision [UK PAL]
* NEC TurboExpress [US]
* Nintendo Gameboy [US] x3
* Nintendo Gameboy Advance [AS]
* Nintendo SuperNES [US NTSC]
* Nintendo Virtual Boy [JP]
* Sega Genesis (Mk1) [US NTSC]
* Sega Genesis Nomad [US NTSC]
* Sega Game Gear [D]
* Sega Saturn [US NTSC]
* Sega Dreamcast [US NTSC]
* SNK NeoGeo Pocket [US]
* Sony Playstation [US NTSC]
Accessories
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* Apple 300 SCSI external 2X CDROM Drive [caddy-load]
* Commodore 1571 disk drive (US very early)
* Commodore 1571 disk drive (US early)
* Commodore 1531 Datassette.
* CGA Monitor for the IBM 5140
* IBM dot matrix/thermal printer for the IBM 5140
* IBM video extension module for the IBM 5140
* Talent DPF-550 disk drive (early model)
* Roctec Rocslim external diskdrive for Amiga
* 16KB RAM expansion for Timex Sinclair 1000
* Atari Lynx battery Pack
* Atari Lynx Sun Visor
* Atari Lynx Carry Case
* Intellivoice speech module for Intellivision
* Megakey Genesis Converter
* Megakey II Genesis Converter
* Action Replay IV Sega Saturn multicartridge
* Famicom<->NES Converter
* Nintendo Super Gameboy
Joysticks/Mice
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* Atari 7800 Joystick
* Competition Pro STAR Extra
* Generic Genesis 6-button pad
* GEOS 101 Mouse
* Interact SG-Propad 6
* Neos MS-10 MSX mouse
* Quickjoy V Superboard (SV-125)
* Quickjoy Megastar (x2)
* Quickjoy Footpedal
* Quickshot QS-129F (wing thing, forgot the name)
* Sega Genesis 6-button Joypad
* Suncom TAC-2
I have software for all of the above, let me know if something interests you and I post you a list on PM. I will only now post the list of Amiga games I possess:
Software
Legend:
bbb = shrinkwrapped boxed
bb = mint box
b = box
-b = tatty box
--b = awful box
aa = mint cart/cd
a = cart/cd
-a = cart tatty/cd partially scratched
--a = awful cart/cd badly scratched
nw = non-working cart/cd
ii = mint instructions
i = instructions
-i = tatty instructions
* Commodore Amiga
Disposable Hero (UK) [bb|aa|ii]+poster
Fantastic Worlds (D) [comp] [bb|aa|ii]
-----> Populous
-----> Realms
-----> Wonderland
-----> Pirates
-----> Mega-Lo-Mania
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis (FR manual ENG game) [bb|aa|ii]
Lemmings (UK) [bb|aa|ii]
Micro Machines (UK) [bb|aa|ii]
Monkey Island (UK) [bb|aa|ii]
Mr. Nutz (D) [bb|aa|ii]
Puggsy (UK) [bb|aa|ii]
R-Type II (FR) [bb|aa|ii]+poster
Shadow of the Beast II (UK) A500 pack version [bb|aa|ii]
Soccer Kid (UK) [bb|aa|ii]
Wing Commander (D) [bb|aa|ii]
Wonderboy in Monsterland (UK) [--| a|--]
Zool 2 (UK) [bb|aa|ii]
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How much for
Lemmings (UK) [bb|aa|ii] and
Shadow of the Beast II (UK) A500 pack version [bb|aa|ii]
Plus shipping to Brazil?
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Oh hey! Beleza?
Vôcé ta pertinho daqui, vou perguntar os custos do envio e despois te mando um PM.
;D
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Wow! Thanks for posting this. I just showed it to the wife and she's now thinking that maybe I'm not such a compulsive collector after all!
Seriously, that's an awesome collection. Perhaps you should open the S. American annex of the Computer History Museum!
Bob
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Lo siento, mi español es terrible ... :)
Pero estoy viendo que usted sabe cómo hablar portugués.
(I had to use Google Translator for that! :)
It's always nice to talk with someone that lives so close.
Now I live in São Paulo, but I'm from the city of Rio Grande in Rio Grande do Sul. That's very close to Uruguay.
My family came from Italy and part of it lives now in Argentina. I have cousins in Buenos Aires!
Best Regards,
:-D
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Hey!
YEs it is cool to find an Amiga fanatic in Sampa. I love that city!
I go there every time I can. Been there last May (the whole month).
OK no more thread derailing, offers welcome! I will find an estimate of shipping to Sampa and will let you know about those games :)
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@hbarcellos
My family came from Italy and part of it lives now in Argentina.
Ah, yes, the Argentalians.
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Texas Instruments - TI99 - a very worthy buy, hope you have a bunch of cartridges to go with it! - FIRST commercial 16bit machine (IIRC), and yes it's pretty cool...
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I have a couple of carts with the TI99/4A. Let me know if you are interested.
You are right about the TI99 being the first 16bit CPU machine available, but this is the TI99/4A, a bit newer model :)
Aproximate shipping costs
------------------------[size=9]
Up to 100 gr.
Surface, every destination: $2,50
(30 to 60 days)
Airway
Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Uruguay: $2,25
(up to 7 days)
Rest of America: $4,25
(up to 12 days)
Rest of the World: $7,00
(up to 15 days)
Up to 500 gr.
Surface, every destination: $10,25
(30 to 60 days)
Airway
Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Uruguay: $10,25
(up to 7 days)
Rest of America: $16,75
(up to 12 days)
Rest of the World: $20,25
(up to 15 days)
Up to 1000 gr.
Surface, every destination: $20,75
(30 to 60 days)
Airway
Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Uruguay: $20,75
(up to 7 days)
Rest of America: $32,50
(up to 12 days)
Rest of the World: $37,75
(up to 15 days)
Up to 2000 gr.
Surface, every destination: $45,75
(30 to 60 days)
Airway
Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Uruguay: $45,75
(up to 7 days)
Rest of America: $65,25
(up to 12 days)
Rest of the World: $75,25
(up to 15 days)
Every additional kg.
Surface, every destination: $20,00
(30 to 60 days)
Airway
Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, Uruguay: $20,00
(up to 7 days)
Rest of America: $27,00
(up to 12 days)
Rest of the World: $32,75
(up to 15 days)
[/size][/QUOTE]
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Some info on the 99/4As.
The white version is a later version which incorporated a new GROM (v1.1, I believe) which detects and disables unauthorized cartridges. The black and silver one does not do this. Although I believe the v1.1 console had some added routines available -- I heard this in my old TI users group, but I have not been able to find documentation to back this up.
As for the 16-bit CPU, unfortunately the 99/4-series is powered by the TMS-9900 (the same CPU used in some missile defense systems, BTW) which is a 16-bit CPU. There's even a way to add 16-bit RAM which is much faster than the 8-bit buss. However, TI decided to compete with Commodore and Atari and crippled the system to keep pricing points down. Sad, really, as a fully built system was quite a machine. The Peripheral Expansion Box alone added immense expansion capabilities without the side-car mess. (Other than that stupid PEB interface and thick fire hose cable.)
If you think the problem with the A500's side-car expansion was bad (show of hands, how many people built an extension to their desk?) you should see some of the pictures of a heavily expanded 99/4 system. WOWSERS!
The TI has a similar architecture to the Amiga in that the VDP (video display processor) and sound processor had dedicated memory (16k, although I recall that there we plans for a 64k capable VDP.) It had what I guess you could call a software blitter that controlled sprites and sound via interrupt. You could set up a list of sound commands, set a pointer, and the computer would play music with little overhead.
Unfortunately, TI decided to put TI BASIC working memory in VDP RAM, to which the CPU had no direct access. On top of that they wrote TI BASIC in GPL (Graphic Programming Language) which was interpreted. So TI BASIC was doubly-interpreted, adding three unnecessary layers of slowness. The CPU only had direct access to 4k of memory out of a 64k address space which it used mostly for scratch and registers. {bleep}s.
The CPU has 16 RAM-based registers, which is REALLY neat to experiment with multi-tasking. No need to push registers onto the stack for a task switch, you just tell the CPU where to find its registers and make sure you're keeping track to find your way back. (Simplistic, but that's the gist.)
I'd be interested in the white TI if it were NTSC. Definitely a neat console (I have three working silver and blacks here) and about 200 cartridges. Sorry I got so off-topic... :-D
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Yes, you could of avoid "littering" my sale thread with the facts about the TI :(
It is an NTSC version, the video modulator converts it to PAL. I can bet on this. If you have an US modulator, it should work in NTSC. If I have the time to test it, you can buy it off me.