Exploring the SuperCPU Accelerator for C64

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  • čas přidán 1. 08. 2024
  • Andy De George asks: Out of all old hardware peripherals what is your favorite, why did it succeed or fail, and how could it have been better? Robin's answer: CMD's SuperCPU 20 MHz 65816 Accelerator for the Commodore 64.
    Become a patron: / 8bitshowandtell
    One-time donation: paypal.me/8BitShowAndTell
    Ending credits music is the title track from the EP "Living Here In The Future" by Bedford Level Experiment: bedfordlevelexperiment.bandca...
    Index:
    0:00 My favourite peripheral: The SuperCPU
    2:41 Did it succeed or fail? Two perspectives
    5:48 How much does it speed up the C64?
    9:09 Test Drive with SuperCPU
    11:55 Wheels - GEOS replacement
    16:53 Metal Dust - SCPU Exclusive
    21:34 Info about the unfinished SuperCPU Myst-like game I was making
    22:55 Why did the SuperCPU succeed or fail?
    25:19 How could it have been better?
    27:44 Thanks to my patrons!
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 451

  • @fluffycritter
    @fluffycritter Před 4 lety +131

    Robin: "It came out in 1995 or 1996"
    me: Oh that isn't that old, that's after I graduated high school
    Robin: "So that's 25 years old, I hope that qualifies as old enough"
    me: [shrivels up and dies]

    • @00Skyfox
      @00Skyfox Před 4 lety +1

      Class of ‘93 here!

    • @IntegerOfDoom
      @IntegerOfDoom Před 4 lety +4

      I felt that one... in my joints.

    • @Sinn0100
      @Sinn0100 Před 4 lety

      Hey...stop it! You're making me feel like some wretched old decrepit thing. I was still in school in 1995-1996...I graduated in 1998. ;)

    • @squirlmy
      @squirlmy Před 3 lety +1

      @@00Skyfox class of '93 university. I had only a VAX account as a freshman and email was within the school only, and by the time I graduated, every department had PCs and student emails were proper internet accounts The PC revolution, then the internet revolution, happened quickly. Seems like overnight to me, now!

    • @00Skyfox
      @00Skyfox Před 3 lety

      @@squirlmy I was high school class of '93, but the very next fall I was taking computer classes which used the college's VAX mainframe for compiling programs. Try as I might I just could not get my C64 to connect to it to remote in over the modem.

  • @ojbeez5260
    @ojbeez5260 Před 3 lety +12

    My Aunt used to work for Caledonian Airlines in the 80's to early 90's and she used a Commodore 64...in fact that's what all the US airlines apparently used at the time for thier employees working at home - with UPlink modems. It was pretty cool you could log on to thier 'telnet' system and book yourself a flight to Rio De Janerio...on a C64!!

  • @AlphaFox78
    @AlphaFox78 Před 4 lety +62

    I worked at CMD in 1996, it was my first real job. I installed JIFFYdos in 1541 drives; I would desolder the ROM and put in a socket, then wire in the toggle switch. it was a lot of fun and I really enjoyed it! but sadly they laid me off about 6 months later and never called me back in. I met Mark Fellows, the guy who designed this, a real nice guy. not sure what happened to him, CMD is still a thing here but they have nothing to do with commadore any more, just make PC clones and servers from what I know. ( I live in east longmeadow and still work right down the road from where they started). I remember a line of SuperCPU cases all lined up and ready for assembly, I would put the cases together and the stickers on. Maybe the one you have is one I worked on! ha. I had a SX-64 that someone gave me and I didnt know what to do with so I sold it to them, they had a whole warehouse full of old commadores... wish I knew then what I know now! I would have grabbed some of that stuff.

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety +13

      That's really cool, it would have been a dream job for many of us then! Were there many other employees there, besides the owner/manager people like Doug Cotton, Mark Fellows, and Charles Christianson?

    • @AlphaFox78
      @AlphaFox78 Před 4 lety +12

      @@8_Bit there was this guy, I think his name was Chris,(maybe it was Charles?) idk his last name. he was the man tech / assembly guy. Mark just dropped off the map, hes on FB but never accepted my friend request from years ago. I saw Doug a few years ago, I think hes still with CMD since he was in town still. It was my favorite job, loved the hands on soldering action.

    • @AlphaFox78
      @AlphaFox78 Před 4 lety +8

      @@8_Bit Mark had an apple IIC, the portable one, he would use it to take from work to home haha

    • @AlphaFox78
      @AlphaFox78 Před 4 lety +9

      @@8_Bit Its funny, the IT job I work at now has another client at 15 Benton drive, the whole layout is different and sadly no C64s!! They are in the front and CMD was in the back, that could be why its different. same address though! thought it was cool going back there.

    • @greatkingrat
      @greatkingrat Před 2 lety +6

      I had an SX64 too but recently. I couldn’t afford one back in the day! I grew up with an Apple 2e but always wanted a Commodore 64.

  • @StevenSmyth
    @StevenSmyth Před 4 lety +11

    I have a friend who used the C64 as his main computer up to the point his mom got him a Mac Classic and an HP Deskwriter for his birthday. We were both in a Doctor Who fan club in Southern California (way before anyone in America knew what Doctor Who was) and the club had an Amateur Press Association or APA. It’s like a club zine; everyone in the APA would type up a few pages, copy or print up however many they needed to contribute, in our case 8-10 each month, bring them to the meetings, then collate them together and distribute the zines to the members. My friend did his in GEOPublish. In order to get a physical copy he would send the GEOPublish service his floppy disc with the files, they would laser print it and send him the hard copy and his disc back. As a desktop publishing platform, GEOPublish rocked. His output looked just as good as the stuff i was doing on my SE/30 at work (I didn’t have my own Mac yet either). If my friend had managed a SuperCPU back in the day, I think he could have limped along until he could afford a better Mac on his own hook, but the sad thing is the GEOPublish service shutdown shortly after that and there was no way for him to preserve the files in any other format other than hard copy and raw text. But, there’s a prime example of a productivity use case for the C64.

  • @jgrimsley2000
    @jgrimsley2000 Před 4 lety +22

    I was CMD fanboy back in the day. I had a C-128D, 1541II and 1581 with JiffyDos, CMD HD-40, RamLink with 16 megs and Hd serial cable, SwiftLink cartridge and CMD mouse that gave my system a real-clock. I subscribed to their magazine, too. I used GEOS-128 until about 2005. I had IBM compatibles since 1989 and got a Amiga 600 in 1993, but love using the C-128 more. CMD was the best! My Aprotek 2400 baud modem was my only non-CMD, non-Commodore peripheral.

    • @totophi
      @totophi Před 4 lety +5

      jgrimsley2000 : Me too! At one point, I had three C-128‘s, two RAMlinks with battery backup, one custom CMD HD with a “humungous” 350 MB, SwiftLink with a USRobotics modem, and various 1541/1571/1581 drives with JiffyDOS. GEOS was really fun like this! Unfortunately I didn’t have any more loose capital by the time the FD-2000 and SuperCPU were released. But for a few brief years, 8-bit computing felt like heaven.

    • @MarkReed-smokindeist
      @MarkReed-smokindeist Před 4 lety +2

      Those little blue modems were nice but a Swiftlink or Turbo-232 cartridge with a high-speed modem was really nice.

  • @Starchface
    @Starchface Před 4 lety +26

    I had never heard of the SuperCPU before. Nevertheless I want to recognize the time and effort that went into making this video. You left no stone unturned. Excellent.

  • @Derision667
    @Derision667 Před 4 lety +12

    Awesome video, Robin!
    Where I think the SuperCPU really shined was amongst the diehard C64/128 users in North America that refused to switch to anything else, even as Commodore shriveled up and died and software developers vanished from the platform. These are people for whom Commodore was a way of life, something they used every day, and were often not gamers. These were the guys who were LOADSTAR subscribers 'til the very end. I think we all knew people, primarily older folks, that used the C64 or C128 as their primary computer well into the late-2000s (what is that, the aughts?), and the SuperCPU (and other CMD hardware) made stuff like GEOS useable enough to actually perform work and do tasks with (though GEOS 128, in 80 column mode, with an REU and a CMD HD (or even just a 1581), was also a very usable platform even without acceleration).
    Many people did just that, really, using their Commodore rigs for day-to-day stuff until the internet arrived. Specifically the web, because even I used to use my C128 to send email for a number of years. Even the mighty SuperCPU couldn't compete with the web, unfortunately.
    I also feel like that's why there's such a dearth of these remaining, despite several thousand of them being built and sold: a lot of them stayed with their older Commodore users and, when those users were no longer with us, they ended up getting lost or thrown out by family or estate liquidators or whoever does that sort of thing, to the point where there's a handful left, all of which command preposterous prices on eBay.
    Anyway... TL;DR: Where the SuperCPU did succeed was that it helped Commodore users (not gamers, not developers, just regular ol' users) keep chugging along into the new millennium.
    AJH

  • @taragwendolyn
    @taragwendolyn Před 4 lety +10

    Re still using old/obsolete hardware - I was still using an IBM XT in 1995. As a family we had a much faster computer that I was able to go on the Internet or play games on, but we kept our decade-old XT running and I had it in my bedroom so I could type documents for school in WordPerfect. :) It was the 90's equivalent of giving your kid a tablet or chromebook today

  • @ScrapKing73
    @ScrapKing73 Před rokem +3

    My C64 was my main computer for productivity well into the early 90s, because as much as I wanted an Amiga I couldn’t afford one. I used GEOS 64 as my office suite, and also used a terminal programme for getting online (with local BBSs, as there was a vibrant board scene where I loved). I did also play games on my C64, but I spent more time doing productivity and online communication.
    I remember reading Compute!’s Gazette about all sorts of cool C64 upgrades like this that I couldn’t afford.

  • @rodneylives
    @rodneylives Před 4 lety +23

    I was one of those people who ended up using a Commodore 64 long after the expected expiration date. But part of that was lack of alternatives, and there's no way I could have afforded an accelerator device that cost as much as the machine itself. I really wish I had had one though.

  • @Vector_Ze
    @Vector_Ze Před 2 lety +2

    I remember seeing the SuperCPU advertised, but I didn't buy one. By then, I'd moved on to the C128, and the Amiga, before Windows 95 ushered in the internet for me. I'd fiddled with bulletin boards a little on my Amiga before 1995. But, my first IBM compatible was an AT&T Globalist in 1995.
    I recently received my The C64 Maxi, and am having a good time with it, refreshing my memories that have faded over the past three decades or so.
    I was never much into games, but more into seeing what I could figure out in the programming department, and that's why I bought the The C64.
    There were really only two games I spent any time with on my original C64s; Jumpman and Fort Apocalypse. And I saw end screens for both of them.
    The primary game I played on my Amigas was Test Drive II. I actually, physically broke a joystick on that game trying to make a curve.

  • @MegaManNeo
    @MegaManNeo Před 4 lety +7

    Still not an Amiga or 486 by a long shot but seeing GeoPaint running that smooth and Metal Dust on that C64 blew me away.
    Not that there were stunning things happening on stock hardware before but this SuperCPU stuff is in a league on its own.

  • @MrGoatflakes
    @MrGoatflakes Před 4 lety +3

    Oh, damn, didn't realise this came out in 1996. I was thinking what an amazing product it was with the w65c816 and 16MB of RAM, and all the awesome things you could do with that, what with zero (direct) page relocation, stack relocation and a 16 bit stack pointer not bound to a particular page boundaries, stack relative addressing, but then I remembered all the things I was doing on a PC in 1996 ._.

    • @jjeeeekk
      @jjeeeekk Před 4 lety +1

      Everything with some minor limitations. Stack and Direct Page is bound to bank 0, the Direct Page not page-aligned demands 1 extra cycle (e.g. for usage as high-level language frame-pointer). ;)

  • @SteveGuidi
    @SteveGuidi Před 4 lety +4

    My ideal setup was to run my C64c with a SuperCPU, SwiftLink and appropriate modem, an FD2000 and CMD hard drive. I remember debating with my friends in 1996 on how this could keep up with PCs and Macs of the time, but I was always stumped by the software support problem.

  • @perfectfutures
    @perfectfutures Před 3 lety +4

    That metal dust game is amazing. Glad someone made the most of this opportunity.

  • @exidy-yt
    @exidy-yt Před rokem +2

    I really was a shameless power-user as a teenager. I went from my yearned for and saved up for 2 years Commodore 64 in 1985 to an Amiga 500 in 1988 to a 386DX-40 PC clone in early 1992. I was chuckling at my friends who stuck with the 64 and were trying to show off GEOS to me (which really was amazing in hindsight) when I was rocking WorkBench 1.3, and was enraged at the slow pace of Commodore R&D letting the PC clones get ahead of them with 32 bit CPUs and 256 colour VGA graphics that I jumped ship to PC land after comparing games like Wolfenstein 3D and Wing Commander to the by then completely outclassed Amiga offerings.
    I kinda wished I had slowed down to smell the roses then, there's a lot of satisfaction to be gained by eking the most out of limited systems and pushing them beyond those limits. I love videos like this. I would love to have seen Mercenary: Escape from Targ running on a 20MHz C64!

  • @DavidRomigJr
    @DavidRomigJr Před 4 lety +2

    I was still buying brand new games for my C64 from my local Electronics Boutique as late as 1994, when apparently corporate told them to reclaim that shelf space. That was the year I graduated high school and the year an article appeared in my local paper, The Mercury, saying local business Commodore Business Machines was filing for bankruptcy. That article hung on my bedroom door for 10+ years. Had I known then that CBM was only 30 minutes away from me, I would have have visited. But that is hindsight. I didn’t even bother to get my driver’s license until 1994. Sigh... memories.

  • @maxsmarts8210
    @maxsmarts8210 Před 4 lety +13

    Wow look how awesome runs the Test Drive, I love that game .

  • @coltoncraft2047
    @coltoncraft2047 Před 2 lety +1

    Just subscribed to your channel! I really enjoy the technical and depth content you have here. Thank you!

  • @timmooney7528
    @timmooney7528 Před 4 lety +8

    When I bought my first 486/33 after college, I got rid of my C-64. I learned later the freeze ups and reliability issues it had would've been solved if I knew where to buy a replacement power supply. Sounds like the SuperCPU was a great product, but just a little late to the market

  • @AdamSommer70
    @AdamSommer70 Před 4 lety +7

    Great video, thanks for posting! The SuperCPU is very interesting!

  • @kloakovalimonada
    @kloakovalimonada Před 4 lety +9

    Best SuperCPU video on CZcams!

  • @DasIllu
    @DasIllu Před 4 lety +16

    Cross Assembler, i remember building a parallel port to userport cable back in '96 or '97. The userport's D0--D7 weren't able to drive the printer port directly but it worked vice versa. IIRC there was one line from the userport to the (i think it was) paper sense line (or something) that i used for a very dirty handshake.
    Wrote the transfer program in QBasic on the PC and in Assembly in the C-128's built in monitor. Worked like a charm. Made it so it would boot and wait in the background for the transfer to start.
    After the transfer was complete, the receiver routine wound just jump to that new program.

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety +4

      Cool! I had built a cable like that too. I found schematics online, and there was some file transfer program. I might have even written it myself too... I can imagine I used Turbo Pascal? Very distant memories now :)

    • @jamesragsdale3069
      @jamesragsdale3069 Před 4 lety +1

      Epic. You guys got REALLY creative.

  • @JohnnyLutz
    @JohnnyLutz Před 4 lety

    This is really great work. Thanks for expanding my mind even just that amount!!! :D

  • @stupossibleify
    @stupossibleify Před 4 lety +5

    Would be good to get someone from CMD/Berkeley Softworks on a future episode as a retrospective on the impact their products had.

  • @darrenjkendall
    @darrenjkendall Před 4 lety +1

    What an amazing piece of technology, thank you for sharing this and your memories with us.

  • @allan.n.7227
    @allan.n.7227 Před 4 lety +1

    High quality content.. well done.. thx for sharing

  • @Kyanzes
    @Kyanzes Před 2 lety

    Excellent demonstration, thank you!

  • @richiebrux
    @richiebrux Před 4 lety +1

    Impressive piece of kit. Thanks for sharing.

  • @tuanbe
    @tuanbe Před 3 lety +1

    Red turbo light was and is a must to show off vast amounts of power to your friends.

  • @xaGe__
    @xaGe__ Před 4 lety +1

    I wish I had one of those back then. Fascinating video.

  • @zledwon
    @zledwon Před 3 měsíci

    Great piece of hardware and great video! Thank you!

  • @m1kkole1nonen
    @m1kkole1nonen Před 4 lety +25

    I'd like to see how this performs with Stunt Car Racer

    • @totophi
      @totophi Před 4 lety +5

      Mikko Leinonen : Grand Prix Circuit! Karateka! Elite! Echelon!

    • @theyamo7219
      @theyamo7219 Před 4 lety +3

      The Freescape games would finally get a good framerate

  • @TransCanadaPhil
    @TransCanadaPhil Před 3 lety

    I'm really enjoying your videos the past few days, I just discovered your channel. Fellow Canadian here and from the sounds of it, you sound like you might be near my neck of the woods here in Winnipeg. I was a Commodore fan back in the 80s too as a kid. More recently I backed the kickstarter to get myself one of the new Sinclair Spectrum Next 8-bit computers (can't wait to receive it this August)! Cheers!

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, I'm just down the road in Thunder Bay :) The Spectrum Next looks great. I wanted one but had just spent a lot of $$$ on other retro computer stuff and couldn't justify it. Maybe later. Have fun with it!

    • @TransCanadaPhil
      @TransCanadaPhil Před 3 lety

      @@8_Bit ahh yes the references to the road trips you made down to Duluth made me wonder. Back in the 80s we used to make road trips down to Grand Forks and Fargo, North Dakota. It was fascinating then because you'd often find completely difference Commodore software available at the local shops down there compared to what you'd see at the typical Zellers or Canadian Tire store here. There was a lot more 3rd party cartridges for both the Vic and C64 that my bro and I were able to pick up that simply weren't available here.

  • @charliep8776
    @charliep8776 Před 4 lety

    Great video, keep up the good work

  • @johnsimon8457
    @johnsimon8457 Před 4 lety +3

    I forgot how slow flood fills were in paint programs on the Apple II and C64

  • @CommodoreGreg
    @CommodoreGreg Před 4 lety +6

    I absolutely LOVE slang, but the problem is as soon as I tried to use it in any serious way I found it had show-stopping bugs. I still think there's desire by people that own these SuperCPUs to have a dev kit. At least I would!
    If you do ever finish a SuperCPU game, I am buying it! FWIW, there's also Wolfenstein 3D for the SuperCPU. I have run it. It's very strange to see it run on a C64. That should count as a second game for it.
    I wonder if we could petition for a C64+SuperCPU mode in the upcoming Mega65...

  • @MindFlareRetro
    @MindFlareRetro Před 4 lety +8

    Such a fascinating device -- I have never actually held one. It's a shame it came on to the scene near the end and never really gained too much traction. It would be great to have one for any Commodore enthusiast's collection. Hmm, I do have boxes of potential goodies I have acquired from people who were going to throw away old retro stuff. I should probably dig out that stuff and see if any treasures await. Another great demo. Thanks again for sharing.

    • @1337Shockwav3
      @1337Shockwav3 Před 4 lety

      It's not ... one of the amazing things about the Commodore community is how they stuck to the original setup (c64 + 1541) for a long, long time ... well reaching past 2010.
      I know 4 people who own a SCPU and one of the devs for one of the very few pieces of software specifically designed for this accelerator. Never even cared about asking if I could have a SCPU on loan.
      If you want hardware expanded beyond any reasonability better go with the Amiga or Atari XL lines.

  • @Oliver-l1c
    @Oliver-l1c Před 4 lety +1

    I really enjoyed seeing what your 'daily driver' was. I'd love to hear more about how you used this setup in the 90's.

  • @MarkReed-smokindeist
    @MarkReed-smokindeist Před 4 lety +1

    My former co-worker ran a 128-based BBS for our user's group as far as the mid 2000's. His C128D had the Super CPU, some CMD drives including a CMD HD and JiffyDOS-equippped 1571 drives. It's sad how all the old CMD stuff sort of evaporated when the then-owner was going through some drama that I don't know the full story on. I believe that a Turbo232 and a CMD RAM-Link were also part of his setup.
    He was also a big GEOS fan. He also played with the GEOS-based web browser...

  • @nebular-nerd
    @nebular-nerd Před 4 lety +3

    That is a cool bit of kit, silky smooth performance on the stuff you demoed. Also seeing the Altera in the prototype begs the question, maybe a 2020's update based on an FPGA (or a Pi)? That would be hilariously fast. 🤓😁

  • @Moonfreeze
    @Moonfreeze Před 3 lety +1

    Wow, had I seen Test Drive like that back in the day, I would've freaked out!

  • @Kris_M
    @Kris_M Před 4 lety +7

    4:00 I had the Final Cartridge III. Man I loved it. It allowed me to hack several games with its built-in dis-/assembler.

  • @kooziesan
    @kooziesan Před 4 lety +1

    Every c64 video you post makes me happy

  • @Franksey180
    @Franksey180 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for making this video :) I own one of these that I bought from eBay maybe 10 years ago. C64 fans will shudder with horror but to this day I've never actually attempted to power it up or test it, so it could be dead for all I know.. I still have all my C64 hardware/software but it will be a bit of a project to get up and running, I assume the C64/C128s I have may need re-capping and PSUs replacing. Great to see Metal Dust in action, I think that gives a sort of preview of what C65 games could have looked like.

  • @michaelhill6453
    @michaelhill6453 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant episode!

  • @madyogi6164
    @madyogi6164 Před 3 lety

    Looks like a very cool tool/solution. I wish, I had a knowledge about it back in the 90's. (97 is when I sort of gave up on C64 and switched to x86). Thanks for sharing!

  • @VulpisFoxfire
    @VulpisFoxfire Před 4 lety +3

    CMD was a great company. I had their RS232 addon that let me uses a 2400 modem back in the day (connected to the local college VAX...amusing trying to tweak things that were written for 72 or 80 columns to run on 40-col. Did try the 80-column terminal program that came with the adapter..NovaTerm, I think it was?...but since I was using a TV rather than a monitor, it looked too aweful to read)
    Also, I remember reading somewhere..BYTE magazine, perhaps?...about someone who had made an expansion-port board that allowed them to run an enviromental control system via the C64 (lights, thermostat, and such) for an office building.
    It always amazed me just how well-documented the C64 was, for both hardware and software..you could do things with it that were very obfuscated on the PC side of things. And are even more so these days.
    Edit: Oh man, the quiet 'chuckling' of the disk drive as the stuff loaded...even if it was a 3.5" rather than a 5.25"...talk about a serious hit to the nostalgia. :-)

  • @vcv6560
    @vcv6560 Před 4 lety +1

    Dang, somebody needs to be making these again! I bought a RAMLink in 1997, should have sprung for the accelerator too.

  • @AllGamingStarred
    @AllGamingStarred Před 2 lety +1

    CPU: "ok, lety's get-"
    (6502 steals a cycle)
    CPU: "AS I WAS SAY-"
    (6502 steals yet another cycle)
    CPU: *screams*

  • @fourthhorseman4531
    @fourthhorseman4531 Před 2 lety +1

    It's very impressive! Can you imagine if we had this back in like 85 or 86? It might have made some of us put off moving up to 16 bit systems.

  • @talideon
    @talideon Před 4 lety +5

    This is one of those times I wish the Mega 65 wasn't so very, very expensive...

  • @djdublo
    @djdublo Před 3 lety

    Fascinating look at something I'd never heard of before.

  • @yohojones
    @yohojones Před 4 lety +5

    You could narate my death sentence and I would just sit there with a dull grin. So calming.

    • @00Skyfox
      @00Skyfox Před 4 lety +4

      He’s like the Bob Ross of retro computing.

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Před 3 lety

      ​@@00Skyfox < In Rob Ross' soothing voice "For GEOS maybe we'll use a happy little FD-2000 along with a SupercPU... there!" ;D

    • @00Skyfox
      @00Skyfox Před 3 lety

      @@BillAnt Perfect!

  • @rannugblah4251
    @rannugblah4251 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm interested in hearing more of your rants about "using what you have and know" vs always going for the latest and the greatest in technology. If you'd consider making a video about how you feel about the modern age of computing compared to when you were growing up, the in my opinion sad changes in how coding is done (each megahertz and megabyte costing fraction of a dollar and in turn coders tend to forgo any discipline for optimization) and so on; I'd be very interested. Keep up the good work.

  • @GrymsArchive
    @GrymsArchive Před 4 lety +3

    Out of all the things I bought for my C64 set up I wish I still had, I wish I still had my *CMD HD 20*

  • @TheZax85
    @TheZax85 Před 4 lety

    Neat! Would love to have something like that, for my C128Dcr 😁

  • @herrpez
    @herrpez Před 4 lety

    18:00 Bolby Mono :D Had me cackling like a madman!

  • @DanSanderson
    @DanSanderson Před 4 lety +1

    It's mind bending to try to put this into the chronology of late '90s computing. I graduated high school in '96 and had already gone through many years with an A500 and a year or so with a 386 laptop by then. Those were both 16 MHz machines. A 20 MHz accelerator for a C64 would be a neat trick and the benefits for GEOS are obvious, but if my goofy kid self had already moved on years earlier, where would this live? (You address this, just sayin'. :) )

  • @darrylteichroeb9132
    @darrylteichroeb9132 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks Robin! Takes me back to the old days! Did you ever run a BBS? The CMD SuperCPU would have rocked serving up telecommunications...

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety +1

      I never did run a BBS but I know some people did run them on a SuperCPU. In fact, I think this one is STILL online: www.triad.se/antidote

  • @KasumiKenshirou
    @KasumiKenshirou Před 4 lety +1

    I didn't know anything like this existed at this time, or that people were still using Commodore 64s. My family upgraded from c64 to a 486 in 1995, and I thought we were one of the last people still using Commodore 64s back then!

  • @BaumInventions
    @BaumInventions Před 4 lety +2

    So basically it is something like the Pentium Overdrive CPUs for the PC World. A very specific product to solve a very specific problem for a very short period of time. I just love stuff like this.

    • @Damaniel3
      @Damaniel3 Před 4 lety +1

      A Pentium Overdrive released in 2010 that pushed your 66MHz 486 to a 1GHz Pentium III equivalent. I could totally have seen myself using one of these back in the day if I still had a C64 laying around.

  • @hunter_college
    @hunter_college Před 4 lety +4

    Fun fact: The German Dark-Electro Band "Welle:Erdball" provided the sound track for the game Metal Dust and even produce a copy on CD - (those guys are also active in the C64-Developer-Scene of today).
    czcams.com/video/HqCiqFZHy8w/video.html

    • @robsku1
      @robsku1 Před 3 lety +2

      They're awesome!

  • @NeilRoy
    @NeilRoy Před 4 lety +4

    I would have loved to own one of those back in the day. But, I upgraded to my Amiga and never looked back. I am surprised that did as well as it did to be honest. The Amiga 500 was pretty reasonably priced in the 90s (in Canada for me). I think of all computers I ever owned, my Amiga was the absolute best. I used to run a BBS on my C64, I wonder if that would have improved it. I had the same Super Snapshot you owned and loved it. It's how I learned to program assembly for it. Good times, I miss those days A LOT.

    • @elmariachi5133
      @elmariachi5133 Před 4 lety +1

      Amiga was THE computer and there still is nothing else in history that has ever seen do far ahead of it's time. Too bad Commodore messed it all up. Amiga is what should have been the survivor instead of those shady Apple products.

    • @garyhoffmann1615
      @garyhoffmann1615 Před 4 lety

      @@elmariachi5133 I played around with an apple emulator on my Amiga, it was way faster than an apple with the same 6800 CPU thanks to the Amigas co-processors.

  • @-Jakob-
    @-Jakob- Před 3 lety

    18:04 that part of the credits is about the release of a remix of the soundtrack on an album which has a weird title: "Nur tote Frauen sind schön" which translates to "Only dead women are beautiful".

  • @s-t-f
    @s-t-f Před 4 lety +2

    20 MHz ????
    Insane!
    What would you do with all of that processing power?

  • @petrusscott3038
    @petrusscott3038 Před rokem

    I created my own expansion board that supported 8 cards. Each expansion slot had 2 switches. The 1st switch enabled/disabled the slot. The 2nd switch set the NMI or the IRQ (can’t remember) to reset the computer. When I plugged in a game cartridge and turned on the computer and pressed reset button, the computer would go to the run prompt, then I could save the cartridge to the disk.

  • @tarstarkusz
    @tarstarkusz Před 3 lety +1

    I can remember when this first came out. I had Geos, a mouse and the 1581 drive and I thought it was too expensive and not really worth it.

  • @aafjeyakubu5124
    @aafjeyakubu5124 Před 3 měsíci

    I used my C64 to write all of my papers in high school. I made flyers for fundraisers. We had a little underground C64 community at my school. Those were the best of times.

  • @jm131719
    @jm131719 Před rokem

    Well done video. I think I briefly saw something on your screen about a dual SuperCPU being enabled. Could you please give a little background on that? Thanks.

  • @d_vibe-swe
    @d_vibe-swe Před 4 lety +2

    3:46
    For me this was my Amiga 1200/060 which I used as main computer to around Y2K, when I finally switched to PC.

    • @d_vibe-swe
      @d_vibe-swe Před 4 lety

      Btw. Anyone knows if the SuperCPU works with the MSSIAH cartridge?

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety

      Unfortunately I don't have a MSSIAH or I'd try it!

  • @Nukle0n
    @Nukle0n Před 4 lety +1

    crazy to make an addon for a computer like this 13 years later. It's def cool but also very head scratching.

  • @paddycoleman1472
    @paddycoleman1472 Před 4 lety +3

    What an amazing addition to the C64.

  • @ogdan1173
    @ogdan1173 Před 4 lety

    Hello. You are can connect all your computers on RJ-45 to use on Internet?

  • @aircraftmech123456
    @aircraftmech123456 Před 2 lety

    i tried this with VICE on my PC and reading was 32. how can i adjust to be more towards your readings for emulation purpose?

  • @gamevidsnstuff5805
    @gamevidsnstuff5805 Před 3 lety

    The disk drive sound sure takes me back.

  • @jase1438
    @jase1438 Před 4 lety +2

    I bought Metal Dust just because of this demo... I don't have a SuperCPU, however it works well enough in VICE!

  • @bjrnen8505
    @bjrnen8505 Před 4 lety +1

    Another reason the SCPU failed was feedback on tech demos. The community want very impressed with these and told the scenes where to stick it and thus the releases were very few indeed. Maurice Randall promised an extended SCPU, a cartridge that would boot up on a C64 aswell as a C128. I would have loved to see that.

  • @Lilithe
    @Lilithe Před 4 lety +1

    I'd be curious to see what demos run partially on this thing and what the crashes look like

  • @bitset3741
    @bitset3741 Před 4 lety +2

    There were a lot of games back in the day that just need a little boost. Overclocking the Sega Genesis shows that pretty well. Hard Drivin' and Race Drivin' show that really well. At stock -7.16mhz they are just playable, overclock to 10 they are a lot smoother, and at 12 or so they are silk. I'd like to see Mercenary for the C64 on the SuperCPU.

  • @lxm2600
    @lxm2600 Před 4 lety

    Super Schweeeeet!! Waited for over a year to get a modern version of this from individual computers! This is a nice platform for writing new c64 and c128 software, because it can be emulated by a large audience even the original is Super CPU Rare! Programming for this is super fun with cbmprg studio ide and emulator!

  • @AndrewTubbiolo
    @AndrewTubbiolo Před 4 lety +1

    What a fascinating view of what could have been if Commodore did not hold the C-64 static for so long. I could imagine if Commodore had a useful expansion bus like ISA we could have had a home brew Commodore architecture movement, that would have fit hand in glove with the Linux movement. Much like the Raspberry Pi movement today.

    • @stefanweilhartner4415
      @stefanweilhartner4415 Před 4 lety +1

      if we look closely we have to say that commodore only developed two good home computers - the vic-20 and the c64. the c128 was just an expensive c64. plus4, c16, c116 etc was crap.
      commodore never developed a cpu. MOS did until they have been bought by commodore. after bob yannes developed the SID chip they separated. why did Jack Tramiel not keep him? Was he completely deranged to let the designer of the best sound chip in this area go???

  • @jjdigitalvideosolutionsllc5343

    How does the SuperCPU compare to other C64 accelerators (old & new)? Like the old TurboMaster and the new Chameleon?

  • @rogerlong5585
    @rogerlong5585 Před rokem +1

    GEOS really benefited from the SuperCPU. Anyone who played Elite will remember that when another ship entered the system, it took forever to get to the space station. Activating the auto-pilot and switching it into Turbo mode meant you could get on with playing the game again, with only the occasional system crash when switching the speed.

    • @AndrewHelgeCox
      @AndrewHelgeCox Před rokem

      So it couldn't stay in turbo all the time and just provide smoother animation? Turbo affected the passage of game time? I see how that's useful but it would have been sweet to get a smooth fps too.

    • @rogerlong5585
      @rogerlong5585 Před rokem +1

      @@AndrewHelgeCox Theoretically, you could have kept it in turbo mode all the time, if your reflexes were also 20 times faster than normal. The reality is that the first time you tried to dock without the autopilot, you'd crash, and the first time you encountered a pirate, they'd hit you with so much firepower so quickly that it would be like they had a Gatling gun laser cannon and your ship would be vaporized.

    • @AndrewHelgeCox
      @AndrewHelgeCox Před rokem

      @@rogerlong5585 Maybe if you could have stepped up one megahertz at a time you could have gotten to play at that level eventually 🤩.

  • @andrewroberts5988
    @andrewroberts5988 Před 4 lety

    I think it was Protovision (or GO64?) that create the Turbo Assembler for the 65816. Awesome feat of brilliance!

  • @dustinc64
    @dustinc64 Před 4 lety +3

    A fun fact.. this runs in 13-14 jiffies on a U64 in turbo mode :) The basic optimizations do not seem to make a difference.. the same value returns.

  • @rabidbigdog
    @rabidbigdog Před 4 lety +1

    IMHO, the death of these machines was the lack of 80-column support. It's existence is fascinating however. Western Design Centre had an 8Mhz 65816 at launch I believe, which Apple didn't use because it would have threatened the Mac.

  • @mrshadowbright4041
    @mrshadowbright4041 Před 4 lety

    what would happen if you connected 2 of them at the same time?

  • @nicholas_scott
    @nicholas_scott Před 4 lety +3

    When I worked on IT in the 90s, I’d see obsolete machines all the time. Especially in factories which would have some proprietary equipment hooked to a c64, or apple 2, or cp1, etc, using proprietary software. They can’t replace the computer without replacing the machine.... so...

  • @Puncimonster
    @Puncimonster Před 3 lety

    I had a question: how can I get a SuperCPU?
    Or where coud it find the details of the SCPU to remake it? Remake SCPU-64 or SCPU-128? Is it possible?
    Somebody could help me, please?

  • @XRPSwan
    @XRPSwan Před 4 lety

    Amazing

  • @yorgle
    @yorgle Před 4 lety

    The typography/general aesthetic of that magazine is identical to Amiga World. :D

  • @bufordmaddogtannen
    @bufordmaddogtannen Před 4 lety +4

    Isn't it amazing how nowadays we need to explain why it is OK to have opinions and personal preferences?
    Thanks for the video, I always have been curious about this particular device.
    Wasn't there a similar interface with a hard drive inside, around 1992-1995?

    • @antonphibes4924
      @antonphibes4924 Před 4 lety

      "nowadays we need to explain why it is OK to have opinions and personal preferences"
      Yeah it's like in the past you never had to justify your actions, theories or beliefs. People just accepted them without question. Especially the Church, they welcomed all ideas and preferences with open arms.

    • @bufordmaddogtannen
      @bufordmaddogtannen Před 4 lety

      @@antonphibes4924 today someone's opinion is somebody else's reason for being offended. Of course this somebody else also thinks s/he is entitled to have opinions and the right not to be offended.
      Like a sort of one-way free speech right.

  • @gameonlinux
    @gameonlinux Před 4 lety +8

    Why is the Dual SuperCPU configuration showing 400 mhz? (26:22)

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety +15

      It's just an April Fool's joke I worked on but never did release :) The idea is that if a SuperCPU multiplies the C64 speed by 20x then a second SuperCPU would again multiply it by another 20x. I actually don't know what would happen if I plugged two in together like that, and I'm scared to try.

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety +3

      @@AndrasMihalyi Yes, I have two. The one shown was my original I purchased from CMD for around $200 + $60 for the RAM card. The second one I bought for around $200 total used, in those years before the prices started climbing.

    • @8_Bit
      @8_Bit  Před 4 lety +1

      @@AndrasMihalyi I think a second SuperCPU would either be ignored or cause the system to just not boot at all, but someone better at hardware might have a more certain answer :)

  • @samcoupe4608KB
    @samcoupe4608KB Před 4 lety

    What speed does it accelerate the 128 too?

  • @carlwillows
    @carlwillows Před 4 lety

    I want to thank you for this video. I would love to get my hands on a "supercpu".

  • @krnivoro1972
    @krnivoro1972 Před 4 lety +2

    That device is fascinating, but now I understand how and why IBM PC won the race: One size fits all...

  • @oN_eXcuses
    @oN_eXcuses Před 4 lety

    I had a Commodore 64 as a child back in the mid 80's. Had a lot of memorable experiences with it. I used mine mainly for playing RPG'S like AD&D Pool or Radiance series and niche type games like Spy vs.Spy. By 91-92 the Commodore 64/128 had become dated. By 96 to 2000 Windows 95 and 98 had become the new rage in computing and although the SuperCPU was a great product that had plenty of potential had it come out years earlier, by 96 most people had moved on to PC's and the Commodore 64/128 was considered an old relic from the 80's.

  • @sablesanctum
    @sablesanctum Před 4 lety

    Pretty cool.