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Commodore 65

The Commodore 65 (also known as the C64DX) is a prototype computer created at Commodore Business Machines in 1990–1991. It is an improved version of the Commodore 64, and it was meant to be backwards-compatible with the older computer, while still providing a number of advanced features close to those of the Amiga.

Commodore 65
TypePersonal computer
Release dateN/A
Discontinued1991 (prototype cancelled)
Units shipped50 to 2000 units
Operating systemCommodore BASIC 10.0
CPUCSG 4510 R3 @ 3.54 MHz
Memory128 KB (8 MB maximum)
Removable storage3½" DSDD floppy disk drive
Display320×200×256; 640×200×16; 640×400×16; 1280×200×4; 1280×400×4; palette of 4096 colors
GraphicsVIC-III (CSG 4567 R5)
SoundTwo CSG 8580R5 SID
PredecessorCommodore 64
A Commodore 65 prototype
Commodore 65 opened up, revealing its internal disk drive
CSG 4510 ("Victor")
CSG 4567 ("Bill")
"Elmer" and "Igor" (programmable logic)
F011B (floppy disk controller)
Opened chassis
Motherboard inscription
Start screen

History edit

In September 1989 Compute!'s Gazette noted that "Sales of the 64 have diminished rapidly, Nintendo has eaten big holes in the market, and the life of the old warhorse computer should somehow be extended." Noting that Apple had developed the IIGS to extend the life of its Apple II series, the magazine asked "Will Commodore take the same tack?", then continued:[1]

The latest rumor says Yes. We've heard reports from several sources of a new machine from Commodore—A 64GS, if you will. This machine is reportedly driven by a GE802, a version of the 65816 microprocessor (which is a 16-bit version of the 6502 chip), and runs at 4 MHz (by comparison, the 64 runs at 1 MHz; the Amiga, at slightly over 7 MHz). It comes with 128K of RAM and is expandable to one megabyte. Fully expanded, it supports 256 colors. Maximum resolution is a stunning 640 X 400 pixels. We've also heard that it has a 64 mode so that 64 owners can purchase a much more powerful machine and still use their software library. The 64GS reportedly comes with a built-in 3 1/2-inch disk drive and will support the 1581. But, our sources say, it does not support the 1541 or the 1571 drive (uh, excuse me, please pass the bologna). All we've heard about sound in the new machine is that it's "enhanced" and features stereo output. The final tidbit is that the 64GS will retail in the $300-$350 range when it debuts in November.

The Gazette added, "Our sources also report that there is a great deal of infighting at Commodore as to whether the machine should be released. The sales staff wants to get the machine out the door, while the naysaying engineers have dubbed it 'son of Plus/4.'"[1] While the next issue reported that "the latest rumor is that such a machine will never see the light of day",[2] Fred Bowen and others at Commodore in 1990–1991 developed the Commodore 65 (C65) as a successor to the C64. In the end of 1990 the decision to create the C65 was taken.[3] The project was cancelled by Commodore's chairman Irving Gould in 1991.

When Commodore International was liquidated in 1994, a number of prototypes were sold on the open market, and thus a few people actually own a Commodore 65. Estimates as to the actual number of machines found on the open market range from 50 to 2000 units.[4] As the C65 project was cancelled, the final 8-bit offering from CBM remained the triple-mode, 1–2 MHz, 128 KB (expandable), C64-compatible Commodore 128 of 1985.

Technical specifications edit

  • The CPU named CSG 4510 R3 is a custom CSG[5] 65CE02 (a MOS 6502 derivative), combined with two MOS 6526 complex interface adapters (CIAs), a UART serial interface, and a memory mapper to allow for an addressable space of 1 MB[6]
  • 3.54 MHz clock frequency (the C64 runs at 1 MHz)
  • A new VIC-III graphics chip named CSG 4567 R5, capable of producing 256 colors from a palette of 4096 colors; available modes include 320×200×256 (8), 640×200×16 (4), 640×400×16 (4), 1280×200×4 (2), and 1280×400×4 (2) ( X×Y×color depth, i.e. number of colors (bit planes) )
    • Supports all video modes of VIC-II
    • Text mode with 40/80 × 25 characters
    • Synchronizable with external video source (genlock)
    • Integrated DMA controller (bit blit)
  • Two CSG 8580R5 SID sound chips producing stereo sound (the C64 has one SID)
    • Separate control (left / right) for volume, filter and modulation
  • 128 KB RAM, expandable with up to 1 MB[6] using a RAM expansion port similar to that of the Commodore Amiga 500
  • 128 KB ROM
  • Heavily improved BASIC: Commodore BASIC 10.0 (the C64 has the relatively feature-weak BASIC 2.0, which was almost 10 years old by this time.)
  • One internal 3½" DSDD floppy disk drive
  • Keyboard with 77 keys and an inverted T directional cursor block

Different views edit

Ports edit

Left side:

  • Power +5V DC at 2.2A and +12V DC at 0.85A[6]
  • 2× Control ports DE9M[6]

Back:

Bottom flap:

  • RAM expansion[6]

Dimensions: ≈46 cm wide, 20 cm deep, 5.1 cm high[6]

Chipset names edit

The custom chips of the C65 were not meant to have names like the custom chips in the Amiga. Although there are names printed near the chip sockets on various revisions of the circuit board, they were not intended as names for the chips. According to former Commodore engineer Bill Gardei, "The Legend on the PCB was to let others in the organization know [whom] to go to for advice on the chips. We did have an issue with that. But that wasn't the name of the chip at the time. The 4567 was always called the VIC-3. I can see why others outside of Commodore made the connection. But again—no—we never called these chips 'Victor' or 'Bill'."[9]

The custom chips for the C65 are:

  • CSG 4510: processor (commonly called "Victor" after Victor Andrade)
  • CSG 4567: VIC-III graphics processor (commonly called "Bill" after Bill Gardei)
  • CSG 4151: DMAgic DMA controller (designed by Paul Lassa)
  • F011C: FDC (floppy disk controller, also designed by Bill Gardei)

The C65 also contains one or two programmable logic arrays depending on the version:

  • ELMER: PAL16L8 (C65 versions 1.1, 2A, 2B), PAL20L8 (C65 versions 3–5)
  • IGOR: PAL16L8 (C65 version 2B only)

Graphics subsystem edit

The main memory of the C65 is shared between the graphics subsystem and the CPU. The memory clock runs at almost twice the speed of the C64. To further increase the bandwidth of the graphics subsystem, the memory is divided into 2× 8-bit wide banks of 64 Kbyte which can be accessed by the CSG-4567 simultaneously. This provides an effective video-DMA bandwidth of 7.2 Mbytes/second which is the same specification as the original 16-bit Commodore Amiga chipset (OCS/ECS). The CPU can use up to half the available bandwidth, since it can only access a single 8-bit bank at a time. In higher demanding video modes, the CPU is slowed down due to increased cycle stealing from the video controller.

Enhanced VIC-II modes edit

In addition to having all of the C64 video modes, the CSG-4567 also supports several new character attributes such as "blink" or "bold" and can display any of the new or old video modes in 80 column or 640 horizontal pixel format, as well as the older 40 column 320 pixel format [6]. These enhanced "VIC-II" modes take up to 16 KB of system RAM. The sprite capabilities in all VIC modes are equivalent to the C64.

Bitplane modes edit

A new "bitplane" video mode was added to allow the displaying of true bitplane type video, with-up to eight bitplanes in 320 pixel mode and up to four in 640 pixel mode. The CSG-4567 can also time-multiplex the bitplanes to give a true four-color 1280 pixel picture. Vertical resolution is maintained at 200 lines as standard, but can be doubled to 400 with interlace [6]. The VIC-III bitplane modes take up to 64 KB of system RAM in non-interlaced or 128 KB RAM in interlaced (400 line) modes. Since the C65 is equipped with only 128 KB in its basic configuration, these modes would consume the entire RAM, and are therefore only useful in a RAM expanded system. On a basic system, it would probably have made more sense to write software which uses less demanding resolutions with fewer bitplanes - partly because this would consume less of the confined RAM space, but also because more bitplanes would demand a higher video DMA bandwidth and consequently slow down the CPU as a result.

DAT and Blitter edit

The bitplanes on the C65 are organized in a less straightforward manner than e.g. on the Commodore Amiga, which organizes the bitplanes as straight rows of pixels: On the C65, the bytes within the bitplanes are organized as 25 rows of 40 or 80 stacks of 8 sequential bytes, similar to the original 320×200 VIC modes. Because this makes it harder to derive individual byte and pixel addresses from their position in the XY coordinate frame, the C65 provides a conversion mechanism in hardware called Display Address Translator (DAT).

Further aid to the programmer comes in the form of a bit-blitter, which supports

  • Copy (up,down,invert), Fill, Swap, Mix (boolean Minterms) Hold, Modulus (window), Interrupt, and Resume modes
  • Block operations from 1 byte to 64 KB

DOS edit

In contrast to previous 8-bit computers from Commodore, the C65 has a complete DOS through which the built-in 3.5-inch floppy disk drive can be controlled. Disks used by the C65 have a storage capacity of 880 KB and the drive is compatible with C1581. Since this format was uncommon for the former C64 owners, the C65 retains the serial IEC port for external Commodore disk drives. It's possible to use a 1541, 1571, 1581, or other similar model.

The DOS itself is based on the Commodore PET IEEE 8250 drive DOS. Since it can only deal with two floppy disk drives, including the internal, only one external drive may be connected to the internal floppy disk controller. Like earlier systems, up to 4 drives can be daisy-chained on the IEC port.

Interfaces edit

The C65 includes the same ports of the C64. In addition, there is a DMA port for memory expansion. The latter is attached just like on the Amiga 500 via a flap in the bottom of the board.[10] The built-in floppy disk drive is connected in parallel, serial Commodore drives can be connected via the usual IEC port. A plug for a genlock was also provided. Only the port for the C64 datasette is no longer available, and the user port missing—like the Aldi C64[citation needed]—the 9 volt AC line. The expansion port differs significantly from all prior C64 variants and rather resembles that of C16.

Legacy edit

Because the Commodore 65 was only a prototype, not many units were made. If one appears on eBay, it may sell for around $20,000.[11]

MEGA65 edit

In 2015, the Museum of Electronic Games & Art (MEGA)[12] announced a recreation of the Commodore 65. Also backwards compatible with the Commodore 64,[13] the MEGA65[14][15] features Commodore 65 compatible hardware[13] recreated in FPGA and supports newer connectors such as HDMI, MicroSD cards and LAN.[16]

In September 2020, the pre-release developer-kit (r3) has sold out and in total 100 systems were delivered by the end of 2020.[17][18][19]

On 30 September 2021, the final version of the MEGA65 with recreated C65 case, was available for pre-order. The first batch of 400 computers has sold out and been released to customers as of May 2022.[20]

As of 10 May 2023, the second batch of 400 computers has also sold out and been released to customers.[21][22]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Elko, Lance (September 1989). "Editor's Notes". Compute's Gazette. p. 4. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  2. ^ Elko, Lance (October 1989). "Editor's Notes". Compute's Gazette. p. 2. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  3. ^ . old-computers.com. Archived from the original on 2010-10-10. Retrieved 2013-06-20.
  4. ^ "Secret Weapons of Commodore: The Commodore 65". floodgap.com. 2007-07-01. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
  5. ^ Commodore Semiconductor Group, previously known as MOS Technology, Inc
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n . zimmers.net. 2009-08-18. Archived from the original on 2015-06-02. Retrieved 2013-06-21.
  7. ^ "c65_html_1410c60e.gif". retrocommodore.com. 2012-12-16. Archived from the original on 2013-06-24. Retrieved 2013-06-21.
  8. ^ . collectorcomputers.com. 2013-11-16. Archived from the original on 2015-06-10. Retrieved 2013-11-16.
  9. ^ C65 open [circular reference]
  10. ^ "Super-Rare Legendary Commodore C65 is About to be Resurrected for Retro Gaming Glory". 15 October 2021.
  11. ^ "MEGA | MEGA - Museum of Electronic Games & Art". www.m-e-g-a.org. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  12. ^ a b "MEGA65 Computer". mega65.org. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  13. ^ "Introducing the MEGA65 (8-bit) computer | MEGA - Museum of Electronic Games & Art". www.m-e-g-a.org. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  14. ^ "MEGA 65: Commodore 65 remake gets a physical release • /r/c64". reddit. 23 April 2015. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  15. ^ "Making a C64/C65 compatible computer in an FPGA". c65gs.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  16. ^ Mega 65, Trenz - The Official seller of (2020-09-14). "MEGA65". trenz.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Gardner-stephen, Paul (2020-11-25). "Making a C64/C65 compatible computer: The DevKits have started shipping!". Making a C64/C65 compatible computer. Retrieved 2020-11-25.
  18. ^ Nostalgia Nerd. "The Commodore 64 has a Successor (and it's amazing!)". www.youtube.com. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
  19. ^ https://shop.trenz-electronic.de/en/TE0765-03-S001-MEGA65-highly-advanced-C64-and-C65-compatible-8-bit-computer? (davidjseibuhr journalist, reports: New Mega65 Corporation began thereafter, they periodically remanufactured pcb revised computers, prebuilt or kits) Cc=564
  20. ^ Dan's MEGA65 Digest, confirmation on batch 2 size
  21. ^ Trenz website, confirmation that both batch 1 and 2 have sold out

Further reading edit

  • On the Edge: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore (2005), Variant Press. ISBN 0-9738649-0-7.

External links edit

  • Hi65: a high-level Commodore 65 emulator
  • C65 page at 'The Secret Weapons of Commodore' website By Cameron Kaiser and The Commodore Knowledge Base
  • FTP directory for the C65 at ftp.zimmers.net
  • C64DX System Specification document
  • C65 System ROMs and Utility Software
  • Commodore 65: Like The C64, But It's One Louder
  • , article on C65
  • 8-Bit-Nirvana: Commodore 65
  • heimcomputer.de: Commodore C65 Prototyp, German C65-site with many photos and info
  • toxic-waste.de: Commodore C65 Information Page by TXW
  • cbmmuseum.kuto.de: CCOM - Commodore 65

commodore, also, known, c64dx, prototype, computer, created, commodore, business, machines, 1990, 1991, improved, version, commodore, meant, backwards, compatible, with, older, computer, while, still, providing, number, advanced, features, close, those, amiga,. The Commodore 65 also known as the C64DX is a prototype computer created at Commodore Business Machines in 1990 1991 It is an improved version of the Commodore 64 and it was meant to be backwards compatible with the older computer while still providing a number of advanced features close to those of the Amiga Commodore 65TypePersonal computerRelease dateN ADiscontinued1991 prototype cancelled Units shipped50 to 2000 unitsOperating systemCommodore BASIC 10 0CPUCSG 4510 R3 3 54 MHzMemory128 KB 8 MB maximum Removable storage3 DSDD floppy disk driveDisplay320 200 256 640 200 16 640 400 16 1280 200 4 1280 400 4 palette of 4096 colorsGraphicsVIC III CSG 4567 R5 SoundTwo CSG 8580R5 SIDPredecessorCommodore 64A Commodore 65 prototypeCommodore 65 opened up revealing its internal disk driveCSG 4510 Victor CSG 4567 Bill Elmer and Igor programmable logic F011B floppy disk controller Opened chassisMotherboard inscriptionStart screen Contents 1 History 2 Technical specifications 2 1 Different views 2 2 Ports 2 3 Chipset names 2 4 Graphics subsystem 2 4 1 Enhanced VIC II modes 2 4 1 1 Bitplane modes 2 4 2 DAT and Blitter 2 5 DOS 2 6 Interfaces 3 Legacy 3 1 MEGA65 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editIn September 1989 Compute s Gazette noted that Sales of the 64 have diminished rapidly Nintendo has eaten big holes in the market and the life of the old warhorse computer should somehow be extended Noting that Apple had developed the IIGS to extend the life of its Apple II series the magazine asked Will Commodore take the same tack then continued 1 The latest rumor says Yes We ve heard reports from several sources of a new machine from Commodore A 64GS if you will This machine is reportedly driven by a GE802 a version of the 65816 microprocessor which is a 16 bit version of the 6502 chip and runs at 4 MHz by comparison the 64 runs at 1 MHz the Amiga at slightly over 7 MHz It comes with 128K of RAM and is expandable to one megabyte Fully expanded it supports 256 colors Maximum resolution is a stunning 640 X 400 pixels We ve also heard that it has a 64 mode so that 64 owners can purchase a much more powerful machine and still use their software library The 64GS reportedly comes with a built in 3 1 2 inch disk drive and will support the 1581 But our sources say it does not support the 1541 or the 1571 drive uh excuse me please pass the bologna All we ve heard about sound in the new machine is that it s enhanced and features stereo output The final tidbit is that the 64GS will retail in the 300 350 range when it debuts in November The Gazette added Our sources also report that there is a great deal of infighting at Commodore as to whether the machine should be released The sales staff wants to get the machine out the door while the naysaying engineers have dubbed it son of Plus 4 1 While the next issue reported that the latest rumor is that such a machine will never see the light of day 2 Fred Bowen and others at Commodore in 1990 1991 developed the Commodore 65 C65 as a successor to the C64 In the end of 1990 the decision to create the C65 was taken 3 The project was cancelled by Commodore s chairman Irving Gould in 1991 When Commodore International was liquidated in 1994 a number of prototypes were sold on the open market and thus a few people actually own a Commodore 65 Estimates as to the actual number of machines found on the open market range from 50 to 2000 units 4 As the C65 project was cancelled the final 8 bit offering from CBM remained the triple mode 1 2 MHz 128 KB expandable C64 compatible Commodore 128 of 1985 Technical specifications editThe CPU named CSG 4510 R3 is a custom CSG 5 65CE02 a MOS 6502 derivative combined with two MOS 6526 complex interface adapters CIAs a UART serial interface and a memory mapper to allow for an addressable space of 1 MB 6 3 54 MHz clock frequency the C64 runs at 1 MHz A new VIC III graphics chip named CSG 4567 R5 capable of producing 256 colors from a palette of 4096 colors available modes include 320 200 256 8 640 200 16 4 640 400 16 4 1280 200 4 2 and 1280 400 4 2 X Y color depth i e number of colors bit planes Supports all video modes of VIC II Text mode with 40 80 25 characters Synchronizable with external video source genlock Integrated DMA controller bit blit Two CSG 8580R5 SID sound chips producing stereo sound the C64 has one SID Separate control left right for volume filter and modulation 128 KB RAM expandable with up to 1 MB 6 using a RAM expansion port similar to that of the Commodore Amiga 500 128 KB ROM Heavily improved BASIC Commodore BASIC 10 0 the C64 has the relatively feature weak BASIC 2 0 which was almost 10 years old by this time One internal 3 DSDD floppy disk drive Keyboard with 77 keys and an inverted T directional cursor blockDifferent views edit Ports edit Left side Power 5V DC at 2 2A and 12V DC at 0 85A 6 2 Control ports DE9M 6 Back Expansion port 50 pin 6 CBM 488 bus using a 6 pin DIN for 1541 1571 1581 6 User port parallel 24 pin without 9V AC 6 Stereo 2 RCA connector 7 for left and right channel 6 RGBA video DE9F 6 8 RF video 6 Composite video 8 pin DIN 6 External fast floppy drive port mini DIN 8 6 Bottom flap RAM expansion 6 Dimensions 46 cm wide 20 cm deep 5 1 cm high 6 Chipset names edit The custom chips of the C65 were not meant to have names like the custom chips in the Amiga Although there are names printed near the chip sockets on various revisions of the circuit board they were not intended as names for the chips According to former Commodore engineer Bill Gardei The Legend on the PCB was to let others in the organization know whom to go to for advice on the chips We did have an issue with that But that wasn t the name of the chip at the time The 4567 was always called the VIC 3 I can see why others outside of Commodore made the connection But again no we never called these chips Victor or Bill 9 The custom chips for the C65 are CSG 4510 processor commonly called Victor after Victor Andrade CSG 4567 VIC III graphics processor commonly called Bill after Bill Gardei CSG 4151 DMAgic DMA controller designed by Paul Lassa F011C FDC floppy disk controller also designed by Bill Gardei The C65 also contains one or two programmable logic arrays depending on the version ELMER PAL16L8 C65 versions 1 1 2A 2B PAL20L8 C65 versions 3 5 IGOR PAL16L8 C65 version 2B only Graphics subsystem edit The main memory of the C65 is shared between the graphics subsystem and the CPU The memory clock runs at almost twice the speed of the C64 To further increase the bandwidth of the graphics subsystem the memory is divided into 2 8 bit wide banks of 64 Kbyte which can be accessed by the CSG 4567 simultaneously This provides an effective video DMA bandwidth of 7 2 Mbytes second which is the same specification as the original 16 bit Commodore Amiga chipset OCS ECS The CPU can use up to half the available bandwidth since it can only access a single 8 bit bank at a time In higher demanding video modes the CPU is slowed down due to increased cycle stealing from the video controller Enhanced VIC II modes edit In addition to having all of the C64 video modes the CSG 4567 also supports several new character attributes such as blink or bold and can display any of the new or old video modes in 80 column or 640 horizontal pixel format as well as the older 40 column 320 pixel format 6 These enhanced VIC II modes take up to 16 KB of system RAM The sprite capabilities in all VIC modes are equivalent to the C64 Bitplane modes edit A new bitplane video mode was added to allow the displaying of true bitplane type video with up to eight bitplanes in 320 pixel mode and up to four in 640 pixel mode The CSG 4567 can also time multiplex the bitplanes to give a true four color 1280 pixel picture Vertical resolution is maintained at 200 lines as standard but can be doubled to 400 with interlace 6 The VIC III bitplane modes take up to 64 KB of system RAM in non interlaced or 128 KB RAM in interlaced 400 line modes Since the C65 is equipped with only 128 KB in its basic configuration these modes would consume the entire RAM and are therefore only useful in a RAM expanded system On a basic system it would probably have made more sense to write software which uses less demanding resolutions with fewer bitplanes partly because this would consume less of the confined RAM space but also because more bitplanes would demand a higher video DMA bandwidth and consequently slow down the CPU as a result DAT and Blitter edit The bitplanes on the C65 are organized in a less straightforward manner than e g on the Commodore Amiga which organizes the bitplanes as straight rows of pixels On the C65 the bytes within the bitplanes are organized as 25 rows of 40 or 80 stacks of 8 sequential bytes similar to the original 320 200 VIC modes Because this makes it harder to derive individual byte and pixel addresses from their position in the XY coordinate frame the C65 provides a conversion mechanism in hardware called Display Address Translator DAT Further aid to the programmer comes in the form of a bit blitter which supports Copy up down invert Fill Swap Mix boolean Minterms Hold Modulus window Interrupt and Resume modes Block operations from 1 byte to 64 KBDOS edit In contrast to previous 8 bit computers from Commodore the C65 has a complete DOS through which the built in 3 5 inch floppy disk drive can be controlled Disks used by the C65 have a storage capacity of 880 KB and the drive is compatible with C1581 Since this format was uncommon for the former C64 owners the C65 retains the serial IEC port for external Commodore disk drives It s possible to use a 1541 1571 1581 or other similar model The DOS itself is based on the Commodore PET IEEE 8250 drive DOS Since it can only deal with two floppy disk drives including the internal only one external drive may be connected to the internal floppy disk controller Like earlier systems up to 4 drives can be daisy chained on the IEC port Interfaces edit The C65 includes the same ports of the C64 In addition there is a DMA port for memory expansion The latter is attached just like on the Amiga 500 via a flap in the bottom of the board 10 The built in floppy disk drive is connected in parallel serial Commodore drives can be connected via the usual IEC port A plug for a genlock was also provided Only the port for the C64 datasette is no longer available and the user port missing like the Aldi C64 citation needed the 9 volt AC line The expansion port differs significantly from all prior C64 variants and rather resembles that of C16 Legacy editBecause the Commodore 65 was only a prototype not many units were made If one appears on eBay it may sell for around 20 000 11 MEGA65 edit In 2015 the Museum of Electronic Games amp Art MEGA 12 announced a recreation of the Commodore 65 Also backwards compatible with the Commodore 64 13 the MEGA65 14 15 features Commodore 65 compatible hardware 13 recreated in FPGA and supports newer connectors such as HDMI MicroSD cards and LAN 16 In September 2020 the pre release developer kit r3 has sold out and in total 100 systems were delivered by the end of 2020 17 18 19 On 30 September 2021 the final version of the MEGA65 with recreated C65 case was available for pre order The first batch of 400 computers has sold out and been released to customers as of May 2022 20 As of 10 May 2023 the second batch of 400 computers has also sold out and been released to customers 21 22 References edit a b Elko Lance September 1989 Editor s Notes Compute s Gazette p 4 Retrieved 4 March 2015 Elko Lance October 1989 Editor s Notes Compute s Gazette p 2 Retrieved 4 March 2015 OLD COMPUTERS COM museum Commodore C65 old computers com Archived from the original on 2010 10 10 Retrieved 2013 06 20 Secret Weapons of Commodore The Commodore 65 floodgap com 2007 07 01 Retrieved 2013 02 26 Commodore Semiconductor Group previously known as MOS Technology Inc a b c d e f g h i j k l m n C64DX System specification zimmers net 2009 08 18 Archived from the original on 2015 06 02 Retrieved 2013 06 21 c65 html 1410c60e gif retrocommodore com 2012 12 16 Archived from the original on 2013 06 24 Retrieved 2013 06 21 commodore ca gallery hardware c65 jpg commodore ca 2011 03 29 Retrieved 2013 06 21 The Story Behind Bill and Victor collectorcomputers com 2013 11 16 Archived from the original on 2015 06 10 Retrieved 2013 11 16 C65 open circular reference Super Rare Legendary Commodore C65 is About to be Resurrected for Retro Gaming Glory 15 October 2021 MEGA MEGA Museum of Electronic Games amp Art www m e g a org Retrieved 2015 10 06 a b MEGA65 Computer mega65 org Retrieved 2015 10 06 Introducing the MEGA65 8 bit computer MEGA Museum of Electronic Games amp Art www m e g a org Retrieved 2015 10 06 MEGA 65 Commodore 65 remake gets a physical release r c64 reddit 23 April 2015 Retrieved 2015 10 06 Making a C64 C65 compatible computer in an FPGA c65gs blogspot com Retrieved 2015 10 06 Mega 65 Trenz The Official seller of 2020 09 14 MEGA65 trenz a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Gardner stephen Paul 2020 11 25 Making a C64 C65 compatible computer The DevKits have started shipping Making a C64 C65 compatible computer Retrieved 2020 11 25 Nostalgia Nerd The Commodore 64 has a Successor and it s amazing www youtube com Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 2020 12 02 https shop trenz electronic de en TE0765 03 S001 MEGA65 highly advanced C64 and C65 compatible 8 bit computer davidjseibuhr journalist reports New Mega65 Corporation began thereafter they periodically remanufactured pcb revised computers prebuilt or kits Cc 564 Dan s MEGA65 Digest confirmation on batch 2 size Trenz website confirmation that both batch 1 and 2 have sold outFurther reading editOn the Edge The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Commodore 2005 Variant Press ISBN 0 9738649 0 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Commodore 65 Hi65 a high level Commodore 65 emulator C65 page at The Secret Weapons of Commodore website By Cameron Kaiser and The Commodore Knowledge Base FTP directory for the C65 at ftp zimmers net Andre Kaesmacher s C64DX Development Site C64DX System Specification document C65 System ROMs and Utility Software Commodore 65 Like The C64 But It s One Louder old computers com LD COMPUTERS COM museum Commodore C65 article on C65 8 Bit Nirvana Commodore 65 heimcomputer de Commodore C65 Prototyp German C65 site with many photos and info toxic waste de Commodore C65 Information Page by TXW cbmmuseum kuto de CCOM Commodore 65 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commodore 65 amp oldid 1216125245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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