• The many Operating Systems of the Commodore 64

    From LundukeJournal@1337:1/100 to All on Mon Apr 11 21:15:04 2022
    The many Operating Systems of the Commodore 64

    Date:
    Mon, 11 Apr 2022 20:07:08 GMT

    Description:
    UNIX for C64? CP/M for C64? Seriously?! (Yes. Seriously.)

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    Did you know that subscribers to The Lunduke Journal get 10 DRM-free (and
    very nerd) books as a perk? Get 73% off for 1 year

    For most of us, this is what the user interface of a Commodore 64 looks like:

    But what if I told you that there was so much more available? What if I told you that you could have full graphical desktops? Or even UNIX systems (with multitasking)?

    Crazy, right? Well, its all real. And its pretty darned amazing. CP/M

    In 1974, the late (and great) Gary Kildall developed the CP/M operating system. Originally developed for the Intel 8080 CPU, it was ported to other architectures, including the Z80 CPU from Zilog.

    And, as it so happens, there was a cartridge released for the Commodore 64 that contained a Z80 processor which CP/M could run on! The C64 CP/M
    Cartridge

    Bringing CP/M version 2.2 to a C64 added a lot of functionality to the
    system: including multiple extra compilers (including COBOL and FORTRAN), and a number of utilities. The back of the CP/M Cartridge

    There were some distinct problems, however. Key among them:

    Despite being technically compatible with existing Z80 compiled CP/M software the C64 could only handle 40 character wide displays. And most CP/M software expected 80 character displays (or, in some cases, 60).

    Likewise, the C64 floppy drive (the 1541) could not read many of the floppy disks that tended to be used for CP/M software.

    The combination meant that most users were limited to the software included with CP/M 2.2 itself. CP/M 3.0 running on the C128. Which was very similar
    to CP/M 2.2. GEOS

    The Graphical Environment Operating System (or GEOS) from Berkeley Softworks, released in 1986 for the C64 (and later for the C128 and even the Apple II), was nothing short of a technological marvel. The things it managed to accomplish, in just 64k of RAM, borders on pure magic. The GEOS desktop

    A full graphical interface with a pointer that could be controlled via either mouse or joystick. The GEOS box

    The applications bundled with GEOS were absolutely fantastic with geoWrite (the word processor) and geoPaint (the drawing software) being the true standouts. Full WYSIWYG word processing on a Commodore 64 geoPaint
    screenshot, courtesy c64-wiki.com . Contiki

    Contiki is a far newer system, having only been started as a project in
    2003. Yet it still supports running on a C64 which is just incredible.

    What is truly insane? Contiki on the C64 supports multitasking . Not kidding.

    And it includes a TCP/IP networking stack, a web server, web browser, FTP client, IRC, telnet, and a bunch of other crazy stuff.

    Obviously youll need some extra peripherals to make use of all that (or be running in a modern C64 emulator). Still. Extremely cool. GeckOS & LUnix

    There have been a few attempts to bring UNIX to the Commodore 64 over the years.

    LUnix , which was last updated in 2004, is a full, preemptive multitasking UNIX-like environment. Even includes a networking stack, webserver the
    works. LUnix screenshot

    And GeckOS has a similar feature set, but was still under development as of 2020. GeckOS screenshot

    Obviously these are not going to be giving you a full, powerful UNIX environment some things that you my be used to simply will not fit in the amount of memory available on the C64. But what has been created is nothing short of astonishing. C64 OS

    Now this one is a little different. This is one that Ive never been able to test, myself.

    C64 OS is a proprietary, commercial operating system for the C64 that is currently listed as being in Beta testing. Just the same, the details and screenshots available are incredibly impressive.

    I love when people take classic computing hardware and push it well beyond what was thought to be possible.

    You might also consider becoming a Founding Member subscriber to The Lunduke Journal. Some seriously choice perks in there.



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://lunduke.substack.com/p/the-many-operating-systems-of-the


    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)